Vanderbilt
University has decided student groups on campus cannot
determine their own leadership. Consequently, a muslim can run the
Christian group, a global warming skeptic can run the Earth First
group, a Republican can run the College Democrats, etc. You get the
idea.
The rule came in part because, as you will not be surprised to learn, a
Christian fraternity “had expelled several students for violating their
behavior policy. One student said he was ousted
You
will be made to care. You’ll be made to care about gay marriage. You’ll
be made to care about killing kids. You’ll be made to care about the
influence of a secular culture on your children as they grow. You’ll be
made to care about a host of issues.
because he is gay.” Tish Harrison Warren wrote about this at
Christianity Today. Her Christian group allowed anyone to be a member,
“but it asks key student leaders—the executive council and small group
leaders—to affirm its doctrinal statement, which outlines broad
Christian orthodoxy and does not mention sexual conduct specifically.
But the university saw belief statements themselves as suspect.”
The first bit of Tish Harrison Warren’s column is really the most
relevant part for my purposes here.
I thought I was an acceptable kind of
evangelical. I’m not a
fundamentalist. My friends and I enjoy art, alcohol, and cultural
engagement. We avoid spiritual clichés and buzzwords. We value
authenticity, study, racial reconciliation, and social and
environmental justice.
A
lot of Christians have long thought they could sit on the sidelines.
Only the icky evangelicals they don’t much care for and the creepily
committed Catholics would have to deal with these issues and the people
who hate those deeply committed to their faith. They, on the other
hand, could sit on the sidelines, roll their eyes, and tell everyone
that they didn’t think it was that big a deal. They were, after all, on
birth control or watching whatever trendy HBO series is on or having a
cocktail or perfectly willing to bake a cake for a gay wedding.
Nonetheless, the secularists at Vanderbilt kicked her Christian group
off campus “for being the wrong kind of Christians.”
My friend Matthew Lee Anderson has some thoughts on it. In part he
writes, “if we do not grasp the joy of the martyrs, we do not
understand them at all.” I tweeted out Matt’s post yesterday, but was
reminded of it again today by my friend Nick. He sent me Rod Dreher’s
piece on the whole thing.
Folks, this is precisely why I started the saying “You will be made to
care.” It all stemmed from a diarist here at RedState who took the
position that gay marriage did not affect him, he did not care about
it, and he would never care about. But, of course, you will be made to
care. It is a larger issue than just gay marriage and many comfortably
naive, living at the margins of faith, Christians, think they have a
comfortable path through life in the United States.
Put bluntly: if you do have a comfortable path through life with no
fears at all of persecution, you probably are not a Christian. Islam
may be about submission, but Christianity is about suffering.1 The
suffering may not be major. It may be an accumulation of small sleights
over time. It may be the loss of a friend or just the expulsion of your
Christian group from your private school. But Christianity is a
religion of suffering and persecution.

You may think you can sit on the sidelines. You may think you can
opt-out of the culture war. You may think you can hide behind your
trendy naked Leena Dunham t-shirt while you sip trendy drinks talking
about trendy shows and writing columns demanding Christians be forced
by the state to bake cakes, provide flowers and farms, and offer up
photographs of gay weddings. But not only will you one day be called to
account to your God for how you advanced his kingdom, but on this Earth
you will be made to care. That does not mean you have license to be
bitter or angry or hateful. You should love others and help others.
Just do not expect anything in return.
[Full
Article]
The ultimate arrogance is to believe the is no higher power.
ReplyDeleteTim
Only person more dogmatic than a country, Baptist preacher is an atheist. Ones experience with the spiritual side of a person is enough. I tend to be still and let those that dont understand squawk on and enjoy the sound of their own hollowness.
ReplyDeleteIt would all be philosophical, if their fear hadn't led them to the attempt to destroy those that tolerate and prosper.
ReplyDeleteThey'll have hell to pay if the Christians finally just say: "I've had enough" and react to the persecution with violence. They're resourceful, gather as family and will be an opponent that strikes fear in the heart of their enemies.
The world will be a better place if they just leave them alone.
Nice Jess. Had a guy tell me once that when Christ returns He will be looking for a group of angry men. Fact is Christians are getting a bit weary of the bullying but thats what we do.
ReplyDelete"Only person more dogmatic than a country, Baptist preacher..."
ReplyDeleteHey! I resemble that remark. It's a good thing too or I'd have a hundred notches on my sixteen gun right now.
i My husband and I love the idea of the university, a place of libraries and lawns, a space set aside to grapple with the most vital questions of truth,...
ReplyDeleteSTOPPIT. Champaign brunch is not the new persecution. Today, throngs of Christians are being crucified and beheaded and exiled into barren hills. Yet these pampered retards think they are suffering for their faith?!? Really Rodge? Can you tell us how many bullets the Wedding Cake Crusaders have taken in the back for the love of Christ?
i Only person more dogmatic ...
Have to agree, Tom. Though preachers may be strident on occasion, you just can't get an atheist to shut up about religion.
God has revealed Himself in my life at every juncture my entire lifetime.
ReplyDeleteAtheists and agnostics, to me, are lost.
"you just can't get an atheist to shut up about religion."
ReplyDeleteI would qualify that with "movement atheists," then yes Helly. They are nihilistic evangelists.
When SCIENCE tells me the full and complete value of pi . . . .
ReplyDeleteI will acknowledge the value.
Till then, anything science can state, but not explain opens a door
thru which all the unworthy are reluctant to enter.
For those who believe in God no explanation is necessary. For those who do not believe, none is possible. ― St. Thomas Aquinas
ReplyDeleteHow long before we start hearing about our leftist government fighting discrimination due to "Christian Privilege"?
ReplyDeleteVlad-The-Inhaler
Insofar as I am concerned, a man may believe any damfool thing he is of a mind to. So long as he does not come after me with force or coercion to make me [or others] do anything about his beliefs, I will stand for his right to believe as he wishes.
ReplyDeleteThat, to me, is Civilized Behavior; admitting that none of us knows the Ultimate Answers but each seeks them in his own way, in his own time.
The journeys of others are none of my business, unless we both choose to discuss them.
But I suspect that those who are preoccupied with the journeys of others are neglecting their own.
e~C