Is Monica Goodling being persecuted for her Christianity and her evangelical educational background? Lots of newspaper stories and blogs have reported on her and they seem to be fascinated with her academic resume, which includes degrees from Messiah College and Regent University, two evangelical schools. For some of this in action, check out her testimony to the House Judiciary Committee on May 23, 2007. (The relevant testimony is on pg 31 & 32.)
What did Monica do to deserve this? First off, before capitulating and testifying before Congress, she originally pled the 5th amendment. That wouldn't be your first answer to the well-known question, WWJD? Nobody likes a hypocrite, and even less so a Christian hypocrite.
Secondly, as a graduate of a Christian college myself (Harding University) I can say that Rep. Cohen's appraisal of the quality of an evangelical college education, at least according to what I experienced almost 20 years ago, is correct. I believe that Mark Noll said it best when he wrote “The Scandal of the Evangelical Mind”….the scandal is that there isn't much of one. Evangelicalism’s legacy of anti-intellectualism is well-documented (try this for starters). What I experienced at Harding (except for the science and math courses which don't normally lend themselves to deep reflection anyway) could hardly be called an education. Indoctrination was the name of the game and if any real thinking threatened to break loose, it was quickly shut down. Thankfully, I transferred to Harding from two years at a state school where almost all of my intellectual development in college actually took place. Hopefully the situation at Harding and other schools like it has changed, but the negative public perception persists. Because I know several faculty members at Messiah, I know for a fact that it really does have great academic credentials, but unfortunately it gets lumped in with other evangelical schools.
So if Goodling is being persecuted for these reasons, then perhaps it's understandable.
The supreme irony of the Monica Goodling story, though, is that her alma mater, Messiah College, traces its roots to an Anabaptist sect. Historically, Anabaptism includes a strong current of pacifism and a worldview that assigns primary importance to Christians' citizenship in the Kingdom of God rather than the nation-state (but unlike the Religious Right today, they didn't try to wrest the nation-state INTO the Kingdom of God) . Due to their denial of the supremacy of the nation-state, members of this radical branch of Christianity REALLY WERE the target of severe and bloody persecution in centuries past. And to this day you won't find an American flag flying at Messiah College. If Goodling learned anything of this legacy, unfortunately she must have forgotten it, because now she is part of an administration that is steeped in a version of Christianity far, far removed from the peace-making counter-culturalism of Messiah's founders.
Tuesday, May 29, 2007
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9 comments:
Amen on that last paragraph (which seems to have gotten cut off, btw). I am one of those radical Anabaptist grads of Messiah College. Actually, I converted to Anabaptism while I was at Messiah. This bad press is sad. I am afraid that not only will it give Messiah a bad reputation among secularists, but that it will attract fundamentalists to Messiah. But if they convert to radical Anabaptism while there, then, hey... all the better, I guess :)
I'm a more recent graduate of Harding (2001). I personally wouldn't go there again, but I don't think that it is quite as bad as what you experienced. The Bible department is the worst, I think. There are a few professors who are great, but many are simply awful and only have the job because they toe the party line. I don't think that it is as bad in the other departments, but that varies depending on the department head as well as the individual professor. I've taken some graduate level classes and I feel that I'm more prepared in some areas than the other students and less prepared in other areas.
Indie: I think that you are right; there was improvement in the last 20 years, especially as the quality of applicants rose (they were still open admissions when I attended). The business dept. and nursing depts. were good when I was there and probably even better now. However, in courses requiring really deep thought about "great" ideas, I think the stance then (and might be now) is that all the answers are already known.
"Indoctrination was the name of the game and if any real thinking threatened to break loose, it was quickly shut down."
Honestly, its a joke to think that secular schools don't have similar biases. Especially with the countless accusations of bias throughout the secular education system.
Also as a student currently attending Messiah College id like to correct a couple things you've said...
1."And to this day you won't find an American flag flying at Messiah College."
There are actually 2 flags flying on campus. They are there as a requirement of the NCAA, which by the way shows where the schools true alliances are (Money rather than Principles).
2."Messiah College, traces its roots to an Anabaptist sect."
While this is true, Messiah is now an "interdenominational" school, and the largest denomination on campus are actually the baptists followed by non-denominationals.
As for the Goodling case, its nice to see that you've judged her without seeming to know why she took the fifth. You made a wonderful generalization that everyone whose taken the is a terrible hypocrite and a bad Christian. Do you know why there was practically no coverage of her testimony? Because nothing illegal happened! The fact that one of the main focuses for the panel was attacking Christian education should show you how stupid this whole thing really was. Everyone knew nothing illegal had occurred, It was all merely a political dog show.
Steve, I see that you've left similar comments for Nancy as you have for me (here and here), but your tone is surprisingly harsher here ("you've made a wonderful generalization," etc.). I appreciated your comment regarding the flag when you commented on my blog, as I wasn't aware of the fact that Messiah flies the flag for sporting events, so I am grateful for your information. On the other hand, I'd like to challenge you to take on a more reasonable and considerate tone, modeling the "gracious Christianity" that Messiah is trying to instill in its students.
"Messiah is now an 'interdenominational' school, and the largest denomination on campus are actually the baptists followed by non-denominationals."
I am not aware of any official documents of the school in which it identifies itself as "interdenominational." It appears that the website makes no reference to the College being "interdenominational" or "nondenominational." While the school may have attracted a multiplicity of various denominationally affiliated students, it remains (as the mission statement says) "committed to an embracing evangelical spirit rooted in the Anabaptist, Pietist,
and Wesleyan traditions of the Christian Church."
Not only the school's history, but its present identity are shaped by its Brethren in Christ foundation (that is, its three "roots": Anabaptism, Pietism, and Wesleyanism). If students disagree, they have that freedom, but that does not change the commitment of the school.
Nancy, I came to your blog through the link from Higgaion. Thanks for your thoughtful writing -- I've added you to my RSS feeds.
I'm interested in your experiences as a former conservative Christian (Southern Baptist), a current Episcopalian, an Arkansan (by immigration), and a college professor. I haven't read deep into your blog, but I was deeply affected by your experiences at Harding (where some students I recruit to my honors program end up going), and wondered to what state school you transferred. I am committed to inquiry without fear and academic freedom, and believe that it serves students better (despite any ideological "party line" that might exist at secular schools) than the rather paradoxical attempt to create liberally educated (that is, "free") human beings through conservative indoctrination. I'd love to hear your thoughts.
Donna, thank you for your comments and for your kind comments. In answer to your question, my first two years of college were at the University of Michigan-Dearborn, after which I transferred to Harding, spending 3.5 years there. You asked for my thoughts on academic freedom vs. conservative indoctrination, and that is a question worth pondering...I feel another blog post coming on...
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