Submit or be derecognized
For a long time now elite opinion on college campuses has been trying to shut down speech that doesn’t stick to their script, especially religious speech. Specifically, Christian speech. The clampdown has now become a little more overt: the California State University system has “derecognized” the InterVarsity Christian Fellowship (IVCF), an Evangelical group, on all 23 of its campuses, as explained in this article [here] by Ed Stetzer in Christianity Today. The reason for the derecognition (if such a word exists) is that the ICVF refuses to change its rules requiring leaders in the group to be believing Christians. The state of California has said, in other words, that Christian groups will not be recognized as official groups on campus unless they open up their leadership to people who don’t share, and may even be hostile to, their very reason for existing in the first place.
InterVarsity Students spreading . . . bigotry and intolerance? |
Consequences of derecognition
You may be wondering what the consequences of derecognition are. According to Greg Jao, National Field Director & Campus Access Coordinator, there are three main things that IVCF chapters will lose:
1)
Free
access to rooms (they will now have to pay, and will be shut out if a
“recognized" group wants the room).
2)
Access
to student activities programs “including”, he says, “new student fairs where
we meet most students.”
3)
“We
also lose standing when we engage faculty, students and admimnistrators.”
He doesn’t
explain in detail what that last point entails. Tish Warren led a similar IVCF
group at the private Vanderbilt University a few years ago that experienced a
similar fate. In a separate Christianity
Today article that Stetzer quotes at length she explains:
Because we were no longer allowed to use
Vanderbilt's name, we struggled to convey that we were a community of
Vanderbilt students who met near campus.
In other words, as close to invisible as they can be short of being banned altogether.
What’s behind it all? Stetzer says that “The university system has decided that speech with beliefs that undergird it—and shape how it is organized—has to be derecognized.” I suppose you could put it that way, but not all “speech with beliefs” is really being targeted. He allows Warren to be somewhat more specific. She explains that the banned groups had “crossed a line”, one that
Is Christianity "Hate Speech"?
What’s behind it all? Stetzer says that “The university system has decided that speech with beliefs that undergird it—and shape how it is organized—has to be derecognized.” I suppose you could put it that way, but not all “speech with beliefs” is really being targeted. He allows Warren to be somewhat more specific. She explains that the banned groups had “crossed a line”, one that
was
drawn by two issues: creedal belief and sexual expression. If religious groups
required set truths or limited sexual autonomy, they were bad—not just wrong
but evil, narrow-minded, and too dangerous to be tolerated on campus.
This states the case more plainly. Notice that it is the same in the wider
world: support (not simply tolerance) of what used to be considered sexual
heterodoxy is the standard by which elite opinion decides who enjoys basic
rights and who does not. Warren and Jao
are both being rather too generous when they posit a desire for “democracy” as
one of the motives for the anti-Christian people. No, democracy is not a priority; these same
people have no problem with federal judges overturning state laws and
constitutional amendments voted in by 60-70% of the electorate, and at the
university level you will not see them applying to the vegetarians, Muslims,
and certainly not the LGBTQ groups the same unreasonable demands they have
imposed upon the InterVarsity Christian Fellowship.
Don't read that, kids - it might be hate speech |
We don't need no stinkin' constitution
First of all, what the State of California
is doing is a direct assault on the constitutional rights of Christian students. The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution starts
out as follows:
Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof . .
.
Telling
members of a religious group whom they must choose as their leaders is an
exceptionally unsubtle trespass on the free exercise of religion – and I know
that courts have found all sorts of ingenious ways to make laws and
constitutional provisions mean the exact opposite of their clear meaning, but
if we’re not willing to fight something this blatant, we might as well run the
white flag up the pole and get it over with.
Since the courts have also found that the restrictions the Bill of
Rights places upon Congress also apply to all other government organs,
including state run schools, this is clearly a constitutional issue (as it is
not at a private school like Vanderbilt).
This potential damage here also extends
beyond the walls of the university. The
half-spoken message that California State is sending its students is that
Christian belief is bad: “not just wrong but
evil, narrow-minded, and too dangerous to be tolerated on campus”, as Tish
Warren said of the attitude of the authorities at Vanderbilt. If such a thing is simply a given in the
environment where they are formed for four years, how many students are going
to be prepared to be open to and tolerant of Christian belief when they get out
. . . especially if the outside environment agrees with what they experienced
at the university?
Bad is bad
And,
as I have noted in these pages many times, there is a conscious and coordinated
campaign underway in the United States and the rest of the Western world to “derecognize”
Christianity as a whole. The
mainstreaming of anti-Christian bigotry lays the foundation; simply holding
traditional beliefs about morality and marriage makes a person fair game for
the foulest and most hateful verbal abuse (see here and here). Somehow the targets of this vileness, and not
the spewers of it, are scorned by elite opinion-makers as “haters” and “bigots”. And who is going to argue when haters and
bigots are defamed, or even threatened with loss of their livelihood (here, here, here)
if they oppose the dismantling of traditional morality - or simply decline to participate actively in
its destruction? This harassment, I submit, is
in fact persecution, if not on the level of Iran or Iraq, and sets the stage for worse: once Christians have been completely driven beyond the pale, what's to prevent harsher forms of persecution? And in fact serious persecutions almost always start with little thing, and with the delegitimizing, the "derecognition", if you will, of the targeted group,
Finally, I haven’t discussed the fact that our colleges and universities
have, in a very short time (and practically unremarked), undergone a radical
change: where formerly they acted in loco parentis, a role in which
they protected their students and enforced moral standards, now they actively promote
promiscuity and licentiousness . . . and actually punish students for upholding
morality. How can this possibly turn out
well?
So,
to all you Ed Stetzers out there, hold your head up – we have nothing to
apologize for. Nobody is confusing California State University with the Islamic
Republic of Iran, but what’s happening there is bad enough, and if we allow
harassment and injustice to continue, more serious persecution is sure to follow.
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