Socrates
March 25th 2003, 09:04 AM
BreakPoint with Charles Colson
Commentary #030325 - 03/25/2003
Scarlet Blight
Rutgers and Religious Freedom
Note: This commentary was delivered by Prison Fellowship President Mark Earley.
InterVarsity Christian Fellowship is a campus ministry whose goal is to establish "witnessing communities of students and faculty who follow Jesus as Savior and Lord" on college campuses. Naturally, you expect these communities' leaders to be followers of Christ themselves.
You also expect a university that lauds diversity not to interfere with InterVarsity's mission. Unfortunately, that's not the case for InterVarsity members who take Exit 9 off the New Jersey Turnpike.
That exit leads to Rutgers University, a state school. There, officials proclaim that they are "committed to making diversity a way of university life ... " They point to the more than 350 registered student groups on campus, many of which receive "direct financial support from mandatory fees collected from each Rutgers student."
Their stated goal is to make each member "of the University community feel welcome, valued, and respected"-but not all members.
Last fall, Rutgers suspended InterVarsity Multi-Ethnic Christian Fellowship's local chapter for violating the university's anti-discrimination policies. How? By requiring that its leaders be committed to InterVarsity's "Basis of Faith and Purpose."
According to the Office for Student Affairs, this is religious discrimination and disqualifies InterVarsity Multi-Ethnic Christian Fellowship from receiving financial support from the school.
After the ruling, InterVarsity moved off campus and tried to settle the matter through negotiations with university officials. When the negotiations failed, it filed suit in federal district court claiming the group's right to freedom of speech and religion had been violated.
As a former attorney general, I can tell you that I'd rather be representing InterVarsity than Rutgers. The double standard at work here is obvious and indefensible. Other student organizations, such as the Gay and Lesbian Alliance and Students for a Free Tibet, are not required to consider for leadership people who do not believe what they believe.
It is only when Christians insist on compatible leaders that it becomes discrimination. And it is not just at Rutgers. According to InterVarsity, its "right to be a recognized student group on campus has been challenged on dozens of campuses in the past decade."
While this is the first time that InterVarsity has had to sue, its struggles point to an even bigger problem: the curtailment of religious freedom on campuses across the country. That is not my conclusion; it is the conclusion of the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, or FIRE.
FIRE calls the "ease with which students are denied the right to associate freely among themselves, even in matters of conscience and religion," "profoundly disturbing." Just as bad, this denial of rights is usually accompanied by a "fundamentally unjust" inability to expose the denial.
In response to what is happening on college campuses across the country, FIRE has produced guides to religious liberty and the use of student fees. Both former Attorney General Ed Meese and Nadine Strossen of the ACLU have endorsed them. I suggest that you visit FIRE's website and download this important material. And tell Christian college students you know about the guide as well.
If enough of us are aware of our rights, then perhaps groups like InterVarsity will finally be able to follow their mission-free from the need to sue for the rights everyone else takes for granted.
Printer-Friendly Version
Copyright (c) 2003 Prison Fellowship Ministries
THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.
"BreakPoint with Chuck Colson" is a daily commentary on news and trends from a Christian perspective. Heard on more than 1000 radio outlets nationwide, BreakPoint transcripts are also available on the Internet.
BreakPoint is a production of The Wilberforce Forum, a division of Prison Fellowship Ministries.
Commentary #030325 - 03/25/2003
Scarlet Blight
Rutgers and Religious Freedom
Note: This commentary was delivered by Prison Fellowship President Mark Earley.
InterVarsity Christian Fellowship is a campus ministry whose goal is to establish "witnessing communities of students and faculty who follow Jesus as Savior and Lord" on college campuses. Naturally, you expect these communities' leaders to be followers of Christ themselves.
You also expect a university that lauds diversity not to interfere with InterVarsity's mission. Unfortunately, that's not the case for InterVarsity members who take Exit 9 off the New Jersey Turnpike.
That exit leads to Rutgers University, a state school. There, officials proclaim that they are "committed to making diversity a way of university life ... " They point to the more than 350 registered student groups on campus, many of which receive "direct financial support from mandatory fees collected from each Rutgers student."
Their stated goal is to make each member "of the University community feel welcome, valued, and respected"-but not all members.
Last fall, Rutgers suspended InterVarsity Multi-Ethnic Christian Fellowship's local chapter for violating the university's anti-discrimination policies. How? By requiring that its leaders be committed to InterVarsity's "Basis of Faith and Purpose."
According to the Office for Student Affairs, this is religious discrimination and disqualifies InterVarsity Multi-Ethnic Christian Fellowship from receiving financial support from the school.
After the ruling, InterVarsity moved off campus and tried to settle the matter through negotiations with university officials. When the negotiations failed, it filed suit in federal district court claiming the group's right to freedom of speech and religion had been violated.
As a former attorney general, I can tell you that I'd rather be representing InterVarsity than Rutgers. The double standard at work here is obvious and indefensible. Other student organizations, such as the Gay and Lesbian Alliance and Students for a Free Tibet, are not required to consider for leadership people who do not believe what they believe.
It is only when Christians insist on compatible leaders that it becomes discrimination. And it is not just at Rutgers. According to InterVarsity, its "right to be a recognized student group on campus has been challenged on dozens of campuses in the past decade."
While this is the first time that InterVarsity has had to sue, its struggles point to an even bigger problem: the curtailment of religious freedom on campuses across the country. That is not my conclusion; it is the conclusion of the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, or FIRE.
FIRE calls the "ease with which students are denied the right to associate freely among themselves, even in matters of conscience and religion," "profoundly disturbing." Just as bad, this denial of rights is usually accompanied by a "fundamentally unjust" inability to expose the denial.
In response to what is happening on college campuses across the country, FIRE has produced guides to religious liberty and the use of student fees. Both former Attorney General Ed Meese and Nadine Strossen of the ACLU have endorsed them. I suggest that you visit FIRE's website and download this important material. And tell Christian college students you know about the guide as well.
If enough of us are aware of our rights, then perhaps groups like InterVarsity will finally be able to follow their mission-free from the need to sue for the rights everyone else takes for granted.
Printer-Friendly Version
Copyright (c) 2003 Prison Fellowship Ministries
THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.
"BreakPoint with Chuck Colson" is a daily commentary on news and trends from a Christian perspective. Heard on more than 1000 radio outlets nationwide, BreakPoint transcripts are also available on the Internet.
BreakPoint is a production of The Wilberforce Forum, a division of Prison Fellowship Ministries.