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Friday, June 11, 2010

Pursuit of Truth must be done in love

Steve Cavallaro is truly prescient (written just after Dr. deWitt’s election as Moderator-Elect in 2008):

Dr. J.R. DeWitt, is a relative newcomer to the ARP (more recently than yours truly), but Drs. Evans, R.J. Gore and Sinclair Ferguson believed that his theological acumen are vitally important as the ARP addresses some important issues.  He would not maintain the status quo, and is quite fearful of a top-heavy denomination (which the ARP cannot be accused of having with any seriousness).

I agree that a man with theological acumen, and who will not seek to preserve the status quo but rather move us into the future, is greatly needed.  I’d humbly disagree with Sinclair Ferguson that Dr. DeWitt is that man.  One of the great things about the ARP, which I’ve needed to have modeled to me, is the emphasis on love as well as truth.  Our pursuit of truth must be done in love and hopefully preserve the relationships that already exist.  My experience with the Dr., limited as it is to debate on the floor of Synod, would make me hesitate in applauding his election as Moderator.  While I may side with him theologically, I fear that the price of winning the debate may be too great.  I really hope I’m wrong.

I would like us to take our theology more seriously, and build stronger relationships with other conservative Reformed denominations.  We do need to repent of our in-grown ways.  But that is a product of spritual renewal.  I want us to be more than well-connected with the PCA, OPC et al.  I want us to grapple with the call to be missionaries to this culture and our communities.  I don’t sense that winsome, missionary spirit with Dr. DeWitt.  I think we had the right motives but not the best choice, if that makes sense.  [Emphasis added]

I gratefully acknowledge the alumni who provided me this link. Thank you.

A Thought

“Never give in. Never give in. Never, never, never, never--in nothing, great or small, large or petty--never give in, except to convictions of honor and good sense. Never yield to force. Never yield to the apparently overwhelming might of the enemy. …

“Do not let us speak of darker days: let us speak rather of sterner days. These are not dark days; these are great days--the greatest days our [Alumni] have ever experienced; and we must all thank God that we have been allowed, each of us according to our stations, to play a part in making these days memorable in the history of our [College].”

Winston Churchill, speech to the Harrow School, 1941. Subtly modified as marked.

Thursday, June 10, 2010

Victory!

“This site is a parody of SAFE. Even so, no lies, personal attacks, or intimidation are allowed.”

pandora_large Hurrah!

Erskine has drifted doctrinally; Barthians and Neo-Barthians run rampant, as do evolutionists and non-inerrantists. Next year we’ll see a Neo-Neo-Barthian for sure. Chuck Wilson told me people at Erskine were “evil,” “terrorists,” “liars,” “intimidators,” and “mutinous thieves.” And some students told me their faith was threatened by an English professor telling them that evolution was true. This is how I knew change was needed.

[Each sentence is a separate link to an article or resource discussing it. Please freely add your own in the comments section].

Ever since that Chalking Incident where a few verbose students cried out for help against persecution and cops were sent to hammer down innocent Christian voices but ignore other students, we knew change was needed. Real change. This “Baal Cult” of Erskine has existed far too long and now “promotes unbelief.” Shocking! We need to “’man up,’ and crush this rebellion against the Kingdom of Christ” in the words of one minister of God.

We blasted Ruble. We blasted O’Cain. We blasted Crenshaw. We blasted Cheney. We blasted the Board. We blasted Alston. We blasted Robyn Agnew, then pretended we didn’t. Heck, we even blasted Jay West, and he doesn’t even work at the school anymore. We made a list and checked all our facts very, very carefully. We all know who’s naughty and nice. Publically. Very, very publically.

image001 I am told a story about Erskine, which I have verified to be true. Students a year ago demanded answers from the administration to various questions. They organized a meeting and asked the administration to show up. And you know what? They did! There were more administrators and faculty in that room than students by a wide, wide margin. People who work for a living spent an hour and a half speaking with any students who would listen. And I mean these guys were grilled – and they knew they would be. Where on earth can you find a college where every single administrator of significance – President, all the directors, Student Services, etc – met together at the behest of students to be grilled by students? I imagine nowhere else. If I didn’t know any better, I’d say these administrators cared.

Of course they’re a bunch of liars. A big problem? The new marketing slogan wasn’t “Christian” enough. And this should be self-evident: “Christ” is the third word. Just days later, SAFE formed.

We told that darned Board what to do but they just wouldn’t compromise about anything in the face of our suggestions. But we were never forceful. There were no consequences if they didn’t listen. Then somebody or other got the idea to reconstitute the Board because it was too large, though nobody is quite sure how each new member was chosen. Blind chance I guess (0.00000069% to be precise).

We wanted to reclaim the school from doctrinal drift and change campus life at Erskine. Er, actually we wanted to subtly modify the governance structure of Erskine. Er, whatever deWitt says, unless he’s saying something else. We hoped to make Erskine safe for Christians – so sue us! (oww, actually, that’s a sore subject). It was the right thing to do. The obvious answer is to kick out the Board members who won’t obey. So sue us! (oops, I’ve got to stop saying that).

And why not? We own Erskine, I repeat we own Erskine, let me say again we own Erskine, again we certainly own Erskine, I’ll clarify: we have a mother-and-child relationship to Erskine.

God calls us to never surrender His principles or allow the cancer of error to spread, even when it means firing people without just cause and breaking civil laws. What are these petty concerns when the teaching of Creationism is at stake?

All we wanted was for the truth to come out. Tell us what you think! We’ll listen! Please, students of all opinions, talk to us. We want our conclusions to represent what students and faculty actually think.

Why stand against us? We fight for the “bright future that is possible” with Erskine, says one Commissioner. We support Erskine – intellectually, of course, and time-wise. The Other Side uses their pocketbooks, but thank goodness we aren’t so debased as to try to “buy” Erskine! Now that we control Erskine’s future, I’m sure our donation patterns will change.

Our Interim Board was harmless – it just existed to change the bylaws of Erskine College, and eh, what the heck, maybe appoint a new President.

And then the lawsuit. Oh, the travesty of Christians suing Christians! You tried to justify the lawsuit by saying Synod cannot be impartial to judge actions that Synod has done! Fool! Of course Synod is impartial. Had you brought your complaint, the ARP Church would have impartially rejected it. This is how things are supposed to work. We were right the first time; we’ll be right the second.

Our own Rev. Phillips said it best why the plaintiffs should be ecclesiastically judged: “That they did not submit to the higher court (General Synod) is beyond dispute [because of the lawsuit].” Well said! How could they be so silly as to challenge our God-given authority to break the civil law, Rev. Phillips? Wonders never cease! Lots of people called for their repentance. Phillips cited “eternal consequences” for each of them. I fear for Young and Hering on Judgment Day!

Christians do not sue Christians! How many times do I need to repeat that? Christians do not sue Christians.

Except, of course, when such lawsuits are justified, in which case a lawsuit is just fine. Thank you, Moderator deWitt and Moderator-elect Maye, for unilaterally protecting us with an appeal, without seeking advice, without seeking permission, and without telling anybody what you were doing! Speed was essential – minutes counted. “I find it a little difficult to know how to respond to your question.” Indeed! Don’t ask questions – we’re busy fighting the dregs of Erskine! Lawsuits may be unbiblical, but justified appeals are not. Indeed, The End Justifies The Means!

We were assailed at every turn, muscled by moneyed interests and worldly passions, and hounded by internet blogs and nameless foes calling us all sorts of names. I am still outraged at their “un-Christlike” attitude and language, but am constantly reminded of the piety, and gentleness, and rationality, and toleration (yes, again I say toleration, and once more toleration) of other viewpoints by those who support us. Truly Men of God! You were courteous to those who opposed you, thankful for their service no matter how imperfect, and were publicly decent to a coworker for his achievement. Best of all, you shunned the polarizing rhetoric of men like Chuck Wilson. Bravo!

What of the “Other Side?” You said it best, Daniel, by quoting scripture in their faces. “Abusive” indeed. “Proud.” “Arrogant.” “Quarrelsome.” Commissioner Mulner was absolutely right: “hate-speech.” Yes, those questions to the Commissioners were hate-speech. We were the Righteous Persecuted.

But nobody has the right to challenge the integrity of men of the church. Nobody! You might point out a direct lie, or another lie by our Moderator, but we never investigated. Even when “Maximus” broke Matthew 18 by publically telling everybody what Dr. Crenshaw had done instead of speaking with him privately first, we weren’t concerned.

Through it all we kept our professionalism and independence. We critically examined a few professors at Erskine, judged his or her commitment to our vision of integrated faith and learning, and inferred the existence of a culture of corruption and intimidation at Erskine by the actions of a few. We united for the peace and purity of the church. We set up a school where Christians are not challenged by other Christians over the specifics of their faith.

We remained unbiased in the face of relentless attack by students and alumni who think Erskine is excellent. Our focus never left those few SAFE students who signed that petition which said, “As evangelicals we are a minority in the classroom, on the campus, and in committee meetings, and so our appeals at Erskine for greater faithfulness to its mission have not been answered.”

Evangelicals are a minority at Erskine. This is hard to understand, but true. Not only that, their identities were secret because of the “personal risk many of us, especially as students, are making by signing this letter,” to protect them from “retribution or adverse treatment on campus” by administrators. We’ve never heard any examples about this – strange, given the unbelievable publicity around incident one and incident two of the “Culture of Intimidation.” (Yes, little Virginia, two contested incidents does a culture make.) Where are all the examples? Doesn’t matter – we know they exist. We didn’t need the fact-finding Commission to tell us either. Recommendations were enough. Since members, like Paul Mulner, had never started public blogs espousing pre-conceived opinions about Erskine’s direction, they were entirely unbiased.

Through it all we blamed everybody else for Erskine’s problems – the Board, the administrators, the faculty, heck, probably even the students. We even claimed firing half the Board was not to blame for Erskine’s financial and accreditation problems now. Now that we have won so tremendously, you might think Erskine’s future is in our hands – that any future setbacks, budget deficits, low student and faculty retention rates, and accreditation issues will be our fault starting today. But you’d be wrong. These are all the fault of those who destroyed Erskine for so many years! I’m pretty sure we’ll never be to blame no matter how far in the future these disasters occur.

pandora_largeRev. deWitt truly did a wonderful job as Moderator. The ARP denomination is not larger than when he took office. It is not stronger. It is not more unified. It is not richer. It is not growing. But it still exists; this alone was quite an accomplishment.

This is the end. Our war is over. The Board won’t stand against us. We believe we’ve done a wonderful thing at Erskine – we think we’ve upheld Christianity from those “secularists,” I guess. Time will tell what Erskine becomes. We’ve opened Pandora’s Box, my friends. Behold the glory within!

I never did read the Other Side’s point of view about Erskine, but “I can’t imagine it being any clearer.”

These are my thoughts.

Signed,

a SAFE student scared of the vindictive and intimidating Administration

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

The Misery of the End, finale

huge_25_127453 I am constantly reminded of a child that pushed a rock just an inch, because he thought his toy soldiers needed it a bit closer to the edge of a hill. But he pushed half an inch too far, and the rock began to move of its own accord, picking up steam until it demolished a path through the family’s vegetable garden.

You see the analogy I hope. Synod was certainly not wrong to demand that Erskine uphold its mission statement – actually, such a demand is wonderful. But they pushed too hard, too fast, without thinking of the consequences, and without questioning whether that rock was already close enough to the edge. Oh Synod! Your shortsightedness and ignorance of other perspectives will be the death of Erskine as it was and as you want it to be. Erskine will change forever because you did not consider the consequences of your actions. These consequences are terrible indeed!

You may blame the Trustees for the lawsuit, and the budget deficit, and the student shortfall next year, and for failing to implement the mission statement, and whatever else, and perhaps that criticism is warranted. But Synod’s outlandish decision (firing a select Fourteen of Thirty) was not the most tactical and least infuriating action possible. Surely – surely – there was another way. You failed to find it – you failed to even look. This was not not wise. It was not wise at all.

Once Upon a Time

People disagree. Some want Erskine to shift toward ARP doctrinal purity, inerrancy declarations, Creationism, and integration of faith and learning to the extreme (I’m still not sure what this means – the Commission never told us). Others want Erskine to be more open – some professors of other denominations, students of other denominations, no inerrancy statement, etc. These two opposing views competed and kept Erskine in relative stasis, or maybe weighted a little in favor of conservative-shifting Synod.

Erskine was kept from being one thing or the other, but instead a happy mixture of the two.

… And everybody was happy.

Well, not perfectly happy, not free of irritation, not ideal, not free of complaints and petitions to Synod, not free of that one English professor, but happy enough to make Erskine enjoyable and successful for hundreds of students each year.

I’m not just talking about the SAFE-students, who were generally happy enough with Erskine to attend without transferring, graduate with excellent academics, and participate in campus life and institutional committees. I’m also talking about the students and alumni who grew so much in their faith and academically at Erskine, and wrote about it. The students who grew in their faith and academically, and filled out the student survey. The students and alumni who despite their words to the contrary now, were perfectly content with Synod appointing nearly every trustee on the Board. They were happy with Synod influencing the administration (or trying to). They were happy being an ARP-affiliated school. They were happy with the Commission. We love the ARP Church!

But now, all of that has changed.

Hindsight is always 20/20, but I remember hearing that Synod had scheduled an emergency session and thinking to myself, what’s the big deal? Nothing shocking will come of it; they won’t do something rash.

…And now we fight.

How does it end?

I received a very wise email some weeks ago. More times than I care to admit, I opened that email and started to write a response, but each time stalled. Because it’s really hard.

This letter asked a simple question: how does it end? How will “trust” be restored? Forget the fighting, war-of-words on these blogs, Facebook, etc. Tell us something useful – how can we reconcile?

…I still have no idea.

I would love to compromise with “TOS.” In fact, I want more than anything to compromise with the other side. Before all this started I was a member of the Other Side – truly, we all were. And you know what? I’m still a member of the Other Side. I still want Erskine to be a Christian liberal arts college. I still think professors should integrate faith and learning in the classroom. I still think certain professors are wrong. I still believe finances at Erskine are not perfect. I still want Trustees who are “competent, engaged, and independent.” I still want Christian students (who comprise a vast majority of the student body) to feel safe, secure, and challenged to grow. I still think intelligent design/creationism should be mentioned in Biology (as they are to this day), the Big Bang mentioned in Physics and how it relates to Christianity (as it is to this day), mistakes in Scripture transmission discussed in Bible (as it still is), Christian character exemplified in every class and in all things (as I believe professors do). & etc.

In short, I want a return to Erskine as it was, because Erskine as it was was excellent. Nothing SAFE, Chuck Wilson, Ken Wingate, or Dick deWitt can say will change that. As David Danehower said so perfectly on the Alumni Facebook group, there is a reason students consistently pick an expensive, small, insignificant college in the middle of nowhere to receive a college education. And there’s a reason students emerge from here with a competitive education and excellent career and graduate school acceptances. Because Erskine is a good school. An excellent school. A Christian liberal arts school.

If intimidation was happening each day, if fiscal mismanagement was as rampant as we are led to believe, if the Board of Trustees was truly “evil,” if Christians were intentionally marginalized by faculty, administrators, and other students, and if the mission statement was compromised so hopelessly that Erskine could no longer effectively teach students, Erskine would have gone bankrupt long ago. But it hasn’t.

And as to students’ Christian faith? Some SAFE-students testified that their faith was rocked by Erskine; this is very tragic. I do not know how many people leave Erskine with a stronger Christian faith or a weaker one. I can only look at the opportunities on campus and wonder, how are we so lucky? Erskine employee Paul Patrick and his interns. BCM. Student Christian Association, with the second-largest, student-assigned budget on campus. The Barn. The faith and guiding influence of the President, who does all he can to minister and interact with as many students as possible, like coming to every sports game and talking to students in Moffatt each day. The testimony and witness of professors, many of whom (if not all) are Christian. The testimony and witness of students, many of whom are Christian. Erskine is an oasis; blaming a weakened Christian faith on Bill Crenshaw seems a bit weak.

The Terror of Assured Defeat

The horror is, it may already be too late. Erskine is now just like that child’s rock, pushed by an overeager and excited group that did not stop to think what might happen. Stopping it now might be nearly impossible.

SAFE was absolutely right of course – one might even say essential – to keep Erskine from becoming all liberal. What Chuck Wilson has done is wonderful – truly. He said terrible things, but he pointed out problems and gave his opinion. We need people to push Erskine to the Right, just as we need people to push Erskine to the Left. But they overshot the goal. Synod’s actions were a game-changer that altered the balance of power substantially. Either they win and Erskine rocks powerfully towards one radical ideal, or they lose, and Erskine rocks towards a different radical ideal. Neither way is good; neither is the excellent Erskine of today. We need a balance. (We also need the civil and moral law to be obeyed, but that’s a different story).

The terror is, saving Erskine may be too late even if the Plaintiffs give up their lawsuit and Alumni start trusting Synod again. SACS is involved now and dislikes the influence of Synod at all. Once bitten, twice shy. SACS seemingly won’t let Erskine be bitten again. And deWitt and Maye seem confident in the eventual success of the Appeal and won’t stop. A resolution coming before Synod would accept the Board’s original compromise, but even if it passes, what assurance does the Board have that half of them won’t be fired in the future? What salve can bring Trust back to the alumni? Most importantly, what can heal Erskine’s damaged reputation?

I have no idea how to restore trust, friend emailer. The boulder of assured defeat won’t be easy to stop.

Conclusion

I need to be very clear. I agree with Synod’s and the Commission’s intentions. I do not oppose what Synod did because I disagree with what they want (a Christian liberal arts college). In my opinion, few disagree with them. I oppose them because I think we are already there, as close as we can hope to get(and because I believe they broke the moral and civil law). Can improvements be made? It should go without saying. But firing the Fourteen, restructuring the governance of Erskine unilaterally, making false statements about the Commission’s role, and demonizing those who disagree with them does not make Erskine more faithful. I expected better from men of the Church.

Tomorrow, pastors and elders, you will take up the business of Erskine. Whatever you do, whatever motions you make, will have consequences. Think them through. Rationalize. Consider.

Remember what Ken Wingate said to you just four months ago if the Commission’s recommendations were not passed: the “due influence” of Synod will be lessened. Consider his comment anew this week, and wonder what will happen if Synod does not act this time in compromise and reconciliation. I want this boulder to stop; I fear you are the only ones who can stop it. I also think it will hurt.

I will never change your mind, dear reader, about whether Erskine is excellent or not. I will never convince you of Erskine’s excellent integration of faith and learning, imperfect though it may be. But what I hope – what David Dangerfield, David Danehower, Howard Wagler, and the entire community on the Alumni Facebook group hope to show you – is that SAFE is not all there is. There are other students and alumni out there who do not agree with SAFE’s conclusions. There are other students who believe Erskine is excellent today, that Christians are not a minority on campus and are not sidelined, that ones’ faith can be strengthened on today’s campus, that teachers integrate their faith into their teaching and, more importantly, into their everyday lives. In other words, there are hundreds – thousands – of students, alumni, professors, and administrators who want you to do what you have always done, and nothing more.

Never forget, never, not in the heat of the moment or over a cold drink by the lake, that Christians just as ardent in their faith and just as passionate about Erskine’s future disagree with SAFE and the Commission about Erskine’s present. SAFE spoke very well and we thank them for it. Now listen to the other side. If you do not listen you will never hear.

I pray you will.

Monday, June 7, 2010

The Misery of the End, pt 2

Mercifully, we approach the end.

As we approach Synod this week, a comment by Dean Turbeville on Chuck Wilson’s blog reveals what’s at stake. I encourage you to read the entire thing, but I’ll quote just a portion here:

Chuck, the issues have now become quite clear: in several weeks the Synod will simply have to decide if it wants to have a Christian liberal arts college and a reformed seminary, or not. … There is one other option: “man up,” and crush this rebellion against the Kingdom of Christ through faithful churchmanship. Only then will we have a chance of seeing the potential of these schools finally realized. We will see what the ARP Synod is made of this summer!

This comment, sincere though the author may be, demonstrates everything that is wrong between Synod and Erskine.

Everything.

What a contrast Turbeville presents! Erskine will either remain in “rebellion” against Christ’s Kingdom, or Synod will act decisively to fix it! What has happened, that good-hearted and sincere believers think Erskine is in league with the devil? Board members are “evil” “terrorists.” Christian students are intimidated, sidelined, and according to that SAFE petition, “are a minority in the classroom, on the campus, and in committee meetings.” Heck, after hearing Turbeville’s words, is it too late to sign up for SAFE? Fix Erskine! Temperance joins the Bandwagon!

I truly have no doubt that were I a Christian living far away from the Erskine World without any first-hand knowledge, I would join that Supporters of Synod site and congratulate them for waging Holy War against “doctrinal drift!” Not only that, I’m absolutely convinced that most – if not all – of the professors at Erskine would do the same. Nobody wants a college that intimidates students. Nobody wants a Christian liberal arts college that rejects Christ. Nobody wants a school in “rebellion” against God. No, I’m fairly confident that each professor at Erskine would gladly fight against such things and be outraged that anybody – anybody – would dare stand against them.

… But it just aint so.

An Excellent Idea

President Ruble welcomed the Commission with open arms and a glad spirit. Truly, there was no stronger supporter of the Commission’s creation. “Come and see Erskine,” we might paraphrase his words. “Come see what we do.”

He was so excited about a commission because he believed Erskine had been misrepresented – and misunderstood – for far too long. Good-hearted but distant people simply cannot know everything there is to know about an institution. Listen to Chuck Wilson & Company for too long to provide your only view of Erskine and you could, understandably, start to believe them. Maybe Erskine isn’t the golden child of the ARP Church like we thought. Heck – 140 current students and alumni are crying out for help, claiming they are “intimidated” because they are Christians. What the heck! What’s going on here?!

Effective and incessant marketing has told the evangelical Christian world that Erskine had failed; our job at the time of the Commission was to show them that it hasn’t. Stand strong. Show the truth. Open every door. Dr. Ruble believed that if the Commission could shine a light into every dark corner and show what Erskine professors actually do, the truth of Erskine might be known. If people knew what Erskine really is, we won’t need to listen to editorialists pushing their own agendas and prejudices. An impartial commission should solve that.

So the Commission was the single greatest thing Synod could have done to “fix” the Erskine mess. Good for them!

The Result: What Erskine Is

But we still have no idea.

We have a lot of anecdotal evidence of Erskine’s depravity: two tales of intimidation, students running around at midnight chalking the sidewalk, some classes that fail to adequately integrate faith and learning, and so forth. But even assuming this is all true, it is far from a universal picture. Call me silly, but reworking an entire college needs more justification than one exchange between a student and faculty member, as terrible and uncalled for as that “intimidation” may be (we are still assuming the student is right here). I want to know everything in summary. Is that so hard?

The great tragedy of the Commission is not their disastrous recommendations – rather, their great tragedy is opacity. This investigative committee failed to document anything. We know nothing more about Erskine today than we did when they started, despite their boast of interviewing anywhere from 80 to 150 people and spending over 900 man-hours. For example:

  • How many students are intimidated by faculty or administrators in a typical week?
  • How often is a student ridiculed by faculty or administrators for being a Christian?
  • What percentage of the student body is evangelical Christian, and what percentage of Christians are present in leadership positions on campus?
  • How many classrooms effectively integrate faith and learning?
    • Corollary: how do you effectively integrate faith and learning?
    • What are examples of classrooms that do not effectively integrate faith and learning
    • What are examples of classrooms that do?
  • How many professors agree with “inerrancy” as defined by Synod? How many do not?
  • How many recent faculty hires do not agree with “inerrancy?”
  • How is Intelligent Design/Creationism currently handled at Erskine, and how should this change?
  • How is the Big Bang Theory handled at Erskine, and how should this change?
  • Chart the progression of Erskine’s conservative vs. liberal progress over the years, paying special attention to the years from 1977 until 2010. Is Erskine more conservative or more liberal, and give evidence.
  • What are the visions that so divide the Board? What are the visions that so divide the administration? How many support each “side?” How might Synod compromise/reconcile these opposing views? Are these divisions present in Synod as well?
  • How many interviewed faculty spoke in favor of Erskine as it is?
  • How many interviewed students spoke in favor of Erskine as it is?
    • How many students did you speak with?
    • How many non-SAFE petition signers did you speak with?
    • Did you ask those you interviewed if they had voiced complaints to Synod?
    • Were the people interviewed a fair cross-section of Erskine (different depts., years, etc?)
  • What opinions of Erskine did each Commissioner have before joining the Commission? Essay format preferable. Full disclosure essential. Did any change their minds?
  • Compare the Board size of Erskine to similar colleges. Bigger? Smaller? Same size?
  • Compare the attention given to students at Erskine to similar colleges in the region. More? Less?
  • Compare the academic accomplishments of students at Erskine to similar colleges in the region. Better? Worse?
  • & etc. Comment with the questions you want answered.

Where’s the beef?

Obviously I don’t want names here. Strip the data of identifying information. But you have to support your recommendations and findings with some hard facts and numbers. Throughout ten points in the Preliminary Report, the Commission stressed the divisions in the Board, the need to reduce its size, and the culture of intimidation. That’s it. No examples. No hard data. Nothing.

That would be fine if the Commission reached a conclusion we all expected. But they didn’t - the Commission reached a conclusion absolutely contradictory to the results of a faculty and student survey conducted just weeks later. And the only stated evidence of wrongdoings at Erskine – fiscal mismanagement and one incident of intimidation – had been rectified before any member of the current Board had taken office.

So with conclusions contradictory to what most faculty and students said in a recent survey and a report devoid of details and criticizing events that occurred before the current Board took office, an observer might easily miss the “emergency.”

So where’s the beef?

False Dilemma

The real tragedy is that one’s preconceptions of Erskine did not change because of the Commission – there was no light shined on Erskine, only heat (to use the Commission’s analogy). They used their influence and power through Synod to enact change without showing one shred of evidence of current problems; they sincerely believed that current problems exist, but didn’t actually show any or provide evidence to support their conclusions.

So we each have our own opinions of Erskine, defined by who we talk to and what company we keep. Nothing has changed. The last glorious chance to see Erskine in its true light – dirty laundry and successes both, with evidence to back it up – was squandered.

Do you see now why Turbeville’s comment is so frustrating to many who love Erskine? He presents to us a false dilemma, the choice between a “Christian liberal arts college and a reformed seminary, or not.” There is no choice here to make. Nor would anybody at Erskine or anywhere for that matter make a choice different from Turbeville’s. A vote against the Interim Board is not a vote against Christianity, and donations to the EC Foundation does not equate to secularism. The recent quest for “independence” from the ARP Church only started after Synod acted – we were all content to let Synod appoint Trustees just three months ago.

Erskine has not, nor was it trending, towards a secular institution. Quite the opposite – as pointed out on this blog, Erskine is more conservative and “ARP Christian” than at any point in recent history. I know Turbeville & Company believe Erskine to be a cesspool of anti-Christian sentiment, but it just ain’t so. Or if it is so, the Commission never proved it.

I understand that many of you will disagree strongly, emphatically, over that last paragraph. You think Erskine is anything but a “Christian liberal arts institution” because of various bad professors, bad administrators, intimidation, whatever. There is no way I can convince you otherwise, unfortunately. I wish I could.

But I do believe that most of us strive towards roughly the same end, even if we can’t agree on where Erskine is now. Yes, there are small differences, like professors who do not uphold inerrancy, or professors who believe evolution is true, or what have you. These are important theological issues, and it irks many in the ARP Church that people disagree with their interpretation of scripture. It irks me that many people “misinterpret” scripture differently from the way that I do. But you know what? At some point, in my opinion, we’re all going to have to understand that Christians can still be Christians but disagree on finer theological issues, that not every professor at Erskine needs to be ARP to integrate faith into the classroom, and that ultimately, learning of and experiencing others’ interpretations of scripture is a good thing, not an evil.

If that final point can be agreed upon, we can all work together. I picture two teams on a tug-of-war rope, struggling with all their effort against the other, yet inexplicably each wanting to reach the same side of the field. We’re all pulling the same way – towards a Christian liberal arts institution; this infighting is what destroys us, not the so-called “culture of intimidation” against Christians that was coined a few years ago.

I simply refuse to believe that a majority of those who support Synod’s actions (if not a majority of Synod itself) are so exclusionary as to demand that each professor at Erskine must hold firmly to all ARP tenets.* Maybe I’m wrong, but I certainly hope this is not the case. I also believe, just as strongly, that professors at Erskine, administrators at Erskine, and those who oppose Synod’s actions generally all want a Christian liberal arts college and do everything they can to see that vision realized. Their effort has been marginalized. I think we’ve all been deceived.

In my heart of hearts, I think we’re all pretty much on the same side, and I weep for Erskine. A few men and students have convinced many that the Erskine we cherish is gone, forever, if we do not adhere to certain demands. I continue to hope and believe that many on both sides of the proverbial fence want to see Erskine continue the fine tradition of producing independently thinking students who are strong in their faith and committed to a lifetime of Christian service. But if I’m wrong – that truly, everybody who sides with that opaque Commission wants an exclusionary and restricted Erskine, well, then see you in court. Just as Chuck said so eloquently, we have no other choice. For as long as there is a glimmer of hope for Erskine as we knew it to exist, we must pursue every avenue to keep her safe.

We are Students and Alumni for a Faithful Erskine.

We are SAFE.

 

Tomorrow: The greatest tragedy here – worse than the Commission’s dual failures in their recommendations and their opacity – is that Erskine’s path has changed. I call this the Misery of the End. Part 3: my plea to Synod, and why ultimately, Chuck Wilson is right.

 

*Pre-emptive sardonic comment: “Yea, you’re right, it’s stupid to demand the professors at the ARP denominational school accept ARP beliefs! How dumb! They should be able to believe anything they want, no matter how heretical we ARPs think it is. And they should teach our ARP kids their heresy too!

“Institutional Failure”, says SAFE - Email Exchange, Bill Crenshaw and “Maximus”

We have been provided the following email exchange by Dr. Bill Crenshaw of Erskine College relating to the one “culture of intimidation” issue between a student and Dr. Crenshaw during the Commissioners’ Forum as described publicly on ARP Talk and Students Aligned for a Faithful Erskine (SAFE).

This email exchange is available at Erskine for Everyone.

You might want to compare paragraph 6 of the SAFE editorial (“Several weeks later…”) to paragraphs 4 and 5 of the 3/15/2010 email sent by Maximus (“In light of it…”).

Sunday, June 6, 2010

“I find it a little difficult to know how to respond to your question.”

EMAIL EXCHANGE between BILL STUART, MEMBER OF EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE OF SYNOD and DICK DEWITT, MODERATOR OF SYNOD

These (update: legitimate) unedited emails chronicle a series of exchanges between a member of the executive committee of Synod and Moderator deWitt. My analysis follows.

Many thanks are necessary to whoever in ARP-Land sent this to me. Your email address made me laugh.

==BEGIN EMAIL EXCHANGE [all emphases added]==
TO: Moderator and Members of the Executive Committee
MONDAY, APRIL 26, 2010

        Below are a series of emails that the Moderator and I have exchanged over the past week and a half expressing my concern about some of the actions that have been taken and who has authorized those actions.  By providing you with each of the emails I feel sure that you will able to follow my train of thought.

    Bill Stuart


TO: MODERATOR DEWITT
FROM: BILL STEWART

    Mr. Moderator,

        I received copies of the appeal today and I was wondering who authorized the Synod to appeal the ruling?  I had not been contacted, as a member of the Executive Committee, so I assume that the authorization came from some other source, and I was wondering what that was?  Please bring me up to speed, as I am preparing my report to Presbytery and will need to know the answer to that question.  Thanks and have a great day!

    Bill


TO: BILL STEWART
FROM: MODERATOR DEWITT
April 21, 2010

    Dear Mr. Stuart,

   I find it a little difficult to know how to respond to your question.

    The Executive Board of the General Synod authorized me to appoint a Liaison Committee to work with the attorneys secured by Mr. Paul Bell.

As you will recall, Mr. Keith Munson and Ms. Sandra Wilson were introduced to us when we met on March 18.  My understanding of the Board's decision was that these attorneys were to defend the General Synod against the action brought by three members of the Erskine Board of Trustees.  I have no recollection that the Board restricted the mandate of these attorneys to the initial hearing in Newberry.

    Every Associate Reformed Presbyterian who is aware of the struggle in which we find ourselves engaged must lament the decision of the plaintiffs to bring suit against the Synod.  It is painful to think that the tithes and offerings of God's people have to be employed to defend the Church against such an extraordinary assault.  How can we consider Erskine College and Seminary as anything other than agencies of our denomination?  Yet it is precisely this issue which lies at the heart of the present dispute.

    I am praying, many of us are praying, that the Lord God will bring the whole matter to a peaceful conclusion very soon.  The plaintiffs must surely know that they may very well be inflicting inestimable damage on the institutions which they have served and in relation to which they have exercised oversight.

    In the hope that I have answered your question satisfactorily, I am,

    Very truly yours,

    Dick de Witt

 

TO: MODERATOR DEWITT
FROM: BILL STEWART

Mr. Moderator,

        I understand your response, but at every turn I hear lets get this matter settled here and now and I thought perhaps that more time might have been allowed for that to take place.  I would also assume from what you are saying that should the Synod not prevail with the appeal that then an appeal could be fashioned for a higher court, and on and on.

        Thanks and have a great day!

    Sincerely,

    Bill

 

TO: MODERATOR DEWITT & MEMBERS OF SYNOD’S EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
FROM: BILL STEWART
April 26, 2010

Dear Mr. Moderator,

              I just wanted to follow-up on our email correspondence last week with a few additional thoughts.  Our establishment of the Liaison Committee was an important and necessary action, reflecting the Board’s recognition that these legal issues fall under the authority of the Executive Board of Synod.

    When this committee was formed, the intent was clear that it would manage the day-to-day relationship with the attorneys rather than the enlarged scope of authority you have adopted as referenced in your email.  By your account the Liaison Committee has the power to do whatever is necessary—regardless of costs—in the name of our defense.

    Throughout any legal saga there are a few seminal moments when the client needs to make a decision that will have far-reaching implications legally as well as financially.  On these occasions prudence argues that the larger authorizing body, the Executive Board of Synod, should be active participants in the decision making.

Certainly, the filing of an appeal of the preliminary injunction would be one of these moments.

    In your email response you implied that the Liaison Committee made the decision to appeal.  However, according to one of your own Liaison Committee members this committee has not met, nor was the decision to appeal discussed or made by the Liaison Committee.

    This raises concerns for me on several fronts.  First, not only do we have the appearance of unilateral decision making, but in fact that is what has occurred.

    Secondly, the Synod is a party to legal recourse (the filing of the appeal) with its associated costs, which has not been authorized. This puts the Synod in an untenable position – morally, ethically, etc.  One or two men cannot be and have not been charged with making decisions of this magnitude.

    Thirdly, it seems to me that we are dangerously close to or are now actually guilty of violating the standards of “competence, engagement, and independence” that have been so highly touted.

    And finally, the matters that are before us legally, institutionally, and denominationally are serious and demand thoughtful responses.  We, the decision-making body, need to be treated as such.  In light of this the Executive Board of Synod should not hesitate to meet via conference call to discuss these weighty matters.

    In closing, I know these are difficult times and I can appreciate how time consuming all of this must be.  I do not know anyone who does not lament the situation that has developed.  We, the Executive Board of Synod, should be working hard not only to respond appropriately to the legal matters, but to move toward solutions that will take this issue out of the civil courts, while simultaneously restoring relationships institutionally and personally.

    I look forward to hearing from you and would ask that you hit the “reply all” button when you reply, because this really should be a discussion that the entire Executive Board is able to participate in.

    Thanks for your kind attention,

    Bill

==END EMAIL EXCHANGE==

 

Hard to answer indeed!

Shouldn’t the Executive Committee know what goes on with the ARP Church? I’m trying to imagine a world where an Executive Committee discovering an appeal after it was filed makes sense… and my imagination isn’t good enough. I mean, if anybody should know, shouldn’t the Executive Committee? How on earth did this happen?

Let’s read the history. I quote deWitt’s own words, published on April 13, just four days after the injunction was upheld and before the appeal  was filed:

On March 18 the Executive Board of the General Synod authorized me to appointed a Liaison Committee to work with the attorneys who represent us [the committee that ran the initial defense, and then filed the appeal we are discussing now]. The members of the committee, in addition to the Moderator [deWitt], are Steven J. Maye, Robert E. Patrick, and Peter A. Waid. Steve is the Vice Moderator and Moderator Elect; he is also serving as Chairman of the Liaison Committee. Rob is the minister of the Bartow Church and Vice Moderator Elect. Peter is minister of the Spartanburg Church.

A Liaison Committee was absolutely necessary to coordinate with the attorneys over Church defense. Running the initial lawsuit is one thing; but making an appeal is far more serious. How was such a decision made? By deWitt’s own reckoning, the Liaison Committee was tasked with everything relating to the lawsuit – no permission or advice was needed from anybody else, saying “I have no recollection that the Board restricted the mandate of these attorneys to the initial hearing in Newberry.” What? You didn’t think it was necessary – not in the least bit important, prudent, or wise – to ask the Executive Committee whether they wanted to continue the lawsuit? Fund the lawsuit? Discuss strategy of the lawsuit? Prayerfully consider the lawsuit?

No, apparently such thoughts never entered his head.

… How odd.

It’s entirely likely that the Executive Committee did not explicitly restrict the Liaison Committee’s mandate; but really, should they have needed to? DeWitt’s defense is that he wasn’t told “no”; let’s ask the nearest parent whether this is a legitimate excuse. DeWitt is not some child running down the church aisles because his parents never forbid it. “But mommy, you didn’t tell me not to!” Give us a break, Moderator! We trusted you to run this church faithfully, and your reply is “they didn’t tell me not to?” What else have you done that we didn’t specifically deny? And should our Moderator take whatever is not forbidden?

But wait. There’s more.

Let’s give deWitt the benefit of the doubt. The Liaison Committee, tasked with running the lawsuit (and apparently free from accountability to, or conference with, the Executive Committee and Synod as a whole), meets with the attorneys and decides to appeal like deWitt said.

Uh, well actually, that’s not what happened either. Stuart wrote:

In your email response you implied that the Liaison Committee made the decision to appeal.  However, according to one of your own Liaison Committee members this committee has not met, nor was the decision to appeal discussed or made by the Liaison Committee.

What the deWitt is happening here?

We are not so stupid as to believe two attorneys decided for themselves to file an appeal and hoped they would be paid. Somebody gave them permission. Let’s ask deWitt himself what happened, shall we? In the same letter quoted above, deWitt predicted:

Decisions will have to be made as to our future course of action. Moderator Elect Steve Maye and I believe it would be irresponsible to turn aside from the task in hand. You should be aware, however, that our defense of the integrity of the Church and her institutions will be both time-consuming and expensive. [emphasis added]

DeWitt and Maye decided it would be “irresponsible” to give up the lawsuit, and instead of consulting with the Executive Committee or the Liaison Committee, decided to file three motions in appeal, a decision that would extend the financial obligations and time horizon of Synod’s involvement enormously, not to mention damaging reconciliation efforts that were then underway.

Do not miss the point of this story. DeWitt and Maye together, solely and alone, without the authority of the Executive Committee, the Liaison Committee, or the full Synod, filed an appeal against the Plaintiffs. Whether the appeal is for better or worse, this decision was not theirs to make. Bill Stuart’s response is priceless. “One or two men cannot be and have not been charged with making decisions of this magnitude.” [emphasis added] DeWitt’s original response was just as priceless:

 I find it a little difficult to know how to respond to your question.”  Yea, you’re not joking.

untitledTry answering this one, Moderator: why did you fire Fourteen trustees without cause, divide the Church, claim the Commission had nothing to do with governance, and now direct the course of Synod by sidelining the Executive Committee and your very own Liaison Committee, sir? What has this man done to us?

More directly, this is the second time on this blog I have pointed out a direct contradiction between what Moderator deWitt said and what Moderator deWitt did. The ARP Church must decide how to deal with these… inconsistencies.

As for me? “Total depravity,” baby. DeWitt no more, no less, than all the rest of us.