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Friday, May 28, 2010

UpChuck (preliminary)

Update: Creepy! Just 15 minutes after I wrote this Tara Mauney wrote a similar piece on the Alumni Facebook group. Anyway, you should read hers too.

Full UpChuck later, but for now, a prediction:

Chuck wrote in Extra 12, “Finally, let us make sure that we have righteous nominees for the Board.”
I predict the slate of nominees proposed by Moderator deWitt will be approved by the Nominating Committee. I might be wrong, but that’s why it’s called a “prediction.” And if that happens – if five people appointed to the interim Board, including some Commissioners, are nominated to join the Board of Trustees (and if they are subsequently elected), Synod will have finally and truly finished everything.

I can think of no better way for Synod to destroy any hope of reconciliation than by nominating these five individuals. I can think of no better way to start reconciliation than by rejecting them. deWitt has made his move – Nominating Committee, you are about to make yours.

Thursday, May 27, 2010

The Misery of the End, pt 1

Update: Corrected factual errors per comments. I suggest you read the Comments section for opposing views to those I’ve suggested here.

Mercifully, we approach the end.

The Commission has come and gone. It’s recommendations are in legal limbo. Erskine has a new President. It’s time to end this madness.

There are two immediate problems. First, nobody trusts Synod/ARP Church or nobody trusts the Board/Erskine/Alumni depending on who you think was wronged. And make no mistake about it – we all feel very, very wronged. So wronged that the Board started a lawsuit to see things restored to the way things were, and so wronged Synod appealed to see Erskine change from the way it was. There is no trust anymore, and trust must be restored before Erskine can heal.

Secondly, Erskine has a tremendous governance problem. We’ve been content to allow Synod the prerogative of appointing almost every Trustee on the Board for decades now. Synod runs this show and they still needed to fire half the Board to get their way. In other words things worked out pretty well so far. Our problem is that Synod cannot be trusted to keep up the status quo; now, Alumni fear, Synod will single-mindedly nominate trustees who will do exactly as they are told. Shazam! Erskine changes.

Trust must be restored. With trust must come compromise. And compromise here is one tough nut!

Improbability (Impossibility?) of Compromise

I have thought long and hard about how to compromise with the “other side.” I even jokingly suggested firing the other half of the Board, since we are verbally told the only thing that matters is size and not ideological composition. I don’t think that idea took very well.

Consider the vast difference in composition between us. Supporters of Synod are roughly unified about a common objective: upholding the actions of Synod in a fight against “doctrinal drift” (sorry, weasel words there but I don’t have a list of names). There is no universal agreement that Synod was wise to fire half the Board, but it was justified. Most importantly of all, convincing others and organizing is already accomplished – they control actions now through Synod. This is excellent: if Synod brokers a compromise everybody will accept it.

Those who oppose Synod are not unified in the slightest. Opposition to Synod’s action spans the entire gauntlet from either separation or reunification, a change in Erskine’s direction or no change in direction, Dr. Norman or no Dr. Norman, the same number of Synod-appointed trustees or fewer, and etc. Several blogs have arisen, the Facebook group is very active, and members who have never met each other face-to-face debate the finer aspects of church doctrine and missional fidelity with new “friends” living hundreds of miles apart. And none of them agree on what “should” be done. The only common denominator is the belief that Synod was royally stupid to force the issue last March.

Synod may compromise, but with who? The Alumni, Administration, and Faculty have enormous vested and intellectual interests here but no power. Only the Board has the authority to bargain with Synod (the Board that exists solely due to a restraining order that is under appeal by Synod as we speak). Realistically speaking, what chance does this Board have in compromise when considered “illegitimate” and “illegal” by the group they are trying to compromise with?

Worst still, Synod has no incentive to hurry. In the vanishingly small chance Synod wins their appeal or (more likely) the Plaintiffs withdraw their suit, the interim Board takes control and compromise will no longer be necessary. Synod then has no incentive to rush things, and indeed Chuck Wilson implores them to spend $600,000/year meant for Erskine on legal bills until the other side gives up or goes broke (the first is unlikely, the second ignorable). Every minutes hurts Erskine vastly more than it hurts Synod, and Synod is apparently content with an appeal that could take years.

And the final span in the vast canyon of compromise improbability? “There are irreconcilable and competing visions about the direction of the college and seminary among the members of the Erskine Board of Trustees.” The Preliminary Commission Report made it very clear why the Interim Board was necessary and it had nothing to do with size! Synod must compromise with the full Board of Trustees that includes all the Trustees who agree with Synod – roughly half the Board. How vast this canyon of disagreement really is!

Synod
---Roughly unified until moderates take stand against Commission

vs. Board of Trustees
---Half of Board opposed to Synod’s actions
-------Competing visions on Board for Erskine’s future governance
-----------Competing visions on Board for EC/Synod affiliation
---------------- & etc.

So the Board is divided between pro-Synod and anti-Synod, and divided again in how to oppose Synod. Such division makes agreement within the Board nearly impossible – not to mention brokering a compromise with Synod as well. And actually, this huge problem is not even the half of it! (To be discussed below).

Quick! Tell the Board to Compromise Surrender, already!

Put simply, Synod wants something. In order to compromise the Board must give them a bone, a steak, or an arm.

The problem is that we don’t know what will appease the Synodites. We must begin with the Commission report (after all, it’s what started this whole mess). There were four recommendations:

  1. “Restructuring [shrinking] the Board”
  2. Replacement Interim Board
  3. Nomination process: Board of Trustees no longer has the role of suggesting nominees for service
  4. Criteria for Trustees - “competent, independent, engaged”

Point one: immediately shrink the Board of Trustees. Possible compromise: shrink the Board of Trustees over a long period of time, say, six years. Uh, wait, the old Board suggested this. The only conceivable compromise over shrinking the Board was suggested – and rejected. Synod would have nothing to do with it.

Point two: Since we’re compromising an interim Board is not necessary because presumably we’ll make Synod happy. Though as mentioned previously the Commission did not exist to deal with governance alone, and firing Fourteen members had more to do with ideology than bodies. Since the law won’t allow group firings, members would need to resign.

Point Three: Nomination process. Legitimate source of controversy; the Board believed it should have the ability to non-bindingly recommend members. Let the Board win here. After all, they are non-binding recommendations. As in, I recommend you brush your teeth every night. Are we really going to wage war over shutting up your annoying mom?

Point Four: Criteria for Trustees. Everybody agree.

Four recommendations, two disagreements: an excellent compromise for the first point and a ludicrous #3 to fight over. And it wasn’t good enough.

So what will satiate them? A strict and literal reading of their demands (“aspirations”) is roughly outlined as three points in ARPTalk 21:

  1. Erskine and Seminary must be faithful to The Philosophy of Higher Christian Education and mission statement
  2. Erskine must “promote the goals, the welfare, the growth, and the unity of the ARP Church”
  3. Erskine should realize “that the ARP Church owns the land upon which the institution sits.” – that “in its great generosity and sense of mission, the ARP Church has allowed Erskine to use the land on which Erskine College sits.” (Their generosity astounds me.)

Wilson cannot speak for all ARPs, of course, but since no Supporters of Synod are pounding down my doorframe denouncing the guy, I’ll assume he’s close to the mark. The Preliminary Report and SAFE Petition also speak to the above, primarily #1.

Expanding on these “aspirations” then, the Commission, Chuck Wilson, Supporters of Synod FB group, SAFE, etc seem want the following: to fire or force resignation of Crenshaw, Burnett, and Hering Bush for not affirming inerrancy. Get rid of the new professors who don’t uphold inerrancy. Mandate teaching of Creationism in Biology classes, as Mr. Wingate demanded (and hire new Biology professors when the current ones leave, as they would). Integrate faith and learning into each classroom (and to be quite honest, to this day I have no idea how you would do this beyond what is already being done. The Commissioners have said explicitly you cannot quantify it). Get rid of the troublesome administration – a few names have repeatedly been mentioned. And we know a dozen or so Board members are not wanted. (I can only assume this is what they want, but really, if these men teach or administer unacceptably, is there any way they can remain at Erskine? And so forth).

I would like to compromise – I really would. But compromise is difficult. Everybody agrees with the First Aspiration and differ only on execution. Since I have no idea what Synod would change about #1 I cannot offer anything in compromise. Compromise also means firing a lot of people. A whole lot. Justified? Maybe so, maybe not. But I feel a bit odd saying, “I’ll trade you Bill Crenshaw to withdraw the appeal” or “shrink Board immediately if you won’t fire O’Cain.” Gets awkward when you put names on it, doesn’t it? Is it right to bargain over these professors, administrators, and Trustees who, quite honestly, are doing the very best they can to make Erskine excellent? Is it right considering many do not believe Synod has the authority to demand such changes anyway? Yet Synod will presumably demand nothing less because these men and women have violated various principles held by the ARP Church such as inerrancy and run Erskine slightly differently than Synod desires. Aspiration #3 – Synod owns Erskine. You don’t compromise with the jewel in your crown.

Silly Board! Compromise Surrender already! Why do you refuse to work with Synod? Why can you not compromise? Stubborn Oxen!

Stubborn Oxen! The Board That Just Won’t Stop Compromising

I am reminded of the years just before World War II when Hitler demanded – and was freely given – many territories in Europe. The Rhineland. Austria. Czechoslovakia. None were sufficient – in fact, together whole countries and regions were not sufficient to satisfy him. Hitler wanted more. He carved up Poland because of this insatiable thirst for land. World War II was the result.

Leaning

Germany pushing over Europe

Synod is no little Hitler (let me say that again – Synod is no little Hitler!), but the analogy roughly stands. I feel a bit like Poland. Synod has been demanding change at Erskine for decades. And always the Board listens and always the Board is right to do so. No, Chuck Wilson-ites have not received everything they asked for, but they’re pretty darn close. Erskine is, at least, as conservative as it used to be, and at most, much more conservative than it used to be. Bill Crenshaw himself admits he would never be hired today. The idea that Erskine is slowly drifting leftward doctrinally is sensationalism. The Erskine of today is more conservative than the Erskine of yesteryear.

(You quoted me here, right? Synod is no Hitler!)

The Synod passed a few statements on Christian Higher Education and so forth in the late 1970s. As late as 2007-2008 the Board rewrote the mission statement to make it even clearer what Erskine’s mission is – a move strongly supported by those opposed to the Board today. Charlatans, says Synodites, but you cannot argue that the Board didn’t pay attention to Synod’s demand of missional fidelity (they differed in application only). Repeatedly over thirty years the Board has tried to keep Erskine a liberal arts Christian college.

And succeeded! Erskine is a strong liberal arts college! The Mission statement is upheld! I have yet to see the mission statement not be upheld! In my opinion, Erskine realizes its mission statement and integrates faith and learning excellently. I’ve blogged about this before and will gladly blog about it again if asked. Synod told the Board to enforce the mission statement. In the opinion of this anonymous blogger who either has no “balls” or is a faithful SAFE disciple, Erskine has done so. Somebody, please, give me an example of a lack of integration of faith and learning. Despite a Commission dedicated to this very principle I have yet to see it.

Appeasement recently culminated in a requirement that each professor sign a statement swearing to believe in the inerrancy of scripture. This seems an odd requirement in that many confessing Christians do not hold this belief and that understanding many disciplines does not require inerrancy of scripture. Notice that I do not say I disagree with inerrancy; I simply say that whether Dr. Crenshaw agrees doesn’t matter a great deal when teaching English.

But regardless, never forget two things: the Board followed Synod’s directive to the letter, Dr. Ruble enforced the requirement to the best of his ability (CURSE the man for not being a mind-reader!), and today every recent hire at Erskine has sworn to believe inerrancy. Synod had no real authority to force this mandate; they relied on the Board to listen and do as they were told. This is about as close to “Czechoslovakia” as it comes.

The Board obeyed Synod despite the legitimate arguments to not do so, namely: that while inerrancy might be popular among reformed theologians, the number of excellent professors teaching Biology, Chemistry, Physics, History, Art, Sociology, and every other discipline imaginable is far less. If a criteria of “accept inerrancy or else” is given the topmost priority, many fully qualified, fully competent, and excellent teachers that would gladly teach at Erskine will be turned away. We might get lucky a few times, but statistically, the quality of professors at Erskine will decrease. This is inarguable; the Board knew of this argument and apparently believed obeying Synod was more important. Czechoslovakia.

Again, my point here is not that inerrancy is wrong, nor that professors are any better who deny the tenant. No, my argument is that in this the Board yet again upheld Synod’s demands.

Then the Commission was formed and eventually demanded the Board to shrink itself immediately, and a couple other requests, or else you’re fired!** The Board counter-offered (i.e. compromised) to shrink over six years. This is remarkable; the Board believed itself to own Erskine and Synod technically had no authority to demand anything or any change in the Bylaws of the Board. It would be as if the Board of Erskine told Synod to fire Moderator DeWitt and shrink the denomination by 50 churches; the Board has no authority and Synod is not forced to obey. Synod rejected the six-year counteroffer (“my way or the highway”) and fired half the Board to get their way (Poland!)

** SIDEBAR **
“Do what we say or we’ll fire you!” This fact was pointed out to me in a comment a few posts ago, and indeed, the Aquila Report is perfectly clear on this point. You realize what I said, right? The Commission told the Board to make their changes or they would be fired. I called this “blackmail” before. Another term is “coercion.” I hope somebody will email the original document if it still exists.
** END SIDEBAR **

We have here a Board that might have dropped the ball spectacularly in their achievements, depending on your point of view, but that inarguably tried to acquiesce to Synod’s will over and over again (and were right to do so!). Compromise! More incredibly, compromise with a body that firstly, does not own the institution, secondly, appoints Trustees at the free will of the Board, and thirdly, has no legal authority over Erskine except for historical precedent and the good-will of the Board. I may tell my coworkers to cook me dinner each night, but they would do so under their own volition. So too with the Board.

But seriously, at some point you’ve got to say “enough is enough.” Poland! After all this acquiescing Synod calls the Board stiff-necked? Seriously? See – no matter how correct the Board was to listen to Synod, appeasement never gets you anywhere. There is always more. Eventually you go too far, demand too much.

None of this changes the enormous problems with compromise today originating within the Board, and of course all of this occurred before Synod fired half of them. Presumably the Board would be more divided now and less likely to bend to Synod’s demands. But never let it be said the Board is deaf. They listened to Synod imperfectly, but plenty. Plenty.

Stubborn Mule! The Synod That Just Won’t Compromise!

Excellent! The Board is clearly willing to compromise. Heck, they even wrote a document begging for reconciliation a few weeks ago. Any takers?

“Sadly, the board of the Alumni Association has made clear their contempt for the ARP Church, the deliberative processes of its courts, and its vision for Erskine.  While I hope that some repair of that breach is possible, as one member of the General Synod [and a Commissioner], I don't see what the Synod needs to do to compromise.” – Paul Mulner, Commissioner (emphasis added)

This quote from Ask a Commissioner was written before the “reconciliation” letter I mentioned above, but as far as I know nothing has changed. The opinion of Commissioners and the ruling body of Synod believed two things very clearly: they should (or ought to) be in control of Erskine through the Board of Trustees, and secondly, they own Erskine. I’ve already quoted the Commission reports that state unequivocally that Synod owns Erskine. Then we have ARP Talk which states no fewer than four times that Synod owns Erskine (ARPTalk 4, 21, 25, and Extra 6).

Please understand: this is why Synod refuses to compromise. In their opinion, compromise is ludicrous. We own Erskine or We ought to be able to control Erskine through the Board they say. Why compromise with your employer? Do what we tell you or we’ll find somebody who will. When slowed down in transforming Erskine quickly, Synod (rightly) balked. As with my own possessions, Synod believes it may do whatever it wants to its college. Stupid, wise, or indifferent, Synod owns the thing and Synod will do what it wants!

As documented previously on this blog, Chuck Wilson no longer believes that Synod owns Erskine directly; we might infer this belief is now rampant among Synodites. This is a substantial victory for the anti-Synod crowd. But regardless, Synod still believes it has the legal and historical authority to control Erskine (hence the legal appeal).

Until this belief changes – until Synod accepts that Erskine owns itself, governs itself, and obeys Synod as a courtesy and not by coercion – then Synodites will see every compromise as unnecessary, every concession a knife in their side, and every employee rejecting strict inerrancy as a painful and unnecessary surrender of Biblical principles. No, Synod will never willingly give up Erskine to doctrinal drift when they believe they own it and control it.

If Synod did own Erskine, I couldn’t blame them.

But do they?

 

Weekend: The distraction called a “compromise proposal” and why it was released, why Chuck Wilson is absolutely right, insight into what Chuck knows that he shouldn’t but that would be unbelievable if true, and how I believe trust can be restored.

 

*Since I recognize that some will misinterpret my historical example above, let me spell it out clearly: Synod is not like Hitler! But appeasement/surrender has been exercise here just like Europe from 1935-1939. It is appeasement, not Nazi Germany, to which I make reference.

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

About those Emergency Synod Minutes…

Many people out there in ARPLand/Erskineland would dearly love to get their hands on the Minutes to the Emergency meeting of Synod.

Well, so would I!

Thanks to a contributor, we know how to do so. Because the Emergency Synod was not an executive session, the minutes are not “secret” and will be freely available in September in printed form co-joined with the Summer Synod, and in digital form available via email.

Physical copies cost a few dollars each and will presumably be mailed or available for pickup at the ARP Office.

Digital copies are available online free of charge from Paul Bell, the Executive Director of Synod, at pbell@arpsynod.org.

My question then is this: the minutes are already written. Why prevent their release on the internet now?

The meeting of Synod was only two days, and minutes are effectively written when the meeting is over, anyway. We are in our third month since the meeting – it is high time to let us see the minutes. Attendance at the Emergency Synod was lower than normal meetings; shouldn’t church representatives get a chance to read the official recording of what happened? Shouldn’t members who were there get a refresher in the motions made, speeches given, and votes taken? Shouldn’t their congregations get a chance to see what happened and send their pastors off with full knowledge?

Think of all the incredible events occurring this Summer at Synod: a heresy trial, the lawsuit, and possibly restructuring the entire governance of Erskine. It seems a little bit important to know what happened to bring all this about!

In the entire history of the ARP Church has a Synod EVER met without having the minutes from the previous Synod? I sincerely doubt it.

Internet distribution costs nothing. I believe the minutes should be released online now, before the Summer meeting of Synod to allow proper discussion among the delegates.

What do you think?

 

Tomorrow: How To Compromise

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

My Submission to ARPTALK*

[The following is humor. Please keep that in mind as you read].

Dear Rev. Dr. Charles Wilson,

Hi, long time reader, thought I'd share a few words. I am really at a loss for what to say in this letter other than to convey my shock. The thing I'm the most frightened about is that Erskine College is morally debased and has no convictions of right or wrong. But there's the rub; I myself cannot compromise with Erskine College; it is without principles. I cannot reason with it; it is without reason. But I can warn it and with a warning it must unquestionably take to heart: Erskine College must have some sort of problem with reading comprehension. That's the only explanation I can come up with as to why Erskine College accuses us of admitting that its opinions represent the opinions of the majority—or even a plurality. What I actually said is that the biggest difference between me and Erskine College is that Erskine College wants to destroy the natural beauty of our Christian education system.

There's no shortage of sin in the world today. It's been around since the Garden of Eden and will surely persist as long as Erskine College continues to abet a resurgence of laughable exhibitionism. Erskine College's attitude is indubitably, "You don't agree with me; therefore, you must be a foul-mouthed flimflammer". Now that that's cleared up, I'll continue with what I was saying before, that it's easy to tell if it's lying. If its lips are moving, it's lying. Prudence is no vice. Cowardice - especially Erskine College's macabre form of it - is. I, in turn, insist that Erskine College believes that it commands an army of robots that live in the hollow center of the earth and produce earthquakes whenever they feel like shaking things up a bit on the surface. That's just wrong.

It may not be within the scope of this letter to encourage people to restore the world back to its original balance, but I would like to mention that we are a church of prostitutes. By this I mean that as long as we are fat, warm, and dry we don't care what Erskine College does. It is precisely that lack of caring that explains why from secret-handshake societies meeting at "the usual place" to back-door admissions committees, Erskine College's fans have always found a way to generate an epidemic of corruption and ecclesiastical unrest.

If you're not part of the solution then you're part of the problem. Erskine College is out to flout all of Synod's rules. And when we play its game, we become accomplices. It's not just the lunatic fringe that's in Erskine College's corner; a number of previously respectable people have begun backing it. Erskine College's fusillades sound so noble, but in fact Erskine College's opinion is that the existence and perpetuation of hooliganism is its own moral justification. Of course, opinions are like sphincters: we all have them. So let me tell you my opinion. My opinion is that Erskine College wants to prevent us from calling for a return to the values that made this school great. If it manages to do that, it'll have plenty of time to focus on its core mission: gagging the innocent accused of protesting obstructionism-motivated prosecutions. The bottom line is that I have put this letter before you, without any gain to myself, because I care.

Sincerely,

Temperance Dogood

 

*** Almost good enough for ARPTalk, huh? Humor generated automatically online at http://www.pakin.org/complaint. I thought it was pretty funny. I added the first sentence (“long-time reader”), changed the subjects (Erskine College/ARP Church/”ecclesiastical unrest”) erased a sentence that didn’t make any sense, and added bolding. Everything else was original. Go auto-generate your own!

Monday, May 24, 2010

UpChuck! – ARP Talk Extra 11

[A new series, “[Look the Facts] Up,Chuck!”, posted soon after I find out about each new ARP Talk missive. Because truth is not much harder to write about than fiction.]

Today: ARPTalk Extra 11, an amalgamation of old issues already covered on this blog and a few new issues. I’ll cover the new stuff.

2. “No competent person who understand what an evangelical Christian is will call EC/ETS distinctively evangelical Christian.” I begin to question my own competency since I clearly believe Erskine is evangelically Christian. Oh dear. But let me get this straight: every administrator for 35 years ignored and subverted the mission of EC? Huh? John Carson? Don Weatherman? These are two examples from this decade that are admired to no end by Synod-supporters. Not to mention editorializing “subverted.” There are no differences of opinion in Chuck-world: you either do what he thinks is Erskine’s mission, or you are a dirty rotten subverter.

4. Tenure is a terrible system that I despise. Go figure. My problem here is not the conclusion, but Chuck’s apparent ignorance as to why Erskine has a tenure system at all (it’s certainly not to increase faculty productivity). Secondly, Chuck is so blinded by rage that he never bothers to figure out who is publishing/researching/etc and who is not. I know faculty are contributing far more than he lets on. Chuck, maybe you should compile a list for us instead of weasel words like “scant” and “some.” Let us know what you find.

5. “A faculty that very largely rejects the faith of the Church they were hired to promote.” Actually, pastors promote the ARP Church; faculty promote teaching and Erskine and the BoT. I know this is confusing. I am “very largely” hesitant to challenge Chuck’s gut feeling that Erskine professors are godless atheists (or worse, Methodists), but humor me here. Does he have a list? Or do we just know it is a lot?

Did you catch what he said, though? “In a sane world, the BoT owns and operates Erskine College and Seminary in trust for the ARP Church.” What a striking contrast to the Commission reports and Mr. Wingate’s answers at Erskine when this all started! In case you have forgotten, the Commission report said, “The ARP Church owns and operates Erskine College and Seminary through the trustees it appoints,” and in the complete report, the ARP Church “owns Erskine and appoints its board.” Enjoy the little things, my friends.

6. “The Scandal of Erskine is a president who uses bifurcated disingenuousness in dealing with a personnel issue.” Uh oh, somebody’s snitching again. Now Chuck knows the “private” communications of Dr. Ruble. Chuck’s right of course: we should immediately fire Dr. Crenshaw for unsubstantiated and unproven allegations of intimidation in the classroom. This is illegal, but that didn’t stop Synod in March!

8. How exactly is Dr. Ruble to blame for fiscal mismanagement that occurred under Dr. Carson’s presidency. I’m not even going to try to figure that out.

9. The election of Ruble by one vote is not a scandal; that’s called “majority rule.” Election by half a vote would be a scandal.

10. Wait, Chuck attacks Scott Mitchell for starting the lawsuit, and then for withdrawing the lawsuit? Damned if you do, damned if you don’t.

11. Matthew 18:6 - “But if anyone causes one of these little ones who believe in me to sin, it would be better for him to have a large millstone hung around his neck and to be drowned in the depths of the sea.” Such a fate is clearly deserved for Dr. Crenshaw and all the other faculty, as Chuck writes, for Crenshaw winning the Younts Excellence in Teaching Award. When, exactly, did Dr. Crenshaw cause a “little one” to sin? That’s a pretty heady accusation to make, in my opinion.

12. Dr. Ruble is blamed for the current “divide” between the ARP Church and Erskine. Hm. I’m pretty sure the divide is “great” and “contentious” because of the Commission and firing the Board of Trustees – not because Ruble kept a balanced budget and increased student enrollment. Just a thought. Although blaming Ruble for all of our problems does seem like a Christian thing to do (and so convenient!).

13. Fiscal mismanagement in Admissions. Follow the budget, people. Also, I think it’s hilarious that “as far as anybody knows” means “nobody has snitched to me yet about it, so it hasn’t occurred.” Wow. Center of the universe, much?

15. The ARP Talk Editor is one of the few people who can transform a volunteer spirit, generous attitude, and commitment to one’s academic field into a criticism. Yes, Dr. Alston is on the Jump Rope committee or whatever it is. For the (third) time in your magazine, we know you’re “not making this up.” Until ARPTalk Extra 12…

587px-Medusa_by_Carvaggio16. Wow. Burnett and Hering control the Seminary. Didn’t see that one coming. And remade the Seminary in their image? Unbelievable. It’s like – it’s like nobody can stop them. You stare into their eyes and… can’t… resist… rejecting… inerrancy. (Picture of Dr. Burnett by Carvaggio)

20. Agreed! It’s important to blacklist hymns at Erskine. Next up: “A Mighty Fortress is Our God.” I hear the author challenged Church authority. Shame on him!

 

Regarding the last sentence of the issue, “simper” means “to smile coyly.” I’m not sure what this has to do with a “shallow stream” and Erskine – I think he might mean “whimper.” Actually, the entire analogy is false because the scandal of Erskine is supposed to be a roaring waterfall drowning anything in its path and not a weak coy smile flowing slowly along.

Anyway, a better sentence would be, “THE SCANDAL OF THE ARP CHURCH will continue roaring along like a deep river if Chuck Wilson continues to make personal attacks and baseless accusations.” I understand the opinion that Erskine is not correctly following its mission statement; this is something we can argue about and (hopefully) solve. What I do not understand is the illogic (example: blaming Dr. Ruble for things he had no control over), the lack of attention to detail (ex: how many professors publish?), the sensationalistic accusations (ex: Dr. Burnett and Hering control the seminary?), and the ludicrous personal attacks (ex: Dr. Alston and jump rope) that characterize Chuck Wilson’s writings.

 

Tomorrow! My own submission to ARP Talk, published on this blog, where I reveal Erskine College to be the den of asps we all know it to be.

Sunday, May 23, 2010

Congrats, Dr. Norman!

[I wrote this on Saturday, but something went wrong posting it and, well, here it is. Sorry].

Dr. David A. Norman was elected by the Board of Trustees this past Friday by a unanimous vote; thanks to the lawsuit, the Board that elected him was not an interim Board but was instead the original, duly elected, legitimate Board of Erskine College and Seminary. He was selected by the presidential selection committee with the highest praise; this committee consists of individuals on either side of the proverbial fence. We must not forget that.

n680663589_7259Had Synod never met in March, had the Commission never been formed, had a lawsuit never been filed, we all would be sitting in our own little corners of the world interested in, but detached from, the selection of our next Erskine president. We trusted the Board of Trustees before all this began; we can do nothing else but trust them now.

I have cautioned repeatedly against secrecy and speed; indeed, had a document not been leaked to the Aquila Report and reposted on this blog, nobody outside of Erskine officials and faculty would have known Dr. Norman was the elected pick. I hesitate to even include the faculty on this list – his introduction to them was bizarre and circumspect. We (the Internet) certainly would not have known about the choice until it was over, or nearly so. This goes contrary to good logic and precedent where organized student groups, faculty groups, and administrators would meet with the candidate and discuss extensively his vision for Erskine, definitions on hot topics, and so forth. Indeed, the first selection of the search committee before Dr. Ruble was picked was rejected based in no small degree on discussions with these focused groups.

I wrote that I wanted to find out everything there was to know about Dr. Norman, and many thanks to all that emailed to help me out individually, and publicly on the Facebook groups. I have heard many good things about this man, and many alumni, pastors, and students are supportive of him.

He has an exceptional academic background, experience in leadership, good contacts, a devoted Christian, a solid thinker, strong commitment to excellence in learning and Christ, and seems able to interact well with students and know what they need to excel. He is clearly ambitious and talented, and Erskine is poised where a strong president who knows how to focus the school after this recent disaster can really turn things around. We are not guaranteed success with Dr. Norman, but we are certainly not guaranteed failure.

Consider two things. First, Synod will appoint five new Board members in June; would you rather a Board plush with the possible addition of the Moderator’s own selection, pick the presidential candidate? Second, who would we wait for? Several serious candidates were considered and rejected. The Committee probably had no other immediate choices. Erskine is certainly not in a position to drift aimlessly with an interim president – or worse, without a president at all. And again, at some point the Board is going to have to vote on a candidate.* Are you willing to let some future Board of unknown composition make this decision?
*Presuming Synod does not discover “SC non-profit law” allows direct appointment of presidents. Just kidding (I hope)!
The selection of Dr. Norman was by no means ordinary, and the methodology was certainly was not desirable. But his election (which, by the way, was probably 98% sure when that document was released) starts a new page in Erskine’s future. Supporters of Synod seem glad to with join him in celebration; alumni seem just as excited. How unexpected – the first things we have all agreed upon was the selection of a president, potentially the most contentious decision since March. I believe this bodes well for the future.

I’m sure we have a lot to editorialize about in the coming weeks – I for one have many concerns and, more importantly, many question marks on what exactly Dr. Norman intends to do and what his vision for Erskine is. There is certainly a lot to write about! Fundamentally, will he side with the Synod of March 2010 or with Erskine as it had been? That is a central question we can’t answer for some time to come. But in my opinion Dr. Norman could – might – hopefully – bring about the best scenario of all: a self-described “nuanced” individual who can set firm goals for integration of faith and learning to convert enough moderates in Synod to his side (thus taking away power from the radicals). And at the same time will keep Erskine strongly liberal arts and self-governing without replaced Boards and other shenanigans, and so will win the support of the Alumni. Without a reason to fight the lawsuit will die and Erskine will slowly, gradually, return to normal. This is my hope, my prayer.

Congratulations, Dr. Norman! Good luck and godspeed! Heaven knows we need you.

Friday, May 21, 2010

The Third Hallmark

“The third hallmark of an effective board is that it ensures that the mission of the institution, as set forth in its mission statements and other governing instruments, is accomplished.” – The Commission Report

(Continuing from Introduction – Won’t Fool All of Us (First Hallmark) and The Second Hallmark)

And now the most obvious Hallmark of them all!

The immediate impetus for the Commission was the presentation of students at Synod with a petition and video asking for Synod to investigate Erskine (Students Aligned for a Faithful Erskine and the video), though Commissioners will remind you the desire had been growing for some time. Some students claimed Erskine was intimidating, but nearly all said Erskine was not living up to its mission statement. Their secret petition 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. … We appeal to you, as the leaders of the Church, for your help.” (emphasis added)

*Untrue
**Untrue
***Untrue.

ARPTALK-Header2Anybody who knows a whit about Erskine College and this controversy will undoubtedly say this hallmark is the reason why we fight. All the justifications I listed earlier – and a dozen more, probably – have to do with this. Integration of faith and learning that SAFE wants so badly. Ending the alleged “culture of intimidation” as Daniel Wells insists. Stopping “doctrinal drift” of faculty and administrators. Making everybody swear to affirm inerrancy. Teaching Creationism as Mr. Wingate told the Greenville News he demands. &etc &etc. All these justifications are about the day-to-day operation of Erskine and the Mission statement. It is no secret that members of Synod – and vocal sidekicks like Chuck Wilson – think Erskine has wandered far afield. Didn’t the Commission take up that charge?

No, the Commissioners at Erskine shunned this point entirely! In fact, they explicitly said this Hallmark had nothing to do with the Commission at all. A man asked during the Q-and-A session, “Why do we need all this change? What's changed since you all were here? … [Later, clarifying question] If you're not here on an everyday basis, how are they going to know if things are going the way they want them to go?”

Moderator DeWitt responded, “Our commission was not charged with that kind of thing. Our commission had to do with governance, board composition, relation to the general Synod, and accountability in that regard. The kinds of issues you suggest are best put to the new president. We did nothing to interfere with campus life or anything of that kind.”

Wingate quickly added: “Let me just add in follow-up, as Dr. DeWitt has said, the purpose and reach of the Commission is not to change day-to-day life at the ground level. It is to make sure the Board of Trustees and the business management of the life of the institution are accountable to the ARP Church. ... Your president is the shepherd.” (emphasis added)

A follow-up answer here is quite odd; in fact, this is the only follow-up answer given during the entire two hours of Q-and-A. Wingate seemed to step over himself to quickly follow-up on DeWitt’s answer. Why? I frankly don’t know precisely, but I have a pretty good guess. Notice how Wingate’s answer is far clearer as to Synod’s control over the Board and its impact on campus life. DeWitt’s answer shut the door entirely on interference with campus life “or anything of that kind.” saying the Commission was concerned only with Board governance from the beginning. Wingate left the door open to acknowledge the Commission's interest in campus life and recommended changes.

In other words, DeWitt blatantly contradicted his Commission’s report. This is significant.

DeWitt primarily (and Wingate to a lesser degree) make two devastating errors here: they suggest the Commission was formed to look at how the Board works rather than what it does, and that members were not interested one iota in campus life. Both are falsehoods.

Synod cannot directly control Erskine and campus life, but they can appoint Trustees to do it for them. The impetus for creating the Commission and its formal assignment were both centered on campus life. The Commission's charge was “to investigate whether the oversight exercised by the Board of Trustees and the Administration of Erskine College and Seminary are in faithful accordance with the Standards of the ARP Church and the synod's previously issued directives.” You cannot argue that altering campus life (including classroom lectures, administrators and faculty positions, convocation, etc) are not part of this charge. Students surely didn’t form SAFE just to see the Board resized. In fact, nobody would care whether the Board was too large if Synod was happy; Synod is unhappy and so the Board is examined. In a very real sense then, “too large” is just an explanation for a Board that doesn’t do precisely what Synod wants.

Perhaps more damning for the Commissioners’ statements above is their own report. The Third Hallmark mentions nothing about governance – rather, it speaks of upholding the Mission statement of Erskine. If the Commission acted solely on board composition and governance, as DeWitt said, most of the two Commission reports would never have been included. Statements on the Culture of Intimidation? Irrelevant. Competing visions for Erskine among the Board members and the administration? Irrelevant. Why interview so many on campus about integration of faith and learning? Irrelevant. The entire Third Hallmark? Irrelevant!

Why add paragraph after paragraph of irrelevant material? No, Mr. DeWitt and Mr. Wingate, based on your own report and the students you paraded in front of Synod last year, I believe the Commission had far greater ambitions than you verbally admit to.

This issue – the Third Hallmark – is why Chuck Wilson writes, why SAFE organized, why Bill Evans and Paul Patrick agitated, why Supporters of Synod Facebook group exists, why the Synod itself churned for these last, infamous 30 years of “inaction.” Why the Commission interviewed 80 people about life at Erskine (or 150 people – they claimed both). Not size. Not finances. Not efficiency. Mission statement. Integration of Faith and Learning. Third Hallmark.

To suggest that the Commission never once considered the drastic change to campus life upon restructuring the Board plays us all for fools. As I said before, their chutzpah is getting us into trouble. We’ll lose Erskine before they’ve finished with it.

The suspension of belief does not end there.

“The Commission finds that the ARP’s directives have not been satisfied, even though this discussion has taken place regularly over the course of the last thirty years.” – the Commission Report

The Third Hallmark is a matter of opinion. Perhaps Erskine really was unfaithful to Synod’s directives, perhaps Erskine is the cesspool of liberalism and “Baal cult” worship as Chuck says, and perhaps those who started the lawsuit are “terrorists” who “bombed” the ARP Church and are deserving of heresy charges, along with a boatload of other people. Perhaps SAFE students felt intimidated by a professor or two and feel that Erskine is not safe enough for them. Perhaps Erskine is tracking to the left and these administrators are to blame and making their lives miserable is their just deserts and they need to just do their job like they’re paid to do and shut up and work…

Is Erskine faithful to its mission, or not? We must each decide. But here the question is irrelevant: Commissioners felt Erskine was unfaithful and restructured Erskine because of it. Agree or not with the conclusion, we must all understand exactly what happened. Nothing to do with campus life? Sheesh!

Integration of faith and learning is one of the most important things we can do at Erskine. Following the mission statement is crucial. Hiring excellent professors and keeping accurate finances are as well. Each of us should always work to see God honored in everything we do – even in class.

image

But the simple truth is this: Christians are not an undesirable caste at Erskine, professors do not browbeat students’ faith until it pours out of them, and every year many – perhaps a majority – of Biology majors find problems with pure evolution. Professors teach their subject, their faith, and how the two reconcile. You receive an excellent “secular” education to compete in this world and an excellent integration of that amoral knowledge into our Christianity. I have absolutely no doubt that administrators, professors, and students at Erskine are more dedicated to helping each other, more kind during times of difficulty, and more connected than at perhaps any other college or university in America. “Forever Connected in Christ, Learning, Life.” Sounds pretty good to me. But never forget that slogan is one of the reasons SAFE organized and Synod churned. It ignores the mission statement, you see.

We are left wondering, as always, what is expected and what will satisfy. To this day I have no idea, and I certainly have a better chance than most.

Conclusion

For the first time in my memory, Erskine made the front page of the Greenville News this year. It wasn’t about Erskine’s excellent academics or student success, either. Whether legal or illegal, this one action had far-reaching and unintended repercussions a blind man could have seen.

Admissions is down. A budget surplus will quickly turn into a budget deficit. Lawsuits and appeals work their way through the system, threatening to damage Synod’s already stretched resources and diverting already scarce resources away from Erskine. Charges of heresy will come before Synod this summer against those who stood up against what happened. And much more. Politics is never pretty; politics in the Church is disastrous.

Commissioners didn’t see the same Erskine the rest of us see. They interviewed 80 people (or 150) who all said roughly the same thing: Erskine is excellent, integration of faith and learning happens, we are intimidated by the ARP Church. Read the faculty and student interviews to see for yourself. And the Commission concluded  that “ARP’s directives have not been satisfied.” Hence the ax.

The great irony is, Synod appoints five new trustees each year. In just three short years they could have completely reworked the Board and done essentially whatever they wanted to. They had this power; Erskine gave it to them. Yet in one deft stroke of impatience they demanded their way and their theology and their Board members and dare not stand in their way!

Think of all the students who will never experience the excellent college called Erskine because they were scared away by all this. Where will they go? What an opportunity to minister and teach that is lost! Think of all the excellent faculty who will leave, or never apply at all, because of this. Think of the presidential candidates scared off by this disaster. Think of the money that was lost, the strife among friends, and the never-ending litigation that with the appeal will continue for years (?) to come.

All of this caused by a well-intentioned but misguided Synod who believed “SC non-profit law” allowed them to fire half the Board of Trustees in order to see their vision of Erskine realized instantly.

Whether Synod broke the law will take years to decide. Whether they broke morality was decided some time ago.

Three Hallmarks. Three reasons. We know clearly why the Fourteen were fired. This was all started one way; it must be stopped another way entirely. Without spite, without fear-mongering, without illegality, without personal attacks, without invective, without lies, but with calm and unyielding assurance in what is right. Things must change.

These are my thoughts.

 

On the Road to Synod,

Temperance Dogood