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My view towards Christian Schools
(Universities and Colleges)
by David Cox
My View and Opinion in General
I should start out by giving some of my background in order that you
understand where I am coming from. I am not somebody who has flunked out of high
school, and therefore has a grudge against schools, Christian or otherwise. I
went to a public primary and high school (there were no Christian schools around
when I was coming up), and upon graduating from High School I went to Bob Jones
University. It has been my observation over the years that while the Christian
School (K-12) does teach Bible and such, many students are enrolled there that
are not saved, and do not even pretend to be (evangelization instead of
education), and these students bring every bit of influence from a secular
school to the Christian school, drugs, cursing, sex, rebellion, rock music, etc.
The Christian schools come back that they have to accept these kids because
otherwise they won't make their payroll. These kids learn to "play the Christian
game", look, act, and talk like a Christian when necessary while living a life
of hypocrisy. At least when I was in a public school, we had to make a decision,
and we didn't fellowship and make friends with the perverse kids. We looked for
"safe" kids that were basically Christians like ourselves. We were rejected and
scandalized as a group for our Christian faith, but at least we knew what it
cost to "be different". That tends to make people "have guts", instead of
floating along with the crowd.
I studied at Bob Jones through the benefit of my parents that paid for
everything. I went to summer school to take extra classes because I thoroughly
enjoyed and desired to learn. God was blessing my time in Bible study. I
graduated in 1979 with a B.A. in Christian Missions, and Greek minor, a
difficult minor for most people. I continued in Graduate School at Bob Jones,
and graduated in 1981 with a B.A. in Bible. I took much more class hours than
was necessary for my masters because I was planning on continuing my studies
with a doctorate after I graduated. Instead I took a Masters in Educational
Administration and Supervision, the major for a Christian school administrator.
At this point I must get nasty with a few things. My take over the years has
been that Christian universities first "feathered their own beds" with majors
that they were graduating, then they tried to "sell" the need to churches. In
the end, many small churches started Christian schools that were latter shut
down. The reason for this is varied, but all return to the Christian
Universities (by the way, they were churning out Christian teachers by the
dozens each year), and these universities "selling" the hard sell that no
Christian parent would dare put their children in a secular school. When asked
what are the qualifications of their faculty (PhD's), they make fun of smaller
Christian Universities or Colleges that have faculty who graduated from
religious schools and they themselves brag of their PhD's who graduated from
secular schools. Strange that this hard sell does not demand that all of their
own faculty have exclusive education from Christian schools. We were told this
gives them validity in the eyes of the world, as if that was something that was
necessary or would really happen. Christians have outpaced, out won, and out
everything the world, and they still don't take us seriously, so why should we
cater to them anyway? End of digression.
I have visited so many churches which had Christian schools and then later
folded. The bottom line in all of this is that we allowed Christian Universities
to mold our thinking when clearly it was self serving on their part. They are
trying to convince Christianity as to the validity and necessary position in
Christianity.
We go back to the New Testament, and Christian Schools don't exist
You may say, this is a hard thing David. Yes it is. But after all is said and
done, we only have the Scriptures to dictate to our lives.
Christian Universities have robbed the church of its teaching duty.
In the end analysis of things, Christian Universities have taught us that no
minister is serious unless he has gone through a Christian school, specifically
a Christian University, preferable a seminary (always they assume that a 4 year
liberal arts education in a Christian School is requirement for seminary).
The New Testament sets the example of pastors and missionaries teaching the
young ministers the ministry. This is clearly what happened in the
Bible.
I have seen both sides of this issue, and in fact, when I first arrived in
Mexico, my vision was to start a small "Bob Jones University" in Mexico. This is
what my education prepared me to do. As I visited Bible institutes in Mexico, I
began to realize that the problems I was being made aware of did not have
solutions where the people were typically looking for them (more money, more
qualified personnel, more, bigger, and better buildings, more money again). The
problem that the Bible Institutes suffered from was one of a lack of student
base, and that was because there was a lack of fundamental churches in Mexico
(still is).
As I thought through what God was showing me, I realized that the general
slide of all Christian Schools in the USA towards a more "accepted" position and
always away from a stronger position is logical. They have the same problem of
inscription of new students. As Bob Jones grew, Pensacola strung up. Dr. Horton
is a Bob Jones Graduate. In my humble opinion, the accusations of Pensacola
against Bob Jones in reference to the King James Issue is simply one of one
business trying to undercut the consumer base of another business. If Dr. Horton
is so strongly against BJU's position on the KJV, then why did he go to Bob
Jones and it not bother him? The fact that a Christian school attacks another
Christian school deliberately trying to get their students by accusing them of
doctrinal "infidelity", well to me, that places the attacker in an equal
position of being untrustworthy. Interestingly, Pensacola attacks BJU, and Peter
Ruckman strings up across town from Pensacola to attack Pensacola and BJU.
It is amazing to me that Christians in general do not recognize the childish
arguing and haggling that all of this comes to.
Christian Universities have robbed churches of their teaching duty
If we go back to a Bible scheme of things, pastors and missionaries are the
principal teachers of ministers. I wondered why at Bob Jones they were
constantly mentioning that the University "brings in" pastors, evangelists, and
missionaries to teach the preacher boys. It was as if somebody had accused them
of being in "ivory towers" (an educational term that means the people seal
themselves up in an university and teach things that don't have anything to do
with the "real world"). This is a real problem for Christian Schools. Their
"validity" is based in bringing in experienced teachers from the real world, but
why do these same expert experienced people have no validity on their own,
teaching in their own churches instead of universities? Simple answer, because
the University makes no money from it all that way. God's plan seems so simple
and so perfect, yet it is set aside in favor of what Christian Universities
teach us.
God's plan is that the church charges no entrance fee at their services.
Anybody can come in freely, receive the teaching they offer without paying
anything. Who pays the bills then? The mature Christians in that church. They
see the ministry of the church, they believe in it (or they seek to change it or
change churches), and they sacrifice for it. Once these new people are saved,
they are taught their obligation to support their local church, and they help
support it all with free will offerings. What is done is limited by the vision
and economic wherewithal of the people in that church. Why is this no sufficient
for Christians? Because Christian Universities have been hot and heavy in
selling the concept of a Christian School, which is to their own economic
benefit. They deny the validity and qualify (sufficient for God, it should be
sufficient for us) of a local church education.
I remember Dr. Bob Jones III and Dr. Bob Jones Jr. preaching in chapel
telling us of how we should write a thank you letter to our parents every
semester to say thank you for our education. We all did that it seemed after
those sermons every semester. But later I began to wonder about things.
Typically these sermons had some kind of illustration of our poor mother back
home who had to get that second job washing floors on her hands and knees so
that we could attend a Christian University. This is to invoke great guilt and
emotional distress so as to move us to write those letters back home.
But if the administration of the University was so moved by the great
sacrifices of the parents (and great was the sacrifices of the parents) then why
didn't they just lower the tuition? Bob Jones has an art gallery with paintings
by famous artists, some costing several million dollars each. Where did the
money come from to buy this luxury? Very simply those poor moms on their hands
and knees mopping up floors so that their kids' SCHOOLS could have unnecessary
luxury. Those things are necessary. They are in the realm of rich people's
dreams. Some may say, the school did not buy it, but the Dr. Bob's bought it
with his own money. Wait a minute, we know the history well, Dr. Bob Sr. was the
son of a poor dirt farmer, and started the school on a shoe string. Each son
took over without any wealth from anywhere else except from their school salary.
So in the end, they took sufficient salary to buy these things, so whether the
school paid for it or the individual it is the same.
You figure a typical Christian School charges $10,000 a year up front (hidden
costs make it more). If they have 8,000 students, then they have a gross income
of around $80,000,000. This does not even touch on the income from the book
publishing, the other "minor" businesses the school runs, nor outside donations
by alumni and friends. The CEO of a business with an $80 million dollar yearly
budget should get probably around 5-8 million. Even if they take only 2-3
million, that is nothing in comparison to what a Fundamental pastor would get.
We would charge a pastor with abuse if he made that, but in the case of a
Christian University president, we think that is typically "normal" somehow.
We typically had at graduation some parent that was honored because they put
6 or 7 kids through BJU. At $10,000 a year pop, over four years each, that runs
around $280,000, or the equivalent of that couple's house, and most of their
retirement, handed over to a Christian University simply because the education a
local church gives is not sufficient nor acceptable in the eyes of "knowing,
educated Christians".
I visit many churches around the country, and one of the things that always
picks my interest is to meet somebody I knew while at BJU. Unfortunately, most
of these people have the same story, they took some major at school only to get
into another field of work later on. Their education at Bob Jones was useless.
Not all people have that story, but an alarming number do have that story, and
being "an educator" (trained as one, and teaching in my own church, and giving
counsel to my own people), I detect that more pressure is given to "get a good
education" (remember the adage, "Bob Jones doesn't teach you how to make a
living, but how to live" -- I thought that was the duty of the local church and
the parents?) at a Christian University than to discern God's will and do it,
whether it is more education or whatever. The rule at Christian Universities is
that every Christian young person needs to go through there except if they are
so stupid that they flunk out, in which case it looks bad on the school so go
somewhere else.
What is the return on our investment?
I look at small churches that have one or two Christian young people that
graduate each year. They regularly send them off to Christian Universities, but
what does the Christian University give the local church in exchange? Instead of
these young people getting married to somebody in their home town, going back to
raise a family and support their local church, they go somewhere else. Churches
propagated in the New Testament by evangelism, but there was a very strong chain
of spiritual men and women that taught their children well, and the local church
continued into the next generation because of these strong young Christians that
had roots and would defend their parents' work and sacrifice over the years that
was represented by their local church.
But many churches do have young ministers return to their churches from
Christian Schools. Unfortunately, while away at Christian University, they are
taught that the local church is not a priority (many schools have students that
don't even attend any church while at school, or they attend occasionally, and
they do not get involved in ministry in the local church). This was at least
required of Preacher boys at Bob Jones, but the rest of the student body is left
as "an option" if they have time. We have created a system whereby the most
important things, sitting under the example and instruction of a man of God (a
pastor of a local church), is unimportant or not a priority. Personal service to
our Lord is secondary or optional "if you have time".
Many young people return from Christian school with these kinds of attitudes.
Sure they attend their church, but they see other things as being a priority
above and over their relationship with their local church. This is what local
churches receive for their promotion of Christian Universities. What's more,
over the first centuries of the Christian church, the "final word" in matters
not specifically revealed in Scripture was settled by pastors, pastors of local
churches. Today, this is settled by expert Bible teachers at Christian
universities and seminaries, by Christian University presidents, and such like.
The only pastors that are accepted by these people are those which are 100% in
agreement and active support of their particular Christian
University.
My view of Christian Universities
The bottom line here is that we need to return to a concept where kids study
anything over high school in a local context where they can still participate
and be active in their family and local church while studying. I do not know
that going to a Christian university is actually all that much better than going
to a local community college and staying active and involved in your own local
church.
My Recommendations as far as Christian Universities
Very simply, I do not think it is a sin for a Christian to go to a
Christian University, just like it is not a sin to go to a secular university.
If it was a sin, then why do all the administrations of Christian Universities
want their faculty to get advanced degrees at secular universities instead of
Christian Universities?
I would point out that in a secular university, anything related to the Bible
is probably wrong, unscriptural. In a Christian university, the unscriptural
teachings are so colored by the institution being "Christian" that they are
unilaterally accepted as biblical, and anybody who does not agree on a
particular point of the Christian University's doctrinal position is "a heretic"
(at least while there, once graduated and an alumni, they want your support and
donations and young people looking for a college even if you are a heretic).
For example, I laugh as I talk with graduates of Pensacola Christian College
about their views of the KJV controversy. While in PCC, they were KJV only to
the extreme, but once out, many "dump" that position for one that is more
moderate, KJV preferred, but other people using other versions is not wrong. I
ask them, "how can you come out of PCC with that position?" Their answer,
"Everybody at PCC takes the school's position while there, but we all know that
really most people don't accept it. When we leave, we will change back to what
we were before." "Why did you choose PCC then?" "Because it is the cheapest
place to go." Amazing. Duplicity and hypocrisy that is built into the system,
and it is okay. Morally, it is not a problem for a person to take a position
which is not really his simply for an economic reason. But this is what
Christian schools are built on, a false and faulty system of principles that do
not produce strong Christians. (PCC has their particular problems, but this is
extremely common among ALL Christian Universities).
The fact that it costs somebody a great sacrifice to take a stand against the
majority is something that God blesses, it is not a problem. Sure, some people
will bend and go the way of the world in a secular university. My take on that
is that these people are not really saved, because a real Christian cannot do
that. If perhaps one does, my Bible says God will judge that person, and if he
does not respond, God will take him home to heaven quickly before his time.
Which Christian University do you personally recommend? None of them
I have problems with the entire set up of Christian Universities. Although
some are better than others, all have problems in my book. I would tend to lean
towards schools that are under the direct supervision of a local church. I feel
that is much better than most Christian schools. For example, I would prefer the
setup of perhaps Hyles-Anderson under a single local church (although I reject
Hyles salvation as easy believism and heresy), or Tabernacle Christian Schools
in Greenville, SC, simply because they are more ministries of that local church
rather than a rogue ministry gone wild like most Christian universities. I do
not think Pensacola's situation of making a local church as a department of
their school is in any way biblical. It makes fun and ridicule of the local
church as presented in the Bible. Nowhere is a pastor and church in the New
Testament under the authority of a local school.
Advice for young people going off to a Christian University
Realize that the situation that you are submitting yourself to is not one in
which you are going to follow the biblical principles. Biblically you see a
brother or sister sin, your responsibility is to go to them one on one first,
and if they admit it and repent, it goes no further. Doing that in a Christian
University will quickly get you expelled. In life, everything must have a
biblical reason (a valid exposition of a Bible verse which clearly explains the
principle) or the matter becomes one of personal preference, your preference
being fine for you, and mine is just different. Every man should be fully
convinced in his own heart of what he is doing (Romans 14:5). In other words,
Christian conscience means you should respect other people's convictions and
beliefs, but not necessary be under them as you are under the Word of God. You
do not trip up people, but you do not have to make their restrictions and
convictions your own unless you understand their biblical exposition of Bible
principles, and you see them as valid.
It is important for Christian young people to understand that their Christian
University is not the final word in their spiritual life, the Bible is. Many of
the explanations that they will hear at a Christian University are simply
"convenient" for the schools at the moment. These will change with time as the
currents of Christianity turn towards or against the issue. Christian
Universities are seeking the broadest base of Christians so that they can keep
their enrollment as high as possible, and if possible, to increase. That means
they have a middle road philosophy, not necessarily a die hard allegiance to
God's word.
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