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Vanderbilt University’s Assault on Religious Liberty

A remarkable thing is happening down here in Nashville. An old story — a university attempts to throw Christian student groups off campus unless they are open to non-Christian leadership — has a very new twist. Hundreds of Christian students are mobilizing against the policy and challenging the administration directly. Tuesday night, Vanderbilt held a “town hall” to discuss the policy, and the room was packed with students wearing white (the color students chose to signal their protest) and hundreds more were turned away and forced to watch on a live stream. You can read reports of the meeting here and here, and watch the entire three-hour affair here.

A few things stand out. First, (at approximately the 14:00 mark in the video) the university did what universities often do — compare Christian students to segregationists — but the students were not intimidated by the rhetoric. The comparison is offensive in the extreme. The vast majority of these religious student groups are open to all students without regard to race, gender, sexual orientation, or even religion. Many of these students are minorities themselves and several actively work in racial reconciliation ministries. Yet they’re compared to segregationists because they want the same rights that every single off-campus Christian organization in America enjoys — the same rights the Supreme Court unanimously affirmed this year — the right to use faith-based criteria when selecting leaders.   

Second, the university was directly confronted with the contradiction between its purported “all-comers” policy, which mandates that anyone can join or lead any student group, and its massive system of Greek life, with its gender-segregated, highly-exclusive fraternities and sororities (see the 2.53 mark of the video). Such questions strike at the heart of the university’s argument and expose the political reality on campus: Universities are less concerned with “all-comers” than they are with finding a fair-sounding policy hook to exclude orthodox religious viewpoints from campus. If Vanderbilt truly was dedicated to “all-comers,” the fraternity and sorority system would cease to exist — as would gender-segregated intramural sports, men’s glee clubs, and any number of other campus organizations the university, students, and alumni deeply value.

Third, the student activism — which was characterized by intelligence, firmness, and respect — will continue. Vanderbilt’s Board of Trust meets again in the next week, and I have little doubt that the students are planning to make their voice heard once again.  

Something is happening in the American religious community, and these students are the tip of the spear. With dozens of churches facing expulsion from public property in New York because of Mayor Bloomberg’s nonsensical and punitive policy against religious expression, with Catholic and other Christian organizations forced to cover sterilization and birth control services as part of their insurance plans, and with campuses becoming increasingly hostile to religious organizations, we may be witnessing the birth of a mass movement for religious liberty. A nation cannot turn its back on its founding principles without a backlash, we are not a “post-Christian society,” and these Vanderbilt students have now joined New York pastors and Catholic bishops at the vanguard of a defining cultural battle. 

New on The Corner. . .


COMMENTS   20

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Annie G.
   02/02/12 11:28

Bless the Vanderbilt students.

I'm 66 years old. People are amazed when I tell them how, in my public schools in New Jersey, we started each day and each school assembly with the Lord's Prayer and a reading from the book of Psalms (in addition to the flag salute and singing the "Star Spangled Banner"). That same school district, a few years ago, would not allow an instrumental version of a Christmas hymn at its "Winter Concert"--presumably lest someone think the lyrics while the orchestra played.

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   02/02/12 11:33

As Father Neuhaus used to say, "Where orthodoxy is optional, orthodoxy will sooner or later be proscribed."

So much for tolerance: "Be as postmodern as we are or we'll equate you with human rights abusers." Nice going, academics, real nice.

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CitizenTrain
   02/02/12 11:36

I wish we weren't a post-Christian society, and yet it may have it's advantages. In a Christian society, there are countless nominal believers who bring enormous discredit to the faith, but in a society where Christianity is stigmatized and sneered at, it may produce more resilient and faithful believers, as seems to be the experience in so many other societies around the world.

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   03/08/12 00:30

Persecution does tend to bring out the best in Christians. The pushback can also bring out the worst.

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   03/08/12 00:34

Persecution does tend to bring out the best in Christians. The pushback can also bring out the worst.

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   02/02/12 11:38

This is the rise of the Church Militant.

At long last we have decided to fight secularism. It goes no further.

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   02/02/12 11:50

I hope you are right. It's crucial that we push back against these infringements.

Hey, we agree on something!

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   02/02/12 11:55

We need more conservatives in academia. For those of us here, it's a whole other world....

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   02/02/12 11:56

You don't have to be religious to think this is absurd. As an atheist, I still think Vanderbilt is in the wrong here. If there is any public space for religion (and in a free society, there has to be), religious groups must be free to organize themselves and exclude others - it's simply the nature of the beast.

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   02/02/12 11:59

Thanks for the ray of sunshine Mr. French. It's easy to get depressed with all the bad news and shenanigans from the Obama administration. It's good to get some good news out there too and show that people are fighting to make a positive change. You would think that is a no-brainer for the university and that they'll change their tune. We'll see . . .

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   02/02/12 12:00

Congrats to the Vandy believers. Keep it up.

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   02/02/12 12:10

This could very easily backfire on the university. What will they do when Anglo students fill the ranks of the Latino Students association and vote themselves into leadership positions? Likewise, white students taking over the Black Students Association? You get the point. Vanderbilt needs to be careful what they wish for. They may very well set an unwelcome precedent.

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   02/02/12 12:21

At my undergrad, in the early part of last decade, the president of the Black Student Union was a pale white guy with red hair. True story.

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   02/02/12 23:18

Yes, but was he "legally black"?
"Black" people in America cannot all be identified by physical appearance.

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Heather Radish
   02/02/12 14:07

A closer analogy: Will they demand the Muslim Student Association accept a Jewish president?

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   03/06/12 21:20

The groups that are really intolerant, like Muslim student associations (such as at UC, Irvine) will be exempt from the requirement to accept non-believers (oops !)

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Vanderbilt Mom
   02/02/12 12:17

Thanks so much for this article! My daughter is a first-year student at Vanderbilt and attended Tuesday's town hall. She said she could not have been more impressed with her fellow students who spoke. They were respectful, intelligent and thoughtful. Let's hope the Vanderbilt board reigns in this out-of-line administration. Perhaps a decrease in financial support from all Vandy alumni who support freedom of religion and freedom of association would be motivating!

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Kirk Fraser
   02/03/12 17:44

Search for "Congressional Bible Study" by me and read it free online, then tell students it should be one of the books they throw at the Administration. I wonder what other deprogramming tools would reprogram schools to teach memorizing a Gospel by the 5th grade, making 5th graders smarter than most pastors instead of letting them to learn to party and drop out?

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   02/03/12 19:00

"every single off-campus Christian organization in America enjoys — the same rights the Supreme Court unanimously affirmed this year"

The Hosanna Tabor case didn't affirm the rights of every off-campus Christian organization. It affirmed the right for PAID MINISTERS not to be sued under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, because of the ministerial exception. That's all. It was a case concerning a possible constitutional violation, which -- as a private institution -- Vanderbilt can't commit. So, no. The Supreme Court didn't "unanimously affirm" any such thing, and it certainly hasn't "unanimously affirmed" anything involved here.

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Shrapnel
   02/04/12 23:35

Same old anti-Christian bigotry we have grown accustomed to in America. ALL other religious groups get a pass including communists and athiests but not those stinking Christians, you know the ones that say "do unto others as you would have others do unto you" and that sort of hate speech, they are a problem. Yes the world will be a better place when red left, intolerant, anti-Christian bigots like these at Vandy are running the world, persecuting those they have differences with for the good of...well..themselves.

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