Christianity Today
 
 
After D'Souza's Departure, The King's College Seeks Doctrine Over  Politics
And TKC isn't the only Christian school moving away from  political 
conservatism.
Melissa Steffan 
posted 11/7/2012

 
 
Two years later, D'Souza—now best known for two books and a film  
criticizing the presidency of Barack Obama—resigned. This followed reports of  
his 
appearance with a new fiancée while still legally married to his wife of 20  
years.  
The day of the resignation, one TKC student asked interim  president Andy 
Mills if the college would distinguish itself from D'Souza's  approach to 
politics. 
"[TKC] is a Christian college. Period," Mills said. He reiterated  the 
point in an interview with CT. "We are reaffirming the reason students came  
here. Students come here for the [Christian] mission and vision." 
In the presidential search that led to D'Souza's hiring, TKC  published a 
list of "'true ideas' that distinguish King's within … higher  education," 
including "biblical competition" and the right to "seek prosperity  and risk 
bankruptcy." TKC no longer lists these on its website. 
TKC was not the only Christian school to include economic and  political 
theory among its core commitments. But changes have been afoot at  similar 
schools that have positioned themselves as conservative in more than  just 
theology. 
Gene Edward Veith, provost at Patrick Henry College, says his  school's 
conservatism has become "more sophisticated" since its founding in  1998. What 
he described as a "meltdown" in conflict between faculty and  administrators 
six years ago "was mainly a matter of the institution maturing  and going 
through some disillusionment struggles," he said. "I see that  happening 
across the board. Christian activists who get involved with politics  soon find 
that things are not so simple as getting Christians elected." 
Meanwhile, Colorado Christian University includes in its strategic  
objectives support of "traditional family values" and "sanctity of life," but  
also 
"limited government," "free markets," and "original intent of the  
Constitution." But spokesman Ron Benton says the school wants "to be known as a 
 
Christian university first and foremost." 
Many more Christian schools used to have explicit ties with  cultural and 
political conservatism, says Allen Guelzo, professor of history at  
Gettysburg College. But some have tried to "return to center." 
"There are many pressures against being known as a conservative  
institution," he said. 
But Guelzo says it is good news if TKC students truly want more  doctrine 
instead of politics. "Doctrinal integrity is number one," he said.  "There 
will be issues that lead politically from that." 
Mills agrees. "We've got to be careful not to set up a false  dichotomy 
between the idea of being faith-based on the one hand and the idea of  
engagement on the other," he said. "I don't think we want to set the two 
against  
each other." 
But the D'Souza incident serves as a warning for administrators at  other 
Christian colleges, said David Dockery, president of Union University and  
author of The Future of Christian Higher  Education. 
"We have to be reminded that our calling is to serve the kingdom  of God 
and the church through Christian higher education, first and foremost,"  he 
said. "When the focus is only in the cultural sphere, we run the risk of  
missing our calling."

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

Reply via email to