Get Religion
 
 
Church of The New York Times keeps preaching its own  faith
July 29, 2014 by _tmatt_ 
(http://www.patheos.com/blogs/getreligion/author/tmatt/) 

 
It’s time for another “Kellerism” update, as The New York Times  continues 
its efforts to highlight religious institutions with doctrines that  are 
unacceptable to the newsroom’s theologians and, perhaps, the U.S. Department  
of Justice. This time, the drama shifts out West, where another Christian  
college community is trying to find a way to live out its faith commitments. 
NEWBERG, Ore. – A growing number of openly transgender  students have 
forced schools around the country to address questions so basic  that they were 
rarely asked just a few years ago, much less answered: What  defines a person’
s gender, and who gets to decide? 
A small Christian college here, George Fox University, has become the  
latest front in this fight, refusing to recognize as male a student who was  
born anatomically female. The student calls himself a man, and as of April 11,  
when a state circuit court legally changed his sex, the State of Oregon  
agrees. 
But George Fox University sees him as a woman, and it prohibits unwed  
students from living with anyone of the opposite sex.
Notice the question that was not asked, in an alleged news story that opens 
 with an editorial assertion: If a private — as opposed to state — college 
is a  doctrinally defined voluntary association, what happens when a 
student decides  that he or she does not believe those doctrines? Think of it 
this 
way: If a  student at a Muslim college decided to convert to Christianity, 
thus  contradicting the covenant he voluntarily signed when he came to the 
campus,  would the college be able to say that this student had to accept the 
school’s  doctrinal authority? 
If private religious organizations have the right to define their 
communities  in terms of doctrine, does this First Amendment right no longer 
apply to 
 doctrines linked to sex? The other way I have stated the question is this: 
Does  the First Amendment’s promise of free exercise of religion still 
apply to  traditional religious believers who reject many of the doctrines 
linked to the  Sexual Revolution? 
The leaders of the Times team, of course, do not appear to be  interested 
in that half of the debate that is at the heart of this news story.  Thus, 
this report crashes, as an attempt at journalism. Why? 
The answer, of course, is “Kellerism.” What is that? Here is a reminder 
_from a recent post_ 
(http://www.patheos.com/blogs/getreligion/2014/07/the-boston-globe-veers-deep-into-doctrines-of-kellerism/)
 , when I first coined 
that term. The key  is the _famous 2011  remarks_ 
(http://www.patheos.com/blogs/tmatt/2011/10/god-and-the-new-york-times-once-again/)
  by former Times 
editor Bill Keller, when he said that the  basic rules of journalism no longer 
apply to coverage of religious, moral and  cultural issues. 
“We’re liberal in the sense that … liberal arts schools are liberal,”  
Keller noted. … “We’re an urban newspaper.” 
Keller continued: “We are liberal in the sense that we are open-minded,  
sort of tolerant, urban. Our wedding page includes — and did even before New  
York had a gay marriage law — included gay unions. So we’re liberal in that 
 sense of the word, I guess. Socially liberal.” 
Asked directly if the Times slants its coverage to favor  “Democrats and 
liberals,” he added: “Aside from the liberal values, sort of  social values 
thing that I talked about, no, I don’t think that it  does.”
The words “aside from” are the doors into “Kellerism.” It’s first  
journalism-defining doctrine is: 

There is no need for balance and fairness and related old-fashioned  
journalism values when one is dealing with news linked to morality, culture,  
religion, yada, yada. Newspapers should resist the urge to slip into advocacy  
journalism when covering politics, but not when covering — uh — moral,  
cultural and religious issues such as sex, salvation, abortion, euthanasia,  
gay 
rights, cloning and a few other sensitive matters. You know, non-political  
issues. Things like Roe v. Wade and Romer v.  Evans.
The second “Kellerism” doctrine grows out of his quiet rejection (_.pdf  
here_ (http://www.nytco.com/wp-content/uploads/assuring-our-credibility.pdf) 
) of a key element in the landmark 2005 Times self study  entitled “
_Preserving  Our Readers’ Trust_ 
(http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/09/business/media/09cnd-timesreport.html?pagewanted=all)
 ,” the passages calling for more 
cultural and intellectual  diversity in the world’s most powerful newsroom. 
Keller — only days after  leaving his desk as editor — said he was committed to 
hiring diversity in the  newsroom on matters of gender, race, etc., but not 
on matters of culture and  intellect. 
So how does this shape the Oregon story? Simply stated, the Times  team 
completely ignores the issue of a private school’s right to define the  
doctrines at the heart of its community, whether on the doctrinal left or 
right.  
Note the unstated connection running through this passage: 
George Fox, a Quaker school southwest of Portland, asked the Department of  
Education for a religious exemption from Title IX. Rob Felton, a university 
 spokesman, said the request was prompted by the position the government 
took  in the California case, and by warnings from Jaycen’s lawyer that he 
intended  to file a Title IX complaint. In drafting its petition, the 
university  consulted with an evangelical group, Alliance Defending Freedom, 
that has 
 fought attempts to allow transgender students to use what they see as the  
sex-appropriate school restrooms and other facilities. 
The department granted the Title IX exemption on May 23, and on the same  
day it gave a similar exemption to Simpson University, a Christian school in  
California — the first two ever given for policies on transgender people,  
department officials and transgender advocates said. It granted a third  
exemption last month to Spring Arbor University, a Christian college in  
Michigan. 
Now, the Justice Department is looking into whether George Fox’s  
transgender policy might violate nondiscrimination requirements in federal  
housing 
law.
What connects these schools? Their attempts to defend the doctrines that  
define their communities. 
The unstated question: Why is the student named “Jaycen” at George Fox? 
This  is the other point where the Times team is completely uninterested in  
the views of those that oppose the newspaper’s doctrines. Apparently, other 
than  the school’s PR voice, there are no voices at George Fox who are 
willing to  defend George Fox. At the end of the story readers are told: 
Jaycen said that in spite of everything, he had found strong support from  
students and faculty members. 
“I want other transgender and L.G.B.T.Q. people to see that they can have a 
 place in faith-based education,” he said. “The fact that I’m here is 
proof of  that.”
Of course, there are schools whose doctrines fit those now held by Jaycen 
and  others whose convictions now contradict centuries of Christian doctrine. 
Should  students attend schools where they can sign doctrinal covenants and 
then keep  those vows? This issue is never explored in the story. Why is 
this student at  George Fox? 
Yes, it does matter that the school’s own community seems to be divided —  
anonymity is crucial — over these doctrines. This is common. That is why it’
s  crucial — in terms of journalism ethics — for the Times team to quote  
people on both sides of this debate, even inside George Fox and similar  
institutions. 
Why not cover both sides of the debate? Because, under “Kellerism,” _error 
has no  rights_ 
(https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=1&cad=rja&uact=8&ved=0CB8QFjAA&url=http://www.patheos.com/blogs/getreligi
on/2013/02/bill-keller-et-al-openly-confess-that-error-has-no-rights/&ei=68L
XU5PdHdGeyAT1x4DICQ&usg=AFQjCNEGsFuzRrD0Ix9MKBCMZzc38gW9xA&bvm=bv.71778758,d
.aWw) , even if that means changing the basic rules of the American model 
of  the press. 
So what happens when Times leaders decide that it is no longer  necessary 
to apply the rules of journalism to religion, culture and morality?  What 
happens when the leaders of this powerful newsroom decide that, in ways  both 
open and subtile, that they can attack religious believers whose doctrines  
they reject? 
Simply stated, many traditional religious believers — even if they are  
long-time supporters of the Times — are being forced out of the  doctrinally 
defined community that is the church of New York Times  subscribers.

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