Chronicle of Higher Education
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Friday, May 12, 2006
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5 Departures on Patrick Henry Faculty Pose Question: Are Christianity and Liberal Arts Contradictory Missions?
Thomas Bartlett
Purcellville, Va.
For such a small college, Patrick Henry sure attracts big-time attention. It has been featured in The New York Times, USA Today, and The Economist. The New Yorker
also weighed in with a lengthy piece. Just last month the Discovery
Times Channel broadcast an in-depth documentary on Patrick Henry titled
God's Next Army.
Not bad for a college that opened its doors in 2000 and has around 300
students. The news media see Patrick Henry as the Christian college
with a right-wing political agenda -- and for good reason. Its stated
mission is to prepare undergraduates, most of whom were home-schooled,
to "lead our nation and shape our culture with timeless biblical
values."
Patrick Henry students have interned for top Republican honchos
like Bill Frist, Tom DeLay, and Karl Rove. Janet Ashcroft, wife of the
former attorney general, sits on the Board of Trustees. The college
makes no secret of its ideological leanings; rather, it flaunts them.
It also boasts of its classical liberal-arts curriculum. The
vision was that Patrick Henry would become as rigorous and prestigious
as an Ivy League institution, but with a firm religious grounding -- a
faith-based Harvard.
But a core group of Patrick Henry professors now question that
much-publicized commitment to the liberal arts. Five of its 16
full-time professors, two of whom have been there from the beginning,
are leaving after a bitter battle over academic freedom. Their
departures have shaken the campus and created doubts about the
college's future.
They have also raised questions that cut to the heart of
Christian higher education, such as: Can a Christian find truth in the
writings of non-Christians? What role should the Bible play in the
classroom? Should a Christian college student grapple with the same
philosophers and the same issues as any other student? Or are certain
ideas too worldly to address?
The controversy has pitted the college's president and founder,
Michael P. Farris, against many of its professors. He has challenged
their fidelity to a biblical worldview, and they have challenged his
commitment to the liberal arts. "When he accuses us of not buying into
the vision of the college, we have to scratch our heads," said M. Todd
Bates, an assistant professor of rhetoric, who is leaving after this
semester. "We came here because of the vision. The question is: What
has happened to that vision?"
Saint in Hell?
It began with Augustine. There were already simmering tensions
between some professors and the president -- over both academic freedom
and the way the college disciplines students -- but the bishop of Hippo
became the tipping point.
Augustine's pursuit of truth was the topic of a campuswide
lecture delivered last fall by Mr. Bates. The lecture was part of a new
tradition at Patrick Henry. The idea was that each fall a professor
would deliver a lecture and then, in the spring, a guest speaker would
talk on the same topic. Classes were canceled that day so all students
could attend. It was designed to bring the campus together.
It led, instead, to a deep division. When Mr. Farris, the
president, saw the text of Mr. Bates's lecture the day before it was
given, he was not pleased.
And when Mr. Farris is not pleased, he is not afraid to let people know.
Before starting Patrick Henry, Mr. Farris was president of the
Home School Legal Defense Association, which he founded in 1983. He is
54 years old, though he could pass for 44 ("I have young hair," he
says). He is a constitutional lawyer and an ordained minister.
Patrick Henry is an hour outside Washington, in the town of
Purcellville, Va., population 3,500. Its small campus feels empty: The
main administration building faces a field where a 106,000-square-foot
student center is planned (a groundbreaking ceremony was held last
week). Mr. Farris's second-floor office overlooks another field. There
is, in other words, plenty of room for growth. The president has grand
plans, along with high-profile backers like Tim LaHaye, co-author of Left Behind, the best-selling Christian book series, who can help make those plans happen.
There are still hurdles to be cleared -- accreditation among them. The
Southern Association of Colleges and Schools rejected Patrick Henry's
accreditation bid. The American Academy for Liberal Education first
turned down the application. The college appealed, and later withdrew
it. The college is now a candidate for accreditation with the
Transnational Association of Christian Colleges and Schools.
The president is understandably proud of the college he started
and enjoys talking about, for example, the larger library that's in the
works, or the cafeteria overhaul. He seems to revel in the details. He
also seems to know most of the students by name, greeting them as they
pass in the hallway.
When he's not playing campus guide, Mr. Farris can be assertive
and direct. In these moments, his courtroom experience becomes evident.
Mr. Bates's lecture, according to Mr. Farris, did not sufficiently
reflect the college's Christian mission. "The original version was 24
pages long, and it didn't mention the Bible," he says.
Mr. Farris says he simply asked Mr. Bates: "Can't we say something about the Bible?"
According to the professor and Paul Bonicelli, who was dean of
academic affairs at the time, the president first threatened to cancel
the lecture. He relented after certain changes and additions were made.
But a draft of the speech that Mr. Bates says is the original
mentions "Scripture" in the second paragraph. Mr. Bates wrote how
Christians can draw on "divine revelation" and encouraged students to
become the kind of people who "may shape the culture to the glory of
God." The professor sent the lecture to faculty members and
administrators before he delivered it. Mr. Farris, he says, was the
only person who objected.
Mr. Bates says he and another faculty member discussed the
speech with the president for nearly two hours. During that discussion,
according to Mr. Bates, Mr. Farris said he believed that Augustine was
in hell. (Another faculty member says Mr. Farris told him the same
thing.) Mr. Farris denies saying this, though he admits having
reservations about the famous saint.
Many professors saw the president's interference as
heavy-handed and worrisome. If a professor could be scolded and forced
to alter a lecture on a well-known Christian figure, what would happen
if a lecture were given on Machiavelli or Marx?
After the incident, nine professors, including Mr. Bates,
reached an informal understanding. If one of them were reprimanded or
dismissed unfairly, the others would come to his or her aid. There were
no legally binding oaths, and nothing was written down -- "it's not
like we signed anything in blood," as one professor put it -- but it
was an agreement just the same.
The Lifeboat Example
Their pact was soon put to the test.
This semester, the father of a student wrote a letter to the
president complaining about one of his daughter's professors. The
professor, Erik S. Root, who teaches government and was among the nine,
used what is sometimes called the "lifeboat example" in one of his
classes. Mr. Root asked students to imagine that two people are
clinging to an inner tube in the middle of the ocean. The inner tube
can support only one of them, so someone has to let go. The example was
part of a discussion on the state of nature. "What would Hobbes and
Locke have to say about this?" Mr. Root asked the class.
One student answered by quoting John 15:13: "Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends."
"That's great, but it's too simplistic," Mr. Root says he told her. "Can we flesh that out?"
The discussion continued, and the professor brought up other
moral quandaries, like whether a soldier should fall on a grenade to
save his comrades. The lifeboat example was mentioned in passing; it
was not the central theme of the lecture.
But the father of the student who quoted the Bible happened to
be sitting in on the class that day. He was not happy with the
professor's response -- and he wrote the president a letter telling him
so.
Mr. Farris was bothered by the allegations made in the letter.
"That's troubling if he told her that was simplistic," he said. "If he
did what was alleged, then he should not be back here next year."
For the record, Mr. Root is a Christian who believes that the
Bible is the inspired, infallible word of God. He says he wasn't
denigrating it or the student with his response. In this context, he
argues, quoting the verse does not fully answer the question. He wanted
to keep the discussion going -- and that is what he did.
Mr. Farris, through a dean, demanded an explanation. The
professor insisted that the president's concerns be put in writing. Mr.
Farris responded with a list of seven questions, only one of which
dealt with the lifeboat example. The others were related to an article
Mr. Root had written on -- who else? -- St. Augustine. But it was the
lifeboat example that aroused the president's ire.
If Mr. Farris had simply asked for an explanation, according to
Mr. Root, there would have been no problem. He would have gladly
offered one. But Mr. Farris also informed the professor that he was
withholding his contract for the following year until he received
satisfactory answers to his questions (there is no tenure at Patrick
Henry). In other words, his job was in danger.
'Stand on Principle'
When Mr. Bates heard about Mr. Root, he felt like he had been
kicked in the chest. "We knew it could happen to any of us," he said.
"So when it did happen, it confirmed that uneasiness."
Four of the professors who agreed to the pact, including Mr.
Bates, followed through. It was not a decision any of them took
lightly. For starters, they all believed in the Patrick Henry vision
and wanted to be part of making it a reality. There were also practical
considerations. "When you have a family and a mortgage, it's a serious
decision," said David C. Noe, an assistant professor of classics and
one of the four. "I have to put food on the table." Still, the
professors concluded that a promise was a promise. If Mr. Root's
contract was being withheld, then they would decline to sign theirs.
Mr. Noe calls it a "question of honor." Mr. Bates sees it in
similar terms: "I had to come home and be able to look my kids in the
eyes," he said, "and let them know that they have a dad they can
respect, who will stand on principle."
The five men are not just colleagues, but good friends. All
except Mr. Root have young children, and their families know one
another and regularly get together. Even when discussing the
controversy, which has been painful for all of them, there is laughter
and good-natured ribbing. They were close before, and recent events
seem to have brought them closer.
The president, for his part, says he is "baffled" by the professors' decisions.
But what happened to Mr. Root seemed, to them, like simply the
latest outrage, further proof that the president had little respect for
them or genuine academic inquiry.
Around that time, Mr. Noe and J. Kevin Culberson, an assistant
professor of history and literature who is also among the four, wrote
an article
for the college's student magazine. The article was a "line in the
sand," according to Mr. Noe. In it he and Mr. Culberson argued against
the idea that "the Bible is the only source of truth." There is, they
wrote, "much wisdom to be gained from Parmenides and Plato, as well as
Machiavelli and Marx."
The article says that while the Bible contains "everything we
need to know for reconciliation with God," it does not tell us "how to
fix a door jamb or file a brief in appellate court." In other words,
there is value in books other than the Bible. What's more, they argued,
Christians have an obligation to seek out truth wherever it may be
found.
This 900-word article prompted a 2,600-word response from the
college's chaplain that was officially endorsed by the president. The
lengthy rebuttal,
which was sent via e-mail to professors and students, questions the
value of reading Machiavelli. It also strongly implies that the
professors' column violated the college's statement of biblical
worldview.
When asked recently what he objects to, Mr. Farris scanned the
article on his computer screen quietly for a few moments. He then
wondered aloud whether it had been altered to remove the offending
phrases. "I think it may have been edited," he said. "That would be an
interesting story." After reviewing another copy of the article, this
one provided by his secretary, he conceded that the online version had
not been edited.
He pointed to a line that says, "Clearly there is no greater good than knowledge...."
That, he said, is contrary to the Bible.
Yet the rest of the sentence clarifies their intent: "... for
without knowledge, there can be no use of any other gift which God
imparts." The professors say the knowledge they wrote about includes
knowledge of God. And what, they wonder, is so unbiblical about that?
The article also says that "the best place to find evidence of
Providential handiwork is not in mountains, birdsong, and sunsets, but
in the works of men."
Mr. Farris does not agree. "I don't think the musings of Dennis Rodman
are superior to the beauty of Mount Rainier," he said. The professors,
however, mentioned some of history's greatest thinkers, not a former
professional basketball player best known for tattoos and dating
Madonna.
Withholding His Blessing
The day after the article was published, the four professors and
Mr. Root told the president they would be leaving the college. They
also asked the president's permission to inform students of the reasons
for their departures. Rumors flew around the tightly knit community.
Some found expression in responses to a short item about the
controversy that was posted on The Chronicle's News Blog.
Some students wondered if the professors now rejected the college's statements of faith and biblical worldview.
The professors' faith in Christianity was questioned, too. In an
interview with the student newspaper, the president seemed to doubt the
professors' belief in the Bible. He later sent an e-mail message to the
campus clarifying his comments by saying he believes "they have a
sincere desire to honor the Bible as God's authoritative Word."
The professors wanted to clear the air. They say they all
believe in the Bible and remain committed Christians. But they were
worried that explaining to students why they were leaving might be
cause for dismissal. All five men had several months left on their
contracts and needed time to find other employment.
No answer was forthcoming. When asked why he declined to give
that permission, Mr. Farris offered an analogy: "I have adult
children," he said. "They can come to me for advice or blessing. If
someone wants to ask for my blessing, that means I agree with them. If
they ask for advice, I can tell them and they'll go do whatever they
want."
In this analogy, the professors were seeking his blessing, which he was not willing to give.
Despite that lack of assurance, Robert Stacey, chairman of the
government department and one of the four professors, read aloud the
college's statements of faith and biblical worldview in one of his
classes. He told students that if they thought he had been unfaithful
to these statements, they should approach him personally. Or, if they
felt he was beyond redemption, they should leave the classroom rather
than sit under his instruction. He said he would not hold it against
anyone who left. About 15 minutes later, one student left. Everyone
else stayed.
When the president heard what Mr. Stacey had said, he fired him.
Mr. Farris explained that Mr. Stacey was "forcing students to
leave the classroom if they disagreed with him." He mentioned the
student who left the class. "What's that girl supposed to do?" he
asked.
'Foolishness With God'
Several students interviewed by The Chronicle, like
Shant Boyajian, a junior government and public-policy major, believe
the professors were treated unfairly. "I think the professors made a
courageous stand in the face of an injustice that was done against
them," he said.
Not all students feel that way. Jeremiah Lorrig, a senior
government major, believes that it is better for the professors to
leave because they weren't doing what the president asked of them. "If
I work at McDonald's, I should want to sell hamburgers," he said. "If I
want to sell tacos, I shouldn't work there."
Another student, who asked to remain anonymous because he fears
retaliation, summed it up this way: "The professors believe there is
truth to be obtained from Plato and Aristotle. While Dr. Farris would
in theory advocate reading Nietzsche, he doesn't actually see the
liberal arts as a good way to find truth."
Mr. Farris said he does value works other than the Bible. He
teaches a course on the Constitution and pointed out that he rarely
quotes the Bible in there. "I'm the one who started the college, and
I'm the one who articulated the vision," he said. "What I don't think
is that we take the Greek philosophers and swallow it whole. I believe
what the Scripture said, and that is that the wisdom of this world is
foolishness with God."
After this semester, Mr. Farris will become chancellor, and
Graham Walker, who was formerly vice president for academic affairs at
Oklahoma Wesleyan University, will become Patrick Henry's second
president. Mr. Farris wonders why, if he is stepping aside, the
professors still decided to leave. "If I'm the problem -- well, I'm
going to be gone," he said.
The professors say they doubt that Mr. Farris would ever
relinquish control of the college, regardless of his title. "Besides,"
said Mr. Noe, "it wouldn't right past wrongs."
Mr. Bonicelli, the former academic-affairs dean, was there when
the college began and helped write the statements of faith and biblical
worldview. He believes that the president is not truly committed to the
liberal arts. Mr. Bonicelli, who left what he calls his "dream job"
because of disagreements with how Mr. Farris ran the college, called
the firing of Mr. Stacey "absurd" and said that comments Mr. Farris has
made about the value of reading Augustine and Plato were "horrific."
He also believes that the college -- which has gotten so much
attention during its brief existence -- will never be the same after
the professors' departures. "I think the trajectory now is that it will
become a Bible college of sorts, not an excellent Christian
liberal-arts college," he said. "The college as we created it -- I
don't think that can be saved."
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