Vanderbilt University has decided that campus student religious groups may not require that their leaders accept the core beliefs of the religious group they would lead. Ironically, Vanderbilt's right to do so rests on the same freedom it denies to these groups--a group's freedom to define what it stands for and the views it expresses.
 

 
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Vanderbilt University has decided that Christian student groups that hold traditional Christian religious views are not welcome on campus. They will no longer be recognized as valid student organizations. Vanderbilt's reason is that such groups require that their leaders be Christian--that is, that their leaders embrace certain core principles of Christianity and try to live according to these principles. In Vanderbilt's view, religious beliefs and standards "discriminate" against those students who do not subscribe to them. Therefore, student religious groups with religious beliefs and standards are banned.
The situation would be unbelievable--were it not true. The issue came to a head this year when a student group at Vanderbilt Law School, the Christian Legal Society, submitted its "constitution" to the university. The constitution provided that the group's leaders should believe in the Bible and in Jesus Christ as their Lord and savior; that they should be willing to lead members in worship, prayer, and Bible study; and that they should "strive to exemplify Christ-like qualities." Vanderbilt's Director of Religious Life, Reverend Gretchen Person, replied that such views were forbidden. Vanderbilt's policies "do not allow" religious groups to have such an "expectation/qualification of officers," she wrote. Last week, the administration officially declared the policy that Vanderbilt will exclude student religious groups that "impose faith-based or belief-based requirements for membership or leadership."
As weird as it may sound--and as ridiculous as Vanderbilt's actions may be--this is entirely within Vanderbilt's constitutional rights: Vanderbilt has the right to be as hostile to orthodox Christianity and to suppress its faithful exercise on its campus as it wishes. Vanderbilt's status as a private university gives it the First Amendment right to take whatever position it wants on the exercise of religion within its university community. Vanderbilt University has the right to despise Christianity (and other faiths, too) if it so chooses.
Of course, having a right to do something does not make it the right thing to do. And Vanderbilt's policy is, undeniably, an embarrassing example of political correctness run horribly amok, of intellectually incompetent administrators, and of institutional hypocrisy. But in Vanderbilt's bad example lies a parable rich in irony about constitutional freedom under the First Amendment.
Source: The Witherspoon Institute | Michael Stokes Paulsen
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