Posted on 12/02/2004 1:07:16 PM PST by Mr. Silverback
Note: This commentary was delivered by Prison Fellowship President Mark Earley.
Do you think college today is a faith-friendly place? That university culture is free of anti-Christian bias? That your childs teachers are pure seekers of truth with no axes to grind?
If you believe that, I have a bridge to sell you. As J. Budziszewski explains in his wonderful new book Ask Me Anything: Provocative Answers for College Students, its still possible to learn something at college, but professors dont always cooperate. He ought to know. Budziszewski is a tenured professor of government and philosophy in the University of Texas at Austin. And hes also a Christian.
A female student who wanted to be a missionary e-mailed Budziszewski to say that although her anthropology professor was kind and gentlemanly when discussing non-Christian religions, he suddenly turned harsh and vulgar when the subject turned to Christianity. To defend his hostility, he said that no one possesses religious truth, that every culture has value and should be judged by its own standards, and that missionaries force their religious beliefs down the throats of other cultures. The young woman wanted to stand up to him but didnt know how.
Budziszewski has the answers. When the professor says, No one knows the truth about religion, the young woman might respond, Professor, if no one knows the truth about religion, then how can you say that your own claim about religion is true? Its like the Liars Paradox, where a man says, The statement I am making is a lie. If his statement is true, then it cant be true, because he just said its a lie. If his statement is false, then its true, but only because hes lying.
When the professor says, Every culture should be judged by its own standards, the student might respond, Professor, whose culture says that we ought to judge every culture by its own standards? Isnt it your culture that says sothe culture of relativist university teachers? So when you demand that every other culture accept your cultures standard, arent you violating your principle that every culture ought to be judged by its own standards?
And when the professor says, Missionaries force their religious beliefs down the throats of other cultures, the young woman might respond, Professor, you say that every culture has value, and we should judge it by its own standards. If so, why do you make an exception for the culture of Christianity? Doesnt it also have value, and shouldnt we judge it by its own standards? In that case, I dont understand why youre so harsh on Christian missionaries.
These are only a few of the tough questions Budziszewski tackles. He has others that students might indeed ask themselves during their time at college. For example, If I was brought up by my parents to believe in Jesus Christ, does that mean my faith is merely arbitrary?; How can the Christian ideal of faith answer the postmodernist ideal of suspicion?; and, If I treat the Church like a consumer product on Sunday mornings, what am I missing?
This year, my two college students will be getting copies of Ask Me Anything for Christmas. You may want copies for yours as well. Remember, college lasts only four years, but the decisions we make in this life last for eternity.
We were at the Virginia Tech homecoming game in October. We were delighted to see that the Homecoming "King" was sponsored by the Christian Student Fellowship (that may not be the actual name).
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Any science, philosophy, or knowledge which supposes that it can stand on its own pretensions, and can leave God out of its assumptions, becomes its own opposite, and disillusions everyone who builds his expectations on it.
- Dr. Herman Bavinck
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