Adam M. Kuehner
June 16, 2004
I had no idea what I was in for when I first
stepped foot onto the downtown Chicago campus
of Moody Bible Institute in the fall of 2001.
As an advocate of the doctrines of grace, I
expected to encounter occasional points of
disagreement at my new school. Nevertheless,
I hoped that the solid overall Moody experience
would outweigh any “peripheral” disagreements. Little did I know
the amount of hot air I would soon encounter in the Windy City.
From the very outset, I noticed Moody’s
frightening tendency toward liberalism and
political correctness. During orientation,
we were shown a video encouraging racial harmony
among the student body, and the host of the
presentation encouraged everyone to admit to
his or her tacit acceptance of racism and confess
it. During the subsequent small group discussion,
a thirty-something white male explained that
he was ashamed of his Caucasian roots and wished
he had grown up with a real cultural
identity. It was shocking to hear such things
at an evangelical Bible college.
Things only got worse when classes started.
In my Personal Evangelism class, for instance,
the professor declared that repentance was
not part of the gospel and, therefore, not
necessary for salvation. According to her philosophy
of evangelism, Christians ought to focus on
winning people to Christ, rather than bogging
themselves down with specific ethical or theological
details. Homosexuals and prostitutes, as such,
should not be approached about their sinful
lifestyle until after they have “received
Christ.” One student, a former homosexual,
criticized Jerry Falwell’s stance against
sodomy, claiming that it “upset many
homosexuals.” The professor agreed, arguing
that such an outspoken approach caused an unnecessary
stumbling block for evangelism. She also warned
us against using words like sin and church,
since they might intimidate our “seeker” and
thus terminate the conversation prematurely.
In the weeks to follow, each of my challenges
to this humanistic approach was either marginalized
or censured, and it was clear that my professor
was unhappy with my alternative perspective.
I even received a zero on an essay recounting
my personal testimony! When asked about the
grade, my professor informed me that my testimony
had included too much theological material
and overemphasized the faithful instruction
of my parents. She wanted me to rewrite the
account, replacing my theological confession
with a “Damascus Road” crisis account.
Unfortunately, things weren’t much better
in my other classes. In Cultural Anthropology,
for instance, the professor instructed us to
be more culturally open-minded toward pagan
totem poles. According to her, they were not
necessarily idols, since many of the natives
who “admired” them were simply
revering moral virtues by associating them
with animals. She suggested that when evangelizing
pagan natives, missionaries should feel free
to use these images in order to further “contextualize” their
presentation of Christian virtues. When I politely
raised the issue of the second commandment,
the professor insinuated that the appreciation
of certain aspects of these pagan practices
allowed Christians to free themselves from
the bondage of Western prejudice.
In addition, few of my professors appreciated
my sincere efforts to counter the school’s
delinquent worldview by circulating solid Reformed
literature and engaging in dialogues with my
fellow students. The result was a widening
gap between the theological and philosophical
truths I was beginning to embrace and the dispensational,
quasi-arminian pietism that dominated a majority
of our chapel services and most of my classes.
In Christianity and Western Culture, my professor
attacked Christian Reconstruction by name,
claiming that it was essentially a fascist
movement that desired to enforce Christian
values and subject children to religious tyranny.
Conversely, he suggested that Christians should
advocate the current socio-political norm of
pluralism. When I raised my hand and humbly
suggested that the current imposition of humanistic
religion through state-controlled education
was equally tyrannical, I was met with cold
opposition.
Over the next few months, I yearned for the
ability to examine and develop a consistently
Reformed Christian worldview. After a long,
arduous search, I came across Christ College
in Lynchburg, Virginia. I was won over by the
breadth of the academic curriculum as well
as the impressive faculty list. I jumped at
the chance to learn politics and history from
Kevin Clauson and Roger Schultz, both of whom
are department chairmen at Liberty University
and experienced Presbyterian elders. On top
of that, Christ College had recently added
noted presuppositionalist Michael Butler as
a full-time philosophy instructor and arranged
for routine modular courses with distinguished
author Kenneth Gentry. No longer would I be
forced to learn history, politics, theology,
and philosophy from an essentially humanistic
perspective. Needless to say, my decision to
transfer was not a difficult one.
Throughout the last of my two years at Moody,
I found much-needed encouragement at the Church
of Christian Liberty, where I was faithfully
instructed and nurtured by several churchmen
and their families. Their willingness to answer
my questions and provide me with helpful Reformed
literature allowed me to nurture my newfound
theological convictions with the stellar writings
of Rushdoony, Bahnsen, Gentry, DeMar, and others.
During that final year, I was able to help
organize a debate on Moody campus between Gary
DeMar and an MBI Bible professor on the nature
of the Abrahamic Covenant. At the debate, Christian
Liberty Press set up a discounted book table
and affordably distributed a slew of postmillennial
and theonomic titles to MBI students. The result
was encouraging, as issues such as covenant
theology, gospel prosperity, and theonomic
civil ethics began permeating classroom dialogue.
Reconstruction fever so swept over the school
that a new interpretation of the doctrinal
standards was advanced. Under the new interpretation,
postmillennial students were prohibited from
graduating, since postmillennialism denies
the “immanency of Christ’s return.” Ultimately,
a handful of my classmates decided to move
to Lynchburg with me and attend Christ College.
In the months following the Moody exodus,
friends and family have occasionally questioned
the wisdom of my decision to transfer from
a well-known Christian college to one that
is small and unaccredited. This approach, however,
misses the point entirely. Instead, we should
be asking the following questions: Why
is it that the only consistently Biblical colleges
and seminaries in existence today are obscure
and small? and Why is it necessary
for a college to receive a stamp of approval
from a secular or humanistic Christian organization? After
all, such institutions (educational and ecclesiastical)
typically oppose the Christian Reformation
for which we so earnestly labor. True accreditation
must be Biblical and confessional, stemming
from an adherence to sound Biblical teaching
rather than political pandering and impersonal
bureaucracy.
Over the past hundred and fifty years, humanism
has progressively infiltrated and captured
numerous one-time-Christian universities, such
as Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Duke, and others.
The ultimate downfall of these schools has
been compromise. Concerning this phenomenon,
historian Daniel Boorstin wrote, “To
make their colleges appeal to everybody, to
people who believe anything or nothing, the
denominations themselves became powerful breeders
of ‘Nothingarianism,’ which some
observers said was the truly dominant American
sect.”
In order to reestablish our lost cultural
influence, we must refuse to trade principles
for popularity; we must refuse to compromise.
Rather than valuing the accreditation of man
and the state, Christians should insist on
conformity to confessional standards and submission
to church authority. Christ College, along
with several other likeminded institutions,
has boldly taken this stance. The road may
be difficult, but the destination remains a
constant. Now just a semester away from graduation
at Christ College, I can honestly say that
I wouldn’t dream of attending anywhere
else.
Adam Kuehner is currently a senior at Christ College and attends Westminster
Reformed Presbyterian Church, pastored by Dr. Roger Schultz. After graduation,
he hopes to pursue graduate studies in Church History and Biblical Languages
at Liberty University as well as to continue working toward a Master of Apologetics
degree at Bahnsen Theological Seminary. His favorite authors include R.L. Dabney,
Greg Bahnsen, and J. Gresham Machen. Adam may be contacted at adamkuehner@yahoo.com.
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