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Dark Christianity - Christian college forbids eye contact
Exploring and Exposing Dominionist Christianity
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Christian college forbids eye contact
Making "eye babies" is the act of staring into someone's eyes for too long. It is grounds for expulsion at a college in the US.



http://chronicle.com/weekly/v52/i29/29a04001.htm
From the issue dated March 24, 2006


A College That's Strictly Different
Secretive Pensacola Christian controls student life with tough regulations and unwritten rules

By THOMAS BARTLETT

Pensacola, Fla.

The campus looks just like the glossy brochure: clean, green, and beautiful. The students are well dressed and well groomed, not a pair of jeans or scrappy goatee in sight. Inside the Commons building, two students engage in a spirited game of Ping-Pong. When one of them misses an easy shot, he cries, "Praise the Lord!"

Pensacola Christian College prides itself on being different, not just from secular colleges, but from fellow Christian ones, too. Some of those differences, like the way students dress, are obvious to any visitor. Others are not. Since its founding, more than 30 years ago, Pensacola has blossomed from a tiny Bible college into a thriving institution of nearly 5,000 students. Along the way it has become known as among the most conservative — and most secretive — colleges in the country.

Not to mention one of the strictest. The rules at Pensacola govern every aspect of students' lives, including the books they read, the shoes they wear, the churches they attend, and the people they date. Many of those regulations are spelled out in a handbook sent to students after they enroll, but there are plenty of unwritten rules as well. Demerits are common and discipline swift.

It's all in the name of preserving Pensacola's "distinctives" — the word the college uses for what sets it apart. But many former students say the enforcement of the rules is often cruel and capricious. Dissent is never tolerated, they say, and expulsions for seemingly minor infractions are routine.

They also complain that Pensacola plays down (or never mentions) an important fact: It is not accredited. For many students, that lack of accreditation has not been a problem; for some, however, it has meant starting college over elsewhere or being rejected by employers.

In keeping with its distrust of outsiders, Pensacola's administration declined repeatedly to comment for this article. A spokesman says college officials "don't want to stir up a hornet's nest." But as interviews with dozens of current and former students make clear, the buzzing has already begun.

The Rule Book

Lisa Morris was walking to class with her boyfriend last October when something happened. At first Ms. Morris, a sophomore music major, is reluctant to divulge the details. Eventually, however, the truth comes out: He patted her behind.

Someone who witnessed the incident reported Ms. Morris and her boyfriend. At Pensacola any physical contact between members of the opposite sex is forbidden. (Members of the same sex may touch, although the college condemns homosexuality.) The forbidden contact includes shaking hands and definitely includes patting behinds. Both students were expelled.

Of Pensacola's many rules, those dealing with male-female relationships are the most talked about. There are restrictions on when and where men and women may speak to each other. Some elevators and stairwells may be used only by women; others may be used only by men. Socializing on particular benches is forbidden. If a man and a woman are walking to class, they may chat; if they stop en route, though, they may be in trouble. Generally men and women caught interacting in any "unchaperoned area" — which is most of the campus — could be subject to severe penalties.

Those rules extend beyond the campus. A man and a woman cannot go to an off-campus restaurant together without a chaperon (usually a faculty member). Even running into members of the opposite sex off campus can lead to punishment. One student told of how a group of men and a group of women from the college happened to meet at a McDonald's last spring. Both groups were returning from the beach (they had gone to separate beaches; men and women are not allowed to be at the beach together). The administration found out, and all 15 students were expelled.

Even couples who are not talking or touching can be reprimanded. Sabrina Poirier, a student at Pensacola who withdrew in 1997, was disciplined for what is known on the campus as "optical intercourse" — staring too intently into the eyes of a member of the opposite sex. This is also referred to as "making eye babies." While the rule does not appear in written form, most students interviewed for this article were familiar with the concept.

As she tells it, Ms. Poirier was not gazing lovingly at her boyfriend; he had something in his eye. But officials didn't buy her explanation, and she and her boyfriend were both "socialed," she says.

There are three levels of official punishment at Pensacola (four, if you count expulsion). Students can be "socialed," "campused," or "shadowed." Students who are socialed are not allowed to talk to members of the opposite sex for two weeks. Those who are campused may not leave the college grounds for two weeks or speak to other campused students.

Being shadowed is the worst of the three. Shadowed students are assigned to a "floor leader" for several days. A floor leader is a student who is paid by the college and has the power to issue demerits. Shadowed students must attend the floor leader's classes and sleep in the floor leader's room. During this time, the shadowed student is not allowed to talk to anyone but the floor leader. Shadowing is usually a prelude to expulsion.

Ms. Poirier was later told she would be shadowed after being spotted riding in a car in mixed company. She tried to explain that it was an innocent outing, but to no avail. When told she would be shadowed, Ms. Poirier decided to withdraw. "I said 'screw it' and I left," she says.

There are plenty of other ways to run afoul of the rules. Last spring Timothy Dow was caught playing the video game Halo 2. Such games are banned by the college. Movies are also forbidden, including those rated G. Music is restricted to classical or approved Christian ("contemporary Christian" artists are deemed too worldly). Students are allowed to watch television news at 6 o'clock, but that's it. The TVs are controlled by college employees, who flip a switch to black out the commercials, lest students see anything inappropriate.

In the library, books and magazines are censored. One student says she saw a pair of black-marker boxer shorts on a photograph of Michelangelo's David. Any books that students wish to read that are not in the library must first be approved by administrators. Those containing references to "magic," for instance, are normally rejected. The rule book specifically prohibits "fleshly magazines and books."

For playing the video game, Mr. Dow was campused. Later, in the cafeteria, he ran into a friend who had just been expelled. Mr. Dow had been told not to talk to his friend, who had previously been campused. But he figured it would be OK now that his friend was leaving. "I gave him a hug and said, 'See you later, man,'" he says.

Someone witnessed the exchange and turned Mr. Dow in. Students routinely turn each other in for violating rules and are rewarded by the administration for doing so. According to several former students, those who report classmates are more likely to become floor leaders.

Mr. Dow was called to the office of the dean of men, where, he says, he waited for about four hours. Then he was expelled.

In The Beginning

Pensacola Christian College is "an idea that came from God," according to its Web site. The college was founded in 1974 by Arlin Horton, who remains its president. It is Baptist but is not affiliated with the Southern Baptist Convention or any similar organization. Both Mr. Horton and his wife, Rebekah, are graduates of Bob Jones University. While it appears that he copied his alma mater's demerit system and some of its rules, there is a longstanding rift between the two institutions.

Several years ago, Pensacola publicly criticized Bob Jones University for using translations of the Bible other than the King James Version. (Pensacola's policy is that the King James is the only divinely inspired English translation.) A group of Bob Jones faculty members fired off a lengthy letter responding to the attack.

It is true that students at Bob Jones are permitted to consult other English translations of the Bible. In the letter, however, Bob Jones professors objected to the implication that the university was not faithful to the word of God. "PCC appears to be bent on claiming exclusive right to the higher ground of Fundamentalism — in lofty isolation, not only from BJU, but from virtually every other Fundamental Bible college and seminary," they wrote.

A representative of Bob Jones University declined to talk about the bad blood between the colleges.

When Pensacola opened its doors, it had one building and 100 students. Its mission was to offer an education "based on the Christian traditional approach in contrast to the humanistic, progressive systems of education." Since then, as it has grown to nearly 5,000 students, it has built a large, gated campus featuring an art-and-music center with a 140-seat recital hall and recording studio; a 137,000-square-foot sports center with a basketball court, ice-skating rink, 12-lane bowling alley, four-lane jogging track, miniature golf course, and racquetball courts. There is a cafeteria, an on-campus restaurant, and a 300,000-volume library.

The campus also has several computer labs and wireless Internet access, although there is a catch. In the mid-1990s, Pensacola had e-mail and limited Internet access, but it shut the services down after several students started an online newsletter criticizing the college. (Needless to say, the students who created the newsletter were expelled.) Internet access was not restored until last year, and it comes with significant restrictions. There are a few hundred approved Web sites; students must ask permission to visit any other site. Amazon and eBay, for instance, are reportedly not on the approved list. Several students say they leave the campus to surf the Web.

Pensacola's success can be chalked up in part to its reputation. It is known as perhaps the strictest Christian college in the country, one that has criticized Bob Jones, of all places, for being too liberal. For those searching for a college that is more-Christian-than-thou, Pensacola is it. It has found a marketing niche.

But that is not the only reason for its growth. Along with the college, Mr. Horton founded A Beka Books, acknowledged as the largest Christian-textbook company in the world. A Beka sells textbooks to more than 10,000 Christian schools across the country, offering a complete curriculum for kindergarten through 12th grade. It has also won a big share of the lucrative home-school market.

The company brings in about $70-million in annual revenue and is valued at $280-million, according to Dun & Bradstreet. A sizable chunk of that revenue goes to support the college, which does not come close to breaking even on its own. According to its 2003 tax filing, the university collected $20-million in tuition and fees and $3-million from contributions. The filing attributes $15-million in income to "royalties," presumably from A Beka.

In the mid-90s, A Beka paid nearly $50-million in back taxes after the Internal Revenue Service ruled that it should have been classified as a for-profit entity. The college itself remains nonprofit.

Revenue from A Beka helps keep costs extremely low. Students pay $6,000 a year for tuition, room, and board. That's about a third or a quarter of what most other Christian colleges cost. When asked what other colleges they considered, Pensacola students often mention Bob Jones, Cedarville University, Northland Baptist Bible College, and Abilene Christian University. Cost is usually cited as the deciding factor.

Just as the textbook company helps support the college, the college helps support the textbook company. Many of Pensacola's students work for A Beka, operating binding equipment, packing books into boxes, loading those boxes onto forklifts. Some students complain about the working conditions; others say it's a good deal. For women, A Beka is usually the only employment option because they are not allowed to hold off-campus jobs. Or leave the campus alone, for that matter.

In the world of Christian colleges, Pensacola is an oddity. It is not a member of the Council for Christian Colleges and Universities. It has little to do with other institutions. Several administrators at other Christian colleges declined to discuss Pensacola on the record for fear of seeming critical. One said he did not know enough to speak knowledgeably because Pensacola keeps mostly to itself.

While not wanting to criticize Pensacola, Carl A. Ruby, vice president for student life at Cedarville, in Ohio, emphasizes that his university doesn't take the "bad-kid approach" to discipline. "On major issues of Christian doctrine, we are probably always on the same page," he writes in an e-mail message. "In terms of living out our faith on a daily basis, significant differences emerge."

Too Much? Or Just Right?

So Pensacola is strict. Sometimes very strict.

Is that necessarily a bad thing?

Not really, according to Isaac Blakely. "You get tired of some of the rules, but all in all the rules are not that hard to deal with if you have the right attitude about it," he says.

Mr. Blakely, a senior commercial-art major, had a friend who was socialed for "sitting too close to a girl." One semester Mr. Blakely himself came perilously close to getting kicked out by racking up 118 demerits. (A total of 150 means automatic expulsion.) The demerits were for small offenses, like forgetting to empty his dorm-room trash can or failing to properly clean the sink. Rooms are inspected regularly, and students who do not meet cleanliness standards are given demerits.

Even so, Mr. Blakely is loath to complain. "If PCC didn't put restrictions on us, I would wonder about their standards," he says. "I'm glad they're doing it."

Mena Ghobrial doesn't mind the rules, either. "At first I thought it was too strict, but it helps me concentrate on my studies," says the senior pre-med major. Mr. Ghobrial, who is from Egypt, thinks that some of the restrictions, such as making students sign out when they leave the campus and write down where they are going, help keep them safe.

Others are less enthusiastic about Pensacola's approach. Lisa Daxer transferred to Cedarville from Pensacola. Like other conservative Christian colleges, Cedarville has its share of rules. For instance, students may not drink alcohol on or off the campus, even if they are over 21. They are also forbidden to listen to music that comes with a parental-advisory sticker. Most forms of dancing are banned (ballet is OK).

That's fine with Ms. Daxer, who has no desire to attend a more permissive secular college.

Her problems with Pensacola go beyond the rules. Administrators there equate loyalty to the college with obedience to God in a way she finds objectionable. "They used to say that being at PCC is God's will for our lives," she says. "So walking out of PCC would be breaking God's will for our lives. Then I've heard them say that you might end up dying because God can't use you anymore."

Darrell Dow has heard much the same thing. "There is this idea that if you go against us, you're going against God," he says. Mr. Dow graduated from Pensacola in 2003 with a degree in computer science, but by then he already felt disillusioned. (Timothy Dow, who was kicked out for hugging a recently expelled friend, is Darrell Dow's cousin.) He says because rules can be "made up on the spot," it seems impossible to abide by all of them. "There's a feeling of helplessness and a spirit of fear," he says. "Not to put too fine a point on it, but there's a very 1984 feel to the place."

Matthew Arnold agrees. He graduated from Pensacola in 1998 with a degree in commercial art and graphic design; his younger sister attends the college "going against all the advice I ever gave," he says. Mr. Arnold is active in an online forum for former students, where many complain about the college and trade their best, or worst, stories. Some even call themselves "survivors" of the institution. Others, though, temper their criticism with fond regard.

Mr. Arnold argues that because the college claims that its authority comes directly from God, students who feel mistreated are put in an extremely awkward position. There is another, more practical fear as well, he says: Getting kicked out might mean starting over because other colleges might not accept unaccredited Pensacola's credits. "You live in terror of losing all the money you've put into the college," he says.

When Adam Peters enrolled at Pensacola, he believed that "the Lord wanted me to go there." But last fall he accumulated 111 demerits and was asked to sit out for a semester. Mr. Peters, a junior majoring in Bible studies, says he has started "to see a lot of the weaknesses" in Pensacola's system. "I can't shut my eyes to those, even though there are strengths," he says.

From his perspective, there are indeed strengths. Christianity is woven throughout the curriculum. Creationism is taught in science courses. Classes begin with a prayer. Along with mandatory chapel services, students must attend the campus church three times every week; they are not allowed to go to another church unless they are from the Pensacola area, and even then they need special permission. Mandatory small-group prayer meetings are held in the evenings.

A strong Christian emphasis is part of what Mr. Peters wanted in a college. But he has become disturbed by how Pensacola exerts its considerable power over students' lives. He is also bothered by how many of his friends have left the college. "One day they're there, and the next it's like, 'Where's Samantha? Oh, she got kicked out,'" he says. "They won't spell things out, and then they'll yank you. There's not always a lot of mercy there."

Insurmountable Problems
Several previously unaccredited Christian colleges, like Bob Jones, have recently become candidates for accreditation. Pensacola, however, has shown no interest in outside approval of any kind. Nor does it advertise its unaccredited status. A search of the Web site turns up no mention of accreditation. It is not mentioned in the college's viewbook either, which dedicates four pages to sports activities and two to campus facilities.

It is mentioned, in small print, on the inside flap of the course catalog: "Pensacola Christian College has never made application for regional accreditation as the College believes it would jeopardize the College's philosophical distinctives." The catalog goes on to say that getting other colleges to accept Pensacola's credits "has seldom been an insurmountable problem."

It was an insurmountable problem for Abel Harding. Near the end of his junior year, Mr. Harding placed a sign on his dorm-room door that said, "Welcome to the Party Room." He glued cutouts from a magazine, including a beer bottle, to the poster. It was meant as a joke, he says, because the very idea that he would have beer in his room was laughable.

The administration didn't see it that way. Mr. Harding was shadowed for three days.

That was one of several run-ins he had with the administration. All students join a "collegian," Pensacola's version of the Greek system. Mr. Harding's collegian was nicknamed "the Scorpions" and one member got a tattoo of a scorpion to demonstrate his loyalty. Tattoos are not allowed, and the student was campused. In protest Mr. Harding and his fellow collegians wore all black to chapel one day. They were forced to leave the service and told they would be expelled if they wore black to chapel again.

The shadowing, however, was the tipping point. Even though the administration told Mr. Harding that he could return for his senior year, he decided to withdraw.

"I just couldn't deal with it anymore," he says.

He applied to the University of Florida and was told that none of his credits would transfer. "I had to start over," he says. So, after three years at Pensacola, he enrolled as a freshman at nearby Santa Fe Community College and later transferred to Southern Illinois University at Carbondale, from which he eventually graduated.

He says he called Pensacola for help, and offi-cials there provided none: "There's no label that says, 'We're not accredited.' How many 18-year-olds know enough to ask that?"

When he was a student, Mr. Harding traveled with a singing group that promoted Pensacola. When prospective students asked about accreditation, Mr. Harding says the singers were instructed to tell them that Harvard and Yale are not accredited, either, and so accreditation doesn't matter. (Harvard and Yale, for the record, are accredited.)

Lack of accreditation has been a problem for Amy Brown, too. She graduated from Pensacola in 2003 with a degree in early-childhood education. But because the college is not accredited, she cannot teach in public schools, she says. She had no idea what accreditation was before enrolling at Pensacola. "I never tried to transfer," she writes in an e-mail message, "because I had friends that did and ended up with all of their credits as electives," meaning that they had to retake required courses.

Mr. Ghobrial, the student from Egypt who doesn't mind the rules, wants to attend dental school. His first choice, West Virginia University, has already said it would not consider his application, because Pensacola is not accredited. "I'm hoping they change their minds," he says.

Many Christian colleges do accept Pensacola's credits, as do some secular institutions. Several former students say they have had no difficulty transferring credits or applying for jobs. But others have. And as more states crack down on degrees from unaccredited colleges, it may get even tougher for Pensacola graduates.

Donald Barber asked about accreditation before he enrolled. The first time he asked, he says, a college representative evaded the question. Then the representative said it wasn't important. "I had to ask three more times before he said no."

Mr. Barber left the college in 2004 after "butting heads" with administrators over an event he was planning. He wanted to invite a speaker from Bob Jones to an off-campus Christian-revival meeting. Pensacola officials told him he could not. "I was appalled by that," Mr. Barber says.

He did not object to the college's many rules. But he did mind that Pensacola's leaders would not tolerate dissent of any kind. "I felt like it stifled my personality," he says.

Students interviewed for this article were asked whether they would recommend the college. Some, even a few who had strong criticisms of the college, said they would. Others said absolutely not. Matthew Arnold, whose sister enrolled in Pensacola against his advice, argues that it depends a lot on the student. "If God told them to go, then there's not a lot you can do about it," he says.

But, he adds, they should know what they're getting into.

Tags: ,

Comments
jalendavi_lady From: [info]jalendavi_lady Date: April 1st, 2006 06:59 am (UTC) (Link)
I keep wondering what would happen if a girl fell, was seriously hurt, and from sheer bad luck the only people around were her male classmates. Would anyone risk stopping? Would anyone risk trying to help her up? Or would they all either stand there watching or run off to get help for something they could have started dealing with themselves?

I suppose anyone ill enough to stop breathing with no same sex person nearby to give mouth to mouth is rather out of luck at these places... or whoever dares save a life by stepping forward in such a situation is.
pope_guilty From: [info]pope_guilty Date: April 1st, 2006 07:36 am (UTC) (Link)
I'm thinking the parable of the Good Samaritan, which in context is about helping people and saying "fuck you" to the rules which say "don't help people", is lost on these people. The fact that this scam is permitted to exist is nauseating.
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makuus From: [info]makuus Date: April 1st, 2006 12:03 pm (UTC) (Link)
"Optical intercourse"... Good grief! What kind of sheep are today's conservative colleges teaching young men and women to be? I make eye contact with everyone I talk to, man or women. Does that mean I'm a person with loose morals? FPS. It's a sign to someone that you are engaged in what they are saying, and to not do so is usually taken as a sign of disinterest or deception. But, I really like this one:

"Students routinely turn each other in for violating rules and are rewarded by the administration for doing so."

I'm not surprised: This kind of thing happens under authoritarian regimes. Think Nazi Germany or Cold-War Russia, and substitute "neighbors" for "students".
cheap_laugh From: [info]cheap_laugh Date: April 1st, 2006 03:55 pm (UTC) (Link)
You're leaving out the Inquisition, which first persecuted and killed "heretical" Khristians. But htey "eye intercourse" thing is over the top. Not even the Haredi (Ultra-Orhtdox Jews) would go that far.
lihan161051 From: [info]lihan161051 Date: April 1st, 2006 04:13 pm (UTC) (Link)
Anyone read Heinlein's "Revolt in 2150"?

A lot of this stuff is so familiar it's creepy. The part about students being rewarded for turning each other in, and given special authority if they do it often and enthusiastically enough, is mentioned explicitly in one of the stories in that book ..

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fragiletender From: [info]fragiletender Date: April 1st, 2006 12:13 pm (UTC) (Link)
That's a cult.
vanar_en_daeor From: [info]vanar_en_daeor Date: April 3rd, 2006 07:04 pm (UTC) (Link)
That's exactly what I was thinking....
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moropus From: [info]moropus Date: April 1st, 2006 12:35 pm (UTC) (Link)

Re: Bizarre...

I think this means there are far more fundamentalists than even I imagined. I was one. I was raised by them, I knew there were lots of us.

One big shocker for me, that my parents had no answer for whatsoever, is that when I moved to another state and got my first real job, the people I worked with were completely friendly, helpful and had actual compassion. So I tell my parents, that the 'sinners' were nicer and more helpful than their 'good' Christian friends. My family's Christian friend were knifing them in the back pretty regularly, but these folks I worked with were helping me and had no religion I was able to ascertain, meaning they didn't go around saying weird religious things all day and then being mean at the same time.

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zrob From: [info]zrob Date: April 2nd, 2006 12:17 am (UTC) (Link)

Re: Bizarre...

Well, that's the problem with groups like this. The forster ingroup mentality for those who tow the line and anyone who steps out becomes an outcast.

Those who follow have their special place among an elec group constantly reenforced in both positive (I feel good with them) and negative (if I fuck up I'll have nothing) ways.

When someone is banished from the community, those who are still in the community are discouraged form speaking with them or contacting them in any way. They seek to isolate the outcast while further bolstering loyalty from those left behind.

Really it's cool that theres a support netowrk for former students. Before the internet I imagine it could be pretty hard for former students to fully realize how victimized they were.
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mirandaflynn From: [info]mirandaflynn Date: April 1st, 2006 12:25 pm (UTC) (Link)
It's disturbing, but at least it's college. The students are nominally adults, and you can leave freely. If they were doing this to little kids, I'd be more concerned. Also, the main punishment seems to be expulsion, so I don't see a downside ;)

Heh, SavedAcademy took a week long field trip to Bob Jones, I suppose to show us where us good little Southern Baptists should go. This was back when they were really hardcore, no interracial dating and all dating was done in campus meeting rooms with chaperones. I got out of it, which *really* pissed my school off.
synergybc From: [info]synergybc Date: April 1st, 2006 05:35 pm (UTC) (Link)
But think about this for a bit. They're 18 or so and yet they don't mind being treated this way. What do you think this says about their upbringing?
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eiredrake From: [info]eiredrake Date: April 1st, 2006 02:17 pm (UTC) (Link)
So now we know exactly how far the stick has to be jammed up your ass for Bob Jones university to call you too fundie. lol.

This is a good part
(Pensacola's policy is that the King James is the only divinely inspired English translation.)

So lemme get this straight. The bible written by a mysogynist, pervert divorcee is the only divinely inspired bible?

Craaaaaaazy, man.. Craaaaaazy.
yhnmzwcs From: [info]yhnmzwcs Date: April 1st, 2006 06:04 pm (UTC) (Link)
The KJV of the Bible was commissioned by King James I. Who are you talking about?

More to the point, the KJV has good poetry, but you need another version besides it to really understand what you're trying to read.

And of course, th KJV is tricky to interpret because meanings of words change over time. (If there's something that evolves, it's language!)

This is my first post with dark_christian. I don't just seem new here.
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pearlandopal From: [info]pearlandopal Date: April 1st, 2006 03:05 pm (UTC) (Link)
That's disgusting. I went to a private Baptist college for three years (then transferred out to a real college), and it had some unreasonably restrictive rules and silly punishments, but at least it was accredited. I have to say, though, that anyone who knowingly goes to an unaccredited school deserves what they get.
lillybeloved From: [info]lillybeloved Date: April 1st, 2006 11:22 pm (UTC) (Link)
aww. I go to a private Baptist university and I think it's a 'real college', even if it has stupid rules.
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dogemperor From: [info]dogemperor Date: April 1st, 2006 03:25 pm (UTC) (Link)
For those unaware:

a) As mentioned explicitly in the article, Pensacola Christian College is probably best known as the publisher of the A Beka curriculum--which is explicitly dominionist and can in fact be described as an indoctrination manual for spiritually abusive and coercive "Bible-based" groups.

Posts of note:

Review of the A Beka curriculum (part one and two) which details, among other things, its coerciveness, the heavy promotion of what is essentially dominionist historical revisionism (including very heavy pushing of the "Christian Nation" canard), actually teaching in sections that "good Christians vote Republican", excising practically all modern mathematics (including, of note, set theory) from their books because the Axiom of Choice is apparently considered "morally confusing", promotion of "deliverance ministry" in the books, etc.

Notes on how curriculum is one of three specific packages (the others being Bob Jones University's own curriculum and ACE (Accelerated Christian Education)) heavily used in dominionist correspondence-school "Homeschool" programs and formally rejected as being insufficient in educational content by the University of California school system (dominionists have attempted to frame this as an evolution debate, but there were actually *multiple* criteria used including the complete dropping of practically all mathematics developed since the late 1800's from the books and promotion of dominionist "historical revisionism" re US and world history):
University of California and its misadventures with dominionists

A lesser known aspect of Pensacola Christian College's promotion of dominionism is that they are one of the major players in the "translator invasion"--misuse of translators and--increasingly--low-power FM stations to set up massive satellite-based "religiocasting" networks. (I am presently on a research project involving these, and in total--counting all players, including a large number of Calvary Chapel concerns, Pensacola Christian College, American Family Radio, Family Radio Stations, Trinity Broadcasting Network and a number of smaller networks--religiocasters of this type may hold fully *half* or more of the radio station licenses in the United States.)

According to RECnet, a group monitoring radio licenses and serving the legitimate LPFM community, per the FCC's records there are at least 161 stations (mostly translators) licensed to Pensacola Christian College, and they are also one of the worse offenders in "app-spamming"--sending large numbers of applications to the FCC (occasionally multiple apps for the same translator space in the same community) in an effort to essentially flood the FCC with apps in the hopes one may be approved.

The network Pensacola Christian College runs, "Rejoice Radio", is fairly extensive even per PCS's own admission; their program guide shows the majority of their broadcasting content is dominionist preachers and programming from Focus on the Family.

Pensacola Christian College is also apparently expanding into frank televangelism (similar to many larger dominionist groups, such as New Life Church, World Harvest Church, and even the dominionist church I am a walkaway from); per the TV "ministry" website they are syndicated on a large number of television stations including--notably--the exact same channel that the dominionist DBS service Sky Angel has used for Justice Sunday events.
assimbya From: [info]assimbya Date: April 1st, 2006 03:54 pm (UTC) (Link)
This is insane. I know that people choose to go here, and that it's college, so (hopefully) no one's being forced into it...but I have to worry about what kind of people would come out of this program. Going on to become Dominionist leaders, perhaps? Or just people afraid of making any sort of contact with the opposite sex?

The part about the college keeping quiet about the fact that it's not accedited is also suspicious. People could go through this dystopia and then find out that it didn't count toward anything in life and have difficulty getting jobs!

As a dancer, this part stood out to me:

most forms of dancing are banned (ballet is OK)

So the type of dance allowed is the kind that has a history of giving an idealized vision of womanhood created by men, a vision that can possibly wreck the bodies of dancers? I suppose us Isadora Duncan dancers would not be allowed because we show 'too much skin' and we have dances relating to 'indecent' or 'pagan' themes. I wonder what they would think of the ballet "Afternoon with a Faun"...

(Btw, I mean no offense to any ballet dancers, I think that these days ballet has been done in ways that do not harm the bodies of the dancers, and there have been many beautiful ballets that do not objectify women, I was more looking at ballet from a long time ago)
dogemperor From: [info]dogemperor Date: April 1st, 2006 04:15 pm (UTC) (Link)
Actually, there are probably kids who are forced into attending:

a) Dominionist "homeschool" correspondence-school programs (including, notably, A Beka) are so devoid of educational content that some universities are rejecting people educated using them outright and others educated using them end up flunking out

b) Kids raised in dominionist households and especially being correspondence-schooled are often ineligible for most scholarship programs (as it's hard to give an exact GPA) and dominionist colleges in turn often give scholarship packages targeted at kids being correspondence-schooled; these tend to "fast-track" these kids to schools like Liberty University, Patrick Henry College, Pensacola Christian College, unaccredited "Bible colleges" in general, etc.

c) Dominionist parents often have quite a bit of say in college choices. (I in fact was flat out prohibited from attending several colleges out of state because they had co-ed dorm halls, even though I was offered full scholarship packages.) Dominionist parents may well prohibit their kids from attending non-dominionist universities--meaning the kid would have to move out (and essentially be a "throwaway") to have any other options for schooling

d) Many of the same groups promoting dominionist correspondence-school "homeschool" curricula are the same groups promoting dominionist colleges (this is true in the case of Pensacola Christian College (A-Beka), Bob Jones University, and others) and heavily promote to dominionist parents using these programs the "dangers" of public and even non-dominionist private universities and colleges

So in a lot of these cases, the kids who end up going there may not have exactly *chosen* PCS--more often than not, the parents choose for them, or they have no other real options than unaccredited "Bible colleges" in general.
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yhnmzwcs From: [info]yhnmzwcs Date: April 1st, 2006 06:20 pm (UTC) (Link)
It's like a monastery, without the learning or meditation, with both sexes, without any useful means of reference to the outside world. If the idea came from God (I'd reason to suspect otherwise because God wouldn't charge such a fool with teaching!), then the idea was swiftly perverted.
brazenbells From: [info]brazenbells Date: April 1st, 2006 07:41 pm (UTC) (Link)
Please tell me this is an April Fools' joke.

...Please?
bennu_ From: [info]bennu_ Date: April 1st, 2006 08:00 pm (UTC) (Link)
I wish!
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myblackass From: [info]myblackass Date: April 1st, 2006 08:05 pm (UTC) (Link)
This makes Scientology seem like a sane alternative.
dogemperor From: [info]dogemperor Date: April 1st, 2006 08:18 pm (UTC) (Link)
Actually, the comparison to Scientology is more apt than you realise; I've even done an in-depth comparison of pente dominionist groups and Scientology that shows in many cases the tactics taken are *identical*.

Then again, a lot of this sort of thing is common across spiritually abusive groups but tends to be far under-recognised in "Bible-based" groups in general--if only in part because the mere existance of "Bible-based" coercive religious groups is only something that's really been recognised in the past five to ten years.

(Full disclosure--I'm a walkaway from an abusive Assemblies of God church, and much of how I in fact learned my own group was coercive was in part from various posts of "coerciveness" checklists on forums dedicated to walkaways from Scientology.)
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dogemperor From: [info]dogemperor Date: April 1st, 2006 10:33 pm (UTC) (Link)
For people wishing even more backgrounder, I found a site run by survivors and walkaways from Pensacola Christian College:

http://www.pensacolachristiancollege.com/index.htm

As it turns out, the college's rules are even *more* extreme than reported in the article, including what is essentially a "hardline pentecostal" dress code (women can't wear slacks at all, for instance), men are prohibited from shaving their heads (by the college's own admission it is unsure how to apply this to non-Caucasians), men are not allowed to wear necklaces of any type, etc. and even having a specific prohibition against going to a local mall after 5pm local time. Men's Health and Vogue are apparently banned quite explicitly by the college, BMG and Columbia House mail-order music catalogues are banned as well as even the *possession* of cassette recorders/iPods/etc. on campus. Viewing any movies whatsoever or even "cracking" the plastic communion cups is considered a demeritable offense.

Full info is here and the group has a walkaways' forum on the website.
dogemperor From: [info]dogemperor Date: April 1st, 2006 10:41 pm (UTC) (Link)
Here are some further links, courtesy of the links section of the walkaways' site:

2001-2002 and 1999-2000 student handbooks

A specific warning about the lack of accreditation of Pensacola Christian College (from a student who found out, too late, that his credits would not transfer)

The links page for the PCC walkaway support site also has multiple links regarding coercive religious groups; I personally agree that Pensacola Christian College (and much of the dominionist movement, in fact) crosses the line to being spiritually abusive.

(And keep in mind, folks, these are the publishers of what is probably the most widely used curriculum package by dominionist private school and "homeschool" correspondence-school programs.)
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dogemperor From: [info]dogemperor Date: April 1st, 2006 11:23 pm (UTC) (Link)

And while we're at it:

Pensacola Christian College is, alas, not the only dominionist group nor the only "Bible-based cult" in the area. Far from it.

Other dominionist groups:

Brownsville Assembly of God (often termed the "birthplace" of so-called "third wave" pentecostalism, though not entirely accurate; the entire "third wave"/Toronto/Brownsville "revival" movement is increasingly being regarded as spiritually abusive by multiple exit counselling groups, and in fact the site Deception In The Church has some of the best history on the movement; Rick Ross Institute has extensive documentation on the coercive aspects of this group)

Pensacola Bible Institute (per at least one thread on fark.com, multiple reports indicate PBI is even *more* restrictive; founder of school promotes, much like PCC, "King James Only" stances, some of which even other fundamentalists have sharply criticised; this page shows Bibolatry (pretty much as explicit as it comes) from PBI's founder; at least one alumnus of PBI linked with attacks on abortion providers per this article; Ruckman, founder of PBI, has actually defended racism and slavery as biblically mandated (see here and here) and has further promoted an idea most popular in racist-dominionist and Christian Identity circles claiming Martin Luther King Jr. was a Marxist (documented here); at least one group identifies Ruckman's groups as being potentially coercive)

Paul Hill (notorious for murder of two OB/GYNs who provided abortion services, was later executed; was author of statement later signed by a number of dominionists within the "pro-life" movement, including Matthew Trewhella (founder of the "Christian Militia" group "Missionaries to the Preborn") and several other dominionists with connections to militia groups, claiming that killing of workers at clinics that provided abortion services was "justifiable homicide"; full info here; of note, the article also mentions a group similar to Pensacola Christian College near Chicago called "Christian Liberty Academy" (and its correspondence-school "homeschool" curriculum, CLASS) and its affiliated college "Whitfield College" (which is also largely a correspondence-school) and is also tightly linked with "Christian Militia" groups)
dogemperor From: [info]dogemperor Date: April 2nd, 2006 12:38 am (UTC) (Link)

And while we're at it:

Interestingly, I've found at least one dominionist congresscritter who seems to be an alumnus of Pensacola Christian College--Rep. Cathy McMorris of Washington State (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cathy_McMorris).

Reportedly she has rather close links with Tom "Dangit, they're pickin' on me cause I'm a GOD WARRIOR" DeLay, including DeLay having directly funded her election campaign to the tune of $5000. She has also accepted money from a California legislator who is now being investigated for ethics violations.

At least one listing (studentsreview.com) notes that the majority of students who have attended PCC would not return.

As it turns out, Wikipedia has a list of unaccredited colleges; interestingly, Patrick Henry College (a dominionist college that explicitly recruits people who were educated primarily in correspondence-school "homeschool" programs like A Beka et al) is unaccredited, as is Whitefield College (noted in a previous reply, and which operates primarily as a correspondence-course "diploma mill" itself and also targets kids from dominionist correspondence-school programs), Bob Jones University (though, frighteningly, it may be a candidate for accreditation), and a passel of other "fundamentalist Baptist" schools.

Very interestingly, whilst looking up info on Whitefield College, it's noted that one of their agencies they claim accreditation through is ACSI--the same ACSI suing the University of California school system for not admitting students educated using A Beka. Interestingly, the same article notes that ACSI is not recognised as an accreditation body by the US Department of Education.

Ken Hovind, a frequently-quoted promoter of creationism and "intelligent design", claims a "doctorate" issued by another dominionist diploma mill, < a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patriot_Bible_University">Patriot Bible University</a>. It, too, is unaccredited (its only accreditation claim being through a group that in and of itself is an accreditation mill for dominionist educational groups). Here's a list of accreditation mills, many of which are used by dominionist colleges. This site and this site have further discussion on "diploma mills" and "accreditation mills" within the dominionist community.

Reportedly both Patrick Henry College and Bob Jones University are seeking accreditation from the same group, Transnational Assocation of Christian Colleges and Schools--an accreditation group that, whilst recognised, has come under legitimate criticism for favoritism towards dominionist groups (among other things, they are the major accreditation group for Liberty University--which they accredited immediately--and for the Institute for Creation Research) and in fact has been at threat at multiple times of losing its own accreditation as a recognised accreditation body. The list of accredited schools is almost entirely dominionist and there is a pending complaint regarding the group forcing its members to sign a dominionist statement of faith as a condition of accreditation.
dogemperor From: [info]dogemperor Date: April 2nd, 2006 03:34 pm (UTC) (Link)
Anyone also wanting to learn a bit more on dominionist schools and dominionist curricula is strongly encouraged to pick up the following book:

Democracy and Intolerance: Christian school curricula, school choice, and public policy

Much of the info I posted in my A Beka study was inspired by, and would have been impossible without, the extensive research in this book.

(And yes, for the record, it's been added to the Wiki now :3)
firewheelvortex From: [info]firewheelvortex Date: April 2nd, 2006 03:49 pm (UTC) (Link)

Or in other words, it is definitely not a classical liberal education.

From Rethinking Schools Online: (please read the entire thing and fling copies about liberally.)






Abortion is also explicitly linked to other sinful conduct, including homosexuality, which, in turn, is linked to egregious criminal conduct. Because homosexuals engage in "vile affections," their claim to legal protection is unwarranted. "These people have no more claim to special rights than child molesters or rapists." says Bob Jones's senior high school current events textbook. 13

.....

By contrast, issues related to rae and the civil rights movement are discussed in a more straightforward and objective fashion, and the tone is generally cool. For instance, the authors of the senior high school American history book from bob Jones University de-emphasize the inhumanity of the institution of slavery by opining that slavery was not particularly cruel:"A few slave holders were undeniably cruel. Examples of slaves beaten to death were not common, neither were they unknown. The majority of slave holders treated their salves well." 15


The author's conclusion is predictable - both from site bias, and as a matter of direct logic:


Conclusion


The above material is a partial summary of my research. Analyzing the material in Christian school texts goes a long way to answering the question of why many conservative organizations advocate programs that would privatize U.S. education. Indeed, one of the primary reasons for conservative support of vouchers and various school choice programs is not only to provide financial support for religious schools, but to also expose larger numbers of American students to conservative ideology.

I would go a step further; both the Bob Jones and A Beka materials are brainwashing first and education second, with extreme philosophical and religious doctrine presented as fact. When parents are the teachers, there is even less possibility that the underlying assumptions will be questioned.



But even if they are, the brainwashing process is not limited to the students; it will strongly affect the parents as well, as they have a built-in trust of the process and a significant investment in terms of money and time.



Please realize that I am not criticizing faith, doctrine or religious beliefs. While there is certainly a place for that, my objection here is that in order to create generations of uncritical believers, these institutions are creating generations of uncritical thinkers who incapable of questioning Authority, while producing no Authorities actually worthy of the name.



I think it obvious that we have seen the first fruits of that immensely stupid idea played out over the last several years, with the words of George Bush being uncritically accepted by large numbers of people despite them being false to fact or revealing of a shallow and simplistic view of the way the world works.



The consequences have been utterly disastrous, compounded by Bush's reliance on people who have been raised and trained within the conservative evangelical movement. It's not in the least due to their faith. It's that critical thinking is required when it's your job to think on your feet and solve problems. "Responsibility" means more than adhering to a dress code and avoiding any "appearance of sin."



If your idea of being a Good Person is to never be in a situation where people might think you were "up to no good," you will never be in a position to be of any good.



"Heck of a Job, Brownie."
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