2003 Archives
-
-
Can a University be distinctively Baptist and academically excellent? No_prichard_92203
Posted: 9/19/03
Can a University be distinctively
Baptist and academically excellent?
âNoBy Ella Prichard
The lists of “top universities in America” include the great public research universities; once-Christian universities, such as Yale, Harvard, Princeton; a few private institutions founded as secular universities after the German model, such as Stanford and Johns Hopkins; and a handful of elite Catholic universities.
As a student at Baylor University from 1959 to 1963, I dreamed of the day when Baylor would become a “Baptist Harvard.” Later, I came to realize the term was an oxymoron; a university can't be Baptist and Harvard at the same time. My attention turned to Notre Dame, a national Catholic university; and I began to ponder the concept of a “Baptist Notre Dame.” But Notre Dame and her sister institutions are marked by openness and freedom of inquiry, very different from top evangelical colleges, such as Wheaton and Calvin. And both those models, Catholic and Calvinist, are marked by an authoritarianism foreign to Baptist tradition.
Baylor's quest:
Joel Gregory
Ella Wall Prichard
Chris Seay
10/14/2003 - By John Rutledge
-
Three views on Baylor’s quest_92203
Posted: 9/19/03
Three views on Baylor's quest
The Baptist Standard asked three Texas Baptists to write from differing perspectives on one of the questions at the heart of the current debate over the future of Baylor University:
Can a university be distinctively Baptist
& academically excellent?
By Joel GregoryBy Ella Wall PrichardBy Chris SeayAs a double graduate of Baylor University, I see my alma mater as standing at a crossroads. It is looking both ways at an intersection and will have to make a decision. That decision superficially appears to be about debt, football, a disgruntled faculty or factious regents. To limit the historic decision confronting the school to those issues trivializes its impact on 158 years of Baylor history. The controversy transcends the disparate issues raised by those with a bushel basket of beefs about the Bears.
More…
The lists of “top universities in America” include the great public research universities; once-Christian universities, such as Yale, Harvard, Princeton; a few private institutions founded as secular universities after the German model, such as Stanford and Johns Hopkins; and a handful of elite Catholic universities.
As a student at Baylor University from 1959 to 1963, I dreamed of the day when Baylor would become a "Baptist Harvard."
More…
10/14/2003 - By John Rutledge
EDITORIAL: Add love, grace & forgiveness to ‘Baylor family’ values_92203
Posted: 9/19/03
EDITORIAL:
Add love, grace & forgiveness to 'Baylor family' valuesYou don't have to live among Texas Baptists long to meet up with folks whose passion for their “Baylor family” seems stronger than their feelings for the blood relatives they see during holidays. This summer, that passion boiled over, as members of the “family” conducted a public squabble over the future of their beloved university.
This family feud has left many loyal Texas Baptists outside the Baylor fold scratching their heads, wondering if all those Bears love their school too much–or not enough.
President Robert Sloan and Baylor 2012, the university's 10-year strategy, have been the twin lightning rods of the internecine strife. (The death of basketball player Patrick Dennehy was tragic, and scandal in the men's basketball program was appalling, and they received national attention. Although these are terribly painful issues that bring great sorrow to all of us, they are not directly involved in the battle for the soul of Baylor.)
All members of the Baylor family want their school to be great. But right now, it needs to embody character-istics of Christ's family– love, grace, compassion and forgiveness. 10/14/2003 - By John Rutledge