探花视频

An unholy mess: can Liberty University weather latest crisis?

Leader鈥檚 offensive behaviours portrayed as exception for morality-focused institution

Published on
October 1, 2019
Last updated
October 1, 2019
Liberty president Jerry Falwell Jr 鈥渉as aligned with Trump as tightly as any public figure in America has鈥
Source: Getty
Liberty president Jerry Falwell Jr 鈥渉as aligned with Trump as tightly as any public figure in America has鈥

Long touted as the world鈥檚 largest Christian university, the fiercely evangelical Liberty University has never been far from controversy.

However, critics believe that the campus鈥 latest ethical and financial scandals might prove to be more damaging 鈥 and might illuminate fundamental governance problems at the Virginia institution.

At the heart of the latest crisis, as in the past, is Liberty鈥檚 president, Jerry Falwell聽Jr. The anxiety of students, staff and alumni stems in large part from salacious reports of his having an executive lifestyle and attitudes more befitting a playboy businessman than a humble apostle of piety.

The most recent public indictment was an investigative report in by a Liberty graduate that described Mr Falwell as using university resources to enrich himself and friends, partying at nightclubs and graphically discussing his sex life with employees.

探花视频

ADVERTISEMENT

Liberty did not respond to a request for comment. But, according to alumni, inside an institution that forbids private encounters between male and female students and prides itself on producing morally superior graduates, such tales are long known and deeply disturbing.

鈥淚鈥檓 not surprised鈥 by the details, having heard versions of them for so long, Rebekah Tilley, a 2002 graduate of the university, told 探花视频. But the behaviour is nevertheless unexpected, Ms Tilley said, for those who knew Mr Falwell鈥檚 father, Jerry Falwell聽Sr, the pastor who founded Liberty in 1971 as Lynchburg Baptist College.

探花视频

ADVERTISEMENT

鈥淲e hold ourselves to a different standard. This isn鈥檛 the way it should be,鈥 she said.

Ms Tilley, now working in communications at a state university outside Virginia, is among a few dozen Liberty alumni who pledged to return their diplomas in 2017 after Mr Falwell聽Jr defended Donald Trump鈥檚 response to the deadly white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, about an hour to the north of Liberty鈥檚 Lynchburg campus.

Mr Falwell Sr was himself very politically active and controversial in US society, having founded the Moral Majority, a Republican-affiliated organisation whose key demands in the 1980s included forbidding official recognition of homosexuality, outlawing abortion and legalising Christian prayer in state schools.

Yet Liberty seems 鈥渨ay more politicised鈥 now, Ms Tilley said. Mr Falwell聽Jr鈥檚 actions have included banning from campus a College Democrats chapter 鈥 whose small but tolerated presence Mr Falwell聽Sr often cited with pride. Some current students have taken to staging campus protests over gender-related issues 鈥 a concern spreading into religiously strict US campuses.

Others alarmed by the university鈥檚 direction under Mr Falwell聽Jr include Brian Melton, a former Liberty instructor who an article on Facebook describing himself and other teachers as victims of a systematic strategy to deprive them of pay and benefits.

Liberty, unlike most US universities, hires its faculty under single-year contracts. It also has become increasingly reliant on its long-time online operations, which now enrol about 95,000 students, compared with a campus population of about 15,000.

探花视频

ADVERTISEMENT

Dr Melton, noting that he has taught at a variety of religious schools, said he found Liberty鈥檚 treatment of its faculty unusual. 鈥淚f anything,鈥 he said, 鈥淚聽believe the situation at Liberty has come about as a result of its increasing disregard of religious sensibilities.鈥

鈥淚t鈥檚 not a stellar academic institution,鈥 said Ms Tilley, who chose Liberty in large part because of family pressure to take the most affordable option.

探花视频

ADVERTISEMENT

Liberty鈥檚 leadership problems, however, are perhaps not unique for an overtly religious institution, said Barry Hankins, professor of history at Baylor University and author of books on religion in US culture.

Christian affiliations were common in the early days of US higher education and are not unusual today, said Professor Hankins, who explained that those institutions with conspicuously evangelical missions were often founded by independent popular preachers such as Mr Falwell聽Sr.

In such cases, he continued, 鈥渢here can be a temptation to run the college like a fiefdom鈥. Christian colleges often fare better after their founder dies, he said, but Mr Falwell Sr鈥檚 passing of Liberty鈥檚 leadership to his son 鈥 who sees overt politicisation as helpful to Liberty鈥檚 brand 鈥 has apparently stymied any such progression.

Of course, Professor Hankins said, a religious affiliation does not necessarily entail a lack of commitment to academic norms of faculty control over teaching and scholarship, and a religious institution can often succeed independently of turmoil at the top.

Some Liberty faculty privately disagree with Mr Falwell Jr鈥檚 hearty embrace of Mr Trump 鈥 鈥渉e has aligned with Trump as tightly as any public figure in America has鈥 鈥 but just continue teaching their classes, Professor Hankins said.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e conservative, believing Christians, and some of them are not on board with the politics of Liberty,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ut you keep your head down politically and just do your work, which is what I suspect a lot of them do.鈥

探花视频

ADVERTISEMENT

paul.basken@timeshighereducation.com

POSTSCRIPT:

Print headline: Critics see an unholy mess at Liberty

Register to continue

Why register?

  • Registration is free and only takes a moment
  • Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
  • Sign up for our newsletter
Please
or
to read this article.

Related articles

Reader's comments (1)

Pitched one against the other,biology (with all its urges) will always trump the Bible ( with all its restraints ) Forming common cause with an unreformed man like trump is the easiest window into how powerful biology ( disguised as piety ) can be. ... swallowing the elephant with evangelical ease but straining sanctimoniously at the gnat !! Basil Jide fadipe.

Sponsored

Featured jobs

See all jobs
ADVERTISEMENT