Friday, September 30, 2011

Vanderbilt University Hates Religious Freedom

From: Real Clear Religion

The Vanderbilt chapter of the Christian Legal Society has rewritten its bylaws to include language that supports the university's diversity policies. But when Vanderbilt asked the club to remove a requirement that the group president lead Bible studies, the club drew the line.

"Our group will no longer be able to exist," said law student Justin Gunter, one of the chapter's leaders.

Understand what the university is requiring: that a group cannot set any conditions for the beliefs its leadership must hold.

This is crackpot stuff.

In principle, the university's gay rights group would not be able to require its president to affirm gay rights. As Colleen Carroll Campbell points out, "By the logic of Vanderbilt administrators, the Muslim Student Association must allow ultra-orthodox Jews to run its meetings."

Along these lines, the invaluable activist group FIRE, which is standing up to Vanderbilt's administration on behalf of the students, explains why this sort of policy is so dangerous to everyone's freedom of association: "Forcing them to allow any student to become a leader regardless of belief can imperil their very existence. For instance, imagine that a ten-person College Socialists group exists on campus. One day, a group of twenty College Republicans shows up for the meeting, votes itself into the leadership by virtue of its superior numbers, and effectively disbands the group."

It should be pointed out that what Vanderbilt is doing is legal. The school is a private entity. And if it were a public university, this kind of illiberal tactic would still be legal -- so said the US Supreme Court in a 5-4 ruling last year.

You would think that all student groups would resent Vanderbilt's unwarranted intrusion into their affairs.

This attack on the Christian groups is an attack on the freedom of association of all of them. But it's okay when it's Christian "bigots" being suppressed, is that it? If your support for freedom of association only extends to groups of which you approve, you don't really support it at all. It is a mystery to me why it's the business of Vanderbilt University to tell its diverse student groups what their leadership may or may not believe.

The gay rights movement is a serious threat to religious liberty, and in ways that are not always easy to perceive.

Yes, the Christian Legal Society may still meet, even though they do not have Vanderbilt's sanction or funding. In point of fact, I support the right of this private institution to discriminate in this fashion, as ugly as it is. (What I don't get is why churches in Nashville don't get down there and demonstrate; you know perfectly well that if gay rights were being threatened like this, gay activist groups wouldn't sit quiet and take it).

Even though the group may meet privately, the message this overall policy sends is that to believe in traditional Christian (or Orthodox Jewish, or Muslim) teachings on homosexuality is to put oneself outside the public square. How many students will be afraid to affiliate with unapproved groups, for fear that it will harm their career advancement? Is it really the case that you want membership in the CLS, or any other unapproved group, on your CV when you are applying for a job?

As Maggie Gallagher wrote several years back: "'Soft' coercion produces no martyrs to disturb anyone's conscience, yet it is highly effective in chilling the speech of ordinary people."

For Vanderbilt, for many gay rights activists, and indeed for American elites, egalitarianism is more important than liberty, as long as the people whose liberty is being suppressed are religious believers.

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