Wednesday, September 26, 2007

"Tenured bigots" not making it any easier


Barna's revelations regarding evangelicals' abysmal reputation among the young is bolstered by the fact that a recent study found similar views are held by most college faculty members.

"In a recently released scientific survey of 1,269 faculty members across 712 different colleges and universities, 53 percent of respondents admitted to harboring unfavorable feelings toward evangelicals."

This study was not funded by a group of right wing "nutjobs", but by a Jewish group looking for anti-semitism! The study found that faculty harbor ill feelings toward Jews only 3% of the time.

See complete article at Thefire

Most of us have known that strong anti-Christian sentiment exists in the ivory towers of academia, but now there is proof. College campuses remain a chief battleground for the hearts and minds of our most precious commodity- the young.

Another example comes from my alma mater, Lehigh University in Bethlehem. This now secular campus was founded on Christian principles, but their most promoted project for 2008 is a week-long religious seminar taught personally by the Dalai Lama! In addition, all incoming freshmen were required to read the Dalai Lama's autobiography. Though alumni fight bravely to restore some vestige of her proud Christian heritage, hope grows ever more dim.

There are implications for our evangelistic efforts in the months and years ahead. We have yet to see any "method" for reaching the young rise to the top of the heap, but there is hope. Fervent prayer, coupled with strategic evangelistic efforts by persevering saints will win them one at a time. Commitment to a creative, humble and power-filled presentation of the Gospel is ground zero.

1 comment:

Paul said...

Maybe I opened a can of worms, Rich.:)

What I hoped to do is to focus on what we can do right now, since there are many factors over which we have no control.

On my own blog, I am doing a series where I am trying to get to the spiritual and sociological root of the problem. In short, I believe the more we look like postmillenial Puritans, the more we will reap the fruits of the overwhelming anti-Puritanism in our culture, especially on college campuses.

I hope you are able to come with your great mind to my workshop on this (from a Pentecostal perspective) at Minister's Enrichment. I promise it won't be boring!