|
Bob Jones University — Racist and Anti-Catholic?
BY Father Dwight Longenecker
December 14-20, 2008 Issue |
Posted 12/8/08 at 11:43 AM
Last week,
Bob Jones University issued a public apology for its racist past. When I
attended the Protestant fundamentalist college in the mid-1970s, the
institution was still struggling to overcome the blatant racism for which it
had become famous. While I was a student, the first black man was admitted. He
was an older married man who lived off-campus, and the unspoken suspicion was
that as such, he was therefore not a danger to the white girls on campus.
Although the ban on black students
had just been lifted, there was still a rule against interracial dating. Not
only were African-American students not allowed to date whites, but Asian and
dark-skinned students from Micronesia were also only allowed to date girls of
their own race.
It was explained to us that this was
not a racist policy, because the same rule applied to all the students
regardless of race: Nobody was allowed to date someone from another race.
How, you might ask, could a college
that claimed to be Christian support blatant racism?
It should be remembered that slavery
in the South, and the continued racism that followed, was supported by many
otherwise godly Christian people — just as apartheid in South Africa was
supported by good, upstanding Dutch Reformed Christian folks.
The justification I heard while I
was at Bob Jones University was based on a fundamentalist reading of Genesis
9:18-27, in which Noah curses Ham and his descendents. The fundamentalist
argument claimed that the descendents of Ham became the African nations, and so
it was God’s will that black people should be the slaves of the other racial
groups.
The theory is far-fetched, but
people sincerely believed it and used the Bible in this way to support slavery,
segregation, and finally, implicit racism. Through the 1980s, Bob Jones
University continued their ban on interracial dating. As a result, they lost
their tax-exempt status. They tried to fight the Internal Revenue Service and
lost. Now it seems that the school, under the leadership of Stephen Jones,
university president (the fourth generation of the Jones dynasty), is turning
away from racism altogether, admitting it was wrong and asking for forgiveness.
Now that Americans have elected a
man who is the product of interracial dating, the pundits speak of a
“post-racist America.”
I hope they are right. I hope
America can one day be free of every kind of prejudice and bigotry, and that no
one will ever be judged based on their race or ethnic background. However,
prejudice and discrimination extends to more than just race and ethnic
background.
Bob Jones is also famous for being
anti-Catholic. I was a student there when Pope Paul VI died, and I remember Bob
Jones Jr. saying publicly, “Pope Paul VI, archpriest of Satan, a deceiver and
an Antichrist, has, like Judas, gone to his own place.”
So the religion of Bob Jones
University was even more stridently anti-Catholic than it was racist.
The very reason the prejudiced
fundamentalist finds it difficult to overcome his prejudice is that he believes
that God’s inspired word instructs him to be both racist and anti-Catholic.
It is a long, hard journey for him
to change his mind. To overcome racial or religious prejudice with careful
reasoning is one thing, but for the believing bigot it is even harder, because
he has to come to the difficult realization that he has misunderstood God’s
word.
Not only does he have to accept that
his interpretation of the Bible was wrong, but also that his authority to
interpret the Bible correctly was also faulty. To have the humility, grace and
intelligence to do this, and to do it publicly, is a praiseworthy
accomplishment.
That Christians at Bob Jones
University have come to the conclusion that their interpretation of the
Scriptures was wrong, and that they made a mistake is not just a political
nicety. It is an about-face of stupendous proportions, for they must now accept
that if they were wrong on this interpretation of Scripture, they might well be
wrong on others.
This is why careful, understanding
and open-minded Catholic apologetics is vital at this time.
My own progress from Bob Jones
graduate to Catholic priest was a journey that took nearly 30 years. As I
gradually grew into Catholicism, I understood that I was not rejecting anything
good from my devout Bible-based background. Instead, I was accepting more and
more of God’s fullness, until at last, I was received into the Catholic Church.
In my book More Christianity, I explain how
Catholicism is not something essentially different from evangelical
Christianity, but something more.
This
is the sort of dialogue we need with our separated brethren who follow Bob
Jones type fundamentalist Christianity. Step by step we need to overcome the
prejudice of anti-Catholicism with a genuinely listening ear, with
nonthreatening information, discussion, and most of all, with the radiant and
joyful example of holy, Spirit-filled Catholic lives.
Then, in time, we may read that Bob
Jones University has also issued a statement acknowledging and apologizing for
their anti-Catholic prejudice. If so, we will have succeeded in winning not
just arguments, but everlasting souls.
Father
Dwight Longenecker is a graduate of Bob Jones and
Oxford
Universities.
DwightLongenecker.com
Filed under
Advertisement
Advertisement
Make a Donation now!
Insightful. Informative. Uncompromisingly faithful. The National Catholic Register is more than a newspaper. It’s a cause. Your support for the Register funds important journalism that helps to build a Culture of Life in our nation, and throughout the world. Help us promote the Church’s New Evangelization by donating to the National Catholic Register right now.
Click here to donate
|