Related Articles
Dr. Ruby Editorial
Faculty and Staff Letter

UPDATE 3: Today sometime I will post an editorial piece Dr. Ruby wrote for the campus newspaper in addition to pieces of a letter he sent to the faculty. He’s given me permission to post both, if anyone is interested in gaining more clarity about the situation.

UPDATE 2: Dr. Carl Ruby wrote me an email yesterday in an effort to bring some clarity to the firestorm that erupted a week ago. We had a great conversation that helped alleviate my concerns with my alma mater and nuance the story. While I cannot go into details about the conversation out of respect for Dr. Ruby’s privacy, I can say that a number of extraneous events collided to create a perfect storm which forced Dr. Ruby to cancel the event.

After a concerted smear campaign by the efforts of Those Who Shall Not Be Named (many of you will know the watchbloggers to which I’m referring) to denigrate the school and leadership, Dr. Ruby wisely pulled the plug and took his lumps. And even though the event was cancelled, the school arranged for an alternative event at a local church, connected interested students to him through an arranged breakfast, maintained personal connection to Shane, and is looking to have him back on campus for another lecture at a better time.

Unfortunately, I responded far to quickly to a CT article that really did not do the situation justice. While the content and quotations did give a rather entrenched, reactionary appearance on the part of the University, I regret my response and apologize for adding to the confusion. In some ways it was a good lesson and a good barometer of the blogger I’m becoming/want to become (more on that later). For those of you who are visiting from Google, Yahoo, or Technorati, as a formerly concerned alumn, the situation is not as it appears. I still have respect for Cedarville, but especially for Dr. Ruby and his handling of an unfortunate situation. Again, sorry for the confusion and my knee-jerk response…

UPDATE: About a week ago Shane responded to the flap at Jim Wallis’ blog with a post called “Don’t Fear Disagreement.” Like, Grace said in a comment: his response was predictably Christ-like. Go figure!

Thanks Wess for ruining my morning! I had heard about the Shane Claiborne lecture cancellation briefly but hadn’t paid much attention to it, mostly because I didn’t realize what it was all about. Then I read the Christianity Today article and totally lost my Grande Columbian Drip and Low-Fat Cinnamon Swirl Coffee cake!

As an alumn of this institution, I feel the right and responsibility to speak against a place that has been trending toward an entrenched, defensive posture in regards to “absolute truth” and “doctrinal clarity” and “biblical world view” issues for the past few years. After an internal professor flap within the Bible Department forced them to reassure everyone and there mother they weren’t “going liberal” by drafting a “Truth and Certainty Document” (which is diappointingly laughable in and of itself), now they wilt to the outside pressure of the likes of such emergent watchbloggers as Ingrid Shlueter, of all people. How an institution that desires to be a place of “world-class academics, christ-centered mission and life-changing experience” can shelter students from ideas from within, let alone outside, the Body of Christ is beyond me.

Aside from perpetuating the “Cedarville Bubble” that alumni and students have all grown to loath, the most disturbing part of this whole brouhaha is the explaination given by Vice President of Student Services Carl Ruby:

“There was a tension between my desire to use this event to challenge students to take a closer look at a very important social issue, and the need to protect Cedarville’s reputation as a conservative, Christ-centered university,” said Ruby. “There can’t be any confusion about our commitment to God’s Word and our historically conservative doctrinal position.”

Let me get this straight, Carl: you and the institution were concerned that having a man who has devoted himself to Jesus and intensionally, deliberately living out His Way would create confusion over the University’s Christ-centered status and commitment to God’s Word? What about Shane is inconsistent with Christ-likeness and God’s Word? Does Cedarville not believe that “religion that God our Father accepts as pure and faultless is this: to look after orphans and widows in their distress and to keep oneself from being polluted by the world,” or are they only concerned with an archaic, wooden literalism that forces people to accept their version of a pietism that borders on repackaged American Christian Fundamentalism?

What’s more, “Nearly all of the opposition to Claiborne’s visit came from off campus,” he said. “The reaction from both faculty and students has been along the lines of, ‘We are a university … We need to be having these kinds of conversations on campus if we are going to adequately equip the next generation of Christian leaders.’ ” I think the true colors of this institution were shown in this incident: they are more concerned with “the need to protect Cedarville’s reputation as a conservative, Christ-centered university” to outsiders than they are with grounding students in a diverse, integrated faith experience.

Shame on you Cedarville University.

Shame on you for caring more about your reputation than exposing students to diversity within the Body of Christ. Shame on you for even suggesting allowing Shane to speak would call into the University’s commitment to Christ, thus calling into question Shane’s own commitment to Christ. Shame on you for bowing to outside pressure from whack-job bloggers whose skeleton fingers drip with poison with every reactionary rant they post.

A few hours ago I posted about how we as the Church can navigate a pluralist public square with regards to questions of morality. While I’m not sure how best to go about doing that, I will say that the type of hyper-ventilating, convulsive defensiveness exhibited from this glorious institution will always produce boarded-up windows and calls to “run for the hills!”. If we can’t even have a sane conversation with others within the Body of Christ, how will we ever think we can have productive, irenic conversations with the Other outside our community? This latest move by Cedarville shows it is neither willing nor capable of doing either, and that is truly sad and shameful.