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Students, Faculty Demand Revocation of Prof’s Honorary Degree Over His Christian Beliefs

Students, Faculty Demand Revocation of Prof’s Honorary Degree Over His Christian Beliefs

“statements are contrary to the university’s mission because of its commitment to diversity and inclusion”

Diversity and inclusion are being cited as justification for this, and no one sees the irony.

Campus Reform reports:

Students demand revoction [sic] of assistant professors’ honorary degree for his Christian beliefs

Over 300 students, faculty, and alumni from Sewanee: The University of the South in Tennessee have signed a petition calling on the Vice Chancellor of the school to renounce the honorary degree of conservative Christian writer Eric Metaxas.

The petition calls for the revocation of Metaxas honorary degree due to what it calls “anti-LGBTQ” and “anti-democratic” beliefs and statements. It references an article written by the assistant professor in which he said that the LGBTQ community Is “capturing the hearts and minds of young people” through literature.

In the article, Metaxas warns parents to shield children against such influences.

“Anyone who reads books for teens these days will tell you that portrayals of gay relationships and characters are rapidly increasing,” reads the piece in question. “In fact, they’re increasing to the point where they’re all out of proportion to reality. If you know the statistics on rates of homosexuality in the real world, you know that it’s somewhere around 3 percent, maybe less. Not so in the world of Young Adult fiction; there, it’s far more pervasive.”

The signatories of the petition content that Metaxas’ statements are contrary to the university’s mission because of its commitment to diversity and inclusion.

The petition also refers to another article by Metaxas titled “How Gay Marriage Harms Religious Liberty,” arguing that he “promotes the disingenuous claim that legalizing marriage equality will somehow prevent religious extremists from speaking out against the policy,” and taking issue with the fact that he uses “harmful rhetoric of ‘love the sinner, but hate the sin.'”

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Comments

The war against Christianity and Christ in particular is centuries old. The best evidence I can give in support of my statement is the French Revolution. The Jacobins, fueled by the Philosophers, the sophisters, overturned altar and throne. This impious work continues to this day, and is fostered by the new Philosophers we know as transhumanists and scientists.

Orthodox Jews are similarly threatened by such an ideology

The school is just living out its Episcopal identity. Much how so many Jesuit universities do.

    gibbie in reply to JRaeL. | November 14, 2021 at 4:40 pm

    Thanks for saving me the effort of looking up which apostate religion is involved. And are there any Jesuit universities which “don’t”?