[go: nahoru, domu]

Jump to content

Faculty Commons

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Sixtrojans (talk | contribs) at 15:42, 26 November 2012 (correction of clm to faculty commons). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Faculty Commons (known until 2007 as Christian Leadership Ministries, CLM[1][2]) is the faculty ministry of Cru. Its aim is to "disciple and mentor Christian professors" with a goal of 500 "Faculty Affiliates" (faculty members promoting Faculty Commons aims) and at least three Faculty Affiliates in each of the 100 largest universities in the United States of America, to enable these professors to "continually saturate [their] campus with the gospel, and fully integrate their faith into their academic discipline and culture".[3][4]

Through its Leadership University website, Faculty Commons maintains "Virtual Faculty Offices" for Christian professors affiliated with it, including a number of members of the intelligent design movement (for whom it also maintains archives of their writings[5]), most prominently Phillip E. Johnson and William Dembski, and Roe v. Wade plaintiff turned pro-life advocate Norma McCorvey.[6]

Rationale

According to a poll cited by the Faculty Commons website, "only 30% of the entire student population is being exposed to the gospel of Jesus Christ even once in an academic year", which led Faculty Commons to conclude "[a] Christian professor sharing a brief Christian testimony the first day of class may be the ONLY Christian witness that many students will hear while they are in college."[3]

National Faculty Leadership Conferences

Faculty Commons has sponsored the National Faculty Leadership Conferences since about 1982.[7] The 2008 conference included J. P. Moreland, Richard Pratt, and William Lane Craig as plenary speakers.[8]

Wedge strategy

CLM has promoted awareness of diverse views over the years such as the wedge strategy of the intelligent design movement. The CLM chapter at the Southern Methodist University, Dallas Christian Leadership, was a co-sponsor of the 1992 wedge conference,[3] that intelligent design movement founder Phillip E. Johnson later described as the movement's "public debut" which "brought together as speakers some key wedge figures, particularly Michael Behe, Stephen Meyer, William Dembski, and myself."[9] CLM were also the sponsors of the Mere Creation conference held at Biola University in 1996,[3][10] which their director of research and publications, Rich McGee, directed[3] and presented a paper at.[11] The papers presented at it were later published as an anthology of the same title,[12] and CLM devoted a special edition of their webzine The Real Issue to a special report on it.[3] McGee also directed the 'Consultation on Intelligent Design' at the Discovery Institute in 1997[13] and CLM was co-sponsor (with Ravi Zacharias Ministries International) of a Wedge conference on 'God and the Academy' in 2000.[14] CLM also sponsored a lecture by Michael Behe at Princeton University on "Intelligent Design: Implications for Science and Belief in God".[15]

Notes

  1. ^ The Two Tasks of the Christian Scholar: Redeeming the Soul, Redeeming the Mind, William Lane Craig, et al., p20
  2. ^ The organisation is however more widely known under the name 'Christian Leadership Ministries'. See, for example, Forrest and Gross (2004), Weinstein and Seay, and their own web pages at http://www.leaderu.com/msu/chapter17.html Chapter 17 Christian Leadership Ministries Involvement, Going Native in Ministry, Part Four: Regrets, Chapter 6: the World at Your Door
  3. ^ a b c d e f Forrest and Gross (2204) p 268, quoting Archived 2001-11-07 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ Thayer Notes (Alumni News), John Walkup, Dartmouth Engineer, Summer 2008
  5. ^ Forrest and Gross (2004) p177
  6. ^ Virtual Faculty Offices of Christian Professors, Leadership University
  7. ^ Chapter 17 Christian Leadership Ministries Involvement
  8. ^ Christians in Engineering and Technology Newsletter
  9. ^ The Wedge Breaking the Modernist Monopoly on Science Phillip E. Johnson. Touchstone magazine.
  10. ^ Intelligent Design Creationism and Its Critics: Philosophical, Theological, and Scientific Perspectives Robert T. Pennock. MIT Press, 2001. Pages 10-11
  11. ^ Forrest and Gross (2004) p59
  12. ^ Mere Creation: Science, Faith & Intelligent Design
  13. ^ Forrest and Gross (2004) pp 196, 278
  14. ^ Forrest and Gross (2004) p196
  15. ^ Forrest and Gross (2004) p71 and footnote 76 (p329)

References