As I went from building to building on campus, I noticed sayings written on wall plaques and placed on walls throughout the campus buildings. At first, given my ignorance of scripture, I thought they were Bible verses, but soon learned that they were sayings of Dr. Bob Sr., many of which continue to stir me on to this day. For instance, “Do right till the stars fall;” has kept me from getting in trouble time and time again, and two of my all time favorites, “Never sacrifice the permanent on the altar of the immediate”, and “It’s never right to do wrong in order to get a chance to do right,” have kept me on track for the last 60 years.
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November 26, 2021
One Man's Journey Down BJU Memory Lane
As I went from building to building on campus, I noticed sayings written on wall plaques and placed on walls throughout the campus buildings. At first, given my ignorance of scripture, I thought they were Bible verses, but soon learned that they were sayings of Dr. Bob Sr., many of which continue to stir me on to this day. For instance, “Do right till the stars fall;” has kept me from getting in trouble time and time again, and two of my all time favorites, “Never sacrifice the permanent on the altar of the immediate”, and “It’s never right to do wrong in order to get a chance to do right,” have kept me on track for the last 60 years.
November 17, 2021
Archival Series: Where Have All the Bible Colleges Gone?
With the rapid departure of Bob Jones University from "separatist Fundamentalism into the inclusive, Broad Evangelical Movement," the closure Northland International University,1 the latest in a string of Bible college closures,2 let’s turn our attention to a timely article from October 2011 by the late Dr. Clay Nuttall. Here now is, Where Have All the Bible Colleges Gone?We should begin with this question: “Is the day of the Bible college over?” In the past, this phenomenal movement produced huge numbers of ministry servants who then flooded the mission fields and filled the pulpits of our land. Many of those people have already retired or have been promoted to Glory and received a “well done” from the Master. A lot of well-known mission fields benefited from the service of these men and women who have left a major mark on mission history. Men trained in Bible colleges were used of God to build some of the largest and most effective local churches we have known.
It has been argued by some that the quality of Bible college students is no longer sufficient for the day we live in. The culture may be different today, but the Word of God has not changed; and that was the heart of the Bible college movement. Most of these institutions came into existence for the sole purpose of training pastors and missionaries. Theirs was meant to be a foundational training, and there always were institutions that could provide advanced training for those who chose specialized service. The idea that a Bible college education was not good enough to prepare people for ministry is seriously flawed, if not downright arrogant! A look at the thousands of servants who were trained, and the ministries that have been established, definitely settles this question.
This is not about the fact that some of those schools failed; the same is true of every movement. Even our Lord had one disciple who flunked the course! Not every Bible college graduate made a serious mark on the ministry, but the same is true of any level of training. A degree, after all, is no guarantee of success.
HOW DID THIS ALL HAPPEN?
As the years have passed, many Bible colleges have faded from the scene. There are a lot of reasons for this: some were poorly constructed and failed because of finances, leadership, and constituency. Some of them merged with other schools, while others left their original goal of training missionaries and pastors and broadened into other fields. Many in this category continued their new direction until they were no longer even Bible colleges, either in practice or in name. They had every right to follow this path, but the progression demands some honesty. If a school is no longer a Bible college, or doesn’t really want to be one, then the right thing to do is to move on. If they are not Baptist, if their main driving ministry is not the Bible, then the best thing to do is to openly confess their new goals.
Confusion arises, however, because of those who claim to hold onto the old even though they have chosen a new direction. To claim that they still are now what they had been leaves much to be desired.
Over the last forty years, I have heard those who have obviously moved away from the Bible college model argue that they still teach the same doctrine and still have the same statement of faith; that is absolutely irrelevant because of what is really being taught and allowed in the classroom. My favorite saying is, “We teach more Bible now than we did when we were a Bible college!” Of course you do, because you reached your goal of a larger enrollment; but being one of the “big boys on the block” doesn’t mean you still have the same theology you once taught!There is nothing wrong with admitting that the change is based on funding, enrollment, or even prestige in academia; there is something wrong with a shell game.
THE PURSUIT OF INTELLECTUALISM
Now we arrive at one of the major reasons why the Bible college has been left behind. As our movement has progressed, there has been increasing pressure for us to become respectable in our academics, like the “elite.” Both old and young fundamentalists have become enamored with the intellectuals and want to be like them at all costs; they even talk like them and walk like them. This is the same mistake that Israel made when they wanted to be like the other nations around them who had kings. So, where there once was a true Bible college, now the leaders mainly want to be respected by the intellectual pagans.
The journey from Bible college to a pursuit of prestige and intellectualism always takes a toll, and this sad declension is almost always represented by a change in theology. It is not always deliberate; in some cases, it may occur out of ignorance of a biblical theology. The journey always demands a change in leadership; and when the new main leaders are not biblical theologians, the slide becomes more rapid. The truth is that sometimes this change is deliberate, even as it is in churches that have left the Bible and Baptist out of their identification. It is not that the leaders are heretics, but rather that they are swept away by motives that differ from their foundational standard.
It appears that the further an individual or institution moves on this journey in order to have the respect of human leaders, the further they also move from a theology that is biblical. Every change has its cost, and those who protest this maxim only prove the point. I am not opposed to higher education; much of my ministry has been there. I am opposed to teaching and defending error. Of course, some Bible colleges have problems with academic and theological issues. That is to be expected because we are all human.
GONE? NOT EVERYONE!
While dozens of Bible colleges have gone out of business, and some have moved on to other areas of emphasis, others have stood firm in their majority purpose of training men and women for the mission field and church ministry. The great thing is that God today is raising up new Bible colleges that have returned to the foundational goals of training. While these schools have gotten their share of criticism, they have come to life to fill a gap left by those who have gone on to different things. One of those new colleges gets my thumbs-up; it is Grace Baptist Bible College of Winston Salem, North Carolina. Not only has it successfully put together a program that looks like that of the Bible college of old, but a number of well-respected saints in our movement have come to join its ranks. Perhaps God will raise up some more of these fine institutions to take the place of the departed.
SHEPHERD’S STAFF
Clay Nuttall, D.Min, October, 2011
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For those committed to the authority and sufficiency of the Bible
Shepherd’s Basic Care is a ministry of information and encouragement to pastors, missionaries, and churches. Write for information using the e-mail address, Shepherdstaff2@juno.com
Related Readings:
1) NIU Closes: The Pattern of Demise
NIU a Gift? Thanks, but No Thanks
May the "Northland Heart" Perpetuate
2) What Do NIU, Pillsbury, TTU Have in Common?
Closure of Calvary Baptist Seminary: Predictable & Repeatable
Calvary Baptist Seminary: They Are Accountable and Won't Own Up To It
Piedmont/TTU: A Predictable Pattern of Merger With Only ONE Survivor
November 12, 2021
God's Sovereignty: He Can Be Trusted
Since I first mentioned my cancer diagnosis in February many have reached out to me with kind expressions of hope and encouragement. I was diagnosed with renal cell carcinoma (left kidney) stage 4, which had spread to my left lung and liver. I shared that news here in Embrace Trials, Hold Joy, God is Near You.
Today, I can provide an update. On Wednesday I had a CT scan. This morning my oncologist called with the results. She said,
"The scan looks great. Everything is stable. No new spots. Nothing is bigger and nothing is smaller. Should continue with the same therapy, maybe increase the dosage every 3rd or 4th day. All in all a good result."
In October I was found to have developed a skin cancer on my left hand. A minor surgery was performed to remove it. The good news is that they got it all, and had not spread.
While my cancer is incurable, the chemotherapy has thus far reduced the size of the tumor and slowed its inevitable spread. Two previous CT scans showed the tumor had been reduced in size by approximately 50%. My wife Liz and I thank God for His loving kindness toward us as we walk this path He has entrusted to us.
Incidentally, in April I suffered a mild stroke and contracted bi-lateral Bells Palsy. All that right on the heels of the cancer diagnosis and chemotherapy issues. It was a vortex of issues one on top of another. I began to feel like Wylie E. Coyote waiting for the next anvil to drop.I was born again in April 1979. From that day to this I knew that when I leave this corruptible body I would be in Heaven. The only thing I did not know was how I was going to get there. It appears, unless the Lord supernaturally heals my body, that question has been answered.
Through all of this the Lord has given me many opportunities to tell of His goodness and witness to lost folks I otherwise never would have met. I want you all to know that when you face adversity, when life takes a turn that you had not anticipated God is in the midst. He is working out His perfect plan for your life and you do not need to be afraid of it. You can trust Him and find joy in trials. I am being prepared and perfected to enter into His presence. It is our glorification we are all being prepared for and we need not fear it.
Thanks again for your expressions of concern, encouragement and kindness.
Kind regards,
LM
November 8, 2021
Archival Series: “Why These Schools Collapsed & What Does It Mean for [BJU]?”
Dr. Will Senn |
“Why did Clearwater close, Northland close, Pillsbury close, Calvary Baptist Seminary close, Tennessee Temple close…. why did they fall, what happened and what can we learn? I want you to do the research. I want us to learn something from history because it will have a current application and future application as it relates to our fellowship.”
The excerpted student answers above (there were thirty in all) boiled down to a summary statement. Dr. Senn prefaced their summary, “Why these five schools collapsed and then what would you say to the other five schools that I love?” Their summary statement was,
Every failed school veered from its conservative and historic base to accommodate a new base…and each time it was the death knell of the school.
Drs. Horn & Pettit |
“You can’t build that [SBC, evangelical] relationship fast enough. So what happens is your pushing the good people out, the Calebs and Joshuas. And you start listening to the ten spies.”BJU is well on its way to joining the five failed schools. You cannot alienate your core constituency and expect them to remain loyal. On its current trajectory BJU should not expect to survive Steve Pettit’s presidency.
Footnotes:
Dr. Bob Jones, Jr, “If BJU Ever Changes...I Pray the Lord Closes Its Doors.”
Ironically it is through the actions of BJU graduates, Steve Pettit (80’) and Sam Horn (86’ 88’ 95’) that the school has lost its ‘strong fundamentalist stand.’ Going forward, unless some radical intervention takes place, it will be through BJU graduate Steve Pettit that the university’s doors are destined to close.
November 1, 2021
Bob Jones University: Compromised Spiritual Sanctification for Secular Pragmatism
Since the installment of Dr. Steve Pettit as BJU president in 2014 we have witnessed and documented (see links below) a slow march away from the university’s biblical separatist legacy. The university has chosen a path of compromised spiritual sanctification for secular pragmatism.
“After being the premier Fundamentalist academic institution for eighty seven years, BJU elected Dr. Steve Pettit in 2014, as the president who steered the University out of separatist Fundamentalism into the inclusive, Broad Evangelical Movement,” (p. 179, 530).
Yours faithfully,
LM
UPDATE (Nov. 7):
1) The BJU administration has removed or blocked the video from its Facebook page we link to above.
2) Dr. Kevin Schaal posted an article at the FBFI Proclaim & Defend blog. In it he cites the section from Dr. Beale’s new book, which we have noted above. We appreciate the FBFI finding its voice over what is transpiring at BJU. The balance of Schaal’s article, however, essentially blunts the impact Beale's sharp and precise statement.
Related Reading:
Alumni and friends of BJU have reached out to Steve Pettit about the direction he is taking the university. On hearing the reproof of friends Pettit and the administration have chosen not to change, and instead stepped on the gas-pedal. The trajectory the university is set upon can have only one of two outcomes, neither good.
Why These Schools Collapsed & What Does it Mean for BJU?
“Why did Clearwater close, Northland close, Pillsbury close, Calvary Baptist Seminary close, Tennessee Temple close…why did they fall, what happened and what can we learn? I want us to learn something from history because it will have a current application and future application as it relates to our fellowship.”
Dr. Bob Jones, Jr. "If BJU Ever Changes...I Pray The Lord Closes Its Doors
Many of the alumni…and long-time friends of BJU have seen enough of how the school is moving toward ecumenical inclusivism to abandon the university. It appears there is little left to do other than: 1) Watch the university continue on an ecumenical trajectory or 2) as one alum said, It “…should be taken back by all who invested their lives, students, and for many…their fortunes in the place.”
BJU Lurches Further Into Evangelicalism
Further we must refuse to surrender resources to those institutions, agencies, and churches who are moving. It is not wise to continue to send our children to colleges, give our money to agencies, or support churches that are in transition while we wait to see where they will land. By then it is too late! Look at where their feet are pointing! At some point there must be separation from this disobedience. It is the only tool which God has given to us to police ourselves and to maintain the priority and purity of our position.
An Analysis of BJU's Position Paper on Calvinism, Arminianism & Reformed Theology
After reading BJU’s position paper, I feel that it reflects a style commonly employed by many New Calvinists. Their writing typically skirts issues to avoid offense or exclusion, while maximizing inclusivity. They achieve this by allowing the reader to supply his or her own theological definitions rather than offering clear-cut ones that would reveal Calvinist views. The fact that BJU’s paper appears to use a similar strategy concerns me.
A Failure to Stay the Course by Pastor Travis Smith
For more than 15 years I have observed a pattern of change at Bob Jones University that is all to familiar. Like a ship slowly, imperceptibly drifting from its course, the university is adrift from the disciplines that shaped the character of generations of Christian students in its past.