UVa Religion Faculty Hate Speech against Evangelical Christians

UVa President James Ryan

by James C. Sherlock

Thirty percent of Virginians identify as evangelical Christians. So, one can never say that the University of Virginia, in targeting them with school-sponsored hate speech, doesn’t swing for the fences.

Members of UVa Department of Religious Studies faculty have unloaded on white evangelicals in as wide-ranging and comprehensive an example of collegial vitriol as you will ever watch or read.

The hatred spewed out is visceral and brooks no dissent.

So UVa’s Religion, Race and Democracy Lab invited only a hallelujah chorus (excuse the expression) of people who utterly despise evangelicals to a webinar on the book Informed Perspectives: White Evangelical Racism: The Politics of Morality in America. Subtle title.

With this exposure of the fiercely anti-evangelical comments by the University-selected participants, including two faculty from the University’s Department of Religious Studies, I expect a major political problem for every Democrat running statewide in the fall elections.

What do they say when their Republican opponents raise this? Do they anger the dominant left of their party or the evangelicals?

UVa is currently an arm of the Democratic party of Virginia. The entire leadership of the University has been appointed by Democrats. The members of the Board of Visitors are each appointees of Democratic governors. President Ryan is a Democratic political star in waiting. UVa’s lawyer is a Democratic Assistant Attorney General appointed by Mark Herring.

The leftists at the University, which include nearly the entire faculty, continually worry both that organized religions will not engage in civic commitment (support Black Lives Matter, for example) and that they will. This webinar had the latter concern.

A few of the comments, and trust me that these are in context or watch it yourselves:

“Evangelicalism is synonymous with whiteness. It is not only a cultural whiteness, but also a political whiteness.”

They are using these moral issues as a shield.

Being white is colorblind racism that I talk about. And that when people say to you, I don’t see color, I see what Jesus sees in you, that really actually means that they just see white and that people who are in evangelicalism like I was in and previously are considered to be white if they behave in certain kinds of ways. And if you don’t behave in those kinds of ways, or if you don’t accede to white evangelical cultural norms, that means that you are not acceptable. And those kind of cultural norms are not just about singing or how you dress or how your deportment is, but it’s also about voting.

I’m teaching a class this semester called The Religion and Politics of Black Lives Matter. It’s jointly taught with the Religion, Race and Democracy Lab. So, it’s between the politics department and the religious studies departments,

The capitalist economy might be the antithesis of God’s economy.

I think that a strong and compelling argument can be made that it’s not just a lost cause, a narrative that still animates white evangelical Christianity wherever it exists, whether it’s on the West Coast, in the south… the Midwest is Confederate. In fact, America is Confederate. So deeply does white evangelicalism WASP religion penetrate the ethos and mythos of the United States, the lost cause is alive and well.

These institutions, American institutions, not just religious ones, have followed this cultural logic of white supremacy rooted in white supremacist white Jesus image, Christianities in the United States, but namely evangelicalism and fundamentalism.

You remind us that evangelicalism is very material and in fact, the ways in which we think about the organization and the operation of capitalist political economy, that the idea of being an entrepreneur really maps on to certain ideals and characteristics of American evangelical culture and its embedded norms, and it’s embedded white supremacist norms.

Much of this professed piety was simply a form of outright hypocrisy.

That’s more than enough. You get the point — the only point — of this “academic” exercise is that White evangelicals are irredeemably (again, excuse the expression) evil.

And this is from the Religious Studies Department.

But I owe you one more quote from that session from Charles Mathewes, Professor of Religious Studies at the University:

There seems to be a real sense of beleaguerment and besiegement — that’s a word — on the right, which is alarming and interesting.

The lack of awareness in that statement is utterly astonishing.

The man had just sat through almost an hour of University-sponsored bitter denunciation of evangelicals and he finds their sense of beleaguerment “alarming and interesting.” At least he didn’t say surprising or unfounded.

From University President James Ryan:

“We should strive not simply to be great, but also to be good, recognizing that in the not-too-distant future, it will likely be impossible for a university to be truly great if it is not also good.”

The University has an Office for Equal Opportunity and Civil Rights (EOCR) which is “dedicated to creating a respectful, inclusive, and welcoming living, learning, and working environment for all faculty, staff, and students.”

Really?  We will find out from each source.

I will file formal hate speech complaints against the Religion, Race and Democracy Lab and the two UVa professors who spoke at this event.  

My charges will be filed with President Ryan, the Board of Visitors, the Provost, the University’s Counsel (Senior Assistant Attorney General Timothy Heaphy) and with the EOCR.

I will demand the disbandment of the Religion, Race and Democracy Lab and the firing of the two professors.

We’ll find out what they think is “respectful, inclusive and welcoming” and, from Ryan, what he means by “good.”


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Comments

36 responses to “UVa Religion Faculty Hate Speech against Evangelical Christians”

  1. anon conservative professor Avatar
    anon conservative professor

    That’s some crazy stuff. There is a terrible double standard that has emerged at far too many universities. People on the left, and in particular minority identity group members, can say whatever they like, make whatever accusations they care to. At the same time, there are words, ideas, data, that if a straight white person says them, shares them, questions them — they put their careers at risk. Total BS. If people want to say stupid stuff, that’s their business. The problem is those same people and their supporters, which make up probably 50% of the students, 95% of the faculty and 98% of the administrators, will not tolerate anyone deviating from their notion of acceptable speech and/or ideas. I guess that’s what it means to be ‘good’ these days: institutionally enforced double standards.

  2. Stephen Haner Avatar
    Stephen Haner

    Responding to “James” above, I assume Sherlock….

    Actually, yes, hostility toward the Fundamentalism wing of the American Church in academia is quite well established and widespread, including a long history of accusing them of racism. Often correctly. It was rampant during my time at W&M, where the faculty was quite liberal, and then I observed it as a reporter who covered Falwell and the rise of the so-called Moral Majority. As in all things, what was implied and coated with civility decades ago is now served straight up with the bark stripped off. I don’t disagree they are guilt of incivility and deep, vicious bias. But in that field, no, not new. Nor was I mounting a defense.

    I bet they have an entire server for your complaints (in the old days I’ve had said a file drawer.) Doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result ever get tiring?

    1. JAMES Avatar

      The evangelical associations will take it up.

    2. JAMES Avatar

      And its an election year.

  3. James Wyatt Whitehead Avatar
    James Wyatt Whitehead

    I hate waiting in line. Glad the line to heaven for Christians is getting shorter.

    1. Stephen Haner Avatar
      Stephen Haner

      Just remember, tiptoe past the Baptists. They think they’re the only ones there.

  4. Stephen Haner Avatar
    Stephen Haner

    I’m sorry, did you read Elmer Gantry? Or at least see the movie? This liberal, mainstream (in a religious sense) bias is new stuff how? (Asks he who has a BA in Religion from a state university….) Even forty years ago that department at UVA was probably similar. The real problem is the hilariously narrow definition of “evangelical” that ignore that strong tradition within the black Protestant churches back to their founding. Nor is the argument about capitalism and Biblical teaching exactly fresh….

    Seriously Cap’t, I don’t know when you were a student there, but this is exactly as it was then. I mean, look who founded the place!!

    1. JAMES Avatar

      Steve, “always been this way” is not a defense. And it has not “always been” that state universities officially spit on major religious denominations. It will be interesting to see the response of the University.

    2. Nancy Naive Avatar
      Nancy Naive

      As a Jainist, the mask is not a burden.

      I really enjoyed my high school Comparative Religions course even if it was just a conservative response to prayer in school and a backdoor way of spending a semester preaching from the Bible

      1. Stephen Haner Avatar
        Stephen Haner

        A firm grounding in the the Bible never hurt and pretty much always helps everyone. An old editorial writer always said those in his trade needed to know the Federalist Papers, the Book of Common Prayer and their Bible, preferably the wonderful poetic cadence of the KJV.

        1. Nancy Naive Avatar
          Nancy Naive

          I wholeheartedly endorse a deep study of the Bible, albeit from the POV of the late W.C. Fields, who upon being found reading the Gideon’s in his hotel room, responded with “Just lookin’ for loopholes. Lookin’ for loopholes.”

  5. Nancy Naive Avatar
    Nancy Naive

    Wow! An unusual backflow in a narrow minded pipe.

    1. Stephen Haner Avatar
      Stephen Haner

      From Google: “Jainism is a religion of self-help. There are no gods or spiritual beings that will help human beings. The three guiding principles of Jainism, the ‘three jewels’, are right belief, right knowledge and right conduct. The supreme principle of Jain living is non violence (ahimsa).” Kinda also explains the character Jane in Firefly….except for the non violence.

      1. Nancy Naive Avatar
        Nancy Naive

        And they lived in close proximity to the Thuggee. Yin & Yang I suppose. The one thing the Brits did well.

  6. First thing to note: The University’s Division of Diversity, Equity & Inclusion very little to say about religious diversity. It’s all about racial/ethnic diversity. Racial diversity is a priority; religious diversity is not.

    Second thing to note: Take a look at the religion courses taught at UVA: https://religiousstudies.as.virginia.edu/current-courses
    African religions. Afro-Creole religions. Yoruba religion. Buddhism (seven classes). Hinduism. Islam (four classes). Judaism (nine classes). Christianity (nine classes, one of which is Christianity in Africa). Only one course on evangelical Christianity. I will say, the description of that course does seem even-handed.

  7. Publius Avatar
    Publius

    Wow. Tough crowd. I have been surprised to see various prejudices in comments on different topics here… against the plantation elite, Southerners, good ol’ boys, fraternities, now evangelicals and Baptists… Guilty on all counts here!
    I did not “do” religion at UVA over 40 years ago – either in class or as an occasional Whiskeypalian.
    But I sincerely doubt that the religion department was crazy like now. Just like history, my major. I am sure the profs were “liberal,” but they were classical liberals. They believed in free speech and American ideals. Even the law school had some non-Communists – my favorite irreverent comment was a securities law professor who remarked that Joe Kennedy was first commissioner of the SEC because “Who knew more about manipulating the market?”
    But I don’t think many of the commenters here actually know in a meaningful sense any evangelical Christians (and I don’t mean Mainline, I mean believe the Bible, not just the parts you like). So you might think they are rigid because they believe things like NO on abortion, gay marriage, gay practice, transgender, but they also are kind and generous and fully aware of the fallen human condition – hate the sin, love the sinner.
    So, maybe cut a little slack, OK?
    Now, on to TJ and the Jefferson Bible. This is another mystery like the sixth child of Sally Hemings (which I think is more likely than not that TJ was NOT the father). I think Jefferson was very much a child of the Enlightenment and just could not wrap his mind around miracles. He would have been an original “follow the science” guy and that is why he established a secular school and wanted free speech and to follow reason wherever it went. At the same time he thought Jesus the greatest moral philosopher and he feared that God was just. Gee…I guess he was an imperfect human like all of us!
    But the point of the article stands – the event is offensive to evangelicals – stereotypical, ignorant and racist, all at once and paid for by capitalists! I suggest these “teachers” quit accepting pay – maybe they could be like Paul and be itinerant tent makers to support themselves while they preach their own brands of stupidity.

    1. JAMES Avatar

      Very perceptive contribution.

      The faculty is not crazy, just ignorant of political reality. They do not consider that they work for a public university, and their first duty is to the people of the state.

      They have convinced themselves that they can say anything – anything – about those who they consider their moral and intellectual inferiors (as long as they are white) and get away with it. In this so well documented case, we’ll see.

      If I were the President or the Board of UVa, I would fire the two professors for being terminally self indulgent. My questions to them: Really? With the cameras running?

  8. LarrytheG Avatar
    LarrytheG

    evangelicals, whether Christian or Islamic or other are a menace to mankind.

    1. Stephen Haner Avatar
      Stephen Haner

      Wow. I keep wanting to label something the stupidest thing you’ve ever said, but then you top it….

      1. Publius Avatar
        Publius

        Thank you for saving me the trouble. Yeah, they’re a menace! On Sunday after church they overrun the restaurants! Taking seats from Larry and his posse!

      2. LarrytheG Avatar
        LarrytheG

        not exactly an original thought:

        Republican Downfall Happened When GOP Aligned Themselves With Evangelicals

        White evangelicals’ dominance of the GOP has turned it into the party of resistance

        “In n the 2016 presidential election, more than 80 percent of white evangelicals voted for President Trump. At one point (in the 19th century) evangelicals were associated with malcontents who fought for prison reform, abolitionism, and even early feminism. Now, this group is “the most loyal and most vital element of the Trump coalition,”

        ” Religion and Right-Wing Politics: How Evangelicals Reshaped Elections
        In the early 1970s, many evangelical Christians weren’t active in politics. Within a few years they had reshaped American politics for a generation.”

        And yes they go sit in Church and then hit the restaurants then they do their politics.

    2. John Harvie Avatar
      John Harvie

      You can’t be serious, Larry (I hope).

      1. LarrytheG Avatar
        LarrytheG

        Not just my view, , you know. Way too much involvement in politics and the Republican Party which has changed so much that they call the original GOP – RINOS and CINOS. People like Bush, even Reagan are now considered CINOS by evangelicals..

        Steve H is now a RINO!

  9. Nancy Naive Avatar
    Nancy Naive

    Yes, yes. Because white evangelical Xians are such victims in this country.

    1. LarrytheG Avatar
      LarrytheG

      Just looking at their undying support of this amoral idiot that was posing as POTUS.

    2. LarrytheG Avatar
      LarrytheG

      Just looking at their undying support of this amoral idiot that was posing as POTUS.

      1. LarrytheG Avatar
        LarrytheG

        The one the Evangelicals love of course!

      2. Paul Sweet Avatar
        Paul Sweet

        Which amoral idiot posing as POTUS?

  10. Sam Adams Avatar
    Sam Adams

    The role of of White evangelicalism in Trump’s assault on American democracy will be a defining story for us to examine in the coming decades. Should scholars of religion NOT study this phenomenon in the interest of “balance”? Yes, what is often called “fundamentalism” is more diverse (racially and theologically) than the topic of this forum, and all of these speakers would admit as such. Yet most whites who call themselves evangelical have made up the core of Trump’s base, defending him up to and including the January 6 insurrection. The role of religion in this alliance is worthy of close examination.

    Several of these speakers have had textured and involved roles in teaching in evangelical settings. For example, Larycia Hawkins taught at Wheaton until she was forced from her job in a most unfair manner. Sherlock is entitled to his opinion, but this is a hackneyed “Academics are liberals” hit job. More interesting would be to explore why White evangelicals are so fervent in their allegiance to Trump and whether anything about that devotion can plausibly be called Christian.

  11. […] President Jim Ryan was kind enough to read my column detailing the unacceptable behavior of two Department of Religious Studies […]

  12. Wahoo'74 Avatar
    Wahoo’74

    Superb article. What happened to your hate speech filing? I have no doubt it was summarily rejected.

  13. […] of Virginia President Jim Ryan was kind enough to read my column detailing the unacceptable behavior of two Department of Religious Studies […]

  14. […] Sherlock wrote about the panelists’ hate speech in Bacon’s Rebellion, and then posted UVa President Jim Ryan’s written response, in […]

  15. […] Sherlock wrote about the panelists’ hate speech in Bacon’s Rebellion, and then posted UVa President Jim Ryan’s written response, in […]

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