I
admire my protégé’s transparency, despite it being well-guarded: “I’ll give you
an honest answer to any question you have.” It took me a while to recognize the
secrecy that allowed, and a little longer to find both the courage and
opportunity to say so: “You seem very certain that no one will know what to
ask.” And then I asked. And I got answers, openly and honestly.
Others,
whose positions I am supposed to respect, admire, and aspire to, have also
answered my questions, but only by claiming that their integrity prevents them
from answering truthfully.
Administrators
of my alma mater (now one of my several employers) have repeatedly declined to
pursue Jesus’ prescription for resolving conflict and reconciling relationships
(Matthew
18:15-18) on the grounds that Simpson University is “a business
providing educational services,” and cannot, therefore, pursue these Biblical
processes (even though they are written into their various handbooks for
faculty, students, etc.). Balancing scriptural authority against the
requirements of California’s
state employment laws is a debatable practice, but a challenge commonly faced
by Christian non-profits.
Then
in February, responding to complaints that they violated the requirements of California’s state
employment laws, the same administration has claimed that they are exempt from
those standards. As a Christian
University, they claim,
they apply Biblical processes that should not be held to the same standards as
other businesses providing educational services. This position, too, could be
debated.
What
is not debatable, however, is that two mutually exclusive claims cannot be held
as simultaneously true. Simpson University’s administration either does or does not
hold to scriptural authority, and it either is or is not accountable to California state
employment laws. But they cannot claim they are “none of the above” on the
grounds that they are “all of the above.”
So,
I admire the transparency of a single mother working to overcome generations of
poverty, exploitation, and addiction, and a lifetime of abuse in her family of
origin, then a string of foster homes, and more recently by men who found her
susceptible to their demands. At the same time, I find reprehensible the
duplicity of respected family men holding terminal degrees, receiving six-figure
salaries, and presuming upon ninety-two years of heritage to assuage their fears
of the transparency that integrity requires.
Simpson in Seattle, in San Francisco, in Redding |
What
brought all this to mind? A call from a local reporter. To verify her upcoming
series of stories on Simpson
University, she asked,
“Is there anything I’ve misquoted? Is there anything you want to change about
what you’ve said?” She had quoted me accurately, but there will likely be
consequences to what I have said. And yet, as difficult as it was to hear her
repeat them, not only do I still believe them to be true, I have already said
them to those administrators who surely would have corrected me if they could.
The
transparency required of integrity means that I have to say what is true, but
also that what is true needs to be said.
5 comments:
"Let your Yes be yes, and your No be no."
"...and say so."
Thanks for the comment.
I think that your claim that mutually exclusive claims cannot be simultaneously held is based on captivity to a western modernist worldview! (I am very good at introducing sarcastic humor into issues I know nothing about...)
Thanks for being courageous enough to stand by your words... whatever they were. The world needs a few more Nathans! May truth come to light and may grace have its way.
Yes, I've been virtually ruined by the influence of those rationalists who hold that there is an objective reality susceptible to logical analysis.
As for what the words were, assuming they actually are quoted accurately, I'll post a link once the articles are published.
Thanks for the encouragement.
Well, it turns out that the Redding Record-Searchlight is now subscription only, even for access to their online versions. So, in the interest of educational value (an exception to copyright restrictions), I would gladly attach the five articles, three enhanced-content documents, and the follow-up editorial to an email reply.
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