Showing posts with label Religion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Religion. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Chapter Bible Study

This blog post cropped up on the search radar today. It sounds like there is interest in the spiritual side of things at one campus at least.
At the end of last school year, I had two students approach me about starting a bible study at Sig Ep. Apparently they have had some students asking questions and wanting to know more about God, and felt it was time to do something about it. We are gearing up to launch this group in a few weeks and start bringing the light of Christ into their lives.

But that isn't the end of it. That was only the beginning. One of our leaders is involved in the new fraternity on campus - Phi Delta Theta - and so we've had some great inroads there. I was able to give them some furniture for their house that I was just going to put out on the curb for someone to take. We're also holding our annual start of the year cook-out there...and going to move our regular group gatherings to their house, too.

But that STILL isn't the end of it. I was talking to Justin last night about if Sig Ep ever has people come in to talk to the guys about practical stuff...like building character, managing finances, etc - and he said they do. Once rush is over, their program director is going to get a hold of me and we're going to set up some times that I can go in there and do some sessions with the guys, challenging them in building character, helping them manage their finances or anything else they would like me to do.
Based on the information on the web site I presume he is referring to the chapter at Monmouth college. They seem to have the elements of a good 'balanced' program.

Comments?

Ramblings...: Committed Prayer

Tuesday, August 05, 2008

Court Orders UF to Recognize BYX

Appeals court: UF must recognize Christian-only frat
By Nathan Crabble Sun staff writer

The University of Florida has more than 60 officially recognized student groups that include religion as part of their missions, including groups for Christian pharmacy students and Jewish law students.

Yet the university denied a Christian fraternity, Beta Upsilon Chi, recognition on the grounds its membership policies were discriminatory.

Beta Upsilon Chi sued UF, leading an appeals court this week to require the university to recognize the fraternity as the case was being decided.

"All we're trying to do is get a group of guys who share a common bond in Jesus Christ together," said Damion Dam, a 20-year-old UF finance/pre-med major and fraternity president. "I really don't see why we weren't recognized in the first place."

University officials say there's a major distinction between Beta Upsilon Chi, or BYX, and other religious groups on campus. BYX requires members to be Christians, while other student groups are open to non-believers.

"The University of Florida welcomes all kinds of student groups including those with a religious focus," said Janine Sikes, UF spokeswoman. "(But) if someone who is a non-Christian wants to join, they should be able to."

BYX, pronounced Bucks, is the largest Christian fraternity in the U.S. Since being formed at the University of Texas in 1985, it has expanded to 20 other campuses.

The University of Georgia chapter was allowed as student groups under threat of legal action, but UF was the first to force the issue to court.

The U.S. Constitution requires universities to recognize religious groups, said Isaac Fong, an attorney for the Christian Legal Society's Center for Law & Religious Freedom who represented BYX.

"What we're arguing here is the First Amendment protects the right of students to form a group around a set of shared principles," he said.

Religious groups at UF walk a tightrope between specialization and discrimination. The Christian Veterinary Fellowship, which conducts mission work in other countries, is an example of an officially recognized group with a religious focus.

"That doesn't mean that we ask everyone who comes to our meetings whether they're Christian or not," said Michelle Bellville, a fourth-year vet student and group president. "We're open to everyone."

But she said members are likely to be Christians or searching for religion.
She cited the case of an undergraduate who came to a meeting to hear a speech and soon converted to Christianity.

As a recognized student organization, the group can use UF facilities and receive funding from student government. BYX's lawsuit claims that the university, by withholding those privileges from the frat, violated Constitutional rights to free exercise of religion, freedom of association and freedom of speech.

According to the suit, filed in the U.S. District Court in Gainesville, UF initially denied recognition of the group on the basis that they limit membership to men. Dam said the fraternity found a sister group to address that issue, but was told its policy to admit only Christians posed another roadblock.

UF requires student groups to comply with nondiscrimination laws and not discriminate of the basis of race, religion, sex and other personal characteristics.

The district court ruled against an injunction that would require UF to recognize the fraternity while the case was being decided. The 11th Circuit Court of Appeals reversed the decision, allowing recognition until a final ruling is made.

Brett Williams, national board member of BYX, said the order has wider implications.
"It has repercussions for all other religious groups who desire to assemble on university campuses," he said.

Sikes said UF will now allow BYX to start the process of being recognized as a student group, but it was uncertain whether the order had wider implications.

Dam said the fraternity's dozen members will start chapter business such as arranging for campus meeting space, even though the case is still pending.

"If anything does change, we still had this time when we were on campus," he said.
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