Suit Challenges Religion Classes Credit

Suit Challenges Religion Classes Credit

An Idaho State University student is suing the school for offering course credit for off-campus religion classes taught by the Latter Day Saints (LDS) Institute.

If Carole Wells, a 36-year-old sociology major and board member of the local American Civil Liberties Union chapter, wins her case, the school will likely be forced to shut down its religious-studies department. Wells alleges in her suit, due for a jury trial in U.S. District Court March 17, that the university is violating the U.S. Constitution by involving the state with religious institutions.

The department offers classes from three off-campus organizations: the LDS Institute, the Evangelical Studies Center, and the Logos Center for Religious Studies, which is composed of mainline Protestants and Catholics. All faculty are approved by the college. Most have doctorates, and all have at least master’s degrees.

“The regional accrediting agency liked the fact that the program guarantees diversity and that students can choose the perspective,” says Mike Powell, director of the Evangelical Studies Center and pastor of University Bible Church.

No college funds are used for the classes. “The only connection is that the university gets money for tuition,” says Powell. “We even pay for our photocopying.” If the university loses the lawsuit, it will likely close the department because it cannot afford to maintain it without depending on the church-based classes.

Wells is aiming at the LDS Institute because it is the biggest target at the overwhelmingly Mormon university. Of the 360 students taking religious-studies courses for credit, five-sixths of them are enrolled in LDS Institute classes.

About 65 percent of the student body is Mormon, and only 100 are involved in evangelical student groups such as Campus Crusade for Christ or the Baptist Student Union. Powell says the Evangelical Studies Center will continue to offer classes whatever the outcome of the suit.

Copyright © 1998 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

Also in this issue

Cuba's Next Revolution: Christians are transforming Castro's Communist stronghold. But will the Protestant-Catholic relationship bred by persecution withstand the pope's high-profile visit?

Cover Story

Cuba's Next Revolution

John W. Kennedy in Havana and Miami

Classic & Contemporary Excerpts from January 12, 1998

Pottery Shard Points to Temple

Gordon Govier

Born-again Christians Lead Norway

Tomas Dixon

Christians Protest Trade Embargo

The Apostle Shows Grit, Grace

Steve Rabey

Top Religion Stories of 1997

Swift Growth Shapes Potter's House

Jim Jones in Dallas

Sandi Patty Stages Comeback

Timothy C. Morgan

Madison Avenue’s Spiritual Chic

CHARLES COLSON & Nancy Pearcey

China’s Leaders Critical of ’Clandestine’ Missions

Ken Walker, with reports from Compass Direct news service

Internet: IRS Spurs Nonprofit Disclosure on Internet

News

Vineyard: Vineyard Founder Wimber Dies

Joe Maxwell, with Heather Johnson and John Geary in Anaheim

Spiritual Mapping Gains Credibility Among Leaders

by Art Moore in Tacoma

Why Evangelicals Have the Biggest Seminaries

News

News Briefs: January 12, 1998

Billy Graham Had a Dream

Vishal Mangalwadi

The Only Way

Daniel B. Clendenin

Roe v. McCorvey

Gary Thomas

Wanted: A New Pro-life Strategy

Bittersweet Cuban Memories

John W. Kennedy

Santeria Holds Cuba in Thrall

Brothers to the Rescue Pawn in Policy Discord

John W. Kennedy in Miami

Editorial

What Really Died in Oregon

A Hundredfold Return

How Should We Pray for Cuba?

Michael G. Maudlin, Managing Editor

Wire Story

Evangelicals, Catholics Issue Salvation Accord

Randy Frame, with reports from Martin King, Baptist Press

News

News Briefs: January 12, 1998

View issue

Our Latest

From Our Community

For John Jenkins, CT “Has Been Courageous”

Pastor John Jenkins shares how CT has made an impact on his life.

Public Theology Project

Chatbot Companionship Will Make Our Loneliness Crisis Worse

People want relationship without tension. Genuine intimacy requires more.

I Have a Social Disability. I’m Also a Leader.

David Giordano

God calls ministers who are afraid to make eye contact—not just ones who sparkle with personality.

What Broke the Evangelical Women’s Blogosphere

Jen Hatmaker’s trajectory illustrates the fraught world of spiritual influencerhood and the disappearance of the messy middle.

News

Kenyan Churches Fight Extremism with Dancing

Pius Sawa

A youth pastor struggles to prevent young people from joining terrorist cells.

Review

The ‘Never Again’ of ‘Nuremberg’ Comes with a Warning

Myles Werntz

The new film asks how the Holocaust happened: and whether it could happen again.

The Russell Moore Show

Ken Burns on the American Revolution

A legendary filmmaker invites us to consider how the American Revolution can teach us how to get along with each other.

Review

In Netflix’s ‘Frankenstein,’ Monster Is More Compelling Than Maker

The Guillermo del Toro adaptation brings unique perspective—but fails to match the depth of its source material.

Apple PodcastsDown ArrowDown ArrowDown Arrowarrow_left_altLeft ArrowLeft ArrowRight ArrowRight ArrowRight Arrowarrow_up_altUp ArrowUp ArrowAvailable at Amazoncaret-downCloseCloseEmailEmailExpandExpandExternalExternalFacebookfacebook-squareGiftGiftGooglegoogleGoogle KeephamburgerInstagraminstagram-squareLinkLinklinkedin-squareListenListenListenChristianity TodayCT Creative Studio Logologo_orgMegaphoneMenuMenupausePinterestPlayPlayPocketPodcastRSSRSSSaveSaveSaveSearchSearchsearchSpotifyStitcherTelegramTable of ContentsTable of Contentstwitter-squareWhatsAppXYouTubeYouTube