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Report Recommends Steps to Help
Students Approach Issues of Sexuality
Posted April 19, 2002
HOLLAND -- Following a year-long review, Hope
College will take a variety of steps to help students deal
with issues of sexuality.
The recently-released report of the college's Task
Force on Issues of Sexuality recommends steps including
developing a series of presentations on a variety of aspects
of human sexuality, and formation of discussion groups and
support groups to help students who are wrestling with
issues of sexuality including homosexuality. According to
President James Bultman, the college will begin implementing
the report's recommendations during the forthcoming 2002-03
school year.
"The plan the task force recommends has been
carefully designed to provide a safe place for education,
dialogue and support while maintaining the integrity of the
college's official position on matters of sexuality,"
Bultman said. "It is a model on which they all agree, and
it is one that I can and will accept."
Homosexuality, in particular as it relates to the
Christian faith, has been discussed on campus for several
years, particularly actively in 1999, when speakers with
opposing views on the topic visited campus. Bultman formed
the task force after the college's Campus Life Board denied
the bid of the Gay Straight Alliance student group to be
recognized as a formal campus student organization during
the 2000-01 school year.
Hope College's Institutional Statement on
homosexuality adopted by the Board of Trustees largely
reflects that perspective of the Reformed Church in America
(RCA), the founding denomination with which the college
remains affiliated. The RCA and the college distinguish
between homosexual orientation and practice, identifying the
latter as "contrary to Scripture" while, also in keeping
with biblical teaching, encouraging "love and sensitivity"
in the care of all people. The college does not provide
formal recognition for groups whose purposes include the
advocacy or moral legitimization of homosexual behaviors.
As an educational institution, the college seeks to
encourage the kind of thoughtful conversation that assists
students to develop discernment about complex moral issues.
The task force met throughout the current school
year to consider a range of issues related to sexuality, not
only homosexuality. The group's work included examining the
treatment of homosexual students on campus, exploring how
the college can best exhibit care and compassion for
homosexual students, reviewing recent attempts at Hope to
educate students on issues of sexuality and considering
additional beneficial educational experiences.
The 12-member group, comprised of members of the
Trustees, faculty, administration and students, released its
report earlier this month. Central among its conclusions is
the conviction that since the college lives its life "in the
context of the historic Christian faith" it ought to
similarly place the Bible "in a privileged position as the
only final authority for the faith and practice of the
people of God and as the primary resource for people seeking
to discern their moral responsibilities." At the same time,
the report recommends that as an academic institution, Hope
College should not ignore "other important sources of moral
insight and guidance which operate in a complex inter-
relationship with the Bible." Citing hospitality as a
principal Christian virtue along with honesty, courage,
humility and patience, members of the task force worked in a
spirit of cooperation despite the fact that they reflected a
wide variety of perspectives on the issues addressed in
their report.
"It is... critically important to recognize that
as an academic institution Hope College owes its students
and the other members of our community the opportunity to
explore such morally controversial and socially relevant
issues as those surrounding sexuality," the report says.
"At Hope College such exploration ought to be guided by the
standards of intellectual integrity befitting an institution
of higher education, and in a spirit of Christian love
consistent with the college's theological commitments."
"The task force strongly believes that for the
campus to effectively enter into dialogue about
homosexuality, it must address wider issues of sexuality on
the Hope College campus," the report notes. "In part, this
conviction stems from its perception that the issue of
homosexuality, with all of its intensity, has obscured the
moral issues confronting heterosexuals on campus."
The committee's conclusion was underscored by a
survey it commissioned. "It is clear from our survey that a
number of students on Hope's campus are engaging in sexual
behaviors that are leaving them at risk for psychological,
spiritual and physical damage," the report says. "Hope
needs to take a proactive approach in helping students make
conscious, wise and healthy decisions regarding the
expression of their sexuality."
The planning committee recommended by the task
force will be charged with presenting a balanced program to
help educate Hope students on a broad range of issues
relating to sexuality. "These events would provide
opportunities for students to learn new information, engage
in moral and theological reflection, and make informed
decisions about the wide range of sexual concerns facing
college students," the report says. "Given the educational
purposes of the college, we would expect these events to be
well informed, wide-ranging and both intellectually and
morally challenging."
The task force proposed the discussion groups as a
way to encourage ongoing conversation among students.
"These groups are designed to offer a place of safe
dialogue," the report says. In addition to its initial
recommendation of a discussion forum concerning sexual
orientation, the task force cited possibilities including
male-female friendships, sexual abuse, sustaining long-term
relationships, pornography and promiscuity.
Recognizing that a variety of students may need
support as they struggle with issues related to sexuality,
the task force recommended that the college's Counseling
Center and Campus Ministries offices work cooperatively to
establish support groups to meet the needs of specific
groups of students. In recommending that such a group for
gay students be established initially, the task force seeks
to have Hope provide "a recognized safe environment for our
students to meet and speak openly with each other about
their lives and their experiences in an atmosphere of trust
and confidentiality."
In framing its recommendations, the task force
also emphasized that all discussion should be conducted with
sensitivity to and respect for those involved.
"Our campus community is comprised of persons with
a variety of religious and moral perspectives," the report
says. "The voices of all members of our community are
welcomed in our conversations, even when we do not agree
with each other."
"Hope College is committed to creating an
environment in which our conversations are carried out with
an 'uncommon decency,' which displays a variety of virtues,"
it continues. "These virtues will include a generous
hospitality creating a safe place for people to voice views
unlike our own, patience which encourages us to work long
and hard to be understood and to understand, humanity which
encourages us to assume we have much to learn from others,
and courage which makes us bold to speak what we believe is
true."
"As we seek to understand complex issues together,
we will consider ourselves to be functioning normally when
we are dealing graciously with one another in all our
differences," the report says. "We undertake these
endeavors in the hope that God's Spirit will lead us,
through our faith, learning and obedience, into justice and
peace."
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