David French Writes About the Moral Bankruptcy of Liberty University in the New York Times

David French wrote a column in the New York Times that looks at what is perhaps the largest scandal in university education. The moral collapse at Liberty University is staggering. French’s column drew a lot of criticism but it articulates well the problems that exist. Its a column that should be read.

“People’s indifference is the best breeding ground for corruption to grow

Delia Ferreira

The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom, and knowledge of the Holy One is understanding.

Proverbs 9:10 NIV

LibertyU

Recently I wrote about the leaked results of a United States Department of Education investigation into Liberty University for allegedly breaking the law in a number of areas. You can read this blog post about in, “The Department of Education Finds that Liberty University Covered Up Criminal Activity, Destroyed Evidence and Broke Federal Law.” Liberty University likes to boast of being the largest “Christian” school in the United States. For those of us who live in Virginia we live under the shadow of what I believe will be an evangelical Waco or Ruby Ridge one day.

But before we get into the article let’s look at how many evangelicals view the world and public education. Many evangelicals live in fear of secular higher education. When I was in Campus Crusade for Christ the goal was to create an environment that would protect people’s faith while in college. That often meant creating a bubble and removing them from their secular surroundings. Evangelicals like to speak about how corrupt secular education is, and how it adversely influences people. That is part of the reason why some choose to attend Liberty University. For some evangelicals secular education is backward, corrupt and a threat to people’s faith.

But what is the reality at Liberty? These past few years it has been overwhelmed by constant and unprecedented scandal. From allegations of covering up rape and sexual abuse to deep issues of racism. Academic freedom has also been compromised as well. And the cherry on top of all this? A university president, Jerry Falwell Jr., who sat in the corner of a hotel room watching a pool boy mount his wife while he played with his junk like there is no tomorrow.

David French wrote a column in the New York Times that blew up on what is left of Twitter. His column looks at what is perhaps the biggest educational scandal in American history. For context consider this aspect; Michigan State was fined $4.5 million for covering up the Larry Nassar sex abuse scandal. Liberty University meanwhile allegedly faces fines from the Department of Education totaling at least $37.5 million dollars. Yes you read that correct, $37.5 million dollars. And evangelicals like to speak about how the University of Maryland, Virginia Tech, North Carolina State University and so many other universities are deeply corrupt, broken and a threat to people’s faith. This blog wants to document what David French wrote, which you can read in its original form in, “The Worst Scandal in American Higher Education Isn’t in the Ivy League.” As always I encourage you to subscribe and support your local newspaper . But if you would like to read French’s column you can do so below.


Those of us who write about higher education can pay too much attention to America’s elite universities. Schools like Harvard, Yale and Stanford are seen as virtual cultural superpowers, and the battle over these schools is sometimes seen as a proxy for battles over the future of the country itself. It’s not that this argument is wrong, exactly. That’s why I’ve written about these schools myself. But it’s incomplete.

In rightly ascribing importance to the Harvards of the world, we can forget that other schools in other contexts also exercise immense influence, and their virtues and flaws can sometimes be more consequential than anything that happens in the Ivy League.

In fact, I’d argue that the moral collapse at Liberty University in Virginia may well be the most consequential education scandal in the United States, not simply because the details themselves are shocking and appalling, but because Liberty’s misconduct both symbolizes and contributes to the crisis engulfing Christian America. It embodies a cultural and political approach that turns Christian theology on its head.

Last week, Fox News reported that Liberty is facing the possibility of an “unprecedented” $37.5 million fine from the U.S. Department of Education. The department has been investigating violations of the Clery Act, a federal statute that requires federally funded colleges and universities to publicly report data about campus crime. To put that number into perspective, consider that Michigan State University paid $4.5 million for its own “systemic failure” to respond to the infamous Larry Nassar sexual abuse scandal, in which Nassar was convicted of sexually abusing dozens of women in his care. While Liberty’s fine is not yet set, the contents of a leaked Education Department report — first reported by Susan Svrluga in The Washington Post — leave little doubt as to why it may be this large.

The report, as Svrluga writes, “paints a picture of a university that discouraged people from reporting crimes, underreported the claims it received and, meanwhile, marketed its Virginia campus as one of the safest in the country.” The details are grim. According to the report, “Liberty failed to warn the campus community about gas leaks, bomb threats and people credibly accused of repeated acts of sexual violence — including a senior administrator and an athlete.”

A campus safety consultant told Svrluga, “This is the single most blistering Clery report I have ever read. Ever.”

If this was the only scandal at Liberty, it would and should be a national story. But it’s not the only scandal. Far from it. I’ve been following (and covering) Liberty’s moral collapse for years, and the list of scandals and lawsuits plaguing the school is extraordinarily long. The best known of these is the saga of Jerry Falwell Jr. Falwell, a former president of the school and a son of its founder, resigned amid allegations of sexual misconduct involving himself, his wife and a pool boy turned business associate named Giancarlo Granda.

Falwell is nationally prominent in part because he was one of Donald Trump’s earliest and most enthusiastic evangelical supporters. Falwell sued the school, the school sued Falwell, and in September Falwell filed a scorching amended complaint, claiming that other high-ranking Liberty officers and board members had committed acts of sexual and financial misconduct yet were permitted to retain their positions.

But that’s not all. In 2021, ProPublica published a comprehensive, gut-wrenching report describing how Liberty mishandled claims of sex abuse and sex harassment on campus and used its strict code of conduct, the Liberty Way, against victims of sex abuse. If, for example, victims had been drinking or engaged in any other conduct prohibited by Liberty policies, those details in their sex abuse complaints could be used against them in school disciplinary proceedings.

Liberty has faced a series of lawsuits related to those claims, and last year it settled one of those cases. Throughout these controversies, Liberty has responded by denying many of the worst allegations against it. Liberty claims, for example, that the Education Department’s preliminary report is marred by “significant errors, misstatements and unsupported conclusions.” It has also acknowledged “historic gaps in compliance” with the Clery Act and says it is making material changes on campus, including spending millions to upgrade campus security and reviewing and enhancing its Title IX procedures.

I know that there are people who will read the accounts above and be angry. They can’t believe a Christian institution could fail its students, the church and the nation so profoundly. Others will read and grow angry for a different reason. The scandals above are only a partial description of the problems at Liberty. They’ll actually think I let the campus off easy.

But there’s another group that will be angry as well — at yet another attack on an evangelical institution in a powerful secular newspaper. That anger, though, is a key part of the problem with the American church, and it’s a problem that no less a Christian figure than the apostle Paul identified almost 2,000 years ago.

In his first letter to the Corinthian church (or, as Trump might say, One Corinthians), he issued a ferocious denunciation of sexual immorality inside the church. In chapter five, he says that he’s heard of misconduct “of a kind that even pagans do not tolerate.” He’s condemning an act of incest within the church, but if you read the accounts of incidents at Liberty, you’ll read stories of gross misconduct that Christians and non-Christians alike should and do find utterly abhorrent.

The chapter continues in an interesting way. Paul demonstrates ferocious anger at the church’s internal sin, but says this about those outside the congregation: “What business is it of mine to judge those outside the church? Are you not to judge those inside? God will judge those outside. ‘Expel the wicked person from among you.’”

Not every Christian institution is rocked by scandal, and there are many Christian colleges that are healthy and vibrant, led by men and women of integrity. Yet as we witness systemic misconduct unfold at institution after institution after institution, often without any real accountability, we can understand that many members of the church have gotten Paul’s equation exactly backward. They are remarkably tolerant of even the most wayward, dishonest and cruel individuals and institutions in American Christianity. At the same time, they approach those outside with a degree of anger and ferocity that’s profoundly contributing to American polarization. It’s also perpetuating the corruption of the church.

Under this moral construct, internal critique is perceived as a threat, a way of weakening American evangelicalism. It’s seen as contributing to external hostility and possibly even the rapid secularization of American life that’s now underway. But Paul would scoff at such a notion. One of the church’s greatest apostles didn’t hold back from critiquing a church that faced far greater cultural or political headwinds — including brutal and deadly persecution at the hands of the Roman state — than the average evangelical can possibly imagine.

Why? Because he realized the health of the church wasn’t up to the state, nor was it dependent on the church’s nonbelieving neighbors. Liberty University is consequential not just because it’s an academic superpower in Christian America, but also because it’s a symbol of a key reality of evangelical life — we have met the enemy of American Christianity, and it is us.

10 thoughts on “David French Writes About the Moral Bankruptcy of Liberty University in the New York Times

  1. Once again, David French hits one out of the park. But the Trump-worshipping, Evangelical cultist Kool Aid drinking wastes of human skin that make up the majority of evangelicals will either dismiss it or blame the wokies and lefties in the media and at the US Deparment of Education…

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  2. A university president, Jerry Falwell Jr., who sat in the corner of a hotel room watching a pool boy mount his wife while he played with his junk like there is no tomorrow.

    Not “mount”.

    Don’t know the specific acts, but Pool Boy’s orders were to NOT put his Tab into her Slot. That was the only forbidden act. Had to use a different orifice. Just like Douggie ESQUIRE of Vision Forum on his Handmaid, as long as there was no Tab A in Slot B, it wasn’t really Adultery. “LOOPHOLE! LOOPHOLE! LOOPHOLE!”

    The Continuing CHRISTIAN Cuck & Cougar Reality Show…
    Ain’t CHRISTIAN Family Values wonderful?

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  3. ‘…Many evangelicals live in fear of secular higher education…’ Some years ago, a guy joined our church. He’d been a full time missionary for a UK city mission. His children started at the high school where my husband taught Physics and Maths. So that’s presumably how he knew hubby had a science degree from a top university. The guy preached his first sermon and had obviously taken against my husband because he said ‘Jesus doesn’t need us to get no fancy college degrees….look at me, I’ve led dozens to the Lord without any.’ My poor innocuous husband was bemused till, after the service, a wiser x-tian said to him, ‘Never believe anybody who tells you that with Jesus in your heart, any old turnip will do for a head.’ That became a family saying for years afterwrds!

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    • Holy Nincompoop Syndrome:
      The more stupid and ignorant you are, the more Godly you must be.

      I was on the receiving end of it all the time during my time in-country.

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    • I saw that. Her tears of unfathomable sadness are delicious. Mmm yummy!

      They pair nicely with a tall glass of Schadenfreude.

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  4. Spot on. I’m perpetually disappointed, though no longer surprised, at how people fall for the grift that is Liberty and the Falwell Christianist-Industrial Complex. I’ve had good friends from high school send their kids to Liberty, and I’m left wondering how we adopted such differing stances after running in the same circles in high school–even in a couple of cases, having gone to the same moderate Baptist church (NOT Falwell’s) in Lynchburg. Tim Alberta’s book also shines a bright light on Liberty’s con…thanks against to the W.E. for recommending it!

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