Thanks to the recent email from Dr. Farris to the student body, I now feel at liberty to discuss some facts that I knew already but had been asked not to communicate.
Fact: A parent raised a legitimate question about the "lifeboat example" that Dr. R. used in class.
Fact: When a parent raises a legitimate question, it is the job of the President of the college to find out if it is true.
Fact: Dr. R. apparently took umbrage at even being asked, leaked the fact that he was being questioned (witness: the "save Dr. Root" campaign), and did not answer the accusations.
Other facts that I have gleaned through knowledge of people and through questioning --
Fact: Some professors have felt for some time that their academic freedom was in peril.
Fact: I myself have felt for the last four years that Dr. F. does not understand the liberal arts side of the college as much as he does the government side.
This is a touchy combination of personalities and events, to say the least. When I talked to Dr. F. on the phone during the first week of April, I told him that I thought he was the only one who could fix things. He sighed and said, "If you figure out how, please tell me! I have asked counsel at every point, and I don't see where I've gone wrong." I believe he was sincere. I advised him later via email that it seemed to me that the professors were scared of him, and that if he really wanted to fix matters, he should go to each one individually, by himself, and volunteer just to listen as they spoke. He replied, and I quote, "Thank you for your comments." In the phone conversation, he told me that he was scheduled to speak with each man who was resigning in the company of each one's pastor. Still, it seemed to me that nobody had talked directly to each other first, which is supposed to be the first step of reconciliation.
This is how I interpret events:
(A) Professors feel repressed, and they feel for whatever reason that Dr. F. just cannot understand their position. I must admit that I have felt this way before with Dr. F. He has very good intentions, but he likes to argue like a lawyer, dodging through loopholes. I think loopholes are cheating, if they only "win" an argument without arriving at truth. :)
(B) Professors make an agreement to be an the lookout for academic repression in the future. Dr. F. does not suspect this in the slightest.
(C) Parent complains about Dr. R., and Dr. F. passes on the concerns, as is his job. Dr. R. publishes an article about Augustine that says among other things (or so I heard from Dr. F.) that marriage is a "political union." Dr. F. adds some of these concerns to the still-unanswered list.
(D) Vigilant professors instantly see this as an occurrence of the very repression they feared. Dr. F. still doesn't know that they think it is anything larger than what it is. He is confused and angered when they respond as if he is a tyrant when he is just (in this instance at least) doing his job.
(E) All tempers flare. Two profs publish an article about general and special revelation that they
must have known would be controversial. Administration responds just as expected, warily unsure what is happening, but no longer expecting professors to respond professionally.
(F) Both sides are right, so far as they go. Dr. F. does not recognize the existence of any wrong opinions he has held in the past, because nobody has told him that they relate to the current situation. Professors see the current situation only as further proof of perceived abuse.
The reason I understand this is that I find it strikingly similar to the disagreement between history majors and Dr. Sa. last year. We all were feeling exceedingly misused, and it felt like it was impossible to explain anything to her. So Beth Branscome started a petition, which we sent above Dr. Sa.'s head to Dr. B. and Dr. F. Imagine my embarrassment in our eventual meeting with Dr. B. and Dr. Sa. when Dr. B. asked us who had actually talked to Dr. Sa. first and only Beth and I raised our hands! I knew then for sure that we had done Dr. Sa. wrong as a group by not talking to her first. And let me add that I have had some wonderful discussions with Dr. Sa. since, and I utterly respect and like her as a teacher and a school authority.
This all is what I meant about a month ago when I posted that the whole mess was a deeply rooted misunderstanding. Anyone who is still reading this has no idea how uncomfortable it is to know information from either direction that one is not allowed to tell the other party. Keep praying, my friends.