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 Rez
(@rezynezy)
Posts: 948
Varsity
 

@valpopal Your own articles posted here from LCMS leaders seem to suggest differently.

 
Posted : 12/11/2024 11:56 AM
(@valpopal)
Posts: 334
Junior Varsity
 

Posted by: @rezynezy

@valpopal Your own articles posted here from LCMS leaders seem to suggest differently.

What articles have I posted from LCMS leaders? As I said, I am not Lutheran. If you asked me to name an LCMS leader, I would have no answer. In addition, about your suggestion that my recommendation for better recruitment of Lutheran students "poses a dark form of thinking" that would "alienate the population of NWI and Chicagoland" Catholics, as well as your detailed history of Roman Catholics: I am Roman Catholic. 

 

This post was modified 2 weeks ago by valpopal
 
Posted : 12/11/2024 11:59 AM
(@vuindiana)
Posts: 166
Freshman
 

I agree with ValpoPal and others who are warning Rez against an overly black-and-white view of the Lutheran issue. I don't think anybody is arguing that Valpo should become a fundamentalist school for diehard conservative Lutherans only, nor is anybody suggesting that Valpo should just entirely give up its Christian particularity to become a totally tradition-less or secular place.

On campus and on this e-board, there are plenty of devout Lutherans who are also committed to welcoming and learning from people of other denominations or backgrounds since at the end of the day VU as an org is not a church but a university - that makes a difference! And there are plenty of non-Lutherans around campus who want to see the school retain its distinctive Lutheran heritage both for the sake of clarity in institutional identity or even for just simple pragmatics/strategy around enrollment and hopefully not continuing to lose a key constituency - let's not shoot ourselves in the enrollment foot, please!?

That said, the Lutheran scene is a toughie (in a way that the R Catholic universities don't have to face) because the Lutheran world is so internally divided between LCMS and ECLA camps that. At this point they have very different cultures and politics, with pretty sharp distrust of each other. Meanwhile, from what I can tell, the Catholics also have a ton of ideological polarization in their ranks, but it's not (yet) an institutional division and so most the Catholics still exist mostly under one umbrella and give some benefit of the doubt to each other when it comes to being in fellowship. But the intra-Lutheran cultural/ideological divisions are extremely palpable and predictable (basically reproducing the secular US politics). So I suspect that structural internal division and distrust does complicate efforts to recruit from Lutherans since whatever prospective families who would factor in Lutheranism at all to the decision will then, on some level, be questioning what Valpo's Lutheranism is and whether it's to be trusted. (And so Valpo's effort to straddle the two and be independent may work for some, but may just end up as a no man's zone in terms of drawing enrollment). There are other denominations that also have structural splits that are variously old/new/tame/raw (Presbyterians, Anglicans, Methodists). They don't really provide a live comparison since these other groups generally never had much of a HS school system or network of universities to begin with -  but if they did, their current ideological splits would probably stymie the functionality of their HS-to-College pipelines in a similar way to the Lutheran/ Valpo case. 

Even so, I'm not terribly convinced that the Lutheranism matters much when it comes to top-level strategic planning, so I mostly find the "Lutheran identity" and ELCA-LCMS infighting to be a red herring. Obviously, Lutheran identity or spirituality matters a lot to particular offices and people sprinkled across campus in terms of providing some motivational sense of why they do their jobs.... But at the end of the day, when the university is making financial decisions that actually shape university operations and campus culture (construction plans and debt decisions, technology platforms, teaching compensation and loads, contracting food services, hiring external consulting firms to tweak program offerings, setting tuition and financial payment requirements for students to remain enrolled, etc.) the Lutheranism (any version of it) doesn't seem to matter or factor in much at all. These are basically secular people making secular business decisions. The Lutherans  -- for all their internal infighting and passion for whatever strain of heritage they prefer -- have been mostly passive and willing to hand over the actual operations of the university to the secular corporate powers and external consultants.

 
Posted : 12/11/2024 1:29 PM
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(@valpo95)
Posts: 66
Freshman
 

@vuindiana, thanks for your long and articulate post. I could not have said it better myself.

I want to pickup on one point:

Posted by: @vuindiana

...the intra-Lutheran cultural/ideological divisions are extremely palpable and predictable (basically reproducing the secular US politics). So I suspect that structural internal division and distrust does complicate efforts to recruit from Lutherans since whatever prospective families who would factor in Lutheranism at all to the decision will then, on some level, be questioning what Valpo's Lutheranism is and whether it's to be trusted. (And so Valpo's effort to straddle the two and be independent may work for some, but may just end up as a no man's zone in terms of drawing enrollment).

It is probably safe to assume that 95% of all LCMS pastors knew who Alan Harre was, and many personally knew him. President Harre hired Bill Karpenko as Director of Church Relations  (not exactly sure of the precise titles over time) and he was in that role for VU for perhaps two decades before he retired in 2005. Dr. Karpenko was a VU alum, and  had been at Concordia Seward in charge of the Director of Christian Education programs. Probably 90% or more of all LCMS pastors knew Bill Karpenko, and probably close to 100% of all DCEs knew him. Although the theologically conservative pastors might have had their disagreements with VU, they still knew that Harre and Karpenko were confessional Lutherans - there was a level of trust developed over decades.

In contrast, President Heckler did not have that level of trust. Although the number of Lutheran students was in long-term decline, President Heckler's status as the first non-LCMS president corresponded with a steep drop in the level of Lutheran students at VU, especially as the recruitment and enrollment decisions take years to work through the system. Perhaps neither the Board nor President Heckler fully appreciated that aspect of his hiring. 

 

 
Posted : 12/11/2024 2:49 PM
(@vu84v2)
Posts: 123
Freshman
 

VUIndiana offered some very insightful comments and he sort of touched on this, but let me ask the question directly. Do prospective Lutheran students and their parents prioritize having many others around them who share their ideological beliefs to the point that they are effectively seeking a homogenous community? I am not Lutheran (nor Catholic), but I have always advocated that Valpo should have robust high quality religious programs linked to its Lutheran identity. I think Valpo does this and has for many years. But it seems that some of the points made here (outside of those regarding Pres. Heckler failing to build and sustain relationships with the Lutheran community) argue that having robust high quality programs is not enough...that Valpo would need to adhere to religious doctrine associated with LCMS or other Lutheran synods to attract a greater percentage of Lutherans.

This post was modified 2 weeks ago by vu84v2
 
Posted : 12/11/2024 5:15 PM
 Rez
(@rezynezy)
Posts: 948
Varsity
 

Posted by: @vu84v2

VUIndiana offered some very insightful comments and he sort of touched on this, but let me ask the question directly. Do prospective Lutheran students and their parents prioritize having many others around them who share their ideological beliefs to the point that they are effectively seeking a homogenous community? I am not Lutheran (nor Catholic), but I have always advocated that Valpo should have robust high quality religious programs linked to its Lutheran identity. I think Valpo does this and has for many years. But it seems that some of the points made here (outside of those regarding Pres. Heckler failing to build and sustain relationships with the Lutheran community) argue that having robust high quality programs is not enough...that Valpo would need to adhere to religious doctrine associated with LCMS or other Lutheran synods to attract a greater percentage of Lutherans.

This, this, this,. My initial argument was surrounded around these suggestions made by some. And as such I proctored my statements around this question. My wording may have been black and white, but I only intended to base my words off of the suggestions being made around a more fundamentalist style of enrollment. That being said, VUIndiana once again proves to be a very inciteful individual. 

 

This post was modified 2 weeks ago 4 times by Rez
 
Posted : 12/11/2024 5:42 PM
(@vuindiana)
Posts: 166
Freshman
 

Posted by: @valpo95

It is probably safe to assume that 95% of all LCMS pastors knew who Alan Harre was, and many personally knew him. President Harre hired Bill Karpenko as Director of Church Relations  (not exactly sure of the precise titles over time) and he was in that role for VU for perhaps two decades before he retired in 2005. Dr. Karpenko was a VU alum, and  had been at Concordia Seward in charge of the Director of Christian Education programs. Probably 90% or more of all LCMS pastors knew Bill Karpenko, and probably close to 100% of all DCEs knew him.

Thanks, VU95! I came during the Heckler years so this kind of comparative history is helpful. It does seem like there used to exist a thickness of connection between the university and LCMS churches in particular that has been lost. And in general, the issue of 'trust' is kind of poignant. That seems all-around hard to come by these days!

Posted by: @vu84v2

VUIndiana offered some very insightful comments and he sort of touched on this, but let me ask the question directly. Do prospective Lutheran students and their parents prioritize having many others around them who share their ideological beliefs to the point that they are effectively seeking a homogenous community? I am not Lutheran (nor Catholic), but I have always advocated that Valpo should have robust high quality religious programs linked to its Lutheran identity. I think Valpo does this and has for many years. But it seems that some of the points made here (outside of those regarding Pres. Heckler failing to build and sustain relationships with the Lutheran community) argue that having robust high quality programs is not enough...that Valpo would need to adhere to religious doctrine associated with LCMS or other Lutheran synods to attract a greater percentage of Lutherans.

Great question, and I don't really know!

I'm not Lutheran so just take this as kind of cultural analysis guess from a friendly observer who wants the Lutheranism to matter and often wishes the Lutherans would get their act together:

My sense is that the ideological commitments and litmus tests are, at this point, mostly unhinged from doctrine. Before I came to Valpo I studied up a bit on Lutheran thought because I figured I should have some understanding of whatever theology or political philosophy must inform the organizational life of Lutherans. So I read a bunch of stuff written by Luther and secondary scholarship on Lutheranism -- about grace, justification, law and freedom, notions of sovereignty, communal ethics, etc. I thought it was great and still do have a lot of respect for it! But the weird thing upon arrival and meeting real live Lutherans was that neither the LCMS or ELCA Lutherans seemed to talk about any of that, and overall most of their litmus tests seem to be about much more mainstream American politics (anti-immigration or pro-immigrant, anti-diversity or pro-diversity, anti-evolution or pro-evolution, etc.) I don't know if the Lutherans just don't know their own intellectual tradition, or if they've just given up on it to fall into line with the more dominant political Right vs Left antipathies? At any rate, I just haven't met very many Lutherans where the religious teaching is clearly animating anything.... It seems to me that most are first politically conservative or politically liberal, and then secondarily Lutheran in a follow-up way. It's for that reason that I do worry the Lutheranism ends up being a kind of no-man's zone for enrollment, since there are far more stereotypically conservative or liberal universities out there. If LCMS families really want a politically conservative and explicitly anti-woke place, then they're going to go to Hillsdale and Taylor and the like because -- even if those places aren't LCMS -- they hit all the conservative buttons they care about. If ELCA families really want to somewhere liberal and explicitly social-justice-y, then they're going to go to Oberlin or Grinnell or something because -- even though they're not ELCA institutions -- they hit the liberal buttons that matter. Or either type of family may just end up sending their kid to the cheaper state school. So yeah... I do have doubts about the recruit-ability of Lutherans as such.

I'm sorry if that sounds ungenerous -- but the grimness in this assessment comes from a sense that we'd all be better off if the Lutherans could actually figure out their Lutheran convictions on a more substantive level. From a sociological sort of perspective, I suspect that it is because the LCMS and ELCA are so untethered from actual Lutheran thought that they get so easily pulled into the church polarizations as a mere cipher for American 'red vs. blue' politics... and that leaves VU more easily co-opted by utterly external pathologies from the higher ed industry and corporate finance worlds. Anybody with an agenda can invoke the "Lutheran mission" and since nobody's really sure what it means, it can be wielded in any which way. So while the little piggies run from right to left, the wolves gladly take up residence in the house.

 

 
Posted : 12/11/2024 8:21 PM
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(@realist77)
Posts: 13
Freshman
 

ValpoPal, thank you for pointing out the BYI-ish "caricature" being used by "Rezynezy" as a straw man argument. He clearly does not know that Lutheran High School populations are usually less than 60% Lutheran. As such, they are ideal Valpo prospects in that all of those students are now made familiar with a Lutheran/Christian context. 

So the church body member declines are not relevant to Valpo's poor recruitment of Lutheran High School graduates. Many Lutheran Schools are growing. CLEARLY those high school students are choosing against Valpo.  Check mate on recruiting failures and on opting out of strategic plans to target them. 

This post was modified 1 week ago by Realist77
 
Posted : 12/12/2024 11:49 AM
(@vuindiana)
Posts: 166
Freshman
 

Posted by: @realist77

Lutheran High School populations are usually less than 60% Lutheran.

Oh, that's interesting - didn't know that either! Definitely all these relations between church, religious affiliation, school attendance, belief, etc. are all much murkier or non-contiguous than one might imagine. 

 

 
Posted : 12/12/2024 12:23 PM
(@vu84v2)
Posts: 123
Freshman
 

Realist: I agree with you that Valpo should target students at Lutheran high schools and re-establish relationships with influential people in those high schools. But to my prior question (to which VUIndiana articulated some very interesting points), would those students come to Valpo as it is today or are you arguing that Valpo as a university would need to change (and,, if so, how)?

 
Posted : 12/12/2024 12:56 PM
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 Rez
(@rezynezy)
Posts: 948
Varsity
 

As someone who knows a tad about k12 education, I believe that is mostly due to the inherrant value some perceive comes from a private education as opposed to a public education. The stereotype of the "rich kids going to the private school" while horribly exaggerated by media, is a very real concept that does exist. Along with perceptions that public schools do not offer as quality of an education that one can receive from privatized systems. However, if populations within Lutheran High Schools are less than 60% Lutheran, then what incentive does that population and their families get out of sending their child to a Lutheran institution, an organization in which they have no religious ties to in the first place? If these were Catholics attending a Lutheran institution than I would be more understanding and concerned given VUs history with the catholic church. I would also like to piggyback on 84 here and ask the same question. The arguments given by some here seem to suggest that VU needs a more fundamentalist approach, which I am not in agreement with.

This post was modified 1 week ago 2 times by Rez
 
Posted : 12/12/2024 12:59 PM
(@realist77)
Posts: 13
Freshman
 

Again, I don't see people on this board pushing for a fundamentalist identity like BYU or even Wheaton. It seems you are making ideology a pivotal factor than it is and forcing a dichotomy.

Even if a large majority of families in the Lutheran high schools were pretty agnostic or at least apathetic toward their churches, I think that these schools has several pragmatic benefits.   

 

PRACTICAL REASONS TO COMB LUTHERAN HIGH SCHOOLS

1)  It provides a defined target (ideal or not.) Thus your staff can focus on be efficient in travel and prospecting.  Sure you should recruit in the public schools nearby too.  But at least you start with the advantages below and your batting average would intuitively be higher in the prime target school.

2)  Identifying legacy families, even extended ones. It's pretty easy to find extended family of alumni in these schools. All you need are surnames and maiden names.  Is this fully pursued? 

3)  Social fabrics in the high schools between parents and between students.  The parents as well as students form bonds regardless of Lutheran church membership.  They pay attention to "popular" college choices by kids their age.  If you have zero going to Valpo it sends a message.  One or two is better, but in past days, you might have one or two bellcow kids and 3-5 would folllow them to Valpo.  

 

 
Posted : 12/13/2024 12:28 PM
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(@vu84v2)
Posts: 123
Freshman
 

Realist...I agree with your points. I have just gotten confused about some comments over the years regarding whether Valpo should change it environment or has changed it in some way.

 
Posted : 12/13/2024 2:11 PM
 MJ08
(@mj08)
Posts: 60
Freshman
 

Why Valpo wouldn’t be recruiting these two high schools is beyond me. Plus they have great football programs as well. 

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Faith_Lutheran_Middle_School_%26_High_School

 

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lutheran_High_School_of_Orange_County

 

 
Posted : 12/13/2024 5:56 PM
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(@valpotx)
Posts: 236
Junior Varsity
 

Do we have information that they aren't recruiting all Lutheran schools across the country?  There is a Lutheran school near me in DFW, and anytime I run into someone that has ties to it, they all know Valpo.  Again, as I have stated many times over the years on this board, I wholeheartedly agree with Rez that Gen Z and Gen Alpha are nowhere near as religious as generations above mine (Xennial, border of X and Millenial).  You should definitely recruit those that have attended Lutheran schools, but a school like Valpo should never just pin its hopes that a religious identity will help them survive the upcoming university closures that will happen, as these Z/A generations also don't think that a university path is the only one available to them.

 
Posted : 12/15/2024 1:51 PM
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