How should universities deal with cases of insensitive proselytising by religious students?
That was the theme of a panel debate organised by as part of a one-day event titled âFaith and Belief on Campus: Division and Cohesionâ to launch a report of the same name.
Giles Cattermole, London team leader for the (UCCF) â representing the evangelising Christian Unions on campus â was grateful for âthe freedom to think and to meetâ in British universities and found it âexciting to see students using their freedom to spread the good news about Jesusâ.
Others expressed reservations about this perspective. Kristin Aune, professor of sociology of religion at Coventry University, drew on the results of a survey of 4,500 students (half of them Christian) she had conducted with colleagues. She noted that only 10Â per cent of Christian students were involved in a Christian Union, and many feared that these unionsâ âover-zealousness can be counterproductive and give the Christian faith a bad nameâ.
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What these students wanted instead was to âbe able to express their faith, primarily through acts of service to othersâ, as in the case of one who told her that his faith motivated him to â[get] up early in the morning to do his flatmatesâ washing upâ, she added.
As for external pressures on Christian students, Professor Aune said that a few had reported âhostile incidentsâŠwhen other students laughed at them, perhaps when theyâd been drinking, [or] where lecturers ridiculed their faith or told them God didnât existâ.
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Hannah Timson, president emeritus of , flagged up some of the issues for the majority of students who identified as secular.
She wanted universities ânot to overlook such studentsâ, for whom humanist societies were often âthe only voiceâ on campus, and to take on board the need for ânon-religious pastoral carersâ. She was also unhappy about the members of Christian Unions who âgo out to clubs, pick students off the street and talk to them about Jesus when they are wastedâ, arguing that this could amount to âmanipulation of vulnerabilityâ.
Asked in a question from the audience about cases of some Christian Unions allegedly befriending lonely international students who had recently arrived in the country and often had limited English skills and then soon pressuring them to commit to Christianity, Mr Cattermole admitted that the UCCF had âno written code of conduct for proselytisation beyond following the example of Jesusâ.
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