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Florida College and race relations



A little history:

1. The original campus now occupied by Florida College was built in the 1920s as a gambling resort for rich tycoons (including Al Capone) from the north to vacation in Florida. It was built in beautiful Spanish and art deco style on the banks of a swampy river. The mosquitoes were kept in check by bats housed in large bat-houses, which are now in disrepair. During Prohibition and then the Great Depression of the 1930s the gambling resort fell on hard times. It was sold to the Baptist Bible Institute where a young Billy Graham attended.

2. In 1946 when the noninstrumental Churches of Christ were splitting over whether churches could contribute to parachurch ministries (orphan homes, missionary societies and evangelistic radio programs), it became evident that all of the colleges associated with the a capella movement were going to go with the majority wing. Many feared this would lead to the Churches of Christ becoming just one more denomination instead of the One True Church. So a board of directors was formed who bought the campus, naming it Florida Christian College, and dedicating it to the children of those who believed it was wrong for churches to contribute to parachurch institutions (thus they called themselves "noninstitutional"). The board of directors decided they would never accept donations from a congregation, only from individuals.

3. An Annual Lectureship was established during Homecoming Week. It is considered an honor to be invited to present a lecture, so Florida Christian College began to play a central role in the noninstitutional Churches of Christ or "churches of Christ" (with a small 'c') as most eventually preferred to be called.

4.  In the 1960s controversy arose over the use of the designation "Christian", since the term "Christian" is only used as a noun in the New Testament, never as an adjective. Thus the two year school became known simply as Florida College. (The board had also established a 1st through 12th grade school as well.)

5. The cash-strapped school went through turbulent times in the early 1970s having long bowed to a significant donor's request that no non-whites be admitted to the college. An exception was made for basketball scholarships, ninety percent of which were African-American males who were totally unfamiliar with Churches of Christ (and who were very disappointed when they found out there were no African-American women on campus). Unfortunately Florida College was not the first or second choice for African-American athletes, so Florida College usually ended up with African-American basketball players who had poor grades. The white students seldom if ever associated with the African-American athletes.

6. A female student from Africa protested the policy and it was changed to admit non-white Americans to Florida College in the early 1970s, one of the last colleges in the United States to admit African-American students, along with Bob Jones University. Since then less than one percent of Florida College students have been African-American, not including the athletes.

7. By the late 1970s there was a significant morale problem among students on campus. A dean resigned due to sexual involvement with a student. The student body seemed to be dominated by kids from the deep south who had a social etiquette foreign to students from the mid-west and far west. The two annual banquets reminiscent of  debutante cotillions, and Sadie Hawkins Day left some students baffled. A significant portion of students had been sent to Florida College by their parents as a sort of reform school, in hopes that their kids would straighten out. As a result an estimated ten percent of the students were spending time in the woods smoking marijuana, marijuana artwork finding its way into the yearbook. In response the college board voted to eliminate athletic scholarships, and refused to admit about two dozen students the next year who were known to not fit in. Student morale lifted.

8. In 1996 Florida College became a four year school with a student body around 450.

9. Currently there is controversy over the teaching of Creation at Florida College, as well as controversy over the teaching of Divorce and Remarriage. The noninstitutional churches of Christ have been in existence since about 1960 and are due for a division, according to some predictors, the house-church movement being one such division.

The Bigger Picture

The Restoration Movement, from the start, was concerned with the work, worship and organization of the local congregation--not social issues. The only social issues were personal holiness issues (part of the Holiness Movement started by John and Charles Wesley in the Church of England). The Holiness Movement was continued in the United States by the formation of the Methodist Church (from Wesley) and the Pentecostal Movement (from the Methodist Church). Thus a 1970s rule on the Florida College campus was: No holding hands. But no rule existed against racial discrimination.

Social issues were left to religious movements such as the Quakers who actively participated in the Underground Railroad to fight the abuses of slavery, and who also helped to reform the penal system. The Shakers formed communal farms where the homeless could come and work in a communal setting. The Salvation Army worked to stamp out alcohol abuse and to feed the poor.

When the Quakers were calling for the abolition of slavery, Thomas and Alexander Campbell also opposed slavery (1830-1860). Having owned a few slaves, they educated them and gradually freed them. They spoke out and wrote against slavery, especially the abuses of slavery. But the Restoration Movement split in 1864 between the north and the south, the north becoming the Christian Church, and the south becoming the Churches of Christ.

Outside the Restoration Movement the Southern Baptist Church was established after the Civil War in part because they did not want to be a part of the northern Baptists (American Baptist Churches) who opposed slavery and supported integration.

As Churches of Christ in the 1950s joined the social movement to help the poor (the social gospel), parachurch organizations formed to administer these charity movements. There was still a significant group in the Churches of Christ who saw both the social gospel and the parachurch ministries as compromises of the central reason for the Church of Christ: to be anti-hierarchical and anti-denominational in structure, thus the split between the majority and the noninstitutional wings occurred.

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Florida College has the dubious distinction of being one of the last colleges in the United States to admit African-American students.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

For more on Race Relations in the Church of Christ click here.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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