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Kevin Roose Infiltrates Liberty University To Write Book

ERIC TUCKER   04/22/09 02:34 PM ET   AP

Kevin Roose

PROVIDENCE, R.I. — Kevin Roose managed to blend in during his single semester at Liberty University, attending lectures on the myth of evolution and the sin of homosexuality, and joining fellow students on a mission trip to evangelize partyers on spring break.

Roose had transferred to the Virginia campus from Brown University in Providence, a famously liberal member of the Ivy League. His Liberty classmates knew about the switch, but he kept something more important hidden: He planned to write a book about his experience at the school founded by fundamentalist preacher Jerry Falwell.

Each conversation about salvation or hand-wringing debate about premarital sex was unwitting fodder for Roose's recently published book: "The Unlikely Disciple: A Sinner's Semester at America's Holiest University."

"As a responsible American citizen, I couldn't just ignore the fact that there are a lot of Christian college students out there," said Roose, 21, now a Brown senior. "If I wanted my education to be well-rounded, I had to branch out and include these people that I just really had no exposure to."

Formed in 1971, Liberty now enrolls more than 11,000 residential students, along with thousands more who study through Liberty's distance-learning programs. The university teaches creationism and that the Bible is the inerrant word of God, while pledging "a strong commitment to political conservatism" on campus and a "total rejection of socialism."

Roose's parents, liberal Quakers who once worked for Ralph Nader, were nervous about their son being exposed to Falwell's views. Still, Roose transferred to Liberty for the spring 2007 semester.

He was determined to not mock the school, thinking it would be too easy _ and unfair. He aimed to immerse himself in the culture, examine what conservative Christians believe and see if he could find some common ground. He had less weighty questions too: How did they spend Friday nights? Did they use Facebook? Did they go on dates? Did they watch "Gossip Girl?"

It wasn't an easy transition. Premarital sex is an obvious no-no at Liberty. So are smoking and drinking. Cursing is also banned, so he prepared by reading the Christian self-help book, "30 Days to Taming Your Tongue."

He lined up a publisher _ Grand Central Publishing _ and arrived at the Lynchburg campus prepared for "hostile ideologues who spent all their time plotting abortion clinic protests and sewing Hillary Clinton voodoo dolls."

Instead, he found that "not only are they not that, but they're rigorously normal."

He met students who use Bible class to score dates, apply to top law schools and fret about their futures, and who enjoy gossip, hip-hop and R-rated movies _ albeit in a locked dorm room.

A roommate he depicts as aggressively anti-gay _ all names are changed in the book _ is an outcast on the hall, not a role model.

Yet, some students also grilled him about his relationship with Jesus and condemned non-believers to hell.

After a gunman at Virginia Tech killed 32 people in April 2007, a Liberty student said the deaths paled next to the millions of abortions worldwide _ a comment Roose says infuriated him.

Roose researched the school by joining as many activites as possible. He accompanied classmates on a spring break missionary trip to Daytona Beach. He visited a campus support group for chronic masturbators, where students were taught to curb impure thoughts. And he joined the choir at Falwell's Thomas Road Baptist Church.

Roose scored an interview with the preacher for the school newspaper, right before Falwell died in May of that year. Roose decided against confronting him over his views on liberals, gays and other hot-button topics, and instead learned about the man himself, discovering among other things that the pastor loved diet peach Snapple and the TV show "24."

Roose would duck away to the bathroom to scribble down anecdotes or record them during lectures. He never blew his cover, even ending a blossoming romantic relationship rather than come clean. He revealed the truth on a return trip to campus. He grappled with guilt during the entire project, but said he ultimately found forgiveness from students for his deception.

"If he told me he was writing an expose or maybe if the book turned out to be what I considered unfair, then I might have been more troubled," said Brian Colas, a former Liberty student body president who befriended Roose.

The university administration has been less receptive. Chancellor Jerry Falwell Jr. said in a statement that Roose had a "distorted view" of Liberty before he arrived and gave an incomplete portrait of the school.

"We appreciate Kevin's generally positive tone toward LU but he admittedly comes from a culture that has very little tolerance for conservative Christianity and even less understanding of it," Falwell said.

Roose said his Liberty experience transformed him in surprising ways.

When he first returned to Brown, he'd be shocked by the sight of a gay couple holding hands _ then be shocked at his own reaction. He remains stridently opposed to Falwell's worldview, but he also came to understand Falwell's appeal.

Once ambivalent about faith, Roose now prays to God regularly _ for his own well-being and on behalf of others. He said he owns several translations of the Bible and has recently been rereading meditations from the letters of John on using love and compassion to solve cultural conflicts.

He's even considering joining a church.

(This version CORRECTS penultimate graf to `letters of John,' sted `Gospel of John.')

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12:42 AM on 05/09/2009
As a nation what really needs to happen is for us to realize that if we are to move forward we cannot keep pandering to these people as if what they say has some legitimacy. The earth isn’t flat...we know that. Consequently we don’t teach its “flatness” to our children in the public school system. When people like this deliberately setout to attack civil liberties, democracy and scientific knowledge. Knowledge that can save millions of lives, (stem cells) that is the last straw and it’s time to directly challenge their credibility and insure that we remain a democracy and not a theocracy.
08:55 PM on 05/07/2009
I’m sure there are a lot of nice people at Liberty U. However as someone mentioned earlier Hitler also had a nice smile...he loved animals and children. There are a lot of “nice” people out there that unfortunately have some very backward and harmful ideas. Mike Huckabee’s certainly got a lovely smile he just doesn’t believe in evolution, gay equality or women’s rights. So it really doesn’t matter to me how nice he is....in fact I would expect that behavior as I would from a used car salesman. Every ruse is predicated on deception.
Feel free to debate them or engage them in conversation all you want... just remember that ultimately the conversation comes back to their superstition and dogma. And since by definition this is inflexible and not subject to change you will find yourself going in circles with them until you turn blue. Frankly many of them are not capable of abstract thought. I’m now fifty and I’ve been arguing and fighting these people since I was in my twenties. They don’t change....they cling to their beliefs no matter how much evidence to the contrary you provide. These are not rational people, for them it’s not about reality it’s about what they want to believe.
04:13 PM on 05/07/2009
Hailing from the State of Kansas as a newly minted faculty member of Liberty University is one Phill Kline. Now Mr. Kline is an interesting case in that he was driven out of office in Kansas as Attorney General when he decided to ignore the true purpose of his position (addressing crimes). He instead tried to use his office to attack Planned Parenthood for his cronies on the Christian Right. Mr. Kline illegally obtained the private health records of women who had visited the clinic over a period of years and filed 107 charges that have since been rendered frivolous and politically motivated by another court. When a group that relies on dogma and superstition decides it’s going to attack the civil liberties of a nations citizens... a line has been crossed. We are no longer talking about a belief system that is privately held. We are talking about political action directed at specific groups of people. The religious right attacks the 4th Amendment right to privacy of women by attempting to tell them how to control their own bodies. They attack equality and the civil liberties of gay people when they insist they be treated differently than other married couples that receive marriage benefits. They attempt to stall “stem cell research” because they believe a “spirit” enters the womb at the moment of conception, etc. All of this is a direct affront to democracy, and man’s altruistic nature to help mankind.
06:02 PM on 05/06/2009
Having lived in Kansas for a large part of my life and not too far from hate mongers like Fred Phelps let me offer the following.
If Fred Phelps comes up to me and tells me I am being intolerant of his views I would point out that he has freedom of speech and freedom to organize publicly. Then I would underscore the fact that my being “intolerant” of his “intolerance” is very silly and nonsensical.
The radical Christian Right decided in the early 1980’s that they were going to become politically active in this Country. This meant hiring lobbyists and doing their best to get a “Fundie” in the White House. The “Moral Majority” under Jerry Falwell decided they would set-up a law school (Liberty U.) and attempt to circumvent the Constitution and Separation of Church and State. They would also do their very best to attack any and every law at the State level that promoted sane health care and contraception. Various attempts have been made over the years to use propaganda like telling people “America is a Christian Nation”, etc. In fact Jefferson, Madison, Franklin and others were adamant that their new government "make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof". Hence the Establishment Clause and the Exercise Clause in the U.S. Constitution. Jefferson and Madison were both Deists and didn’t believe in the supernatural AT ALL, (virgin births, resurrections, parting the sea’s, Noah’s Ark, etc.)
12:14 AM on 04/26/2009
Monica Goodling graduated from Liberty University. What does that say?
07:31 AM on 04/24/2009
Good idea. We should all infiltrate each others' cultures with an open, non-judgmental mind. You know, like, every day and all the time.
06:48 AM on 04/24/2009
Boy's got a good head on his shoulders.

Thinks well, good for him.
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grasyknol
Senator Sherrod Brown - My Senator!
01:21 AM on 04/24/2009
I lost my job in Ohio and was considering infiltrating "Promise Keepers" for a job lead.
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xsm941f
by any means necessary
12:19 AM on 04/24/2009
Oops. Hit my hot button! I am a Christian, in fact a deacon in a Baptist church. Fortunately I believe God gave me a brain and I haven't read anywhere in my Bible that I shouldn't use it. My "hot button" is the Bible being the "unerring, literal word of God". That is ridiculous. Which translation? The original Hebrew? The Aramaic? The Greek? The King James? The New International (which I prefer)? Which translation does Liberty U. accept as the 'true' word of God and why? What about the books that didn't make it into the Gospels? And the fact that the very decision which books made it in was made by a small self-appointed group of guys MANY years after the death and resurrection of Christ. Please, I prefer to think that God WANTS me to question things as a means to a greater understanding of him I can't understand why some folks can't deal with anything but 'absolutes' that alleviate them of any thinking. Personally don't think that was what Jesus was preaching. Does however sound alot like the Taliban.
01:46 AM on 04/24/2009
BAM!
How do the falwell sheep respond to that!
Must they be so rigid?
11:44 PM on 04/23/2009
What do the students discuss in private? Do the students get into detailed examination of the bible? Wonder if they sought answers to questions that nag me.

Did child Mary consent to be impregnated by god? If "no", then was the act a rape? What did Mary feel during the event?

Why are there no repeats of the big miracles? Is god's power something like a quiver of arrows? When the "flood" arrow is shot, is it gone? When the "crumbling wall" arrow is shot, is it gone?

Can angels protect humans from violence? If so, why did Lot give up his daughters to the Sodomites so they would not rape the angles visiting him? Can angles and humans have homosexual sex?

Sure would like to know if there is an ounce of curiosity in Liberty U. Or, do they just drink the cool-aide.

I will look for some answers in the book while having a coffee in the local book store.
10:00 PM on 04/23/2009
It took him one semester to get brainwashed. That's what I'm talking about. Intelligentsia my a $ $ !
09:40 PM on 04/23/2009
Boring. Been done. Maybe his mother will buy the book.
07:13 PM on 04/23/2009
And the faithful asked Brian if they should follow the holy gourd or the holy sandal

Brian told the faithful to f**k off

The faithful asked how should we f**k off.
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brashier
09:48 PM on 04/23/2009
"You are all individuals!"

"YES. WE ARE ALL INDIVIDUALS!"

"i'm not."
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Trial Lawyer
08:51 AM on 04/24/2009
"he's not the Messiah, he's a very naughty boy!"
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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07:12 PM on 04/23/2009
Instead of informing the lost that, "God loves you," it would be more accurate to say that, "God wants to love you."
The real issue is not the fact that God loves humanity for this is commonly accepted except among the infidels. God takes no delight in suffering of the wicked. It is the Devil and hisdemons who will be tormenting the damnd.
God is love.
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bbriani3842
400+ yrs of science & STILL no evidence for a god
07:40 PM on 04/23/2009
Then why doesn't he fix the wickedness?

If I had the power to heal my children's addictions, pains and what not, I wouldn't hesitate . . .
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booboo111
micro-bio
09:45 PM on 04/23/2009
I will heal all your problems my dear, but first is that minor detail of the check..............
08:34 AM on 04/24/2009
That is what is known as the Trilemma:
1. God Is good.
2. God is all-powerful.
3. Evil is real

or in the case of the Book of Job:
1. God is good.
2. God is all-powerful.
3. Job is a righteous man.

The vexing point of the Trilemma is that one of the three have to be wrong. The greatest western thinkers have been studying it for centuries and there has yet to be consensus. I ascribe to the Buddhist allegory of the poison arrow: quit worrying about why you were shot with the poison arrow or where the arrow was made and instead focus on removing the arrow (suffering) and healing yourself and by extension others.
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booboo111
micro-bio
09:49 PM on 04/23/2009
My father is a Jew1sh carpenter also. He's even in the union! Coincidence? I think not!
07:09 PM on 04/23/2009
It is somewhat disconcerting to find a student of an Ivy League school embark on a 'spy mission' to find faults against a school founded on the precepts of 'conservative Christianity' in order to lampoon it.

Mr. Roose does find some good at Liberty, and perhaps for himself, the derision of what many think of 'Christianity,' (and demonstrated by most of the commentators ) is proof of the ignorance of many 'educated elites'.

It may be shocking, but Liberty may actually be closer in some aspects to the traditions of the American Ivy League than, well, the modern Ivy League...

Consider Brown, for example, by reading the MEMOIR OF THE REV. JAMES MANNING, D. D.
FIRST PRESIDENT OF BROWN UNIVERSITY. He graduated Princeton, Class of 1762....

Harvard's mottos: "Christos Et Ecclesia," "In Christi Gloriam," and "Veritas pro Christo et Ecclesia;”

Yale:
"Lux et Veritas" is explained at this Yale website: http://www.yalealumnimagazine.com/issues/01_03/seal.html

Princeton:
"Dei Sub Numinie Viget." translated: "Under God's power she flourishes."
Benjamin Rush, Signer, Declaration of Independence, and America's leading M.D. for those who may question the relation between "Science" and "Religion." His 1806 "Essays, Literary, Moral, and Philosophical has a few poignant thoughts...

Since there is a particularly vitriolic tone to "Creationism" comments here, perhaps one of Darwin's contemporaries, Princeton's Charles Hodge's 1874 spellbinder: "What is Darwinism?" has some profound observations for the modern reader...

First, know the facts...
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dctackett
07:27 PM on 04/23/2009
"First, know the facts"?... reread your first sentence, then you might have to reread the article.
08:02 PM on 04/23/2009
Mr. Roose's hidden agenda:

..."but he kept something more important hidden: He planned to write a book about his experience at the school founded by fundamentalist preacher Jerry Falwell."

Sounds like it was originally intended as a "spy mission" to me...

"If I wanted my education to be well-rounded, I had to branch out and include these people that I just really had no exposure to."

..."These people"... as if they are social outcasts to be examined like a strange new species? I hope I am misreading Mr. Roose...
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bbriani3842
400+ yrs of science & STILL no evidence for a god
07:41 PM on 04/23/2009
Can you come up with anything less than one hundred years old?
07:55 PM on 04/23/2009
Please click the Yale link, it is copyright 2009... quite important to recent Yale Alums, I suspect... and they are rather contemporary to you and me...

Again:

"Lux et Veritas" is explained at this Yale website: http://www.yalealumnimagazine.com/issues/01_03/seal.html