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A
Look at the Scandal of Granting Honorary
Degrees
in the Church
By William Alnor
(posted August 11,
2004)
©
2004, The Christian Sentinel 
Editor's note: This is
Part 2
of Bill Alnor's article from The Christian
Sentinel's August 2004 E-update that
examines the issue of phony degrees, and
suspect credentials within the church, and
particularly within the apologetics
community. To read Part 1, please
click here.
Some cases of
institutions giving phony degrees are easy
to see through. For an interesting
account of how fringe creationist
teacher/tax protester Kent Hovind's doctoral
credentials from "Patriot
University" collapsed under an inquiry
go to http://tinyurl.com/foyj.
Other cases are not as clear cut.
California apologist Robert Morey holds a
doctorate from the highly regarded (and
regionally accredited) Westminster
Theological Seminary near
Philadelphia. However, when he began
speaking out on Islam Morey also began
claiming to hold another doctorate in
"Islamic Studies" from an
unaccredited seminary, whose campus more
resembles a house on Cheltenham Avenue,
Philadelphia rather than an educational
institution.
But these cases withstanding, an area
of credential abuse within the church
involve the substitution of "honorary'
degrees for real ones. In an egregious action within the
field of apologetics, Dr. Norman Geisler of
Southern Evangelical Seminary (SES) publicly
awarded Hank Hanegraaff, the scandalized
leader of the Christian Research Institute,
an honorary doctorate about five
years ago. It turns out Hanegraaff long ago had
dropped out
of Calvin College in Michigan after
attending classes for less than two years,
sources said. Trouble was (and still is) Geisler's
institution is not regionally accredited (it
maintains TRACS accreditation instead),
meaning that a degree from SES would not
hold water at many other institutions of
higher learning that are regionally
accredited (meaning among other things
credits from SES may not be transferred to
regional accredited institutions).
It was
also significant that at the time that SES
did not have a doctoral program at all, so
Geisler was bestowing an honor on Hanegraaff
that his own institution could not grant to
anyone.
Additionally, after critics of Hanegraaff
cried foul about it, with complaints even
reaching the influential AR-Talk listserv, Geisler went on Hanegraaff's
Bible Answer Man Broadcast and repeatedly
defiantly referred to Hanegraaff as
"Doctor."
There have been other strange acts
covering the world of apologists as well.
For example, the Evangelical Ministries to New
Religions, as part of a call for clear
ethical standards among its members created the
Manual of Ethical and Doctrinal Standards
in the mid 1990s. It states:
SELF-REPRESENTATION. The way EMNR
members represent themselves in terms of
background, experience, testimony,
education, and expertise is to be honest
at all times. This affects us in a variety
of ways:
(a) Educational degrees and
ordination. EMNR members shall not
advertise themselves as having degrees of
higher education unless the degree has
been legitimately earned at an institution
requiring in-class instruction or through
an accredited "distance
education" facility. Honorary degrees
and degrees from correspondence schools
may be advertised provided there is no
effect of deceiving the reader through
ambiguous description. Degrees obtained
from "diploma mills" must not be
listed on a member's resume or
biographical summary. Ordination obtained
through mail-order institutions should be
omitted from one's list of credentials.
However,
even while the manual was being created and
agreed upon by the EMNR board,
one of EMNR's high ranking board members for years allowed himself to be referred to as
"doctor" at numerous conferences
ranging back to the 1980s.
He was even awarded that title in EMNR
publications and letterheads dating to
the early 1990s. However, a quiet inquiry in
2000 under the leadership of former
president John Morehead, revealed that the board member
did not hold a doctorate -- even the
university he taught at refused to list him
as such, and so the
"Dr." was quietly dropped before
his name on publications and in recent
conference announcements. No admission
of wrongdoing was ever made by the EMNR
board member, and still many
apologists refer to him as
"Dr."
Similarly, Many apologists are fuzzy on this issue
and related ones dealing with proper
academic credentials and accreditation. For example, apologist
Gretchen Passantino speaking on the
"Stand to Reason" radio broadcast
in Southern California not long ago, was
promoting the Southern California extension
program at the seminary she teaches at, the
Faith Evangelical Seminary as being
"fully accredited." Instead Faith
holds just the TRACS accreditation, which is
practically meaningless in the academic
world. This means for example that
institutions like Biola, Wheaton, Cal State,
UCLA and other universities holding regional
accreditation would almost never accept
credits from Faith Seminary. Further, a
degree from a TRACS only accredited
institution, would not be considered a
legitimate degree at many other institutions
of higher learning and those holding such a
degree, even a doctorate from such
institutions, would almost certainly be
unable to teach at any four-year college,
university or graduate school.
(Additionally, Bill Alnor has prepared a
list of guidelines on accreditation for
those interested in pursuing higher
education. For an E-mail copy click here or
write him at bill@cultlink.com. He also
spoke at EMNR's conference on this issue
earlier this year. To obtain the tape go to http://www.emnr.org.)
A second problem within the church is the
astonishing number of people who have been
given "honorary" doctoral degrees,
who then turn around and call themselves
"doctor," thus quietly implying
they have earned degrees. This is deceptive
and goes against academic protocol. In
reality, although many institutions of
higher learning give honorary doctorates,
the secularists -- those outside
Christianity receiving them know better than
to take them seriously. Thus they don't
refer to themselves as "doctor" at
all, since it would be a joke to do so.
Among the institutions most responsible
for contributing to the confusion is Oral
Roberts University of Tulsa that seemingly
doles out honorary doctorates like candy at
Halloween to children. ORU has even
presented honorary doctorates to some of the
most questionable figures imaginable, even
con men and known purveyors of false
doctrine and at least one accused sexual
predator. After some of these people are awarded an ORU
honorary doctorate, sometimes without serving
any time in higher education, a good number of these
men and women have gone on to publicly call
themselves doctors in their books and in
teaching materials.
ORU has doled out honorary doctorates to
the late Kathryn Kuhlman and Rex Humbard,
both accused of multiple imporprieties; the
late plagiarist and false teacher Kenneth E.
Hagin; prosperity teachers Frederick Price,
Creflo Dollar, Marilyn Hickey, Joyce Meyer,
Jesse Duplantis, Paul (David) Yonggi Cho,
his wife, and Kenneth Copeland; former NFL
player Roosevelt Greer; the late
entertainer, Bob Hope; false teachers and
founders of the Trinity Broadcasting Network,
Paul and Jan Crouch. But most egregious was
ORU's awarding of honorary degrees to the
following teachers who were exposed in
international scandals for various instances
of crookedness: Bishop Earl Paulk (who has
faced a slew of sustained sexual misconduct
accusations over the years); disgraced
television preachers Robert Tilton and Larry
Lea (who were both targets of PrimeTime
television exposes by Diane Sawyer); and
faith healer Benny Hinn, who has faced
dozens of major scandals during the past 15
years. And there are many other lesser known
false teachers given honorary doctoral
degrees since ORU began the practice in 1972.


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