Brigham Young University
Faculty Center

Statement on Academic Freedom at BYU

September 14, 1992

Preface

At Brigham Young University, faculty and students are enjoined to "seek learning . . . by study and also by faith" (D&C 88:118). This integration of truth lies at the heart of BYU's institutional mission. 1 As a religiously distinctive university, BYU opens up a space in the academic world in which its faculty and students can pursue knowledge in light of the restored gospel as taught by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. For those who have embraced the gospel, BYU offers an especially rich and full kind of academic freedom. To seek knowledge in the light of revealed truth is, for believers, to be free indeed.

The freedom to form religiously distinctive intellectual communities is protected not only by the principle of religious freedom but also by long-established principles of academic freedom.2 The BYU community embraces traditional freedoms of study, inquiry, and debate, together with the special responsibilities implicit in the university's religious mission. These include the duty to exemplify charity and virtue, to nurture faith, and to endeavor to teach all subjects with the Spirit of the Lord.

This document articulates in clear but general terms how BYU's unique religious mission relates to principles of academic freedom. BYU regards the following approach not as narrowing the scope of freedom but as enabling greater (or at least different) and much prized freedoms.

Conclusion

It is the intent of Brigham Young University to reaffirm hereby its identity as a unique kind of university-an LDS university. BYU intends to nourish a community of believing scholars, where students and teachers, guided by the gospel, freely join together to seek truth in charity and virtue. For those who embrace the gospel, BYU offers a far richer and more complete kind of academic freedom than is possible in secular universities because to seek knowledge in the light of revealed truth is, for believers, to be free indeed.


Notes

  1. See the Mission of Brigham Young University in [this catalog or the] University Electronic Handbook.

  2. Both the American Association of University Professors (AAUP) and the Northwest Association of Schools and Colleges (NASC) have traditionally provided for special treatment of academic freedom issues in religious institutions, whose existence contributes to genuine pluralism in an overwhelmingly secular modern academia. The AAUP's "1940 Statement of Principles on Academic Freedom and Tenure" provides that "limitations of academic freedom because of religious or other aims of the institution should be clearly stated in writing at the time of appointment" (AAUP Policy Documents & Reports [Washington, D.C.: AAUP, 1990], 3). Similarly, the NASC Accreditation Handbook "allows `reasonable limitations on freedom of inquiry or expression which are dictated by institutional purpose' as long as they are `published candidly'" (1988 ed.), 9-10; see also 133.

  3. See Michael W. McConnell, "Academic Freedom in Religious Colleges and Universities," Law and Contemporary Problems 53.3 (1990): 303-24; David M. Rabban, "A Functional Analysis of `Individual' and `Institutional' Academic Freedom under the First Amendment," Law and Contemporary Problems 53.3 (1990): 227-301.

  4. McConnell, "Academic Freedom," 305.

  5. Ibid.

  6. Journal of Discourses (Liverpool: Amasa Lyman, 1860), 7:283-84.

  7. See policy on Honor Code, University Electronic Handbook.

  8. Faculty Rank and Status: Professorial Policy, Policy and Procedures Section, University Electronic Handbook (rev. 1 June 1992), sec. 3.0.

  9. For example, the Catholic church's major statement on academic freedom in Catholic universities, Ex Corde Ecclesiae, affirms, among other things, that "every Catholic university, without ceasing to be a university, has a relationship to the church that is essential to its institutional identity" (John Paul II, "Apostolic Constitution on Catholic Universities [Ex Corde Ecclesiae]," paragraph 27 [1990]).

  10. For a discussion of "the Greater Institutional Academic Freedom of Private Universities," see Rabban, "A Functional Analysis," 266-71.

  11. See, for example, several articles appearing in First Things: James Nuechterlein, "The Death of Religious Higher Education" (January 1991): 7-8; George M. Marsden, "The Soul of the American University" (January 1991): 34-47; James Tunstead Burtchaell, "The Decline and Fall of the Christian College" (April 1991): 16-29 and (May 1991): 30-38; David W. Lutz, "Can Notre Dame Be Saved?" (January 1992): 35-40.

  12. See McConnell, "Academic Freedom," 311-18.

  13. Ibid., 312.

  14. Ibid.

  15. Ibid., 313. Similarly, Rabban argues that private universities may be granted greater latitude to establish educational policies than state institutions because "The resulting pluralism within the academic world . . . may provide more tolerance for diverse and unpopular views than a rule that would subject all universities to the commitment to diversity of thought that the first amendment imposes on public ones" ("A Functional Analysis," 268-69).

  16. McConnell, "Academic Freedom," 313.

  17. J. Reuben Clark, Jr., "The Charted Course of the Church in Education," in Messages of the First Presidency, ed. James R. Clark (Salt Lake City: Bookcraft, 1975), 6:49.

  18. McConnell, "Academic Freedom," 314.

  19. Ibid., 316.

  20. Ibid.

  21. As George S. Worgul, Jr., states in the "Editor's Preface" to Issues in Academic Freedom (Pittsburgh: Duquesne Univ. Press, 1992): "'academic freedom' at any university-whether public, private, church-related or church-sponsored-is never unlimited or absolute. Every university has an identity and mission to which it must adhere. . . . Freedom is always a situated freedom and a responsible freedom" (viii-ix).

  22. This document does not address policies, common to all universities, that govern the orderly maintenance of the institution, the disruption of classes, or the university endorsement of personal actions. This document speaks only to limitations arising from BYU's mission.

  23. Conference Reports, Oct. 1912, 30. The source of Roberts's citation is the Latin maxim, "In necessariis unitas, in non-necessariis (or, dubiis) libertas, in utrisque (or, ominibus) caritas" (see Philip Schaff, History of the Christian Church, 2nd ed. [New York: Scribners, 1915], 6:650-53).

Statement dated September 14, 1992.