It looked like Dr. MarkHagerott, military professor and
senior military officer of history at the United States Naval Academy and
candidate for the presidency of Luther College in Decorah, Iowa, was on his way
to be elected to the top position of that school. The presidential search committee had narrowed the list of candidates to two, and the Board of Regents appeared to have moved
toward consideration of only Mr. Hagerott. Decorahnewspapers.com reported the Board of
Regents as follows:
After receiving the report from the Presidential
Search Committee, the Luther College Board of Regents charged the committee to
further explore the candidacy of a single finalist, Dr. Mark Hagerott, and to
report back to the Regents no later than April 30, 2013. Â We look forward to
additional engagement with Dr. Hagerott. Any decision about the election of
Luther's next president will be deferred until after the receipt of the
committee's subsequent report to the Board.
A clarifying statement appeared a few days later, which delayed the presidential election to later in the Spring.
How had the train gone off the tracks?
Some discomfort in
the Luther community on Hagerott's affiliation with The Lutheran Church--Missouri Synod emerged. One example of this in the Luther College student
newspaper, CHIPS, published an opinion piece titled "Lutheranism and the Luther Presidency."
The article's bottom line was straightforward: "The ELCA and the LCMS are both Lutheran, but only one
denomination represents the Luther College community."
On Tuesday, March 5, Dr.
Hagerott withdrew from consideration for the office. Decorahnews.com has
an article on Hagerott's withdrawal here. Hagerott's own "Reflections on a College
Search" may be found in CHIPS. A couple of quotes from Hagerott's reflections follow.
It was with sadness that I withdrew from the
Luther College search. My wife and I found it to be a wonderful place. People
we met were so genuinely friendly. But in light of articles published in this
paper and the college paper that used a very narrow lens to interpret who I am
and what I stood for, I feel it now necessary to explain why I withdrew from
consideration. Moreover, how I was portrayed and judged in the articles holds
implications for Luther's future hiring and promotion practices.
Despite my record, the debate as framed both in
the school newspaper and the community paper became one sided, portraying a
requirement for theological conformity. Counterpoints were conspicuously
absent. Such a demand for conformity surprised me, because as I read on the
website, the Luther family was "...of all backgrounds, we embrace
diversity". At Annapolis I worked with, hired, mentored, and led persons
of all faiths, genders, sexual orientations, and political persuasions, and I
maintained an impeccable record of tolerance.
Perhaps it is fitting that these questions come
to the fore now, as we approach the 500 year anniversary of the Protestant
Reformation, when Martin Luther challenged the reigning orthodoxy of his time.
Perhaps the orthodoxy today is “political correctness” on college campuses
across America? My hope is that Luther College will be a source of a new
reformation, one that encourages persons, from liberal to moderate to religious
conservative, to participate with confidence in the mission of educating the
next generation of undergraduates. It was to that end, and is my hope now, that
my decision to end my candidacy will allow this important debate to continue
without distraction at Luther College.
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