Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Is ‘diversity’ the new religion of American universities?
Is ‘diversity’ the new religion of American universities?
Jan 29, 2026 10:50 PM

When hiring faculty, most American universities require an almost religious assent to its diversity and inclusion goals. It e as no surprise that this is resulting in more ideological conformity and less viewpoint diversity.

Read More…

As American universities worked tirelessly over the past couple of centuries to purge religion from institutional education, their success left a conceptual void. Without religion, the western university was in need of some of sort of metanarrative or ontological justification for its existence. It needed a meaning system—a way of providing direction in framing and understanding its goals and aspirations. Perhaps it is more accurate to say that religion per se was not removed from college campuses but that Judeo-Christian religion was replaced with a mitment to diversity, equity, and inclusion.

As is often recalled, almost all the Ivy League universities were founded with explicitly Christian missions. This is very evident, for example, in Harvard’s original mission statement: “Let every student be plainly instructed and earnestly pressed to consider well the end of his life and studies is to know God and Jesus Christ, which is eternal life, and therefore to lay Christ in the bottom, as the only foundation of all sound knowledge and learning.” In order for the institution to remain mission-driven during that era, it would have called for faculty members who mitted to that Christ-oriented vision. And it would have recruited students who sought to be formed by that explicitly religious mission.

Harvard’s current mission statement, however, has no explicit religious orientation, at least as formerly understood: “The mission of Harvard College is to educate the citizens and citizen-leaders for our society. We do this through mitment to the transformative power of a liberal arts and sciences education.” But what informs that education? What set of presuppositions about the nature and purpose of knowledge is used to determine if faculty are a mission fit? What presuppositions about the nature of the human person and destiny of human life are students expecting to receive in the classroom? Justin P. McBrayer, a professor of philosophy at Fort Lewis College, argues that, increasingly, those presuppositions require putting faith and trust in the goals of diversity, equity, and inclusion. In fact, it is quickly ing the case that professors cannot get a teaching job without pledging allegiance to diversity. Diversity now functions like religious faith.

Writing at Inside Higher Ed, McBrayer observes that “contrary to what you might think, many secular institutions now require faith statements.… They go by the name diversity statements, but they function in the same ways as faith statements at religious institutions.” Professors are expected to put their faith and trust in diversity as a way to “improve the success of diverse student bodies” and advance the cause of diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI).” Here are some examples McBrayer cites:

New York University’s Tandon School of Engineering requires that all faculty applicants include “a statement of your experience with or knowledge of inclusion, diversity, equity, and belonging efforts and your plans for incorporating them into your teaching, research, mentoring, and service.”

California State University, Sacramento, requires applicants for a history job to submit a statement showing, among other things, how the candidate would “advance the History Department’s goal of promoting an anti-racist and anti-oppressive campus to recruit, retain, and mentor students.”

For another history job, Northern Arizona University requires a diversity statement “that highlights an understanding of the role of diversity, equity, inclusion and justice in a university setting. Please include examples from past experiences and reference plans to advance diversity, equity, inclusion, and justice in your teaching, research, and service.”

Hofstra University in New York es applications for an assistant professor of sociology as long as that person can demonstrate mitment to critical criminology, restorative justice and racial equity in the criminal justice system and show how her teaching, research and service would contribute to a culturally diverse and inclusive environment.

McBrayer then argues that the diversity-statement requirements function like faith statements in the following ways: (1) both faith and diversity statements effectively screen out candidates (“unbelievers in the mission”) at the application stage; (2) both faith and diversity statements require people to assent to claims above their epistemic pay grade; (3) both are signals of tribal loyalties; and (4) both faith and diversity statements close questions. For example, McBrayer believes faith statements ask Christians to articulate belief in the Trinity or assent to things they cannot verify empirically. He may not be fully aware of how statements of faith work in religious traditions, but McBrayer’s overall point has merit—that is, Christians seeking faculty appointments at Christian institutions will not struggle to articulate or explain the basic tenets of the Nicene Creed or the confessional beliefs of their particular tradition, and so on, even if they are not working in theologian disciplines. McBrayer is correct that faith statements intend to introduce the boundaries of epistemic belief and pedagogy. He is also correct that they are meant to close some questions and screen out potential applicants. What is fascinatingly true about parison, however, is that diversity, anti-racism, equity, and so on are treated not only as faith propositions but that professors are expected to be evangelistic about these ideas in the classroom. That’s a religious impulse.

Professors are also increasingly required to advance their ideology of power structures, which undergirds so much of the progressive understanding of what forms the human person. A central tenet of progressive ideology is that institutions are the causes of injustice and human failure, because if it were not for unjust institutions and power structures, human nature would inevitably lead to just social and economic es for all people. This presupposition naturally leads to the assumption that material and social power disparities between special interest (minority) groups and the racialized norms of “whiteness,” are, by definition, indisputable evidence of structural injustices that require some sort of centralized coercive attempt to produce the same es for all members of identity groups.

Following this, it es clear that diversity-statement requirements are one way of screening out those who question progressivism’s view of the causes of disparities and injustice. It fends off, just as in a statement of religious faith, those unwilling to evangelistically advance the ideological assumptions of progressivism. Advancing the ideological assumptions of DEI will be conscious-binding for those who have any kind of reservations. Sadly, to even question those presuppositions might automatically bring the charge of racism and bigotry, or result in being tagged as someone who does not value diversity for its own sake.

Research shows that across the U.S., college faculty are generally ideologically progressive. It only stands to reason that viewpoint diversity is not included as a “diversity” goal, at least if that means hiring, on purpose, conservatives or classical liberals. At Harvard, only 2.9% of professors surveyed in the faculty of Arts and Sciences report being conservative or very conservative—and diversity statements are a way of keeping it that way. If McBrayer is correct that diversity statements are essentially statements of faith used to screen out “unbelieving” job applicants, then American universities will e increasingly less diverse, less equitable, and less inclusive, because more conformist to one perspective. McBrayer notes that “religious colleges are private institutions that are typically up front about their religious orientations.” I suggest that if universities want ideological homogeneity, they should be equally up front about it rather than use a thinly veiled exclusionary requirement as a signal of religious assent to the presuppositions advanced by progressive ideology.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Kishore Jayabalan: Initial Thoughts on Encyclical Leak
Kishore Jayabalan, Director of Istituto Acton in Rome: “The fact that this draft has been leaked well in advance of the encyclical’s official release shows the great interest in what Pope Francis has to say about the environment. To be sure, he will frame the issues in Christian terms, as the pope must always do. My concern is that he will blame the market economy for basically all our environmental degradation and neglect the very important role private property and...
Pope Francis Encyclical Leak Fuels Speculations
A draft of Laudato Sii is circulating and causing an uproar. This document seems to align with climate scientists, arguing that “the bulk of global warming is caused by human activity.” However, this draft may not be the final encyclical, Rev. Federico Lombardi, a Vatican spokesman, said that it is merely a “intermediate version” and not the final encyclical. Whether or not this is the final language and content that will be in the ing encyclical on the environment, much...
Have Christian Female Entrepreneurs Changed The World?
Christina M. Weber says that Christian women have been trail-blazers in showing us how to balance family life, work and worship. In the 20th century, Weber says that political ideologies tried to break down family life. Marxists munists promoted disconnection between children and their parents with patible work schedules. They also destabilized marriages with the encouragement of promiscuity and lust. The agenda—dependence on the state above family and God — fueled the economic and political goals of their leaders. But...
Dory Rowing in the Canyon: Where Work and Wonder Meet
One day, while riding down the Colorado River, Amber Shannon suddenly realized her vocation. “I really wanted to row little wooden boats down big rapids with big canyon walls,” she says. “That was the life dream.” Although it may sound impractical to some, tour guide John Shocklee calls being a boatman in the Grand Canyon “the most coveted job in the world.” “It’s definitely easier to get a PhD than it is to get a dory here in the Grand...
Michael Miller: First Reaction to Leaked Encyclical Draft
Michael Matheson Miller, Research Fellow and Director of Acton Media at the Acton Institute: “Pope Francis has spoken consistently about the need to end exclusion for the world’s poor. Since the environmental movement often neglects the challenges of the poor, it will be interesting to see how the encyclical addresses the call to environmental stewardship in the context of poverty and economic development. “ ...
Why the Price System is One of God’s Artworks
At an auction in2007Andreas Gursky turned 99 cents into $3.34 million. Well, sort of. Perhaps it’d be more accurate to say he turned99 Cent II Diptychon, a photograph depicting an interior of a supermarket, into a few million. At the time this was the most expensive photograph in the world. Even more amazing is that this wasthe third print of the same image that had sold for millions. Two others sold in 2006, one for $2.25 million and another for...
Crank Up The Air Conditioning: It’s Good For The Economy
If you are of a “certain age,” you grew up without air conditioning. As unthinkable as it is now, we made due with window screens and fans. And we survived. Honestly, it was pretty miserable sometimes. Especially if your dad happened to have a vinyl recliner that you sat on during hot, humid August days watching Brady Bunch re-runs. Peeling yourself off one of those is an experience that will scar you forever. Air conditioning is more than just a...
Rev. Sirico: Environmental Encyclical May Fall Prey To Politics
Speaking on The Steve Malzberg Show on Newsmax TV on Friday, Rev. Robert Sirico addressed questions regarding the new papal encyclical, Laudato Si’, which reportedly will be released this week. mented on Pope Francis’ tendency to speak “off the cuff,” saying this may be exploited by the press or others who simply want to push their own agenda regarding the environment and climate change. Sirico also expressed trepidation regarding the pontiff’s plan to address a joint session of Congress during...
5 Facts About the Magna Carta
Today marks the 800th anniversary of the sealing of the Magna Carta. Here are five facts about this English documentwhich helped to establish the rule of law: 1. Magna Carta (Latin for “the Great Charter”), also called Magna Carta Libertatum (Latin for “the Great Charter of the Liberties”), was a peace treaty between King John of England and rebel barons that was sealed on June 15, 1215. Magna Carta established for the first time the principle that everybody, including the...
Court to U.S. Army: You Allow Vampire Mickey Mouse Tattoos, Why Not a Turban?
If the Army can make an exception to its regulations for a vampire Mickey Mouse tattoo, why can it not do the same for a turban? That was part of a federal court’s thinking in a ruling ordering the Army to allow a Sikh college student to join his college’s NROTC unit without having to shave his beard, cut his hair, or remove his turban. Iknoor Singh, a junior at Hofstra University and an observant Sikh, has “long dreamed of...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved