I recently read that my alma mater, Abilene Christian University, will be changing one of it’s rules regarding alcohol use by students. The current rule is if any student is seen using alcohol, they are subject to dismissal from the school. The new rule will not prevent students of legal age from using alcohol away from campus and non-school events.

I have some mixed feelings about it. On the one hand, there aren’t that many students of legal drinking age. Add the fact that the school can’t afford to try and babysit students all over town and it makes it seem like a rule that doesn’t have to be on the books anyway. On the other hand, and what really bothers me, I feel like ACU is relaxing it’s standards. While I was a student, I happened across a few people who broke a few of the rules but they and I all knew ACU’s standard and respected the school’s right to set rules to hold to that standard. Now, it appears the standard is loosening and I feel like that is a problem our society already faces. “Kids are going to have sex so tell them about condoms instead of abstinence.” “People are going to use drugs so legalize marijuana.” How far can we go as a society to lower our standards to nothing? How far will ACU go in lowering than standards?

I don’t know all the reasons for their decision and oddly enough, they didn’t ask my opinion. Maybe they think it will be a revenue stream for the new Budweiser Field they want to build (did I mention they passed on 3 student-athletes of excellent character and enough ability to play for other LSC schools and I’m still rather disenchanted about that) so their star athletes can show off their prowess. Maybe it’s a simple as saving some ink for a rule they cannot enforce.

In the end, ACU doesn’t care what I think and I don’t think too highly of ACU. I don’t know that their new decision will amount to anything but I also wonder if it’s the first step down a slippery slope of decisions that will eventually render it a “Christian education” much like you will find at TCU or Harvard or a number of other schools that started with some religious roots but have effectively abandoned them in the name of academia. Time will tell.