Academic FAQ's
All FAQ's
How does The King’s
College differ from other
Christian colleges?
Three things. First, The
King’s College has planted
itself in the center of
Manhattan. Secondly, The King’s
College views Christian faith as
consistent with rigorous and
demanding intellectual inquiry.
Finally, The King’s College
focuses on engaging mainstream
culture and the nation’s key
institutions.
The King’s College has
planted itself in the center of
Manhattan. Almost all of the
significant Christian colleges
in the United States on the
Protestant side of the Christian
spectrum are in small towns, the
countryside, or the suburbs.
Many important Catholic colleges
and universities are in cities.
The King’s College is
non-denominational, but its
roots are in the Protestant
evangelical tradition, and we
are probably alone among
colleges in this tradition in
our embrace of the city. We are
not just physically in a city:
we embrace the idea of the City
as the place where civilization
takes shape. And having chosen
to embrace the idea of the City,
we chose to build The King’s
College in the economic and
social heart of America’s
greatest city.
The King’s College views
Christian faith as consistent
with rigorous and demanding
intellectual inquiry. Generally,
Christian colleges are not
thought of as belonging to the
first tier of college and
universities in the United
States. The most demanding
colleges, the ones with the
well-earned reputations for the
best teachers, the best courses,
and the best programs are,
without exception, secular. The
Ivy League and the top liberal
arts colleges are all secular.
Though most do not reach this
rank, some Christian colleges
have very good academic
programs. We don’t set ourselves
above the best Christian
colleges. But we do recognize
that Christians in the United
States have too often settled
for second best. The King’s
College offers a clear choice: a
Christian education that makes
no compromises in intellectual
quality. We want our graduates
to compete with the best
graduates of the best secular
colleges and universities. This
will take time. The tradition of
tough-minded commitment to
demanding intellectual standards
has waned within American
Christianity. We are part of the
vanguard that aims to restore
that tradition.
The King’s College focuses on
engaging mainstream culture and
the nation’s key institutions.
Many contemporary Christians are
content to live within their own
communities—the Christian
bubble. And many Christian
colleges accede to this to by
preparing students for life
within the precincts of
established Christianity. The
King’s College has a different
approach. We want to engage the
secular world as well as
adherents of other faiths. We
expect our graduates to enter
the mainstream of American
society—and change it for the
better.
|