Academic FAQ'sWhat is the place of Christianity in the life of The
King’s College?
Christianity lives vibrantly and fully in the College’s
curriculum and its faculty. We hold that the Bible is indispensable to knowing
both the nature of creation and the way of redemption. We view the world as
knowable; we view reason as one of God’s gifts to humanity; we view ourselves as
stewards of both our own intellectual gifts and the trust that God has put
in his earthly servants. We hold ourselves as accountable. We see humanity as
fallen but redeemable by God’s mercy and grace in Christ. We are skeptical of
utopian promises and shortcuts to human perfection. We expect the world to be a
hard place and life to pose difficulties for which merely human solutions will
be inadequate. At the same time, we accept the call to build the Kingdom, and we
understand that to mean we must strive here and now to make the world better
than it is. (Genesis 1:28, II Cor. 10:5)
The College does not have a chaplain
or required chapel; and the College does not “enforce” Christian behavior
through an extensive series of rules. We have an honor code and a commitment to
leading worthy Christian lives. Faculty members are required to sign a statement
of faith; students are not. Christianity is part of the fabric of the College,
not a badge that we wear or a tradition that we merely acknowledge. The truths
of Christianity and a Biblical worldview are the College’s central pedagogical
basis. We take that as a warrant for an intellectually generous, open, and
honest encounter with the larger world.