Daniel Patz starts Friends of Northland site: "support the healthy direction we have observed over the last several years"

So, the letter and petition are directed to the Board. Yet, when you compare the list of Board members with some of the names on the petition and the name of the person initiating this petition, you notice that they are petitioning their own family members. Also, Matt Olson is listed as a board member. Did he fire himself?

As I’ve said earlier, I’m basically clueless with all things Northland, but this seems really odd.

How many that signed the list either have college age kids of their own they could send to NIU or are in a position to influence others to go to NIU?

It is one thing to sign a petition to send to NIU’s board and another to be able to back it up with the income NIU needs to continue to operate.

Thank you cousin Daniel for a fine letter. I’m praying for you that God will use you in a mighty way to influence the future direction of NIU.

Blessings!

Don

So, do I have this correct?

Don is petitioning his own mother and uncles and Dan is petitioning his own father and uncle and aunt and they’ve already persuaded a couple hundred other people to join them in this petition.

[Brenda T]

So, do I have this correct?

Don is petitioning his own mother and uncles and Dan is petitioning his own father and uncle and aunt and they’ve already persuaded a couple hundred other people to join them in this petition.

Correct. We believe that our parents are supportive of the changes at NIU under Olson. We are pleading with them to understand that there are hundreds of people who also support the healthy changes that have taken place at NIU over the past three years.

Don Sailor mentioned that the changes are healthy. Other posters on other threads here at SI have said the same thing. Let me state I know next to nothing about NIU other than that they used to be BJUs “sister” institution, kind of BJU North.

Let me ask then, how was NIU unhealthy before?

[Mark_Smith]

Don Sailor mentioned that the changes are healthy. Other posters on other threads here at SI have said the same thing. Let me state I know next to nothing about NIU other than that they used to be BJUs “sister” institution, kind of BJU North.

Let me ask then, how was NIU unhealthy before?

I have always disagreed with the BJU North idea. The attitudes of the campuses are much different. I am not going to comment on the particulars of this situation, but I would argue that just because it was said that the change was healthy does not mean it was unhealthy prior to the change. A child makes a tremendous amount of change (growth) through their childhood, but it was not because they were unhealthy, just that they were maturing. The same is true of a business. Most business start small and continue to grow and even change their purpose or methods. That does not mean the beginning business was unhealthy. As an institution or church, we should constantly be examining what we are doing to make sure that we are doing the best that we can right now. It is not to try to offend those from the past - or to call them unhealthy, but instead to do our best right now. I do wonder if that is some of the struggle within fundamentalism. There are some who sincerely believe that any change whatsoever carries with it a condemnation for the past. Sometimes those trying to make changes do imply that and are overly critical of the past. That is not the right spirit. Instead, we need to see cooperation and appreciation for the past as well as an understanding that not all change is accusing the past as being “unhealthy.”

It is what you change to that can be bad, though. Other than music, what changes have occurred on campus? I read they left behind a demerit system in favor of a mentor system. I have no problem with that in principle.

Bob Nutzhorn, you wanted to avoid saying unhealthy by changing it to maturity. Well that implies that the new is better, and the old was immature.

[Mark_Smith]

Bob Nutzhorn, you wanted to avoid saying unhealthy by changing it to maturity. Well that implies that the new is better, and the old was immature.

My argument was that a healthy change does not necessitate what was being changed from was unhealthy. It is possible to make a healthy change from something that was also healthy. You could argue why you would make the change, which is fine to argue that, but that was not your original statement. Another example: I could eat a really healthy vegetarian diet, but then decide I wanted to change that diet to include a bit of fish and chicken. That is change from healthy to healthy. For me, I would do better on the second diet because it would make me miss red meat a little bit less than if I had not meat at all. Healthy diet changed to what most agree is also a healthy diet. No need to call either one unhealthy or immature.

I also think of it as going from ‘healthy’ to ‘healthier’.

When kids are little, we surround them with form and structure to keep them from hurting themselves or because we are trying to protect them from realities they cannot understand and manage yet. But as they mature and become more skilled, some of those structures can be taken away - because, for example, we know they can go up and down stairs safely.

If I had been able to listen to whatever I wanted to when I first arrived at Northland, I would not have learned to be discerning in my music nor what it means to not offend a brother by insisting on my preference. Now I’ve learned that.

So it’s not a matter of ‘they were bad’ as much as the Word has so informed my conscience that I don’t have to do it with the styles that I grew up with and can ‘expand’ a little bit more, while keeping the Word as touchstone.

I’m thinking of these kinds of passages:

But I, brothers, could not address you as spiritual people, but as people of the flesh, as infants in Christ. I fed you with milk, not solid food, for you were not ready for it. And even now you are not yet ready, for you are still of the flesh. For while there is jealousy and strife among you, are you not of the flesh and behaving only in a human way? - 1 Cor. 3:1-3

For though by this time you ought to be teachers, you need someone to teach you again the basic principles of the oracles of God. You need milk, not solid food, for everyone who lives on milk is unskilled in the word of righteousness, since he is a child. But solid food is for the mature, for those who have their powers of discernment trained by constant practice to distinguish good from evil. - Heb. 5:12-14

"Our task today is to tell people — who no longer know what sin is...no longer see themselves as sinners, and no longer have room for these categories — that Christ died for sins of which they do not think they’re guilty." - David Wells

I have always disagreed with the BJU North idea. The attitudes of the campuses are much different. I am not going to comment on the particulars of this situation, but I would argue that just because it was said that the change was healthy does not mean it was unhealthy prior to the change. A child makes a tremendous amount of change (growth) through their childhood, but it was not because they were unhealthy, just that they were maturing. The same is true of a business. Most business start small and continue to grow and even change their purpose or methods. That does not mean the beginning business was unhealthy. As an institution or church, we should constantly be examining what we are doing to make sure that we are doing the best that we can right now. It is not to try to offend those from the past - or to call them unhealthy, but instead to do our best right now. I do wonder if that is some of the struggle within fundamentalism. There are some who sincerely believe that any change whatsoever carries with it a condemnation for the past. Sometimes those trying to make changes do imply that and are overly critical of the past. That is not the right spirit. Instead, we need to see cooperation and appreciation for the past as well as an understanding that not all change is accusing the past as being “unhealthy.”

I think this was one of the wisest things I’ve read on the whole NIU threads….

‘Just wish I had written it. :-D

Dan Burrell Cornelius, NC Visit my Blog "Whirled Views" @ www.danburrell.com

[Mark_Smith]

Don Sailor mentioned that the changes are healthy. Other posters on other threads here at SI have said the same thing. Let me state I know next to nothing about NIU other than that they used to be BJUs “sister” institution, kind of BJU North.

Let me ask then, how was NIU unhealthy before?

I think that that misunderstanding is a big part of the problem. It never was BJU North. There has always been (affirmed even by students a while back) a fairly different model of ministry philosophy. Application of standards looked pretty similar, sure, but the way they got there was different.

NIU used to be something else. Under Olson it changed. What are some examples of the old way and what is the new, and how is that better?