Then I was right. You're certainly NOT graduating thousands, are you?
I'd estimate at least a couple of thousand IFB grads per year. There are quite a few schools I didn't mention, some sizeable.
And I am curious to know if BJU really qualifies as one of these "extremely strict" colleges. I honestly don't know.
I went to BJU in 1970-72, and it was quite strict then. Our newest missionary got his M. Div. there some time ago, and says it is still strict.
I hope you can learn to read more thoroughly. The very quote you provided showed extraordinarily clearly that I said that many more become disillusioned and leave OR BECOME LITTLE CARBON COPIES. Pay attention, John. Carbon copies stay. If you are going to make smart alek remarks like "I hope you learn to state things more clearly" then at least have a point. 10-4?
IMO you've been unclear before, and I stand by my statement that, to me at least, you were unclear this time.
I am being abrasive. I apologize. You are right. I hope you will try to understand that I have been burned by one of these institutions and one of these movements and they seem almost evil to me. I do, however, realize that there are many wonderful servants of God who come from them- like yourself- in spite of these silly, suffocating, personality wiping, carbon copy making, automaton programming institutions.
Thank you for the apology.
I have been burned by fundamentalists, too. One leading fundamentalist wrote a pamphlet against my grandfather in the early 1970s (with his name in the title), alleging among other things that granddad had bribed me to switch colleges, which was a lie. So I was slandered by a fundamentalist leader to the broader movement. I got over it, and you will too.
I'm still a fundamentalist not because of the personalities, but because I believe the practice of "earnestly contending for the faith" is right and Biblical. All movements have their critics, and all movements have genuine failures that should be criticized. On the other hand, every movement has people that go overboard and are nasty in un-Christian ways. According to my family, after the 1957 New York Crusade when fundamentalists criticized Graham for having liberals on the committee, Graham himself kept quiet, but one of his relatives wrote some very nasty stuff. I've read that relative's biography, and he did do a good work for Christ, though he lapsed that time. The trick in such a case is to keep our eyes on Jesus, amen?
I do believe that these movements, at least the ones in the Southeast for the past few decades are issue oriented rather than Christ exalting. They are more concerned with the "old paths" than The Way. They make more of standards than they do the Savior. Many of their pastors and leaders are popes who speak ex cathedra with no bible whatsoever to support their positions. And these types are evil and do ten thousand times the harm than the little good they produce.
But I recognize on the same token that there are many wonderful IFB pastors- like Clarence Sexton whose church I have attended, whose pastor's conference is very good, whose history hall is awesome whose preaching is expository and often christocentric, whose college is overly strict and a bit stifling and carbon copy making but at least it is a copy of good men like Sexton and Scott Pauly.
I wish you could have been at Tennessee Temple when I was there. I still appreciate the great ministry of Lee Roberson, and the godly teachers I had in the college and seminary. Those who came out automatons did so because they ignored the teaching and example of these good men and women.
But on the SAME TOKEN Sheldon Smith tossed Sexton from the Sword conference!
I've met both men, but have little contact with either one nowadays. I will say this, though. When granddad was considering who should follow him as Sword editor, he came to the conclusion, "God doesn't ordain institutions, He ordains men." So both of these men, and both you and I, will someday give account of our ministries to the Lord Jesus Christ. But we don't need to give account to each other. May we be faithful in both contending for the faith and loving the brethren.