5 points for BU’s Starr

Like so much about Baylor University, Kenneth Starr’s election as president has been fraught with discord. What is the way forward for Starr and for Baylor?

image_pdfimage_print

(This is an early view of my editorial in the March 1 Standard.)

On one hand, many members of the “Baylor family” and others have praised Starr’s selection. They cite his: International name recognition, active Christian faith, high regard as attorney and judge, unprecedented improvement of the Pepperdine School of Law, advocacy for the rule of law as special investigator in the Clinton administration, skill as a fund-raiser, and lack of ties to Baylor and its decade-long “fight.”

On the other hand, many have criticized Starr’s election. They point to his: Early affiliation with the Church of Christ, current attendance at a CofC congregation, longtime membership in a nondenominational church that seems more fundamentalist than Texas Baptist churches, affiliation with Southern Baptists who opposed Texas Baptists and Baylor, apparent ease with which he switches denominations, the high-profile investigation of Bill Clinton and the controversial engagement in California’s Proposition 8.

Not merely facts or logic

Both sides cite facts and logic. But, of course, human beings cannot be reduced to facts, nor are they ruled by logic. Ken Starr is a human being and therefore more complex than his advocates’ and detractors’ litanies. So, he most likely will be neither the super-hero for which his fans long, nor the evil villain his foes fear. Besides, no matter what fans or foes think, the regents have voted. He will become Baylor’s 14th president June 1.

Goals for a productive tenure

Ultimately, Starr’s tenure at Baylor will not be judged by the resume he brings to office. His years in the Church of Christ and his experience as special investigator shaped him, but they will not determine whether he succeeds at Baylor. His legacy depends upon what he does at and for Baylor. Here are some goals to which he should aspire:

1. Extend Baylor’s legacy as distinctively Texas Baptist. This is not too much to ask. Baylor would not exist had not Texas Baptists birthed and nurtured it. This also is not parochial. Half of Baylor’s motto is “Pro Ecclesia.” Other schools serve specific aspects of the church—fundamentalist, liberal, evangelical, Catholic. The Texas Baptist/historic Baylor ethos is unique and deserves to be preserved. It’s theologically conservative, but not fundamentalist; expansive enough to welcome students and faculty of other Christian denominations; compassionate to serve all God’s children. Nor is this provincial. The other half of Baylor’s motto is “Pro Texana.” Baylor is Texan, and most of its students and alumni are Texans. Similar schools serve other states and regions. Texas needs Baylor to be uniquely Baylor.

2. Lead everybody, including the regents. Baylor has a strong-willed board of regents. The problem is strong boards are prone to overstep their bounds. Boards should set policy but leave administration to the administrators. Starr must exercise the gravitas of his reputation and provide a pattern for how boards respect the balance of power and duty.


Sign up for our weekly edition and get all our headlines in your inbox on Thursdays


3. Heal the rift. This is crucial; Baylor cannot be all it must be if it remains divided. While fault can be found all around, the primary reason for the divide is the denigration of Baylor’s past. Starr should start the healing by making amends to all alumni as well as to family and friends who love Baylor’s previous presidents.

4. Balance excellence. The root of the recent rift has been an interpretation of Baylor 2012 that implies Baylor’s historic reputation for greatness in the classroom impedes it from becoming a top tier research institution, which is the benchmark for acclaim. These are not mutually exclusive, and Starr must prove it. He can start by studying the School of Social Work, which manages both to the Nth degree.

5. Raise money. Baylor needs a $2 billion endowment. If Starr meets the first four goals, this one will fall into place.


We seek to connect God’s story and God’s people around the world. To learn more about God’s story, click here.

Send comments and feedback to Eric Black, our editor. For comments to be published, please specify “letter to the editor.” Maximum length for publication is 300 words.

More from Baptist Standard