Pastoral Letter to the Cornerstone University Board of Trustees - Word version in Google Docs
*This letter, with signatures, will be sent to each member of the Board of Trustees after the 1st of December, 2024.*
To the board and administration of Cornerstone University,
This letter is written on behalf of the undersigned alumni who have been called to serve in the role of pastoral leadership within the Body of Christ.
We write to express deep concern, as shepherds of the sheep, about the conduct of Dr. Gerson Moreno-Riaño as President, the approval of this conduct by the board of trustees, and the transformative vision that has been set forth for the future of Cornerstone University as first and foremost a market-driven career preparation institution with an identity defined by a political agenda. We believe that on its current course, many pastors like us, and parents, will be unable to in good conscience recommend Cornerstone University.
Our experience at Cornerstone (and/or GRTS/CTS) involved much more than gaining knowledge and marketable skills that would enable us to have a successful career. We learned these things, certainly, but they were not the heart of our experience. We were not taught what to think from a singular viewpoint, but how to think critically and biblically in ways that would fortify us for the challenges of ministry. We treasured as mentors and friends the professors and staff that were a part of our faith journey. These God-honoring men and women were one of the primary reasons why Cornerstone was a valuable partner to the Church in furthering the gospel.
Our love for this institution and what it has meant to our lives and ministry has led us to react with sorrow and concern to the numerous credible reports of fundamental changes to the university and seminary, and the conduct of its leadership in effecting these changes. These changes, and how they were made, do not reflect well upon the institution of higher Christian education that we once knew, or upon the reputation of the gospel.
Our concerns are centered around the following areas:
1. Toxic leadership that has manifested itself in repeated examples of the treatment of professors and staff in ways that are unworthy of an organization acting in the name of Jesus Christ. This includes, but is not limited to, demands for unquestioning loyalty, intimidation of staff and faculty as well as ignoring their concerns, the purging of voices attempting to respectfully express differing viewpoints, and most recently, the abrupt revoking of the signed contracts of eight faithful faculty members, including nearly the entire Humanities Department and the seminary Dean.
2. A lack of honesty and transparency when communicating with Cornerstone’s employees, students, and alumni. This includes, but is not limited to, the financial status of the university, the way in which professors and staff were terminated, projects and initiatives that were abandoned, and policies that were changed without input from those affected by them.
3. The vision championed by Dr. Gerson Moreno-Riaño {As expressed in his 7/27/24 Fox News essay} that leans heavily upon more profitable asynchronous online instruction, cheaper adjunct professors, and the purposeful diminishment of the Humanities Department. We recognize that financial realities must be taken into account, but these realities cannot be the driving force behind what Cornerstone is and does. Quality instruction for all students in the humanities is essential to the development of a robust Christian Worldview and ethic. Without this instruction, Cornerstone University is losing one of the pillars of its character.
4. Significant steps in the direction of aligning the school with one political party and one cultural viewpoint, instead of the Kingdom of God. Politicizing the gospel, by bending it to the right or to the left, is a grave theological error that marginalizes true brothers and sisters in Christ all over the world whose faith and hope are in Jesus, but whose politics or culture may differ. Like the Church and all of its members, Cornerstone should seek first the Kingdom of God, not any transient human political agenda.
It is our hope that this letter will speak to the hearts and minds of board members, administrators, and Dr. Gerson Moreno-Riaño, and lead to meaningful conversations with concerned students, staff, and alumni in the hopes that the future of Cornerstone University will remain firmly connected to the Christ-honoring qualities that have been its hallmark for generations.
Respectfully submitted in our effort to serve and support the Church and the gospel,
To sign the letter, click on this Google Form link: Signature Page for alumni pastors
To sign the letter if you are a non-pastor CU alum or any concerned CU-stakeholder (parents, non-CU pastors, prayer supporters, former staff, donors, etc.), click on this Google Form link: Signature Page for all other stakeholders
For further information about the issues addressed in the letter:
Voice of CU
The Voice of CU website has testimonial and documentary evidence that demonstrates how grounded this wording of this letter is in reality.
Pastor Noah Filipiak's podcast:
Pastor Powell's previous blog posts on this topic: