Christian fraternity (fraternities and sororities)

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While the traditional social fraternity is a well-established mainstay across the United States at institutions of higher learning, alternatives – in the form of social fraternities that require doctrinal and behavioral conformity to the Christian faith – developed in the early 20th century. They continue to grow in size and popularity.

History[]

Early 20th century[]

Christian fraternities were established in the early part of the 20th century; the three largest were Beta Sigma Psi, Alpha Gamma Omega, and Sigma Theta Epsilon, which are still active.

Beta Sigma Psi[]

Beta Sigma Psi, the oldest Christian fraternity, was founded as a national fraternity for Lutheran students in 1925 at the University of Illinois, home to the largest Greek system in the United States. The fraternity had its origins in the concerns of Rev. Frederick William Gustav Stiegemeyer, the son of a Lutheran pastor, who had been entrusted with the spiritual care of Lutheran students at the University. In the fall of 1919, he organized the Lutheran Illini League with a nucleus of ten students. At that time their intention was to meet once or twice a week for religious instruction and discussion on contemporary issues. In the fall of 1920, now with twenty members, the Lutheran Illini League rented a house, and in early 1921 reorganized as the Concordia Club. By 1923 the group regularly participated in campus activities; so much so that they began being referred to as the "Concordia Fraternity." On April 17, 1925, incorporation papers were filed for Beta Sigma Psi National Lutheran Fraternity in Springfield, Illinois. By 1970, Beta Sigma Psi had grown to eighteen chapters. The fraternity had ten active chapters as of 2016.

Alpha Gamma Omega[]

Alpha Gamma Omega was established in 1927 at UCLA. The fraternity suffered a decline in chapters and membership before experiencing extensive national growth starting in 1987. As of 2020 it had sixteen active chapters.

Sigma Theta Epsilon[]

Sigma Theta Epsilon is the result of the merger of two local Methodist-affiliated fraternities in 1941: Phi Tau Theta, founded in 1925, and Sigma Epsilon Theta, founded in 1936 at Indiana University. The merged fraternity was initially called Delta Sigma Theta, but the name was changed to Sigma Theta Epsilon in 1949 when a national sorority that was already using the name Delta Sigma Theta threatened legal action.

By the late 1950s, Sigma Theta Epsilon had grown to over twenty chapters. However, its numbers began to decline at the end of the 1960s. The fraternity became non-denominational in 1968. Down to only three chapters by the 1980s, Sigma Theta Epsilon began chartering new chapters again in 1988. The fraternity had twelve active chapters during the 2000s, but as of 2016 had only three active chapters.

Late 20th century[]

At the same time that the historic Christian fraternities were beginning to rebound from their declining numbers, other groups of Christian fraternities developed, with the rise of the Evangelical Christian movement. The largest, Beta Upsilon Chi, directly led to the founding of three other Christian Greek letter organizations. The second largest, Alpha Nu Omega, was founded three years later.

The Texas Movement[]

Origins in Austin[]

Beta Upsilon Chi was founded in 1985 on the campus of the University of Texas at Austin followed by Gamma Phi Delta in 1988, while Kappa Upsilon Chi was founded in 1993 on the campus of Texas Tech University.

Beta Upsilon Chi founders declared it to be an alternative to the stereotypical fraternal lifestyle and set its purpose as "establishing brotherhood and unity among college men, based upon the common bond of Jesus Christ." Though originally conceived as a local Christian fraternity, efforts from Christian students at neighboring Texas schools convinced the founders of BYX to initiate new members and open new chapters. In 1989, BYX leaders initiated men from Texas Christian University to establish the Beta chapter of Beta Upsilon Chi. As of 2017, Beta Upsilon Chi is the largest Christian social fraternity in the United States.

Lubbock[]

In 1993, Kappa Upsilon Chi was founded by four men who led Christian college ministries, some of whom graduated and entered into the ministry. The Alpha class contained some members formerly of Phi Gamma Delta social fraternity at Texas Tech. The fraternity sought to be a social alternative for Christian men. While it originally had no intentions of expanding, the fraternity grew rapidly.

Expansion to women[]

In 1988, three years after Beta Upsilon Chi was founded, women from Texas established Sigma Phi Lambda, or Sisters for the Lord. This women's Christian sorority was heavily modeled on BYX and is considered by many to be its sister sorority. However, the Texas Tech chapter of Sigma Phi Lambda is primarily associated with Kappa Upsilon Chi.

As Beta Upsilon Chi inspired Sigma Phi Lambda's establishment, Kappa Upsilon Chi inspired the establishment of Theta Alpha and Delta Alpha Chi, two separate Christian sororities established in Florida.

Growth[]

Fifty-five chapters of Christian Greek letter organizations (GLO) trace their roots to the Texas Movement. Beta Upsilon Chi and Sigma Phi Lambda both began in 1985.

BYX, with thirty-eight chapters in Texas, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Arkansas, Mississippi, Georgia, Missouri, Florida, Louisiana, South Carolina, Kentucky, Alabama, Michigan, North Carolina and Indiana, remains the largest Christian fraternity in the United States.

Mississippi was the first state to offer a Christian fraternity at all of its comprehensive four-year universities.

Alpha Nu Omega[]

Alpha Nu Omega, Incorporated was founded in 1988 on the campus of Morgan State University. Its organizational purpose is to "present a Christian alternative to the students and or faculty on college/university campuses, to minister to the needs of the whole person (spirit, soul, and body), and to promote an attitude of academic excellence among its members." Alpha Nu Omega is established as far north as New York, as far south as Florida, and as far west as Ohio. While most chapters are located at historically African-American colleges and universities, the organization does not consider itself an African-American Christian organization and welcomes all ethnicities.

The organization exists as one organization but operates as two distinct entities: a fraternity and sorority. The two are bound by one constitution. As of 2016, 16 chapters were active.

Other groups[]

Other Christian fraternities were founded during the second wave of the fraternal movement of the late 20th century and early 21st.

  • Alpha Delta Gamma in 1924, founded at Loyola University Chicago in the Catholic Christian tradition
  • Phi Kappa Theta in 1957, founded at The Ohio State University in the Catholic Christian tradition
  • Chi Alpha Omega in 1987, founded on the campus of East Carolina University
  • Gamma Phi Delta in 1988, founded on the campus of University of Texas at Austin
  • Alpha Nu Omega also in 1988, founded on the campus of Morgan State University
  • Alpha Omega (Co-ed) in 1994, founded on the campus of Western Michigan University
  • Delta Omicron Gamma in 1998, founded on the campus of University of Tennessee at Martin
  • Men of God in 1999, founded on the campus of Texas Tech University when a group of men talked about God at a Step Show. MOG performs a yearly Step Show filled with mimes, dancers, and singers in honor of their beginning. MOG has grown, as have other second-wave Christian fraternities, but it prefers to remain small. Unlike other groups, they limit the number of men that can join each chapter. They feel this enables them to witness and disciple more effectively.
  • Gamma Psi Lambda in 1999, founded on the campus of Fort Valley State University Gamma Psi Lambda started off as a Christian Fraternity but under the unction of the Holy Spirit they became a Co-Ed Christian Fraternal Organization
  • Alpha Iota Omega in 1999, founded on the campus of University of North Carolina
  • Lambda Sigma Phi in 2001, founded on the campus of the University of Alabama
  • Mu Omicron Gamma in 2001, founded on the campus of Old Dominion University
  • Alpha Omega Theta in 2002, founded in St. Louis, Missouri
  • Phi Gamma Gamma Christian Service Fraternity in 2002, founded at Virginia Tech
  • Kappa Phi Epsilon in 2004, founded on the campus of University of Florida
  • Mu Lambda Psi in 2004, founded on the campus of California State University Northridge
  • Delta Phi Xi in 2007, founded on the campus of Tarleton State University
  • Phi Omega Sigma in 2004, founded on the campus of Missouri State University
  • Theta Chi Gamma Christian Fellowship in 2008, founded in Phoenix, Arizona
  • Phi Eta Chi Christian Fraternity & Sorority in 2010, founded in Houston, Texas
Alpha Omega[]

Alpha Omega was founded in 1994 by Donyll Lewis on the campus of Western Michigan University in Kalamazoo, Michigan. The vision of Alpha Omega is based on Revelation 1:8 and the question, "Why join a man-made fraternity when the body of Christ is the largest fraternity in the world?"

Alpha Omega is co-ed and multicultural. Members come together with "One Vision and One Heart" for the purpose of "Building Stronger Christians, Witnessing to those who do not know Christ, Setting up Programs fitting that of Christian Living and Meeting the Concerns of the Students on and off campus and Ensuring Educational Success of its members and non-members."

The fraternity is based in Michigan. It has chapters as far north as Ferris State University in Big Rapids, Michigan and as far south as the University of Toledo, Bowling Green State University in Toledo-Bowling Green, Ohio.[1]

Anointed Students In Unity Fellowship[]

Anointed Students In Unity Fellowship Fraternity & Sorority, Incorporatedwas founded on August 13, 1999 on the campus of Albany State University and incorporated on May 30, 2000. Founded by Shannon Thomas and 14 other students, ASUF has grown to eight chapters in Georgia and Florida.

Theta Nu Gamma[]

Seeing the need for unity among Christian men in his community and surrounding areas, Mario Jimerson began to seek God through prayer and fasting. He was awakened from his sleep one night with a vision to start a new Christian fraternity. This new organization would exemplify true brotherhood and the connection man needs in order to commune with God. In his vision, Mario saw the colors and the name of this new fraternity. With this, he began to write the constitution and bylaws. On Tuesday June 10, 2008, Theta Nu Gamma Christian Fraternity was created in Phoenix, Arizona. Its goal is to teach men to be leaders in the body of Christ and take their rightful place as head of the home.[2]

Megisté Areté Christian Fraternity Inc.[]

In 1975 Mattie P. Dawson had a vision of a Christian sorority that would cater to the needs of Christian women on college campuses. That vision came to fruition in 1987 at the founding of Elogeme Adolphi Christian Sorority Inc. At the same time, her husband Bishop Harold Dawson had a vision of his own. His vision was that this sorority would have a brother fraternity of young men that would serve both as a covering for Elogeme and as a ministry to the needs of Christian college men. Megisté Areté Christian Fraternity Inc. was founded on May 7, 1989 on the campus of Illinois State University. Megisté is Greek for "greater" or "greatest," and Areté is Greek for "manhood" or "manliness". The organization has 10 active chapters.[3]

Local fraternities[]

The second wave of Christian fraternities was accompanied by "local" fraternities that have only a single chapter.

  • Phi Kappa Chi was founded on the campus of Baylor University in 1988.
  • Alpha Omega Christian Fraternity was founded in the Spring of 1998, at Young Harris College, in Young Harris, Georgia. The Rock is their main symbol, and the AO motto is: "God is good, All the time."
  • Alpha Omega Theta was founded July 16, 2002 in St. Louis, Missouri, although its Alpha chapter is based out of Springfield, Missouri at Missouri State University. Their pillars of belief are Unity, Leadership and Integrity. They are linked through the special "AO BOND" to their sister organization Alpha Theta Omega Christian Sorority Inc.
  • Kappa Phi Epsilon was founded on the campus of the University of Florida. Kappa Phi Epsilon has initiated over 260 brothers since 2004.
  • Mu Lambda Psi was founded on the campus of California State University Northridge in 2004.
  • Delta Alpha Chi was founded on the campus of Oklahoma City University in 2005.
  • Mu Pi Phi was founded September 2006 at Northern Kentucky University. They are based on the ideals of Charity, Moderation, and Passion. Although they currently have only one chapter, they planned to nationalize in 2007.
  • Delta Tau was founded in fall 2006 at Missouri State University. After watching a local christian sorority establish and grow, a group of men felt the need to establish a brotherhood of Christian men. Their sister sorority is Gamma Alpha Lambda.
  • Mu Sigma Chi was founded on the campus of Ferrum College in 2008.
  • Chi Omicron Rho was founded on the campus of Pittsburg State University in 2017.
  • Lambda Sigma Phi was founded on the campus of The University of Alabama in 2000.

List of fraternities[]

Year founded Fraternity Active chapters Locations
1925 ΒΣΨ - Beta Sigma Psi 10 IL, IN, IA, KS, MO, NE, MI
1927 ΑΓΩ - Alpha Gamma Omega 15 CA, CO, NC, VA
1929 ΦΑΚ - Phi Alpha Kappa 1 MI
1925 ΣΘΕ - Sigma Theta Epsilon 3 OH, OK, TX
1960 ΑΠΚ - Alpha Pi Kappa 1 TX
1985 ΒΥΧ - Beta Upsilon Chi 37 TX, OK, TN, AR, MS, GA, MO, FL, CO, LA, AL, NC, KS
1987 ΧΑΩ - Chi Alpha Omega 3 NC
1988 ΓΦΔ - Gamma Phi Delta 18 TX, OK, LA, NC, CT, AL, MI, SC
1988 ΑΝΩ - Alpha Nu Omega 19 MD, DC, NJ, NC, FL, OH, PA, NY, TX, IN, TN, DE,
1988 ΦΚΧ - Phi Kappa Chi 1 TX
1989 MA - Megiste Arete Christian Fraternity Inc. 10 IL and colonies[4]
1990 ΖΦΖ - Zeta Phi Zeta 17 IL, FL, AR, TX, IA, AL
1993 ΚΥΧ - Kappa Upsilon Chi 9 TX, GA, NM, OK, FL, TN, KY, SC
1994 ΑΩ - Alpha Omega 7 MI, OH
1996 ΩΦΘ - Omega Phi Theta 3 CA
1998 ΔΟΓ - Delta Omicron Gamma 1 GA
1999 ΓΨΛ - Gamma Psi Lambda 5 GA, AZ, AL
1999 MOG - Men of God 2 TX
1999 ΑΙΩ - Alpha Iota Omega 2 NC
1999 ASUF - Anointed Students In Unity Fellowship 8 GA, FL
2001 ΜΟΓ - Mu Omicron Gamma 3 VA
2001 ΛΣΦ - Lambda Sigma Phi 2 AL
2002 ΑΩΘ - Alpha Omega Theta 6 MO
2002 ΦΓΓ - Phi Gamma Gamma Christian Service Fraternity 3 VA, MI
2004 ΚΦΕ - Kappa Phi Epsilon 1 FL
2004 ΜΛΨ - Mu Lambda Psi 1 CA
2004 ΦΩΣ - Phi Omega Sigma 2 MO
2005 ΔΑΧ - Delta Alpha Chi 1 OK
2006 ΜΠΦ - Mu Pi Phi 1 KY
2010 ΦΗΧ - Phi Eta Chi Christian Fraternity 1 TX
2017 ΧΟΡ - Chi Omicron Rho 1 KS

Branded chapters[]

Some non-religious national social fraternities allow individual chapters to brand themselves with unique ideals conforming to specific interests of the local members. Instances have arisen in which a singular chapter of an IFC-affiliated social fraternity brands itself a Christian chapter and initiates members on the basis of national membership standards as well as religious beliefs. One of the oldest such chapters is the Beta Alpha[5] chapter of Theta Xi Fraternity at Georgia Tech which marked itself Christian in 1974. The chapter operates as a full social fraternity and member of IFC while pursuing Biblical masculinity and Christian brotherhood. The Beta Alpha chapter is currently the only Christian chapter of a secular fraternity.[6] It expanded this model to a second chapter at Georgia Southern University; however, that chapter has since reverted to a non-religious chapter.[7]

In the news[]

Alpha Iota Omega and North Carolina[]

Alpha Iota Omega and the University of North Carolina clashed over the university's anti-discrimination policy. The fraternity refused to agree to the policy, which banned religious discrimination. As a result, Alpha Iota Omega was not officially recognized by the university for the 2003–2004 academic year. The fraternity sought assistance from the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, a civil liberties group, and the Alliance Defense Fund, an American legal alliance defending religious liberties. A lawsuit was filed in the United States District Court for the Middle District of North Carolina on August 25, 2004, citing the incident in fall 2003 when UNC administrator Jonathan Curtis refused to extend the benefits of official recognition to AIO.

This is not the first legal scuffle between a Christian organization and the University of North Carolina administration, and the university has claimed that Intervarsity Christian Fellowship's policy that leaders must be Christian is also discriminatory. The lawsuit is currently pending.

Beta Upsilon Chi and Georgia[]

In late 2006, Pi Chapter of Beta Upsilon Chi at the University of Georgia was not registered as a student organization by university officials "because the group requires its members and officers to share the group's Christian beliefs."[8]

After months of negotiation between university officials, student officers of the local chapter, and officials at the fraternity's national headquarters in Texas, attorneys with the Christian Legal Society and Alliance Defense Fund filed a civil rights suit on December 6, 2006 in federal court against the University on behalf of Beta Upsilon Chi.[9]

The next day, December 7, published reports in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution indicated that "the University [would] remove the religion clause from the [University's anti-discrimination] policy for the Christian fraternity to settle this particular situation and is discussing 'an exception to religious discrimination (that) could be put into place much like an exception to gender discrimination is in place for same-sex social fraternities and sororities.'"[10]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Alpha Omega Collegiate Ministries". www.alphaomegacm.com. Retrieved 2016-07-16.
  2. ^ "Theta Nu Gamma".[permanent dead link]
  3. ^ "Megiste Arete Christian Fraternity | Established 1989— "The Mighty Men of God"". megistearete.org. Retrieved 2016-07-16.
  4. ^ "Megiste Arete Christian Fraternity - Established 1989— "The Mighty Men of God"".
  5. ^ Beta Alpha
  6. ^ https://orgsync.com/136028/chapter
  7. ^ http://www.thetaxigsu.org/
  8. ^ "Redirected AllianceDefenseFund".
  9. ^ The complaint in Beta Upsilon Chi, et al. v. Adams, et al.
  10. ^ "www.ajc.com".[dead link]

External links[]

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