Christian Colleges Call New Federal Regulation an โExistential Threatโ
A proposed policy would label college programs โfailingโโand block federal student loansโif graduates donโt out-earn peers without the degree.

A Christian college in Georgia and member of the Council for Christian Colleges & Universities, one group concerned about the new federal regulation.
Christianity TodayMay 11, 2026
Share
Share
Dan Henry / Chattanooga Times Free Press via Associated Press
Though college presidents are in the middle of graduation season, Philip Dearborn, the head of the Association for Biblical Higher Education, found 21 of them willing to make a last-minute trip to Washington, DC, at the end of April.
In dozens of meetings with lawmakers, they pleaded their case against a new Department of Education regulation they say could crater their programs. The regulation would label a bachelorโs or masterโs program a โfailureโ if its graduates donโt earn more than their peers without the degree.
Students in these โfailingโ programs would be ineligible for federal financial aid.
Sign up for The Daily Briefing
Get the most recent headlines and stories from Christianity Today delivered to your inbox daily.Email*
https://www.google.com/recaptcha/api2/anchor?ar=1&k=6Lfd4_8qAAAAAM3nu0ZhX66_rmavZrSWhkxYc4Ft&co=aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuY2hyaXN0aWFuaXR5dG9kYXkuY29tOjQ0Mw..&hl=en&v=U5VsmTDhJM1iOJUyw4DEUTYv&size=invisible&anchor-ms=20000&execute-ms=30000&cb=ql7yfs9buj44Sign Up
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Thanks for signing up.
Explore more newslettersโdonโt forget to start your free 60-day trial of CT to get full access to all articles in every newsletter.
Sorry, something went wrong. Please try again.
The new rule portends a problem in particular for seminaries, theological schools, and Bible colleges at a time when clergy are aging and sometimes in short supply.
By the governmentโs own estimate, 53 percent of bachelorโs degrees for religion and religious studies would be considered โfailingโ under this new metric. Those programs, which would not qualify for federal loans, are projected to have the highest failure rate of any undergraduate program.
For masterโs degrees, the outlook is especially bleak: The government estimates that 89 percent of religion or religious studies degrees would be considered failing.
โItโs an existential threat to the future of religious higher education in the USโI donโt think thatโs an overstatement,โ Dearborn told CT. โIt came out of left field.โ
The Council for Christian Colleges & Universities, representing 170 schools, and The Association of Theological Schools, representing 270 graduate theology schools, are also voicing serious concerns about the regulation.
Dearborn thinks religious education became the unintended target of a regulation designed to rein in certain for-profit programs accused of saddling students with high debt and low-value degrees.
The One Big Beautiful Bill that Congress passed last year included a requirement for an earnings test on undergraduate and graduate programs to determine their eligibility for federal loans. Even as it was being drafted, leaders of Christian colleges voiced concerns.
โAn accountability framework that reduces a faith-based schoolโs value to the future earning potential of graduates will minimize or alter its self-understanding and effectively punish those institutions for advancing a service ethos driven by their religious convictions,โ wrote Asbury University president Kevin Brown in a Deseret op-ed in June 2025, before the bill was signed into law.
On April 20, the Education Department released details of the regulation, and the public has a month to comment before the regulation becomes final. As of May 8, the regulation had drawn more than 2,700 comments, a much higher number than other regulations that are in a similar comment period.
One commenter, Linda Adler-Kassner, noted that comparing the median income of an entire demographic to a small college program that may have only a few students didnโt make any sense mathematically. One graduate with low earnings could drag down the whole program.
โIt seems to disproportionately impact programs in religious institutions, as well as majors like theater, dance, and music. This reality, as well as the mathematical calculations underscoring the requirement, suggest that smaller programs and programs designed to foster faith-based engagement need different measurement metrics,โ Adler-Kassner wrote.
The regulation states that if the program has fewer than 30 graduates, the government will add more graduatesโ earnings from other years until it reaches 30 graduates as the minimum.
To evaluate earnings, the federal government would use US Census and International Revenue Service data to compare the median salary of those with undergraduate degrees four years after their graduation to the median salary of those with high school degrees ages 25 to 34. (University administrators contend this comparison is also unfair: A high school graduate who has potentially been in the workforce for 16 years may reasonably be earning more than a college graduate with only four years of experience.)
A programโs graduates who are mostly from the collegeโs state have to beat the state median, but if theyโre from around the country, as is the case with many religious schools, they would have to beat the national median.
For graduate programs, the government would compare the median salaries of masterโs degree holders with median salaries of undergraduate degree holders.
If a college program, such as a biblical studies major, flunks the earnings test two years in a row, the government would label it as failing. Biblical studies majors at that school would no longer be eligible for Title IV federal loans, and the college would have to disclose that the program was considered โfailing.โ
The Education Department did not return a request for comment on the concerns of religious colleges.
โFinancial outcomes matter, but they donโt totally measure whether an education is worthwhile,โ said David Hoag, president of the Council for Christian Colleges & Universities (CCCU).
Frank Yamada, head of the Association of Theological Schools, recently held a webinar informing its members of the regulation.
โIf folks want to get their degrees in these areas, but theyโre not eligible for financial aid, itโs going to significantly impact the religious workforce,โ Yamada said. โIn many Christian traditions now, there are often more job openings or calls available than there are candidates to fill those calls.โ
Hoag said the regulation is part of the Trump administrationโs reaction to Biden-era student loan forgiveness programs that did little to restrict how loans are distributed in the first place. The CCCU leader is glad that schools now can advise students against borrowing more than they need to, for example. He also thinks schools should be transparent with students about what they are likely to earn in the job market. Some of those numbers are already available on the Obama-era โcollege scorecardโ that shows median earnings for particular schools.
But Hoag added: โOne of the other areas thatโs targeted is culinary arts. Weโre going to have lousy food in the future and fewer people in ministry. Those are not good combinations.โ
Music training will be hit hard, too.
Kyle Werner is a faculty member at Manhattan School of Music, which had a series of meetings recently with faculty and staff to warn them about the new policyโs fallout. The school doesnโt have lucrative degrees to balance out its lower-earning arts degrees, he said.
โBy five years from now, when all students have come in under the new policies, our school could be facing penalties that amount to about 10 percent of our annual budget, which would be untenable for us,โ Werner said in an email.
In the meeting, attendees asked whether the government could measure graduatesโ income eight years after graduation instead of four, because musicians often have a longer runway to success. Werner said that was true for him as a composer: He worked for about seven years before securing regular commissions. Before that, he pieced together jobs as a teacher, administrator, and church music director.
โIf you looked at my life four years after graduation, the current policies would not deem me a โsuccess,โ but if you looked eight years after graduation, things were looking much better,โ Werner said.
Pastoral work is not lucrative, either.
Joshua Christy earned a bachelorโs in biblical studies from Anderson University in 2005. When he became the senior pastor of a small church in Missouri in 2011, a part-time job, he earned $225 a week. Under the proposed federal regulation, his post-graduation income would not pass the earnings test. He did not choose his major based on future compensation.
โLearning to study the Bible and minister to a congregation was something I found, and still find, deeply fulfilling and meaningful,โ he wrote in an email. โIt was never about money, and money has never really interested me as a goal worthy of pursuit.โ
Jon-Michael Shelley graduated from Covenant College in 2019 and picked up a ministry internship at a Southern Baptist church in Tennessee where he made $8.50 an hour. He worked as a barista to make ends meet.
โFor the first two years out of college, being a barista was more lucrative than my ministry job,โ Shelley said. Heโs now a youth pastor at an Anglican church in Atlanta.
An earnings test also canโt capture nonmonetary ways churches take care of their workers, such as by offering a parsonage. The Southern Baptist church Shelley interned for after graduation found him a host home where he could live for free.
He graduated with significantly less debt than his friends who attended state schools, he said, which also doesnโt factor into the proposed earnings test of college programs.
Dearborn, who now represents roughly 200 postsecondary schools, is not sure he would have passed the earnings test when he graduated from Lancaster Bible College in 1994 and became an admissions counselor.
Though Dearborn began his career with a humble salary, money was not the reason he earned a Bible degree. He later became the collegeโs provost.
โGod has always provided and been so, so generous,โ he said. โAnd Iโm thankful for my college degree.โ
It taught him intangible skills like how to relate to people, how to see the world in context of a greater narrative, and how to fulfill commands from the Bible for ministry, he said.
โChurches are going to need leaders and leaders are going to have to be trained,โ Dearborn said. โWhether we do it through our current understanding of how it goes, or a new way of thinking, Iโm confident the church will rise up and figure it out. It sure would be nice if our government allowed our students to use loan dollars as well as grant dollars.โ
โ Aaron Morrison contributed data reporting to this piece.
