No idea why some people think it is necessary to attack evolution
in order to be Christian. That is, yes, objectively it is not much
of a problem to identify the historical reasons ;   but these "reasons"
make poor sense and a strong case can be made that the
Bible itself teaches evolution.  However,  there is another  point
that is important, the need for Christians to know how others think
and learn what they can from those others.  Murashko's article
is limited in the learn-from-others category, but very much
on target in identifying the need to engage in the realm
of ideas with other people.
.
Billy
.
.
.
 
_____________________________________________
 
 
 
 
Author Aims to Equip HS Students With Psychology From  Christian Perspective




By _Alex  Murashko_ (http://www.christianpost.com/author/alex-murashko/) , 
Christian Post Reporter
January 10, 2013|3:00 pm
The author of a high school textbook that introduces  psychology from a 
Christian perspective says Christian students entering college  are unprepared 
for the challenges of today's Psychology classes and  "schools-of-thought." 
Dr. Tim Rice, LPC, author of Psychology: A Christian  Perspective, High 
School Edition, also believes this unpreparedness is a  reason for the high 
rate 
of Christian students dropping their faith after  entering college.
"Surveys suggest that as many as 75 percent of Christian students 'walk 
away'  from their faith within 12 months of entering college. If that statistic 
is  accurate, and if it has anything to do with the teaching in college, it 
is  because Christian students are unprepared for the worldview challenges 
embedded  in modern Psychology's theories and schools-of-thought." 
Why are Christian students unprepared? 
Rice states, "Among Christians, Psychology is controversial and our  
disagreements are often contentious. Many Christians see Psychology as an  
idolatrous and ungodly rival religion and are concerned that there is no room  
for 
faith in its study. Some have called Psychology 'the great seduction in  
preparation for the antichrist.' Others believe that God created Psychology 
when  He created Man and that we have a duty to study it." According to Rice, 
"because  the disagreements about Psychology are so contentious no one has 
taken on the  task of covering this subject at the worldview level, especially 
in a way that  supports high school students, until now." 
The publishers of Psychology: A Christian Perspective say the book  equips 
parents and teachers to "help students to recognize psychology-specific  
worldview issues, and to introduce them to the study of the wonders of God's  
greatest creation: the human mind." 
The Christian Post recently interviewed Rice about his book. The interview  
conducted by email is below.  
CP: How is your book being received since its release? From both a  secular 
and Christian perspective? 
Rice: I am pleased to say that the reviews have been overwhelmingly 
positive.  Jackye Biehl, the Administrator at First Baptist Academy in 
O'Fallon, IL 
wrote,  "We LOVED the curriculum but better than that – our students loved 
it as well  and the feedback from the course was amazing." Psychology: A 
Christian  Perspective, High School Edition is being used this school year by 
42  Christian schools and by hundreds of homeschooling families. Christian 
educators  understand that Psychology class in college will challenge 
students' worldview  and it seems that there has been a collective sigh of 
relief 
that someone has  taken on the challenge of creating a resource to equip 
students to meet the  challenge. 
The secular community has dismissed me as an Intelligent Design quack. 
CP: What is your greatest hope in regards to what you would like to  see as 
the result of students studying this book? 
Rice: I really believe that every Christian student needs to deal with  
Psychology class before they go to college. As a young Christian taking  
Psychology 101 almost 30 years ago, I was not very prepared to defend my faith  
and totally unprepared to recognize the worldview beliefs underlying the  
theories and schools-of-thought I was taught. I don't want that to happen to  
students today. That is why I believe that Psychology is one of the most  
important electives that a student can take in high school. 
I also believe that because Psychology is a contentious topic among  
Christians, we've abandoned it to the secular, humanistic, and evolutionary  
perspectives. We need to reclaim Psychology for Christ and that starts with 
high  
school students. The goal for the study of Psychology, just like the study 
of  Biology, Theology, History, and every other discipline, should be to 
understand  God's creation and, in the words of Johannes Kepler, to "think 
God's thoughts  after him." Instead of surrendering psychology or falling away 
in the face of  the world's teaching, we have a duty to put forth reasoned 
explanations for our  worldview in every discipline, including psychology. 
CP: How does homeschool Psychology tie-in to this book? Will  homeschooling 
parents be more prone to require their students to read this  book? 
Rice: We are a homeschooling family. As my oldest daughter approached high  
school graduation, I discovered there was not a good resource for me to use 
to  teach Psychology. My first book, Homeschool Psych: Preparing Christian  
Homeschool Students for Psychology 101 was targeted to homeschoolers. I  
assumed that Christian schools had good resources, but I was wrong. I wrote  
Psychology: A Christian Perspective in response to requests from  Christian 
schools, but it is intended for all Christian high school students.  Often, 
adults who took Psychology in college use the book to get the Christian  
perspective they did not get in college. 
I believe high school students who do not plan to go to college would read  
the book too. Psychology has influenced not only college and the culture, 
it has  influenced the Church. Every year Christians buy millions of books on 
self-help,  recovery, addiction, relationships, parenting, spiritual 
growth, and emotional  and mental health. Bible colleges, seminaries, and 
Christian radio promote  psychological programs. Sometimes it seems Christian 
authors, speakers, and even  some pastors "Christianize" psychological theories 
by 
sprinkling in a few verses  from the New Testament and mentioning Jesus. We 
have to dig deep, down to the  biblical worldview level to evaluate all the 
stuff that is out there. 
CP: You've stated your opinion on this before, but again, what are  the 
challenges of Christian students entering college in regards to the study of  
Psychology? 
Rice: There are a number of challenges Christian students face in college  
Psychology class. 
Although there are many Christian professors, psychology departments are 
home  to some of the more anti-Christian intellectuals on college campuses. In 
fact,  psychology professors tend to have the highest levels of agnosticism 
and atheism  and often attack the Christian worldview as unscientific, 
irrational, prudish,  exploitative, controlling, inhibitive, oppressive, and 
naïve. Many psychology  professors teach that Christianity is incompatible with 
sound mental health,  that it contributes to human suffering, and that 
"intelligent" students will  eventually abandon their faith. 
Christian students are often unprepared to recognize modern psychology's 
core  worldview assumptions: naturalism, behaviorism, humanism, evolutionism,  
empiricism, and moral relativism. Those worldview beliefs are embedded,  
sometimes very subtly, in modern psychology's theories and schools of thought  
and they are presented under the banner of "science." It has been reported 
that  many Christian students walk away from their faith after the first 
year of  college. I believe that if those reports are true and if they have 
anything to  do with the teaching in college, it is, at least in part, because 
of the subtle  worldview challenges embedded in psychological theories. It 
was for me. By  simply forewarning and preparing students in advance, they 
are better able to  resist believing ideas grounded in anti-Christian 
worldview. 
CP: Anything else you would like to add? 
Rice: I think that a Christian perspective on Psychology is a powerful tool 
 in responding to the theory of evolution. There is a passage near the end 
of  Charles Darwin's Origin of Species in which Darwin, writing about  
psychology stated: 
"In the distant future I see open fields for far more important research.  
Psychology will be based on a new foundation, that of the necessary 
acquirement  of each mental power and capacity by gradation. Light will be 
thrown on 
the  origin of man and his history." 
According to Darwin, all mental activity, even what we think of as our  
God-likeness, is ultimately nothing more than a "capacity" that humans 
acquired,  bit by bit, through variation and natural selection. Darwinian 
evolution, 
when  applied to human psychology, reduces our consciousness, our morality, 
our  capacity to make decisions and judgments, religious experience, love, 
empathy,  altruism, hate, greed, dreams, and everything else that makes us 
human to  nothing more than a bunch of neurons doing their thing. 
But Psychology, more so than biology, is where the theory of evolution has  
the most difficulty. There are no cogent evolutionary explanations for our  
"higher" capacities, our God-likeness. I believe that the fight against  
evolution is not likely to be won with arguments of sub-cellular irreducible  
complexity. It is, however, winnable in the arena of the incomprehensible  
complexity and wonder of God's grandest creation: the human  mind.

-- 
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