While not literally the case throughout, it must be confessed that again  
and again
I had the view, as I read, that I was reading my own material, it  sometimes
is that close to my exact views on these subjects.
BR
 
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from the site:
Religion &  Politics
 
How Should We Teach the Bible in Public Schools?
By _Mark A.  Chancey_ 
(http://religionandpolitics.org/author/mark_a-_chancey/)  | January 7, 2014
 
This past summer marked the fiftieth anniversary of the United States  
Supreme Court decision in _Abington Township v. Schempp_ 
(http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/getcase.pl?navby=CASE&court=US&vol=374&page=203)
 . That case 
is most famous  for its prohibition of school-sponsored Bible reading in 
public schools, but it  also figures prominently in American educational 
history for its endorsement of  the academic, nonsectarian study of religion in 
that same setting. The Court  famously noted:  
It might well be said that one’s education is not complete without a study  
of comparative religion or the history of religion and its relationship to 
the  advancement of civilization. It certainly may be said that the Bible is 
worthy  of study for its literary and historic qualities. Nothing we have 
said here  indicates that such study of the Bible or of religion, when 
presented  objectively as part of a secular program of education, may not be 
effected  consistently with the First Amendment.
As a biblical scholar who teaches about religion for a living, no one has 
to  convince me that the Bible is worthy of study, as are other aspects of 
religion  beyond sacred texts and other religious traditions beyond those that 
utilize the  Bible. There are strong civic reasons for teaching about 
religion in K-12  contexts: Religious literacy is essential for the smooth 
functioning of a  pluralistic democracy in a shrinking world. The issue is not 
only understanding  the world “out there,” beyond American shores, but also 
understanding our own  society, which is increasingly religiously diverse. 
Biblical literacy is a key  component of this much-needed broader religious 
literacy. 
The issue of how public schools teach about religion is relatively  
under-studied, but it is clear that confusion abounds on the question of how to 
 
meet the Court’s benchmark of objective, secular presentation. For these  
reasons, I welcomed an invitation to study public school Bible courses for the  
Austin-based _Texas Freedom Network Education Fund_ (http://www.tfn.org/) , 
a watchdog group. Using  open records requests, TFN obtained course 
materials from sixty Bible courses  taught in Texas high schools in the 
2011-2012 
school year; they asked me to  examine them for academic quality and adherence 
to the legal guidelines offered  by various federal courts. 
The resulting report, _Reading, Writing & Religion II: Texas Public School 
Bible  Courses in 2011-2012_ 
(http://www.tfn.org/site/PageServer?pagename=issues_religious_freedom_bible_courses)
  (a follow-up to an _earlier study_ 
(http://www.tfn.org/site/PageServer?pagename=issues_religious_freedom_bible_cou
rses_2006_report) ), found that most Texas Bible courses crossed  the 
constitutional line by promoting certain religious perspectives over others  
and 
religion over non-religion. While many problems appeared to be missteps by  
well-intentioned and otherwise well-trained teachers, others reflected overt 
 sectarian agendas. 
The syllabus for one course, for example, identified its objective as “to  
consider the teachings of the New Testament through the lens of faith,” and  
students read books on Christian apologetics. Many courses depicted the 
Bible as  straightforward, unproblematic history—even the miracle stories. A 
PowerPoint  slide from one district illustrates this approach, instructing 
students that  “Christ’s resurrection was an event that occurred in time and 
space – that  it was, in reality, historical and not mythological (cf. 2 Pet. 
 1:16)” [sic]. Many courses presented traditional Christian theological  
interpretations of scripture as normative readings, going so far as to teach  
students that the Tanakh/Old Testament supernaturally predicted the coming 
of  Jesus. (When a New York Times _reporter_ 
(http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/02/us/for-texas-religious-electives-a-call-for-more-inclusion.html?_r=0)
  
questioned this approach, pointing out to one teacher  that Jews do not 
believe that Jesus fulfilled Isaiah’s prophecies, the teacher  curiously 
countered, “In New York, they don’t.”) Pseudoscience made its way into  some 
courses, such as those that advocated creationism or the belief that _racial 
origins can be traced to Noah_ 
(http://tfninsider.org/2013/04/02/texas-bible-courses-racial-origins-traced-from-noah-continued/)
 .  
The good news is that other Texas courses succeeded admirably in treating 
the  biblical material in ways that respected constitutional limits and 
diverse  religious sensibilities. How did they do it? 
    *   They relied on resources informed by a broad range of biblical  
scholarship, not just the scholars of one particular religious community. 
    *   They informed students about the unique features of the Bibles  of 
different traditions (Jewish, Roman Catholic, Protestant, and Eastern  
Orthodox). 
    *   They were intentional in exposing students to biblical  
translations associated with different religious traditions. 
    *   They were sensitive to the different ways various religious  
communities have interpreted particular passages and did not present one  
tradition
’s interpretation as normative. 
    *   They recognized the importance of biblical texts as ancient  
historical sources without lapsing into a tone of assumed  historicity. 
    *   They discussed the Bible’s moral and theological claims  without 
presenting them as authoritative for the students. 
    *   They recognized that the Bible is not a science textbook. 
    *   They treated Judaism as a religion in its own right and not merely 
as  the foil or background for Christianity.
Several resources are available to help school districts and teachers 
create  legally and academically sound courses like these latter ones. The 
Society of  Biblical Literature, the primary professional society for biblical 
scholars,  offers _Bible Electives in Public Schools: A Guide_ 
(http://www.sbl-site.org/assets/pdfs/SchoolsGuide.pdf)  as  well as an e-zine 
for secondary 
school teachers, _Teaching the Bible_ 
(http://www.sbl-site.org/educational/TBnewsletter.aspx) . The American Academy 
of  Religion, the professional 
society for the broader field of religious studies,  has developed _Guidelines 
for Teaching about Religion in K-12 Public Schools  in the United States_ 
(http://www.aarweb.org/sites/default/files/pdfs/Publications/epublications/AARK-
12CurriculumGuidelines.pdf) . The First Amendment Center, Bible Literacy  
Project, and Society of Biblical Literature jointly provide _The  Bible and 
Public Schools: A First Amendment Guide_ 
(http://www.sbl-site.org/assets/pdfs/BibleGuide.pdf) . Such tools can help  
districts teach the Good Book right—
and help students develop an informed  perspective on the Bible and its 
ongoing cultural  relevance.

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