Thoughtful article that identifies the very real problems of teaching (about) 
the Bible

in the public schools.  This idea has been high on my list for many years, we 
need

Biblical literacy as part of education. American history cannot be understood

without knowing what the Bible says. Nor can American literature or, in a number

of senses, American politics. So, how do you solve the problems that the article

spells out?  Open for discussion...


BR



---------------------------------------------------------------------------


[or not]

Teaching the Bible in Public Schools Is a Bad Idea—For Christians

If many evangelicals don’t trust public schools to teach their children about 
sex or science, why would they want those schools teaching scripture?


Jan 30, 2019
Jonathan Merritt<https://www.theatlantic.com/author/jonathan-merritt/>
Contributing writer for The Atlantic


Shortly after Fox & Friends aired a segment about proposed legislation to 
incorporate Bible classes into public schools on Monday morning, President 
Donald Trump cheered these efforts on Twitter. “Numerous states introducing 
Bible Literacy classes, giving students the option of studying the Bible. 
Starting to make a turn back? Great!” Trump 
wrote<https://twitter.com/realDonaldTrump/status/1089876055224184833>.


The segment followed a USA Today 
report<https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/education/2019/01/23/in-god-we-trust-bible-public-school-christian-lawmakers/2614567002/>
 on January 23 that conservative Christian lawmakers in at least six states 
have proposed legislation that would “require or encourage public schools to 
offer elective classes on the Bible’s literary and historical significance.” 
These kinds of proposals are supported by some prominent evangelicals, 
including Family Research Council president Tony 
Perkins<https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/education/wp/2016/07/14/gop-platform-encourages-teaching-about-the-bible-in-public-schools/?utm_term=.0e33eb8c2752>,
 the Texas mega-church pastor John 
Hagee<http://www.bibleinschools.net/News/Dr-John-Hagee-Writes-About-Bible-Literacy-Project-Textbook.php>,
 and even the actor Chuck Norris<https://www.wnd.com/2007/04/41002/>. They 
argue that such laws are justified by the Bible’s undeniable influence on U.S. 
history and Western civilization.


If conservative Christians don’t trust public schools to teach their children 
about sex or science, though, why would they want to outsource instruction 
about sacred scripture to government employees? The type of public-school Bible 
class that could pass constitutional muster would make heartland evangelicals 
squirm. Backing “Bible literacy bills” might be an effective way to appeal to 
some voters, but if they were put into practice, they’re likely to defeat the 
very objectives they were meant to advance.


<https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2016/04/trumps-bible-fail/478425/>

Debates over whether religion has a place in public schools are as old as 
public education itself. Some of America’s earliest grade schools were private 
and church-run, and they almost always included religious education. In 
colonial New England, which had early public schools, religious texts, 
including the Bible, were generally assigned a central role. In the 19th 
century, however, as a greater array of local governments started public 
schools to provide nonsectarian education for all children regardless of 
religion or social status, that began to change.


  *
<https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2018/11/what-should-america-do-its-empty-church-buildings/576592/>
  *   
<https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2018/06/southern-baptists-call-off-the-culture-war/563000/>

As the historian Steven K. Green writes in The Bible, the School, and the 
Constitution: The Clash That Shaped Modern Church-State 
Doctrine<https://amzn.to/2G8kbsu>, many of these common schools still included 
Bible reading and were influenced to some degree by Protestantism. But they 
largely avoided providing devotional content and eschewed proselytizing 
students. After all, as Green says, “a chief hallmark of nonsectarian education 
was its purported appeal to children of all religious faiths.” The ostensibly 
secular nature and mission of these common schools miffed many Protestants at 
the time, much as they do today.


<https://adclick.g.doubleclick.net/pcs/click%3Fxai%3DAKAOjsusSUiAjC2Dogfzwim9KFOoAOIjUJ-yY0MCeY1b0Xw7A6CPAS3eb8koiTH43sdYzNaFuAypd5z9XL4pYXhphQz5FqMbD1dlDoeWmLXM0CHhV-DGVgEZ3xOD7_1Z5CjM4iOw9jMCc71sOMfNEHijJ11F9MERn0f71lCZW034a_PNKmq0ezmMretuK1NgbsM2siB8nNZMqWS-cAI4IZBU_XyqETUW7AbJx4ZjBRULKRe0if_zqAWlx1vJSBs8eIGyIScPRSxNXEcoO0XvkYTMacXXzXtspPTH1hp9LQ%26sai%3DAMfl-YRvYRbrR7bndr0iEPJS1qvy2pmp1S3UNiyXGjkvbgH_0rAp3oA9juF0Mz22pQBDIipPt7-nHaWJKs3ls5XQuK8NFUw3rRBhu63hXTlbRRQ86H5AXZ_4WSttd50M%26sig%3DCg0ArKJSzFYV804874ZXEAE%26urlfix%3D1%26adurl%3Dhttps://www.theatlantic.com/free-daily-crossword-puzzle/>

These early schools were controlled by the states, but the federal government 
began to assert a greater role in the 20th century, as the Supreme Court 
started to constrict the presence of religion in public schools. This included 
the landmark 1948 case of McCollum v. Board of Education, in which the Court 
ruled that “a state cannot consistently with the First [Amendment] utilize its 
public school system to aid any or all religious faiths or sects in the 
dissemination of their doctrines,” as well as the highly controversial 1962 
case of Engel v. Vitale<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Engel_v._Vitale>, in 
which the justices declared that compulsory prayer in public schools was 
unconstitutional because it violated the First Amendment’s establishment 
clause<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Establishment_Clause>. These decisions 
helped spark the modern culture wars and the rise of the religious right, a 
movement that sought to fight the “secularization of public schools,” which 
included the reincorporation of prayer and Bible reading.


<https://www.theatlantic.com/education/archive/2018/09/why-schools-are-banning-yoga/570904/>

Donald Trump is an unlikely choice to play the role of champion for this cause. 
The thrice-married real-estate mogul who claims to have never asked God for 
forgiveness has said that he attended Manhattan’s Marble Collegiate Church, but 
the congregation responded that he is not “an active 
member<https://www.cnn.com/2015/08/28/politics/donald-trump-church-member/index.html>.”
 Trump claimed on the campaign trail that the Bible was his favorite 
book<https://www.christianpost.com/news/donald-trump-declares-his-favorite-book-is-the-bible-prophet-says-god-told-him-billionaire-is-his-trumpet-to-america-142768/>,
 but he couldn’t cite his favorite 
verse<https://www.cnn.com/2015/08/27/politics/donald-trump-favorite-bible-verses/>
 when asked. (He finally named his favorite verse eight months later, but 
seemingly didn’t 
understand<https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2016/04/trumps-bible-fail/478425/>
 how to interpret or apply it.)


But while Trump might not care much about the Bible personally, he knows it is 
politically important to many of the conservative Christians who support him. 
According to a recent 
study<https://www.americanbible.org/uploads/content/State%20of%20the%20Bible%20Report%202013.pdf>
 conducted by the Barna Group, a staggering 97 percent of churchgoing 
Protestants and 88 percent of churchgoing Catholics said they believed that 
teaching the Bible’s values in public school was important. Trump’s odd tweet 
is likely an effort to shore up his base, rather than a passionate plea for a 
new educational initiative.


Following Trump’s tweet on Monday, some legal scholars argued that teaching the 
Bible in any form in a public school would violate the First Amendment. But 
others, such as John Inazu, a law and religion professor at Washington 
University in St. Louis and the author of Confident Pluralism: Surviving and 
Thriving Through Deep Difference<https://amzn.to/2Sb4eYF>, believe that this 
would depend on the nature of the classes.


“The Court’s approach to the establishment clause is convoluted and unclear, so 
it is difficult to say whether a Bible literacy class is unconstitutional,” 
Inazu told me. “It’s a historical fact that the Bible has influenced Western 
civilization and U.S. history, so it’s plausible that you could teach a class 
like this if it is done in a way that promotes cultural literacy.”


<https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2016/04/kountze-cheerleaders-free-speech-religion-banners-football/476892/>

Inazu added that the courts would also consider the motive behind instituting 
such classes. If they determine that the motivation behind Bible-literacy bills 
is to privilege Christianity, the classes could be ruled unconstitutional. 
That’s bad news for those pushing these bills because, as USA Today 
reported<https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/education/2019/01/23/in-god-we-trust-bible-public-school-christian-lawmakers/2614567002/>,
 they are the product of “an initiative called Project Blitz coordinated by 
conservative Christian political groups” who seek to “advocate for preserving 
the country’s Judeo-Christian heritage.” (It’s telling that they aren’t also 
advocating teaching the Koran or the Bhagavad Gita as part of world-history 
education.) So even if these bills pass, the classes they’ll spawn will likely 
not last long.


But assume for a moment that no ulterior motive is behind these bills, and that 
the conservative Christian activists and lawmakers are merely deeply concerned 
that America’s schoolchildren receive a better cultural-historical education. 
And also assume that teaching a Bible class in a public school is not a 
violation of the establishment clause, as many legal scholars claim. As Inazu 
pointed out, for a Bible class in public school to have any hope of passing 
constitutional muster, it would need to be academic rather than devotional. 
Which is to say, it couldn’t actually impart biblical values to students, and 
it would need to draw from scholarly consensus. And this is where the whole 
enterprise would backfire.


Start at the beginning. Many conservative Christians believe that the opening 
of the book of Genesis teaches a literal seven-day creation of the world by God 
around 6,000 years ago. But most academic Bible scholars believe that this text 
should be read poetically, and not as history or science. They interpret these 
passages as making theological points from the perspective of its ancient 
writers, rather than commenting on the truthfulness of Darwinian evolution or 
any other modern debate. Additionally, most conservative Christians believe 
that when Genesis tells about Adam and Eve, it is referencing two historical 
figures who were the first humans who ever lived. But geneticists assert that 
modern humans descend from a population of people, not a single pair of 
individuals.



<https://www.theatlantic.com/education/archive/2016/03/homeschooling-without-god/475953/>

The potential problems don’t stop with the Bible’s creation narrative. 
Conservative Christian parents across America teach their children a Bible 
story about a man name Noah who built a giant boat to house all of Earth’s 
animals during a cosmic flood. But scientists say that such a flood is 
impossible; there isn’t enough water in the oceans and atmosphere to submerge 
the entire Earth. Historians point out that strikingly similar stories are told 
in sources other than the Bible, some which pre-date the biblical tale. This 
story, many scholars conclude, was not meant to be literal. And what of the 
Bible’s story of Jonah being swallowed by a great fish and surviving in its 
belly for three days? A marine biologist will tell you it’s anatomically 
implausible, and many biblical scholars say the story is intended to be 
understood allegorically, anyway.

That evangelical understandings of the Bible differ from scholarly consensus 
doesn’t make them incorrect, but it does mean that the material taught to 
public-school students would likely diverge from what they are learning in 
church and at home.


Can you imagine young Christian students coming home from school and informing 
their parents that they’ve just learned that all these cherished Bible stories 
are in fact not historically correct? How would evangelical parents react when 
their fifth grader explains that their teacher said the Apostle Paul said 
misogynist things and advocated for slavery? And what if the teacher decides to 
assign the Catholic version of the Bible, which has seven books that 
Protestants reject as apocryphal?

And this only addresses issues of historicity and interpretation.


he social teachings of the Bible could also create issues in a public-school 
setting. A recent thesis 
project<https://www2.baylor.edu/baylorproud/2011/07/graduate-thesis-suggests-regular-bible-reading-may-increase-support-for-social-justice-openness-to-science/>
 in sociology at Baylor University suggested that increased Bible reading can 
actually have a liberalizing effect, increasing one’s “interest in social and 
economic justice, acceptance of the compatibility of religion and science, and 
support for the humane treatment of criminals.” Every community that reads the 
Bible places unequal stress on certain books or passages. While evangelicals 
are generally more politically conservative, teachers in public schools might 
choose to emphasize the Bible’s many teachings on caring for the poor, 
welcoming the immigrant, and the problems of material wealth.


Bible-literacy bills are unlikely to pass in most states, and even if they do, 
they might be soon ruled unconstitutional. But conservative Christian advocates 
would do well to think through the shape these classes will likely take if 
their efforts are successful. They might end up getting what they want, only to 
realize that they don’t want what they’ve got.

-- 
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Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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