An
interesting Op-ed article in the
Los Angeles Times about the importance of people knowing what the Bible is all about.
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We live in the land of biblical idiots
Public school courses that promote Bible literacy can enhance our civic life.By Stephen Prothero
March 14, 2007
ALTHOUGH THE 110th Congress has brought to Capitol Hill 43 Jews, two Buddhists and a Muslim Rep. Keith Ellison (D-Minn.), who took his oath of office on Thomas Jefferson's Koran Washington remains a disproportionately Christian town. More than 90% of federal legislators call themselves Christians, making Congress more Christian than the United States itself. The president is an evangelical Protestant. Catholics enjoy a majority on the Supreme Court.
Biblical references from the Jericho Road to the golden rule to the promised land permeate political speech. Yet U.S. citizens know almost nothing about the Bible. Although most regard it as the word of God, few read it anymore. Even evangelicals from the Bible Belt seem more focused on loving Jesus than on learning what he had to say.
In a religious literacy quiz I have administered to undergraduates for the last two years, students tell me that Moses was blinded on the road to Damascus and that Paul led the Israelites on their exodus out of Egypt. Surveys that are more scientific have found that only one out of three U.S. citizens is able to name the four Gospels, and one out of 10 think that Joan of Arc was Noah's wife. No wonder pollster George Gallup has concluded that the United States is "a nation of biblical illiterates."
Biblical illiteracy is not just a religious problem. It is a civic problem with political consequences. How can citizens participate in biblically inflected debates on abortion, capital punishment or the environment without knowing something about the Bible? Because they lack biblical literacy, Americans are easily swayed by demagogues on the left or the right who claim often incorrectly that the Bible says this about war or that about homosexuality.
One solution to this civic problem is to teach Bible classes in public schools. By Bible classes I do not mean classes in which teachers tell students that Jesus loves them or that the Bible is the inerrant word of God, but academic courses that study the Bible's characters and stories as well as the afterlife of the Bible in literature and history. Last week, the Georgia Board of Education gave preliminary approval to two elective Bible courses designed to teach religion rather than preach religion. As long as teachers stick to the curriculum, this is a big step in the right direction.
The most common objection to such courses is that they are unconstitutional. But the Supreme Court has repeatedly given a constitutional stamp of approval to academic courses about religion. In 1963, Justice William Brennan wrote in Abington vs. Schempp that "the holding of the Court today plainly does not foreclose teaching about the Holy Scriptures." And in 1948, Justice Robert Jackson wrote in McCollum vs. Board of Education that "a course in English literature that omitted the Bible
would be pretty barren."
But barren of the Bible is just what our public school curriculums are. According to a study by the Bible Literacy Project, which publishes a Bible textbook for secondary schools, only 8% of U.S. high school students have access to an elective Bible course. As a result, an entire generation of Americans is growing up almost entirely ignorant of the most influential book in world history, unable to understand the 1,300 biblical allusions in Shakespeare, the scriptural oratory of President Lincoln and the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. or even the prominence of Ezekiel 25:17 (actually a mishmash of this verse and passages from Genesis, Psalms and other books) in the film "Pulp Fiction."
Some have argued against Bible courses in public schools on the theory that they would unconstitutionally "establish" Judeo-Christianity. For Scripture courses to be lawful, this argument goes, teachers must give equal time to all the world's scriptures, treating the Bible as one scripture among many. But the Bible is of sufficient importance in Western civilization to merit its own course. Treating it no differently from, say, the Zend-Avesta of the Zoroastrians or Scientology's Dianetics makes no educational sense.
What makes sense is one Bible course for every public high school student in the U.S. This is not a Christian proposal. It does not serve the political left or the political right. It serves our young people and our public life.
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What do you think of this proposal? How much knowledge do you have of the Bible? If given a quiz on the Bible's main stories, would you score high enough to get a passing grade of over 60%?
I don't think the religious principles of the Bible could ever be fully taught in a public school setting (nor could they be understood by everyone), but by studying the stories and people mentioned within the Bible itself, those who aren't Christians could possibly be led toward Christianity. I guess in my mind, this is way more effective than the shoving of opinions that so many so-called Christians resort to in our country. Why do you think the church has a bad name? So many people profess a faith in Christ, but refuse to live out what they claim to believe in and even degrade people who don't agree with them. I'm definitely not an expert on evangelism...but if Christians want to win souls, they need to lead by example.
Hardly a seperation of church and state.
Now, should information about the books of other religions be taught? Yes, because that information is important and can put speeches, references, and such in perpective.
My late father used to say a very sad but true quote... "Christianity as a whole is becoming more and more difficult to define, because the world is becoming more churchly and the church is becoming more worldly". The lines of what's right and wrong have been so badly blurred that nobody knows what truly is right and wrong. The few that do for the most part are too chicken to stand up and say something in fear that they might offend someone or something. Which is a whole can of worms within itself. How ignorant is it that you have to live in fear of what color you wear or what you say, because if you offend some idiot because they don't you wearing a certain color they'll shoot you dead. People like that have reached a whole new level of stupidity! All I have to say to that is GROW UP!
My final thoughts are if you or anybody else wants to study the Bible or any other religion regardless of location and yes that includes PUBLIC SCHOOLS they should have the right and freedom to do so. If you don't that is fine too but you don't have to throw a fit about it and prevent everyone else from it too. For those of you that have a problem with religion... might I remind all of you of one freedom that you may have forgotten about... It's called the freedom of religion. If you don't like the USA for our values and principals, then LEAVE! Why come or stay here if you don't believe in what this country was built on. If you think you can come here and change us to fit you... to a point yes, we'll allow some change. that's what the USA is all about... FREEDOM, but you will never abolish the beliefs of our founding fathers who built this country on the very beliefs of Christianity. If that day ever happens it will be a very sad end of what once used to be a great place to live.
I doubt that people are really THAT ignorant (i.e. the comments about Noah and Moses seem kind of farfetched).
On one hand while people are going to argue that it's unfair and unconstitutional it would also leave the bible open to a lot of misinterpretation (although any real exposure might be a good thing).
A class about the Bible wouldn't necessarily have to be a religion class in which all religions are discussed, depending on what the basis for the class is supposed to be. There are plenty of classes on, say, public university campuses in the U.S. that look at the Bible not from a theological perspective but from the viewpoint that it formed a big basis for American history, and also that it is a piece of literature like any other.
With that said, I wouldn't have a problem with a class about the Quran or any other religion either as long as the material is treated fairly.
Lastly, I hope I don't sound like a jerk saying this or anything, but for all the talking jokerrabbit is doing about not "imposing" one's belief on others, he certainly sounds like he's trying to impose his beliefs on me and everyone else here...
I don’t believe you should hate anyone but people like this make it very hard.