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CJ Cregg
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PostMon Apr 24, 2006 3:31 am    See You in Bible Class

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See You in Bible Class

By Sarah Childress


May 1, 2006 issue - Fresh from a bruising federal court fight over the teaching of evolution, Georgia marched back into the culture wars last week when Gov. Sonny Perdue signed a bill allowing Bible classes in public high schools. An estimated 8 percent of the nation's schools offer some form of Bible study. But the Georgia law is the first to set statewide guidelines and earmark public dollars for a Bible course. Five other states are considering similar measures. Georgia's school board has until February 2007 to decide how the courses should be taught, and forces on both sides of the issue are bracing for a messy battle.

In the past, school Bible lessons were informal. Now two groups with national influence and powerful backers are offering states comprehensive curricula. Last fall the nonprofit Bible Literacy Project published "The Bible and Its Influences," a textbook endorsed by moderate Christian and Jewish groups. So far, 30 schools are teaching the pilot program, and the group says 800 schools have shown interest. Meanwhile, the National Council for Bible Curriculum in Public Schools, backed by a long list of conservative evangelicals, including Pat Robertson, says its curriculum is already taught in 353 school districts. However, if Georgia opts for either program it will be the first time that a state has officially adopted a Bible curriculum. "You can't turn a public-school classroom into a Sunday-school classroom," says Dan Quinn, spokesman for the Texas Freedom Network, a watchdog group that commissioned a report on the council curriculum. The study, written by Mark Chancey of Southern Methodist University, says that the program teaches the Bible from a primarily conservative Protestant view. The council says its approach is constitutional. Just in case, it offers legal aid to districts that teach it. State Sen. Tommie Williams, one of the Georgia bill's authors, used the council's curriculum as a guide when drafting his proposal. "We simply have to teach 'This is what happened�make your own judgments'," he says.

Whatever the Georgia state school board decides, observers predict a flurry of lawsuits. And Georgia teachers will once again find themselves in the cultural cross-fire.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/12440797/site/newsweek/



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webtaz99
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PostMon Apr 24, 2006 7:02 am    

This will not stand. It is so blantantly unConstitutional that I can't see why it was signed into law. School property, teachers, and custodial personnel are provided by government money, and therefore cannot be used for religious purposes.

I don't get this. Bible classes can be held at churches, which are supported by their congregations and other private sources, or at any other private forum. Why do they need to be held at schools?



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Lord Borg
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PostMon Apr 24, 2006 2:21 pm    

After the battles with removing the ten commandments from a court room, christmas trees being called a "Holiday" tree, the Easter bunny being called "Spring BUnny" they do this? pretty stupid...

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Captain Dappet
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PostMon Apr 24, 2006 2:22 pm    

Hah. Americans. ^^

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Starbuck
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PostMon Apr 24, 2006 4:12 pm    

Seperation of church and state means that they cannot FORCE you to learn about a religion or make laws based upon a religion. The class will most likely be an elective. I have a zero hour bible study class. Its fine. Whats the huge fuss, yes... its a public school... and no one is forcing the students to take it.

and how is it unconsitutional, taz?


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Theresa
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PostMon Apr 24, 2006 9:59 pm    

Starbuck wrote:
learn about a religion or make laws based upon a religion. The class will most likely be an elective. I have a zero hour bible study class. Its fine. Whats the huge fuss, yes... its a public school... and no one is forcing the students to take it.

and how is it unconsitutional, taz?



Exactly. Go Kitey.



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webtaz99
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PostTue Apr 25, 2006 9:13 am    

Even if no one forces a student to take the class, the class is using government-supplied buildings and personnel who are paid for by taxes. This forces the tax payers to support a religion. Also, I don't remember having any religious questions in any tests I took in school (with the possible exception of history classes).

And as I pointed out, why should these bible classes be in the school, instead of somewhere else?

This is just another facet of the "religious right" trying to make America a Christian state, just like the "Islamic extremists" trying to make an Islamic state.



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CJ Cregg
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PostTue Apr 25, 2006 9:43 am    

Do Americans have ANY kind of religious class in school?

In the UK kids have to take RE (Religious Education) for the first 3 years of secondary (High) School, but it includes all religions


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teya
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PostTue Apr 25, 2006 11:22 am    

Individual districts can have comparative religion classes (including all religions) but not classes geared toward religious education in one religion.

For those who support this, do you really want to go back to the days when Jewish students were forced to recite the Lord's Prayer, or face suspension?

I got suspended my very first day of kindergarten for refusing. I would suppose some of you would cheer the school's choice to do that.



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Theresa
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PostTue Apr 25, 2006 10:05 pm    

Teya, we don't tolerate others disrespecting you, when we catch it, so why should we tolerate your disrespect? Your last statement served no purpose except for provocation, making it unnecessary.



BTW, originally, like Kitey was saying, the seperation was to protect the church.



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teya
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PostWed Apr 26, 2006 8:25 am    

No disrespect intended, Theresa. It was a simple question. Which you didn't answer, but scolded me for asking.

That's what we had before, and unlike you, I was around to experience it. I was also around for the taunts: "You killed Jesus!"

It's a different side to the equation--and one that I think *is* important.

If these Bible classes would also include comparative studies--for example how Jews interpret the passages in the OT that Christians say point to Jesus as Messiah--then I would be more supportive. But they don't.

Even if a class is supposedly elective, supporting one religion over others is unconstitutional. And how does the child who opts out feel, when that shows the child to be "different" and therefore ostracized--or when that difference makes him a target for conversion among his peers?

The "separation of church and state" was both to protect the church and to protect the public. It works both ways. The Supreme Court ruled on school prayer to protect the minority. Public school Bible classes favor the majority, and if they're mandatory or even strongly suggested and encouraged, trample the right to free religious expression by kids in the minority.

That doesn't belong in public schools.



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Theresa
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PostWed Apr 26, 2006 10:16 am    

Why would I reply to such a statement? Anyone who answered that they'd "cheer the schools decision" is obviously a bigot. Hence the statement that your statement could only lead to provocation. It served no purpose except that. And now, moving on.

Quote:
That's what we had before, and unlike you, I was around to experience it. I was also around for the taunts: "You killed Jesus!"


What do you know, really? About me, or what I've seen, experienced, etc...? Nothing? Yeah, that'd be right. Though, to clarify things for you, since you decided it was ok to make a general statement like that, my mothers parents are two of the most racist, anti-semetic people that I know. I've been witness to some of the things they have said, and done to those they think are inferior. And when I spoke up, I was called a "*beep*/kike lover". By my own grandparents. So sadly, I have had exposure to such ignorance. Perhaps not in the same manner as you, which would make sense, since we are all individuals.

"People fear what they don't know" One of the most obvious examples of this would be the AIDS virus. But once the education started, much of the stupidity went away. (no, I didn't say all or most, so let's not nitpick) People now fear Islam, thinking all Muslims are terrorists. So now people are being educated about Islam. The same thing with homosexuality. The same also applies to Christianity. Education is the only way to overcome racism/bigotry, etc... The school isn't making it mandatory, but they are making it simply available. If there wasn't a call for it, it wouldn't exist. Have a class for every relgion and non religion, it doesn't matter. And I think it'd be stupid to argue about cost, especially since we are continually demanding money for more education. Or is that only for subjects we feel are worthy? If so, each school should only teach reading, writing, mathematics, science and/or history. Instead of forcing 14 year olds to put condoms on fake penises.

Quote:
The "separation of church and state" was both to protect the church and to protect the public. It works both ways. The Supreme Court ruled on school prayer to protect the minority. Public school Bible classes favor the majority, and if they're mandatory or even strongly suggested and encouraged, trample the right to free religious expression by kids in the minority.


You have to like this statement. "Trample the right to free religious expression by kids in the minority" "Protect the minority"
Ok. So what are you doing to the majority by not allowing them to have their classes? Discriminating? According to dictionary.com, yeah.
If the classes were compulsory, I'd see a problem. And I also don't see how those who fail to take the classes will be targeted. Having experience with the youth in my church, the "majority" (Christians), are actually the minority these days. Unless of course you are of the opinion that simply being in America makes you a Christian?



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teya
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PostWed Apr 26, 2006 10:56 am    

Theresa wrote:
What do you know, really? About me, or what I've seen, experienced, etc...? Nothing? Yeah, that'd be right.


You have said that you're not even close to 50. So that means that you weren't alive when organized school prayer was legal.

I was, so, yes, I do have more experience in this situation--where one religion is taught in public schools than you do. And I do have the experience from the other side.

Quote:
I've been witness to some of the things they have said, and done to those they think are inferior. And when I spoke up, I was called a "*beep*/kike lover". By my own grandparents. So sadly, I have had exposure to such ignorance. Perhaps not in the same manner as you, which would make sense, since we are all individuals.


Yeah, well, I was the *target* of people like your grandparents. So, while they called you names, I got beat up and rocks thrown at me. I guess it's the same thing.

Quote:
The same also applies to Christianity. Education is the only way to overcome racism/bigotry, etc...


The only way Bible classes are going to reduce bigotry is if they are taught within a spectrum of beliefs. Jews and Christians use--in part--the same Bible, yet Christians interpret it differently. But how often are Jews told that their tradition and interpretation is *wrong* because there is only One Way to view it?

Frankly, your claim that Christians are discriminated against in the same manner that minorities are is disingenuous. How are they discriminated against? The thing is that Christianity has been mainstream in the past. That Christians aren't getting special privileges (like being able to recite the Lord's Prayer as a school event in the morning) simply puts them into the same category as the rest of us.

Quote:
And I think it'd be stupid to argue about cost, especially since we are continually demanding money for more education. Or is that only for subjects we feel are worthy? If so, each school should only teach reading, writing, mathematics, science and/or history. Instead of forcing 14 year olds to put condoms on fake penises.


Children are allowed to opt-out of sex ed classes, just as you claim non-Christian kids would be able to opt out of Bible class.

Frankly, given the quality of writing and math skills I see in the people I interview for jobs lately, I wish the American schools *would* concentrate on the basics.

Quote:
And I also don't see how those who fail to take the classes will be targeted.


Again, I've experienced it. Children are conformists--they hate standing out, being different from their peers. And children are very good at taunting and excluding those who are different.

Quote:
Having experience with the youth in my church, the "majority" (Christians), are actually the minority these days. Unless of course you are of the opinion that simply being in America makes you a Christian?


No, I'm simply going by polls that indicate that the majority of Americans define themselves as Christian. Whether or not that makes the majority of them Christian according to other Christians isn't for me to say.



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Theresa
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PostWed Apr 26, 2006 11:03 am    

Wow, you totally disregarded lines in my post that would not support what you had to say. Thanks for showing me that you pick and choose, and that there's no point in trying to discuss anything with you,

I got beat up in HS for being Christian. So don't ever tell me there aren't very heavy similarities. And if you continue to make such generalized statements about people, thinking you know more about what they've experienced than they do? Then you, like RM did, will have to do a little refresher in the rules of WN.
And no, you can't "opt out" of a sex ed class. I have the F to prove it.

BTW, your post contradicts itself. If you read it carefully, I'm sure you may find it. And I guess you are including "Sunday Christians". You'd have to be, to say you are using polls. I'm not. I'm talking about real Christians.


Last edited by Theresa on Wed Apr 26, 2006 11:26 am; edited 1 time in total



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Puck
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PostWed Apr 26, 2006 11:23 am    

I would prefer that they did not have this class actually-the primary reason being that I do not trust the government to properly teach this class. My religion is clearly important to me, and although I do like the idea, I do not have faith that the teaching will constantly be theologically true, and truthfully witness the teachings of Christ and the Christian faith.

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Theresa
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PostWed Apr 26, 2006 11:34 am    

Isn't the focus of school to make you think, and to look into things? If everyone is taking what the teacher says as fact, and not thinking about it, we're screwed.


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teya
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PostWed Apr 26, 2006 12:03 pm    

Theresa wrote:
Wow, you totally disregarded lines in my post that would not support what you had to say. Thanks for showing me that you pick and choose, and that there's no point in trying to discuss anything with you,


Um, no, I quoted the lines that I had something to respond to, you know as in "I disagree with *this* point, and this is why." If I didn't quote it, then I didn't have an issue with the point.

And I'll note that you did exactly the same thing in both your posts, but I guess that's different somehow.

Quote:
And no, you can't "opt out" of a sex ed class. I have the F to prove it.


Did you fight that? Because that's illegal--at least in this state. I do realize that education law differs by state, but that would seem a prime issue to fight.

Quote:
BTW, your post contradicts itself. If you read it carefully, I'm sure you may find it.


You complain about me making barbs and generalizations and then you post *this*? Come on! If you want to make a point that I'm being hypocritical, then simply point it out rather than taunting me with my lack of "careful" reading.

Quote:
And I guess you are including "Sunday Christians". You'd have to be, to say you are using polls. I'm not. I'm talking about real Christians.


Theresa, if I were to judge who is Christian and who isn't, I would be doing exactly what I dislike--making a determination of someone else's faith based on my own prejudices.

I leave it up to the Christians to determine who is and isn't. It's not my place to decide that.

I simply take someone at their word--if they identify themselves as Christian, then that's what take them to be.



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Theresa
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PostWed Apr 26, 2006 12:07 pm    

Quote:
Perhaps not in the same manner as you, which would make sense, since we are all individuals.



But hey, take on the role of the victim instead of the survivor. That's up to you.
BTW, I was giving you the opportunity to find the contradiction yourself, if you found that offensive, sorry.

Anyway, I've made my point, and you keep assuming things about me, and it doesn't seem that's going to stop, so I am.



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teya
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PostWed Apr 26, 2006 12:18 pm    

Theresa wrote:
Quote:
Perhaps not in the same manner as you, which would make sense, since we are all individuals.



But hey, take on the role of the victim instead of the survivor. That's up to you.
BTW, I was giving you the opportunity to find the contradiction yourself, if you found that offensive, sorry.

Anyway, I've made my point, and you keep assuming things about me, and it doesn't seem that's going to stop, so I am.


I'm sorry, but I can't make head nor tails of this. You quote yourself and then accuse me of being a victim instead of a survivor.

No, Theresa, I'm a survivor who doesn't think that other kids should have to go through what I did.

Do I dare ask how this is not making assumptions about me?

And you still haven't pointed out the hypocrisy.



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Theresa
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PostWed Apr 26, 2006 12:38 pm    

I do believe the word I used was contradiction?

And I quoted something I said, that you also quoted, that you ignored in your post, Especially since it was rather vital in the context it was in, IMO, at least.
You're focusing on the past, instead of trying to educate those in the future. History repeats itself isn't just a nice little saying, it's a fact. And if we don't learn, we'll just keep doing the same things over and over again. And one of the things we have to learn about is our differences. If schools can teach about sex, sexual orientation, etc..., there is no reason that they can't teach about religion. In most of Britain, RE is mandatory, and apparently they have much less of a problem with hatred and violence than we do. I'm sure that's just a coincidence, though.

But again, as you so graciously pointed out, I'm too young to really know anything, as apparently you must experience something to learn from it. Or that my experiences were some how lesser than yours. (This would be where I got the "victim" from, btw, the continual "it was worse for me" statements). If I were to go with that, then I could support my grandparents hatred of Jews and blacks, given that they are Irish-American. Because, if you know your history, you'd know their story.

"Mainstream" and "majority" are linked. In one post Christianity (Christians) are the majority. In another, they are the "mainstream of the past". Do you see the implied contradiction? But I'm sure that you didn't mean it as such, and I now regret even bringing it up.

So, to make myself clear, again, on where I stand on this issue.
I believe that only through education can racial/religous and other intolerances be stopped. I think by assuming a child will be persecuted for not taking a class, you are borrowing trouble.

"The Bible and Its Influences" This is the name of the class being taught. There are going to be postives and negatives about nearly every religion mentioned, I'd assume. From the curriculum I've been able to view, it doesn't promote Islam, Christianity, Catholocism or Judiasm.



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IntrepidIsMe
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PostWed Apr 26, 2006 2:21 pm    

If the class is taught from a purely non biased standpoint, then I don't think there should be an issue. It's about the Bible, not Christianity or Judaism. Even if you don't follow any faith in particular, you can't deny that the Bible has had an influence on many world events for over a thousand years.

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teya
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PostWed Apr 26, 2006 2:31 pm    

Theresa wrote:
You're focusing on the past, instead of trying to educate those in the future. History repeats itself isn't just a nice little saying, it's a fact. And if we don't learn, we'll just keep doing the same things over and over again.


Exactly. And what I'm seeing is a return to the past--when we weren't studying all religions, just one.

Quote:
And one of the things we have to learn about is our differences.


Again, I totally agree.

It's how that's taught that can be the problem.

Quote:
If schools can teach about sex, sexual orientation, etc..., there is no reason that they can't teach about religion.


In theory, I completely agree. In practice is another thing...

Quote:
But again, as you so graciously pointed out, I'm too young to really know anything, as apparently you must experience something to learn from it. Or that my experiences were some how lesser than yours. (This would be where I got the "victim" from, btw, the continual "it was worse for me" statements).


Again, you're doing exactly what you excoriate me for--putting words in my mouth.

I never said you were too young to know anything. I said that I experienced things back before the Supreme Court ruling that many want overturned (I don't know if you are or are not among them). I'm concerned about history repeating itself because from my perspective, it doesn't look like we've learned a whole lot.



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Seven of Nine
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PostWed Apr 26, 2006 2:38 pm    

Personally, I don't see a problem with Bible classes in schools. We have to have Christian-based assemblies here in state schools, and RE is semi-compulsory from 3-5 to 14 (parents can withdraw their children, but it rarely happens even with kids from other religions).

I learnt about 6 religions in school- Christianity, Judaism, Islam, Hindu, Sikh and Buddist. In my classes were normally representatives from all of those religions other than Buddist. It definitely helped tolerance to know about how other religions worked.

Ignorance breeds fear. I said the Lord's Prayer in assembly during primary school and sung hymns. Some of my favourite songs are hymns I learnt while 8 or 9 years old. Even my Muslim friends enjoyed the hymns, even though they think of Jesus as a prophet, not the son of God. Education is a good thing, and I think Bible classes are a step in the right direction.

From Danni- living in an officially Christian county


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teya
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PostWed Apr 26, 2006 7:09 pm    

Seven of Nine wrote:
I said the Lord's Prayer in assembly during primary school and sung hymns.


I've got no problem with religion classes so long as not just one is represented. Got no problem with songs. As a matter of fact, I go to church on Christmas so I can sing Christmas carols.

The Lord's Prayer is another matter--it's a prayer to the Triune God of the Christians (Father, Son, Holy Spirit) and as such is idolatry to a Jew. To make a child recite that who isn't being raised as a Christian is IMO not right.



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Seven of Nine
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PostThu Apr 27, 2006 1:32 am    

We weren't made to recite it- those of other faiths either said their own prayers, or kept quiet. There were a couple of students who sat out of assembly.

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