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The April 2 issue of Time magazine carries the cover story entitled “The Case for Teaching the Bible. The article is now a week old, but deals with a very important, noteworthy topic that I believe will increase in its significant in the years to come. Thank you, David Larson, for sharing it.
In this article, Writer David Van Biema asks, “Should the Holy Book be on the public-school menu? Yes. It’s the bedrock of Western culture. And it’s constitutional—as long as we teach but don’t preach it.” Here’s a little excerpt:
“Stephen Prothero, chair of the Boston University religion department, whose new book, Religious Literacy (Harper SanFrancisco), presents a compelling argument for Bible-literacy courses: “In the late ’70s, [students] knew nothing about religion, and it didn’t matter. But then religion rushed into the public square. What purpose could it possibly serve for citizens to be ignorant of all that?” The “new consensus” for secular Bible study argues that knowledge of it is essential to being a full-fledged, well-rounded citizen….
Is it constitutional?
TOWARD THE BEGINNING OF THE COURT’S string of school-secularization cases, the most eloquent language preserving the neutral study of religion was probably Justice Robert Jackson’s concurring opinion in the 1948 case McCollum v. Board of Education: “One can hardly respect the system of education that would leave the student wholly ignorant of the currents of religious thought that move the world society for … which he is being prepared,” Jackson wrote, and warned that putting all references to God off limits would leave public education “in shreds.” In the 1963 Schempp decision, the exemption for secular study of Scripture was explicit and in the majority opinion: “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,” wrote Justice Tom C. Clark. Justice Arthur Goldberg contributed a helpful distinction between “the teaching of religion” (bad) and “teaching about religion” (good). Citing these and subsequent cases, Marc Stern, general counsel for the American Jewish Congress, says, “It is beyond question that it is possible to teach a course about the Bible that is constitutional.” For over a decade, he says, any legal challenges to school Bible courses have focused not on the general principle but on whether the course in question was sufficiently neutral in its approach.”