I have offered my thoughts about appropriate holiday greetings and religous misunderstanding and religious hyperbole. So based upon these items you probably think that you know exactly what I am going to say about using a high school textbook to teach the bible in public school.
Well, this may surprise you but based upon my understanding of this book I am not automatically opposed to it. If it adheres to the description in the story I linked to I would be open to it.
"Now, a new textbook for high school students aims to fill a gap by teaching the Bible, both the Old and New Testaments, in a non-sectarian, nonreligious way as a central document of Western civilization with a vast influence on its literature, art, culture and politics."However I am skeptical about the schools and instructors within the schools. Specifically I am concerned that there will be teachers who deviate from the curriculum and teach the course as in a religous manner and that is unacceptable to me.
From the perspective of understanding the influence of it on literature, on art, on society in general I can see a purpose in such a course. But in the end I am greatly troubled by the potential for misuse and abuse and this may be yet another time where the smartest and most judicious move would be to err on the side of safety and not teach this course in public schools.
2 comments:
The Bible is religion. Religion should be taught at home or in shul/church.
I am so glad that in PA the entire school board that was pushing ID was voted out.
I'd be curious as to which course would have this as its subject mattter. What would be left out in a history class or literature class(or biology class, heh)so that the Bible could be taught to such an extent that an entire text book would be needed for it? And a religion class? Doesn't sound like the kind of text for a religion class. Readin' and Writin' and 'Rithmetic in the public schools please. Save the Bible as literature courses for college.
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