Back when I was in elementary, I remember a classmate mentioning the "that's how God made it" line, and the teacher then stating that we could not speak about religion in school. Back then, I did not understand it. Now I do. If we were all the same religion unanimously, I can see where it would be ok. If you want religion taught in the classroom, public school is just not the place. There are private schools just for that. Growing up, I remember going to "CCD" classes after school at the local Catholic Church to deal with all the sacraments, communion, confirmation, etc. Looking back, that seems appropriate. Why would a Jewish kid, for example, need to exposed to all that in a PUBLIC school?
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Originally posted by Nickintex View PostBack when I was in elementary, I remember a classmate mentioning the "that's how God made it" line, and the teacher then stating that we could not speak about religion in school. Back then, I did not understand it. Now I do. If we were all the same religion unanimously, I can see where it would be ok. If you want religion taught in the classroom, public school is just not the place. There are private schools just for that. Growing up, I remember going to "CCD" classes after school at the local Catholic Church to deal with all the sacraments, communion, confirmation, etc. Looking back, that seems appropriate. Why would a Jewish kid, for example, need to exposed to all that in a PUBLIC school?All men are created equal but his choices determine his value and what's in his heart determines his worth.
"Political correctness is a doctrine, fostered by a delusional, illogical minority, and rabidly promoted by an unscrupulous mainstream media, which holds forth the proposition that it is entirely possible to pick up a turd by the clean end"
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I am also a proponent to religion being taught in school not just Christianity but all so we can all understand what each religion teaches to gain a mutual respect. There are many people that dont understand Islam and assume that it breads terrorists but if you actually knew the religion you will realized that Islam has been hijacked by nut jobs in the name of religion.
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Originally posted by Darbex View PostI am also a proponent to religion being taught in school not just Christianity but all so we can all understand what each religion teaches to gain a mutual respect. There are many people that dont understand Islam and assume that it breads terrorists but if you actually knew the religion you will realized that Islam has been hijacked by nut jobs in the name of religion.All men are created equal but his choices determine his value and what's in his heart determines his worth.
"Political correctness is a doctrine, fostered by a delusional, illogical minority, and rabidly promoted by an unscrupulous mainstream media, which holds forth the proposition that it is entirely possible to pick up a turd by the clean end"
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Perhaps it should be noted that Texas accepts very little federal funding of its schools (I think its less than 10% and then, and please correct me if I'm wrong, only those funds for use in specific programs with which it agrees. Whether or not you believe that the Contitution (federal) espouses a "separation of church and state" or not, I don't believe that's necessarily germane to the discussion of teaching religion in Texas public schools. I can understand if you hate religion and want to work toward an agnostic society, but trying to get it into Texas public education by draping yourself in the federal Constitution is disingenuous at best.Charles Jones
http://www.breitbart.tv/obama-dems-i...unders-intent/
A government big enough to give you everything you want is big enough to take away everything you have. --Thomas Jefferson
Guns are responsible for killing people much the way pencils are responsible for misspelling words.
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Let's get one thing straight (excuse the term). I do not hate religion nor am I working toward "agnostic society". My point is that religious teachings do not belong in a public classroom. To me, that is like trying to convert people. If one wants to convert as an individual, that's fine. As you feel that the idea of evolution is being "crammed down people's throats" is wrong, what makes forcing of an individual religion on others via the classroom ok? So if we have Jewish, Muslim, Buddhist, or Shinto children in the classroom, it's the teacher's responsibility to change them over to Christianity? Now, to teach ABOUT RELIGIONS from a historical, or sociological perspective is completely different. Sure, this country was founded on Judeo-Christian priniciples. Who's to say which one is the "correct" Christianity? Whatever happened to religious tolerance?PLECOS SUCK!
https://www.facebook.com/NickInTex1970
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I am not in favor of forcing Christianity to anyone. But I think that in history classes it should be taught why the framers of this nation did what they did and not skirt around the fact that they created this nation on principles that they felt were necessary from Christianity.
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Nick....
It wasn't a specific "you" directed at you personally. It perhaps would have been better if instead of "you" I had said "a person". Regardless of that, an agenda, on both sides, remains. I think that Christians are the only ones being intellectually honest about it because I think a majority of those against creation being taught in the schools do have an anti-religion bias and agenda and you are probably the exception, not the rule.Charles Jones
http://www.breitbart.tv/obama-dems-i...unders-intent/
A government big enough to give you everything you want is big enough to take away everything you have. --Thomas Jefferson
Guns are responsible for killing people much the way pencils are responsible for misspelling words.
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I want to see Nick vs. Chuck Norris :)
Chuck Norris: Bringing the Bible back into schools (WorldNet Daily) You will definitely want to read this entire article at WorldNet Daily. Our good friend Chuck Norris spells out quite clearly how this grass roots effort is taking hold.
Three hundred eighty-two public school districts have voted to implement a course on it.
Over 1,350 schools in 37 states can now offer it as a textbook.
Approximately 190,000 students have already been taught from it as a course curriculum.
I'm talking about the Bible in public school. It's no joke! And I want to help you get a course on it offered in your school district, too.
The Bible is big news!
Over the past few years dozens of news agencies from all over our nation have reported on the re-entry of Bible curriculum back into classrooms.
Just this past week, Time ran a cover story, "Why we should teach the Bible in public school."
Georgia's Legislature approved and is preparing its 180 school districts to offer two literature classes on the Bible.
More than 800 Craig, Colo., residents are petitioning to get an elective class at Moffat County High School on the history and literature of the Bible.
In my own state of Texas, the House Public Education Committee is presently considering requiring the state's 1,700 school districts to offer history and literature courses using the Bible as the primary text.
Liberal attacks on Bible curriculum
Of course, liberal groups are fighting at great expense to keep the Bible from being taught in public classrooms.
The Texas Freedom Network, or TFN, is one of them – a self-admitted adversary of any biblically conservative movement, calling themselves "a mainstream voice to counter the religious right." The TFN, for example, is requesting five unnecessary changes to the Texas bill, which is intended to assure students are taught this classic text:
- Mandate that teachers have appropriate academic qualifications and sufficient training on legal and constitutional issues surrounding instruction about the Bible in public schools.
- Require rigorous, scholarly reviewed textbooks and other curriculum materials for all courses.
- Include strong and specific language that protects the religious freedom of students and their families by barring the use of Bible classes to evangelize or promote personal religious perspectives.
- Require the Texas Education Agency to regularly monitor and report on the content of public school Bible courses to ensure that they are academically and legally appropriate.
- Continue to allow districts the option to offer – or not offer – such courses.
Much more subtle than the TFN are the liberal ''compromises'' being offered by such individuals as Charles Haynes, the head of the Freedom Forum First Amendment Center, who purports to be a helper ''for schools and communities [to] find common ground on conflicts involving religion and values in public schools.'' Haynes' address of this issue remains suspect due to his continued track record of pushing a very pro-liberal platform – something that would make any card-carrying member of the ACLU proud. His conflict of interest also lies in the self-promotion of a textbook, ''The Bible and its influence,'' which he has partnered in developing and marketing to public schools.
Groups like TFN, or masked secular progressives like Charles Haynes, are offering a paranoid and polemic reaction to protect children from being preached at with the Scriptures. In the end, however, if they have their way, they will inadvertently prohibit the children of our land from learning about the one sacred text that has influenced more spheres in our nation than any other. Even more, they are fighting against the very positions and purposes for which our Founding Fathers raised up this country.
The Word from your Founding Fathers
Anyone who has studied early American history knows that the Bible has always been embedded throughout our culture, from classrooms to congressional halls. This was especially the case in the origins of our nation.
A study by the American Political Science Review on the political documents of the founding era, which was from 1760-1805, discovered that 94 percent of the period's documents were based on the Bible, with 34 percent of the contents being direct citations from the Bible. The Scripture was the bedrock and blueprint of our Declaration of Independence, our Constitution, academic arenas and heritage until the last quarter of a century.
Citing a few of our Founding Fathers, the NCBCPS website notes:
"The Bible is a book worth more than all the other books that were ever printed." – Patrick HenryIf men like Jefferson believed in biblical education, it is not difficult to understand why liberal groups like TFN are losing the battle to prohibit the Bible and its influence on Western civilization from being taught in public schools. Try as they might, they will succumb to a force far bigger than themselves.
"It is impossible to enslave mentally or socially a Bible reading people. The principles of the Bible are the groundwork of human freedom." – Horace Greeley
"I have always said, and will always say, that studious perusal of the sacred volume will make us better citizens." – Thomas Jefferson
While president of the United States, Thomas Jefferson was elected the first president of the Washington, D.C., public school board, which used the Bible as a reading text in the classroom.
Gena and I ponder and pray through many requests to endorse certain causes and products, but it took us only a few minutes to decide to support and even join the National Council on Bible Curriculum in Public Schools, or NCBCPS.
NCBCPS's course helps students understand the Bible's influence and impact on history, literature, our legal and educational systems, as well as art, archaeology and other parts of civilization. In this elective class, students are required to read through their textbook – the Bible.
Unknown to most, it's legal and our constitutional right to be taught the Bible in public schools!
That is why, from California and Alaska to Pennsylvania and Florida, 93 percent of boards approached with NCBCPS's Bible curriculum have voted to implement it.
You can preview some of the curriculum or the teacher's guide at their website.
To learn how anyone can help their local school board to implement Bible curriculum, please write or call NCBCPS at the contact information below.
For a contribution of any size, a starter package with a step-by-step guide, all legal data necessary to satisfy the questions of school board members, letters from school districts that have implemented it, the table of contents of the Bible curriculum, and other NCBCPS information will be sent to you immediately.All men are created equal but his choices determine his value and what's in his heart determines his worth.
"Political correctness is a doctrine, fostered by a delusional, illogical minority, and rabidly promoted by an unscrupulous mainstream media, which holds forth the proposition that it is entirely possible to pick up a turd by the clean end"
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- Mandate that teachers have appropriate academic qualifications and sufficient training on legal and constitutional issues surrounding instruction about the Bible in public schools.
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I'd love to see how that would fly at say, Bellaire High School, where a huge percentage of the students are from Jewish backgrounds. This is my point.PLECOS SUCK!
https://www.facebook.com/NickInTex1970
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Ok, let's just say, ok, the public schools are gonna teach the bible and Christianity (too bad for the Jewish students). So, whose version are they supposed to teach? Catholic? Southern Baptist? Mormon? Episcopalian? Lutheran? Pentecostal?
Get the point?PLECOS SUCK!
https://www.facebook.com/NickInTex1970
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Originally posted by Nickintex View PostOk, let's just say, ok, the public schools are gonna teach the bible and Christianity (too bad for the Jewish students). So, whose version are they supposed to teach? Catholic? Southern Baptist? Mormon? Episcopalian? Lutheran? Pentecostal?
Get the point?
The error you are making nick is in mixing the Bible and Christianity with Churches and denomination. Teaching the Bible does not = Teaching religionAll men are created equal but his choices determine his value and what's in his heart determines his worth.
"Political correctness is a doctrine, fostered by a delusional, illogical minority, and rabidly promoted by an unscrupulous mainstream media, which holds forth the proposition that it is entirely possible to pick up a turd by the clean end"
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Originally posted by Nickintex View PostI'd love to see how that would fly at say, Bellaire High School, where a huge percentage of the students are from Jewish backgrounds. This is my point.All men are created equal but his choices determine his value and what's in his heart determines his worth.
"Political correctness is a doctrine, fostered by a delusional, illogical minority, and rabidly promoted by an unscrupulous mainstream media, which holds forth the proposition that it is entirely possible to pick up a turd by the clean end"
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I also find it ironic that in the name of "Diversity and Tolerance" people are so intolerant of the diversity provided by the inclusion in school curriculum of the principals that this country was founded on.All men are created equal but his choices determine his value and what's in his heart determines his worth.
"Political correctness is a doctrine, fostered by a delusional, illogical minority, and rabidly promoted by an unscrupulous mainstream media, which holds forth the proposition that it is entirely possible to pick up a turd by the clean end"
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