- Feb 10, 2013
- 32,872
- 19,352
- 29
- Country
- United States
- Gender
- Male
- Faith
- Catholic
- Marital Status
- Celibate
- Politics
- US-Republican
Thanks for the infoTeaching the Bible as literature in public schools is allowed under the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. Although the Supreme Court ruled that students could not be forced to study the Bible for religious purposes, they are allowed to study the Bible as they would literature in order to understand its influence, language, and artistic legacy. This study must be strictly academic, not devotional. Teaching the Bible "as literature" does not imply that the Bible is not factual. This description merely indicates that selections from the Bible will be studied as any other text would be in an English course.
Will be interesting to see how it is incorporated (taught) ... no doubt it will be challenged.
Religion most certainly does drive world views to a high degree and those vary ... so teaching the differences of those views is important to know because it most definitely affects what is going on in the world. It does and has impact(s) a lot of what goes on in the world.
How this may be done without weighing the beliefs one way or another remains to be seen ... that is ... not teaching a particular bias one way or another.
The creation/verses evolution beliefs will come into play as well.
Religion spans a wide range of topics .... no doubt it is a difficult challenge to teach without a bias one way or another.
We will see I guess.
Upvote
0