Reasons or just Christian Myths?
Here’s my response to some reasons that were given supporting religious instruction classes by an Anglican reverend. I believe that they don’t hold up to scrutiny and are actually just popular Christian myths!
Here’s my response to some reasons that were given supporting religious instruction classes by an Anglican reverend. I believe that they don’t hold up to scrutiny and are actually just popular Christian myths!
Reverend Christine got back to me again to expand on her reasoning for supporting bible in schools. I’d heard most of these before but I […]
This is a speech to the board of trustees by Pippa Jinks, whose children attend Riverhead School. The comparisons she makes with racial segregation and […]
Pippa’s experience sounds very similar to my own. She was prepared to speak up for what she thought was right and managed to initiate some change. But without enough open parental support for her stand, the board limited what they were prepared to do.
There’s a common response from pro-religious instruction people that the classes “never did me any harm” or “what harm do they do?”. Aside from being a very self-centred view that because they don’t think they do any harm, therefore no harm is done, it’s simply not true.
I think that children from other religions (Islam in this case) often have it a lot harder than kids that simply opt-out without an apparent reason. I am certainly concerned that the stand I have taken against these classes will impact my daughter. If it does, I will certainly be knocking on some doors.
This story shows how religious bias from school staff can affect kids quite badly. In this case, staff at a small school were also promoting religious beliefs and mistreating children in private as well as in front of the class.
This is a too-common example of what segregating children based on religious beliefs does. It creates an us-and-them mentality with the kids being taught faith ending up with a sense of superiority.
The Churches Education Commission has been contacting congregations all over the country asking their parishioners to pray and write to the Ministry of Education and their MP’s to encourage them to support their case for retaining Bible in Schools classes. I thought I would contact one of them and see what they thought!
Whenever the topic of Bible in Schools comes up on facebook, there’s a lot of supporters who have opinions about why bible classes are important and how the world will end if it’s taken out because our kids will turn to the dark side and the gates of hell will open. But do any of their reasons hold water?
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