Column by Jeannie Babb: Christians should be the loudest voice
Jun 26, 2012 | 2136 views | 4 4 comments | 6 6 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Jeannie Babb
Jeannie Babb
slideshow
There are some things I will never understand –and I don’t just mean bacon-scented air freshener.

I do not understand why some parents want government schools involved in teaching their children to pray and read the Bible, when they do not trust government schools with something as simple as sex education. If parents are so fearful that public school teachers might veer from science to instill the wrong values in sex education classes, why in the world would they want those same people deciding why 1 Timothy 2 says the woman will be saved through childbearing?

Nor do I understand why it is Christian parents clamoring for prayer and Bible teaching in school. “Mere Christianity” as C. S. Lewis termed it, does not exist. The problem of an imagined consensus is belied by the fact that there is a church on every corner. All of these churches will tell you they teach the truth of the Bible, yet no two can agree on its interpretation. Their diversity is revealed not only in large denominations (Baptist, Methodist, Catholic, Church of God) but the fact that each of these divisions is further divided (Independent Baptist, Southern Baptist, Cooperative Baptist, Missionary Baptist, Primitive Baptist, etc.)

As a Christian, I don’t even understand how this imagined goal of “putting the Bible back in school” would work. Parents could not even agree on which version. King James 1611? New International? With or without gender inclusive language? I would want them to use the New Revised Standard Version with Apocrypha, but I suspect we would never reach consensus. If we ever agree on the Bible to use, who gets to decide how the readings are interpreted? Anyone who says Scripture needs no interpretation either has not read the Bible or has not understood its contents.

I wonder if these particular parents just have not thought enough about the implications of handing religious training over to the government. They may live in a fantasy world that imagines everyone belongs to their church, or at least should. They may fantasize that it is their version of the Bible being read, their interpretation of it being taught, and their formulaic prayer wafting over the PA system. I invite them to stop and ask themselves, what if it isn’t my Jesus being preached?

Individuals can pray any time they want, but I don’t know what sort of public prayer would be acceptable for public schools. Do Baptists mind if their children are taught to pray in tongues? Will Methodists be pleased to hear their children pray “Hail Mary, full of grace?” Is it all right with these parents if the teacher asks the children to kneel toward Mecca? It seems to me Christian parents should be the loudest voices demanding freedom of religion – which means keeping religious training in homes and churches and private religious schools, out of the government’s control.

Jeannie Babb is a Ringgold native. You can find her on Facebook or pedaling a neon green bike through the Sewanee fog to the School of Theology, black academic gown billowing behind like a sail. Send email to taylojb1@sewanee.edu.

Comments
(4)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
lfeisshort
|
June 28, 2012
I would not want a public school teacher that could be an atheists teaching any student about the Bible.
classicliberal2
|
June 28, 2012
...and that kind of bigotry is fairly common, and one of the reasons these things are generally not taught in public schools.
classicliberal2
|
June 27, 2012
Brief but solid. I've always found it rather remarkable that the reactionaries who cloak their politics under the "Christian" label demand government-endorsed prayers in school, as the practice of praying as that sort of spectacle is explicitly condemned by Jesus himself.

It's also worth noting that none of the reactionaries who beat these particular drums would stand for a serious bible study in public schools, either. You mention the Timothys; a real bible study would note that those are almost certainly 2nd-century forgeries, just as are at least 4 other (and maybe more) writings canonized on the basis of being Pauline, but not actually Pauline. Start pointing out things like the copious contradictions in the texts, and the reactionaries would quickly decide this whole bible study thing had worn out its welcome.

The shame of the widespread contempt for religious liberty among reactionaries is that it was Christians--specifically, Roger Williams and his followers--who first put into practice the idea, and did so on this very continent. It was a grand experiment, later made a part of the foundation of the modern United States, and is one of the greatest gifts the U.S. ever gave the world, yet, disgracefully, they would, with great enthusiasm, drag it into disrepute and contemptuously abandon it. Such a world, such a world.
maureenkj
|
June 26, 2012
Just found your columns - Nice.
Postings are not edited and are the responsibility of the author. You agree not to post comments that are abusive, threatening or obscene. Postings may be removed at our discretion.