REBUTTAL -- God is alive and well in public schools
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Steve Smith, please, for God’s sake, do a little homework before you
spout off. I realize you are a columnist, and part of your job is to stir
up the community pot a little and force us to think.
You do a very good job in that regard, if you’ll pardon the
understatement. But you’re also a journalist, and journalists have a
moral responsibility to do research and get the facts straight.
The Supreme Court did not ban God or the mention of God in school.
I am a high school history teacher and my state-approved textbooks
have numerous chapters on God and religion. The Christian Club meets and
prays regularly on our campus, and many of our students are active
members of various church youth groups.
In the religion unit I teach to my ninth-graders, they read excerpts
from Genesis, the New Testament, as well as excerpts from the Koran and
the Bhagavad Gita.
We discuss prayer in class a great deal. I tell my students that they
are free to pray at any time, but that I will not impose my beliefs on
them. Their beliefs are sacred to them, and I have no business trying to
change them. What the Supreme Court said is that I cannot impose my
particular style of prayer on them.
I cannot force them to recite Buddhist prayers, Hindu prayers or
Christian prayers. I cannot tell them they must pray my way, or even
worse, the government’s way. I certainly cannot force them to pray that
God will help them win a football game, even if the majority of teenagers
voted on it. This would be demeaning to our constitution and to God.
You should read a little history, Steve. It will make you a better
writer. Our founding fathers grew up in an era where millions of people
had been slaughtered in the name of some religious belief, where
governments intent on forcing people to believe and pray a certain way
were willing to kill and maim to force religious conformity.
Thomas Jefferson and those other brilliant men were determined that
that would never happen in our country. They realized, as you should,
that belief is a personal choice and should never be dictated in any way
by a government.
On a personal note, I grew up in this area long before Smith was born,
in an era when prayer was forced on us in school. When I was in fourth
grade, my well-intentioned teacher made us stand up one day and recite
the Lord’s Prayer.
I don’t know if there were any Jewish children in my class; Jews and
other non-Christians kept a very low profile in that “enlightened” era.
But I did find out on that day that the version I had learned in Catholic
religion classes did not exactly match the majority Protestant version.
As I blurted out the words I had been taught, I suddenly realized that
the rest of the kids were staring at me. From then on, I and a few others
were referred to as the “cat-lickers.”
Is this what Smith wants? Another way to divide us?
We are a great country because we allow religious freedom. Ironically,
because we do not force a particular religion or form of prayer on our
citizens or on our students, we are a very religious nation.
I believe we have the highest ratio of church attendance of any major
country in the world because people feel free to worship as they choose.
Don’t change that. Please don’t force me to make my students pray a
certain way.
God is alive and well in public school. But he may not be a football
fan.
JOE ROBINSON
History teacher
Newport Harbor High School
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