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Ecurb wrote:Sorry I misunderstood what you wrote/ Will try harder
Why would you possibly think I was scorning the Constitution when, in fact, I was praising it? In fact, I was agreeing with Xris (Surprise! Surprise!) that teaching religion with public funds is an abuse of public funding, and showing how it is disallowed here in the States.
I will say this -- Americans who revere the Constitution as infallible -- like Fundamentalists who revere the scriptures as infallible -- are dogmatic.
Xris wrote:Sorry but I still believe it is fundamentally wrong that any state funded school should attempt to teach children religion as a fact. Yes I have actively opposed church schools but it has had no effect.Many things (including state-funded schools teaching religion) that are "fundamentally wrong" nonetheless fail to qualify as "child abuse". I agree that state funded schools shouldn't preach religion. However, one component of a liberal education is to UNDERTSTAND the basic precepts of World Religions, and to have some familiarity with their literature and rituals. Are we to avoid teaching The Iliad and the Odyssey because of the divine interventions that occur in them?
Ecurb wrote:Ecurb,
Many things (including state-funded schools teaching religion) that are "fundamentally wrong" nonetheless fail to qualify as "child abuse". I agree that state funded schools shouldn't preach religion. However, one component of a liberal education is to UNDERTSTAND the basic precepts of World Religions, and to have some familiarity with their literature and rituals. Are we to avoid teaching The Iliad and the Odyssey because of the divine interventions that occur in them?
In many Universities (both public and private) here in the States, there is a "Religion Department". As an academic subject, “Religion” (sonetimes called "Comparative Religion") is one of the Humanities – like Literature, Philosophy, History, and Languages. Students study it like they study these other seminal works of man. A department for training priests or ministers would be a “Theology” department.
One more thing: I think you’re over-exaggerating the problem, Xris. I’m a father myself. Sit down with your children and say, “We’re sending you to the church school because in many ways it offers you the best available education. Of course, some people – including your teachers – think that the Bible is historically accurate and that Jesus died on the cross to save us from our sins. In the past, most people believed this. Today, many still do – but most educated people think that while there may be some historical truth in some biblical stories, many have been invented or exaggerated, and “God” is a human invention. In fact, that’s what I think. You – as you get older – can decide for yourself. In either case, however, it’s good to learn about Christianity, because it has been so influential to Western thought and culture, and in order to understand ourselves and how we think, we must understand what has influenced us to think that way.”
What’s so hard about that?
Xris wrote:Sorry but I still believe it is fundamentally wrong that any state funded school should attempt to teach children religion as a fact. Yes I have actively opposed church schools but it has had no effect.The only religious lesson that I remember in the state school I went to, Ewell County Secondary School, she tried to explain to us that this aspect of walking on water could have come from there being a storm and the fishermen unable to distinguish whether he was on solid ground or not.
Ecurb wrote:You are offering two distinct opinions, Xris. You say, "Schools for the young should not be allowed to teach faith." This is very different from saying, "Publicly funded schools for the young should not be allowed to teach faith." (I'm not sure what "faith" is, but I assume Xris means "religious dogma".)How and when did I advocate book burning or the taking away of free speech? When did I say parents should be stopped from sending their children to church? I may not approve of their actions but I have not advocated the removal of parental responsibility. All I have requested that state funded faith schools should not teach religion as a certainty. When a five year old comes home telling their parents "god loves me" that is abuse. It is not for the parent to counter the insidious nature of religous indoctrination in primary schooling.
In the first case you are advocating censorship, book burning, and the abridgement of free speech. In the second, you are arguing for a particular governmental policy. Of course if you consider teaching religion to young children “child abuse”, your advocacy of censorship and book-banning makes sense. My opinion, though, is that the censorship and anti-intellectualism you advocate are evil in principle. What gives you the right to “not allow” parents to send their children to church on Sunday for religious instruction?
Ecurb wrote:You are offering two distinct opinions, Xris. You say, "Schools for the young should not be allowed to teach faith." This is very different from saying, "Publicly funded schools for the young should not be allowed to teach faith." (I'm not sure what "faith" is, but I assume Xris means "religious dogma".)Where does Xris advocate book burning? I suppose Ecurb means this metaphorically. But does Ecurb then recommend that parents allow a small child to look at anything and everything? Or does Ecurb not rather recommend that parents are careful to exclude harmful material and wrong ideas from a small child?
In the first case you are advocating censorship, book burning, and the abridgement of free speech. In the second, you are arguing for a particular governmental policy. Of course if you consider teaching religion to young children “child abuse”, your advocacy of censorship and book-banning makes sense. My opinion, though, is that the censorship and anti-intellectualism you advocate are evil in principle. What gives you the right to “not allow” parents to send their children to church on Sunday for religious instruction?
What gives you the right to “not allow” parents to send their children to church on Sunday for religious instructionTo begin with, the children possibly might have better things to educate themselves with on Sunday. However, if the children are so deprived that Sunday School is better than petty crime, or being beaten by relatives, or starved of their breakfasts, then by all means let them be sent to Sunday School. I understand that in the poorer parts of West Africa churches and mosques give schools and hospitals that would otherwise be not there. West Africans however are often pragmatic folk who can take or leave what suits them.In America and Britain where religions are not the only providers of essential services the population as a whole including parents should be educated enough to tell nonsense from sense.
Xris wrote: How and when did I advocate book burning or the taking away of free speech? When did I say parents should be stopped from sending their children to church? I may not approve of their actions but I have not advocated the removal of parental responsibility. All I have requested that state funded faith schools should not teach religion as a certainty. When a five year old comes home telling their parents "god loves me" that is abuse. It is not for the parent to counter the insidious nature of religous indoctrination in primary schooling.Xris said, "Schools for the young should not be allowed to teach faith." Of course it is possible that he didn't mean what he said. But Sunday School ("Church School" in England, Xris) is a school for the young, and if, in fact, it were not allowed to teach faith that would constitute censorship and the elimination of free speech.
Jjpregler wrote:Xris: were you forced to send your child to a church school? I mean, under the threat of punishment form the state you wre mandated to have to send your child there? You had choices. You could have placed your child in a different school Yet, you placed your child ina church school then cried at the expected results of placing your child ina church school.If the only schools in your area are church schools what choice have we? Many villages only have one primary church school. I have no objections to church schools but i do object to my taxes funding them without my children having an alternative secular education. You in the US may not suffer this disgraceful situation but we are not that fortunate. As for my ability at the time to pay for private education? you are joking ?
In the US, state schools are not allowed to teach religion, but that is based on our constitutional freedom of religious choice and state funded school teaching religion is a way of the state "sponsoring" one religion over another which is not allowed. Obviously, you have different laws there that allows it, but your children were not forced into that single educational school with no other choices. You may have had reasons to not choose another school, maybe even as simply as budget, but you still did not choose to make any sacrifices to get your child to another school, inter alia you chose to send your child to the church school.
Xris wrote:You are constantly misquoting me. I have never said a parent should be stopped from sending their child to Sunday school. I have never insinuated that any book should be burnt or destroyed. You appear intent on exaggerating anything I have said. Once more for the record, I oppose faith schools obtaining public funding, if those schools insist on educating the young into a dogmatic belief system. If a child is found crying, to then say god loves them is an even sicker form of abuse. Do you honestly believe I we can not comfort a child without evoking the power of an invented god. Those who request or require their children to be religiously indoctrinated should pay for that privilege and find a private school to their needs.You have stated throughout this thread that "indoctrinating" children with religious beliefs constitutes "child abuse". Now you say that you "never said a parent should be stopped from sending their child to Sunday school."
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