I have long thought
that we do not know how to talk about
religion in public because we never talk
about it in the classroom. Education is
not just about learning things. It is also
about learning how to talk about those
things that matter most to us.
Unfortunately, many
teachers and school administrators are
nervous about religion in the classroom.
Schools can deal with virtually any topic
these days, from race to sexual
orientation, but somehow religion seems
problematic. Religion is too passionate,
too personal, and too controversial. Yet
many of our students have their first
contact with education in religious
institutions, and religion serves as one
of their primary motivations to learn in
the first place. Does it make sense to ask
them to leave religion at the door when
they enter the world of secular education?
There is a growing
consensus that religion needs to be
returned to the schools, but there is much
less agreement on how to accomplish this
goal. There is much talk about character
education, but is figuring out morality
any easier than just studying religion
more directly? And does it really do
justice to religion to treat it as a
supporting actor in a morality play? Why
not just teach the Bible, church history,
and world religions?
Well, why not? For
starters, liberals and conservatives both
have their suspicions about religion
courses in high schools. Liberals fear any
break down in the so-called wall of
separation between church and state.
Conservatives fear that religion courses
will reinforce notions of cultural
relativism that pervade much of the
academic ethos.
Both groups are
probably right to be skeptical about the
ability of most teachers to handle the
topic of religion. Teachers rarely have
any training in teaching religion. Reform,
then, must come from schools of education.
Moreover, the media offers little help in
providing models for public discussions of
faith. Many teachers worry about how to
deal with religious passion, and many
educators have a hard time in keeping up
with complex Supreme Court decisions about
religion and education. It is almost as if
educators think you need a therapist and a
lawyer in every religious studies
classroom.
Part of the problem,
too, is that our students today are more
evangelical and outspoken about religion
than in the past. If the best (meaning,
most critical and articulate) students in
the past were the ones who had put
religion aside and were open to everything
while asking skeptical questions, the best
students today are often vigorously and
unapologetically religious. Evangelicalism
has come of age. These students know how
to argue, and they have important things
to say about secular culture. How do you
let them have their say?
The pedagogical
problem lies in attending to both
pluralism and passion in the public
classroom. There have been several
pamphlets and statements released recently
by groups promoting the study of the Bible
in public education, and this is a good
trend. However, they often take the
position that the Bible should be taught
in value neutral ways, avoiding so-called
confessional or theological topics. Thus,
the Bible as Literature is a popular
course for schools that want some, but not
too much, religion in the curriculum.
Opponents of these
courses worry that teaching the Bible in
any classroom will inevitably raise
religious issues that go beyond the study
of literature. They are right. The Bible
is important not just because it has
influenced Western culture, but because it
is a religious text. It is impossible to
separate the historical from the
theological. Even the most skeptical
historians have opinions and assumptions
about religion that influence their work.
It can be useful to teach students that
religion can be talked about in objective
ways, but it would be foolish to ask
students not to be too invested in this
particular text. In no other classroom
would a teacher try to minimize or
diminish student excitement about the
significance of the topic being discussed.
These problems are
difficult, of course, but they are not
unsolvable. In my book, Taking Religion
to School, Christian Theology and Secular
Education (Brazos Press, 2000), I lay
out some principles for their resolution.
Let me summarize that position in three
basic points, which I hope, will initiate
further discussions.
First, teaching and
studying religion is a personal, as well
as intellectual, enterprise. Teachers
should encourage and honor their students'
faith commitments. More than that,
teachers need to be open with students
about their own religious presuppositions.
Students have a right to know what is
shaping the teacher's discourse. And
teachers have an obligation to model for
students the public discussion of issues
that have personal importance. Teachers
can demonstrate for students how intellect
and faith can work together to produce a
public discussion of religion.
Second, religion
classes should privilege Western religious
history. The Bible is the fundamental
document in Western history, and little of
that history can be understood outside of
the trajectory of the religions that were
born from it. Certainly, students need to
know about world religions. But many
conservative Christians will resent a
curriculum that suggests that Eastern
religions are somehow more important than
Western religions. Moreover, most students
today, even if they are devout, know
little about the history of western
religious traditions. That is the amnesia
that education needs to work against the
most, because you must know your own past
before you can adequately understand other
traditions. You also have to know
something about religion to understand
anything about most academic topics. To
know anything about American history, for
example, Judaism and Christianity are
essential subject matter. This material
must be taught in its full complexity, not
just as social and political trends but
also as a history of ideas, where what
people believe makes a difference.
Third, religion
classes should not discount or discredit
the question of truth. A religion class
that values tolerance as an end in itself
will end up valuing nothing at all.
Students cannot be asked to bracket their
beliefs, because one purpose of studying
religion is to help students deepen and
broaden their beliefs. It is tempting in a
religion class to treat all religions and
all religious beliefs as the same. All
religions, say, are about being a morally
good person. Such vapid generalizations
help nobody. Instead, they privilege not
objective truth but a New Age eclecticism
that is hardly above criticism. Doing
justice to religious differences, then, is
one of the hardest but most important
tasks of the religion classroom. Teachers
should let students become involved, let
them argue, but they should also model how
one can hold to a belief and be open to
reformulating it and listening to others
at the same time.
A true pluralism in
education will exist only when those of
faith feel that their positions are being
taken seriously. When conservative
Christians feel alienated from the
educational process, they push for
questionable political goals, like putting
the Ten Commandments on courthouse lawns.
All people of faith should be able to
integrate their beliefs with their
intellectual journeys. Becoming smarter
does not necessarily involve becoming less
religious. In fact, there is a good
argument to be made that one cannot become
fully educated unless one comes to terms
with the moral, spiritual, and
intellectual challenges of religious
faith.
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