Public School God
Christians shouldn't stake their futures to such a deity
by Joel Belz
EVEN THOUGH AN UPPITY JUDGE IN CLEVELAND RULED
the city's voucher program
illegal and suspended the program, then 72 hours later reversed himself and let some of the
voucher kids go to school, it was bad news. But it wasn't the worst news last week on the
education front.
And the bad news about terrible teacher shortages as New Jersey's public schools tried to
open late in August also wasn't the worst news you could find about education.
Nor was word about a short teachers' strike in Detroit the Worst.
And the bad news that hundreds of schools were having to add expensive X-ray scanning
devices to their already beleaguered budgets--that too was not the worst news you could
have imagined.
The really bad news in education was that something like 45 million American youngsters
headed back peacefully, and without a whimper of protest from them or their families, to
public-school classrooms to be indoctrinated by their government For 35 hours every week
for the coming school year, those children's belief and value systems will be shaped by a
government-imposed agenda.
American public education, to be sure, is either broken or approaching it on several other
fronts. Academically, fiscally, behaviorally, in terms of its facilities, in terms of personnel
shortages, in terms of moral shortages--in all these ways, even die schools that win
awards for outstanding achievement are just getting by. By now, everybody knows it.
But the fundamental breakdown that both precedes and overshadows all these other
disasters is this: If it is wrong for government to run die railroads, the telephone companies,
and the banks--and it is--how is it possibly right for government to take on the much more
delicate and sensitive task of telling our children what they are to think and believe on a
whole host of issues? And if we are concluding, as we seem to be, that the government
should reduce its role in welfare, mail delivery, and perhaps even retirement programs, what
on earth prompts us to think the one task government might still be good at is passing on
our value system to the next generation?
It was Thomas Jefferson, of course, who wrote early on in our nation's history that "To
compel any citizen to provide in taxes for the propagation of that which he disbelieves is
both cruel and tyrannical." But if ever there were a monstrous machine designed to do on a
massive scale exactly what Mr. Jefferson said should never be done, it is the public-school
system.
As such, the public-school movement is a false god. (I take care to distinguish here between
the system itself and the many good people who remain in that system, whether as teachers,
administrators, board members, or supportive families.)
Many folks believe, I know, that the rapid advent of public schooling in the United States
a century ago was one of our main tickets to much that has been good in the 20th century. It is
commonly accepted that the remarkable progress we've enjoyed as a modern people is
somehow rooted in the educational thinking of men like Horace Mann and John Dewey.
But what everyone should keep in mind is that from its earliest days, the public-school idea
was much more a social experiment than it ever was an educational experiment. You do not have to read much of the thinking of
the pioneers in public schooling to know that their great distress was not that Americans
were uneducated (our forbearers could in fact, on average, read better than Americans can
today), but rather that Americans were so fragmented. Geographically, ethnically, racially,
religiously, socially, and economically, we were too diverse a people to satisfy the early
social engineers. They wanted all of us singing from the same sheet of music- And the music
was theirs.
To
be sure, not all of that was bad. The effort almost certainly produced a kind of national
unity we might otherwise have lacked. But it was unity at great cost-and especially so for
Christians. For it was a unity focused increasingly through the years on the assertion that
the God of the Bible was just one among many options in life. When you preach that long
enough, the God with a capital "G" becomes a god with a lower case "g," and then no god at all. Taking His position you will often find the one who
challenged Him in the first place.
So how much more audacious can you get than to set up a system of schools where first you
try to deny God His place, then you step in with a full curriculum of what you think
constitutes truth about life, while always through the whole process you control the court
system that decides what can and cannot be taught in those schools-and whether citizens can
spend any of their educational tax money for any alternatives?
That's why the system is a false god. There may be some who are willing to stake their
futures to such a deity. But Christians should never be among them.
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