Welcome to the MachineIN 1849, WHEN THE organized Protestants of Massachusetts debated whether to back the public school movement, which was being promoted by the Unitarians, they decided in favor of support, but with well-expressed conditions. They wrote:
I don't believe any Christian can doubt that there has been a "full and fair experiment" of public education for the past 150 years and that its fidelity to the religious interests of Christian children has been proven to be decidedly negative. In fact, thousands of Christian parents, without knowledge of what was written in 1849, already have taken their children out of the public schools and either decided to homeschool them or place them in Christian schools. Their responsibilities as Christian parents have led them to make this necessary decision for the sake of their children's well-being. But it is disturbing that most Christians still patronize a system that is undermining the religious beliefs of their children. One wonders what must happen before these parents realize the harm they are doing to their children by keeping them in the government schools. The simple fact is that the present government education system has as its foundation an anti-Christian philosophy known as secular humanism. To confirm the truth of this assertion, read the first and second Humanist Manifesto. The first was written in 1933 by young Unitarian ministers who believed the spiritual power of orthodox religion was in decline and should be replaced by a rational, man-centered, nontheistic religion. They wrote:
Humanism is the only religion in America that has as its purpose and program the reconstitution of the institutions, rituals, and ecclesiastical methods of other religions. This is an overt declaration of war against biblical religion. Forty years later, Humanist Manifesto II stated: "As non-theists, we begin with humans not God, nature not deity. [W]e can discover no divine purpose or providence for the human species.... No deity will save us; we must save ourselves." In the January/February 1983 issue of The Humanist magazine, a young scholar by the name of John J. Dunphy expressed the aim of humanists in education:
The humanist war against Christianity is going on every day in the classrooms of America. But the real battle is being fought in the courtrooms of the nation. In March 1987, U.S. District judge W. Brevard Hand ruled in Smith vs. Board of School commissioners of Mobile County, Alabama that the public school curriculum was based on the tenets of secular humanism, so he ordered humanist textbooks removed from the schools. However, this ruling was overturned by the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which stated that "none of these books convey a message of government approval of secular humanism." In other words, humanists are free to teach their dogma in the public schools as long as the government does not convey a message of approval. But at the same time it is said that the mere inclusion of anything Christian in a public school curriculum automatically implies government approval, and this argument is used to keep Christianity out of the schools. The notion that public schools are neutral when it comes to religion is belied by the strong prejudice against Christianity, as openly expressed by such humanists as Dunphy. This is not neutrality but warfare. Until Christians recognize that government schools are establishments of religion, and that education is fundamentally a religious activity, we shall not be able to deal realistically with our educational crisis. This is the key question for Christian parents: Does educating a child in a public school violate God's commandment in Deuteronomy 6 to raise a child in the love and admonition of the Lord? There is no substitute for a godly education. In place of God, the public schools offer evolution, sex education, death education, multiculturalism, transcendental meditation, situational ethics, drug education, and other humanist teachings. These programs are creating the new nihilists, amoral barbarians that are devastating the fives of thousands of parents. There is hardly a Christian family that has not lost a child to the satanic culture growing in the public school environment. If Christians wish to restore America as a nation under God, they shall have to educate their children in schools that revere Him.
Reprinted from TABLETALK, August, 1999. |