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In reply to the discussion: How Much Religeon Should Be Discussed In Our Public Schools? [View all]Drahthaardogs
(6,843 posts)250. I agree.
And if the teacher said "To spread the Good News" I would have a fit.
And if they said,"We are building the foundation of understanding for the Crusades, then the Reformation, Enlightenment, and Renaissance, and this context will allow the student to not only understand the "what" happened but also the "why"
I would say, "ah, okay"
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If you're teaching Bible, you shouldn't be teaching in a public school
mountain grammy
Oct 2017
#168
Didn't they just find Peter's bones AGAIN? Like, they've found them a couple of times.
VermontKevin
Oct 2017
#185
"Pilates" should never have existed, but "Pilate" was only disputed by those who never read Philo
VermontKevin
Oct 2017
#217
No part of Medieval history turned on knowing the first important sacrament
marylandblue
Oct 2017
#24
My original comment: "no part of medieval history turns on knowing the first important sacrament."
marylandblue
Oct 2017
#243
Addressing religion in a historical context is one thing, indoctrination is another.
Irish_Dem
Oct 2017
#105
the Mormons were not a majority in my hometown, they kept it on the down low.
Thomas Hurt
Oct 2017
#66
Keep in mind the curricula is set by the state and the school district n/t
TexasBushwhacker
Oct 2017
#48
I had the same initial first reaction, but then I reconsidered and think it should only
smirkymonkey
Oct 2017
#125
I was the same way. I couldn't "get" history just by lectures. It took art history to make sense
Coventina
Oct 2017
#107
Well, I would say, Christianity was THE dominating force in the European Middle Ages.
Coventina
Oct 2017
#108
Fine to provide a general outline of all the European religions at the time.
lagomorph777
Oct 2017
#51
How about they watch Monty Python and the Holy Grail and check it off the list?
Not Ruth
Oct 2017
#77
A section of history class dealing briefly with the history of religion in the US
guillaumeb
Oct 2017
#84
IMO, enough to understand the basic allusions in the art and literature they study. Same with
WinkyDink
Oct 2017
#148
Christians beleive Christ rose from the dead. What holiday celebrates that? Would have been a more
brewens
Oct 2017
#153
A certain amount of understanding Christianity and the Catholic Church is crucial for understanding
cemaphonic
Oct 2017
#154
It's pretty tough to understand European history without knowing something
The Velveteen Ocelot
Oct 2017
#157
the golden rule & the beatitudes. and render unto caesar what is his. nothing else.
pansypoo53219
Oct 2017
#186
I'm a former catholic and don't have an issue with those questions. It sounds like they are getting
SweetieD
Oct 2017
#201
The question isnt how much religion should be discussed in public schools,
J_William_Ryan
Oct 2017
#213
I don't think it should be allowed. It establishes Christianity as the National religion
Demsrule86
Oct 2017
#247