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Time Magazine Cover Story Pushes Bigoted Christian Supremacy

Posted by Bruce Wilson at 4:04 PM on March 30, 2007.


Bruce Wilson: World Gets "Non-Theocratic" Time edition, US gets "Bible In Schools"
timecover1
Rest Of World Gets "Newsy" Time Edition, Americans Get Their Own "Theocratic" Version

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[ images: two editions of Time will go out next week. One for Americans, another for everybody else in the World]Time Magazine cover
Is "vibrant access" to the Bible is a Constitutional right of every American school child ? Is ensuring that access is the patriotic duty of every American citizen ? That's one of many claims to be found in next week's issue of Time Magazine. But only Americans will get the dubious privilege of such naked, bigoted expressions of Christian nationalist ideology. Why ? Well, next week people everywhere around the world except in North America will behold an April 2, 2007 edition of Time Magazine issue very different from what Americans will see. In Asian, European, and South Pacific markets next week's Time will feature a cover story image of a menacingly glaring, black turbaned and bearded man alongside a cover story title "Talibanistan". Time seems to feel Americans deserve something else though, and so Time's domestic US April 2, 2007 edition will feature a cover story entitled "Why We Should Teach The Bible In Public School". The story appears to say that Christian right beliefs are the only true expressions of Christianity, that liberal Christians are little more than atheists in disguise, and that all other religious beliefs on Earth are invalid and only Christians can achieve a fully meaningful life. Time's story has vanished 45 million moderate to liberal American Christians from the debate over the Bible in schools but Americans with non-Christian religious and philosophical beliefs, Muslims, Jews, atheists, and so on, fare even worse....

Welcome to America, 2007.

Note to readers: this critique has been through several substantial rewrites, and I've posted a version 2.0 now that contains substantial new material. In version 1.0, I came out swinging, in version 1.1 that you're reading here on Alternet, I toned down the rhetoric and firmed up the analysis. In 2.0 I've pushed that trend much farther along and gone into very specific detail on how Time Magazine's cover story advances Christian nationalist, bigoted ideology that may well be inadvertent but that hardly matters the groups and minorities Time has seemingly excluded from the debate over Bible classes in public schools.

The tale opens in the New Braunfels High School in Oakwood, Texas as teacher Jennifer Kendrick works her students along through the Gospel of Matthew. Kendrick's curriculum is loosely based on the more neutral of the two big national scope Bible course curriculae, "The Bible and It's Influence" that has been endorsed by a broad spectrum of religious scholars from across the religious spectrum and is credited my many as relatively nonpartisan. Kendricks considers the curriculum slanted though, telling Van Biema the curriculum "will bring up Catholicism and mention Gandhi, but you can tell it's written as if I am a Protestant Christian teaching Protestant Christians".

Van Biema sums up his quite favorable impression of Jennifer Kendricks' high school Bible class:

"I could find little to object to here and much to admire. Here was a conservative teacher going way beyond The Bible and Its Influence, but not in a predictable direction. She name-checked the Crusades, avoided faith declarations and treated the Bible as a living document to be pored over rather than blindly accepted. She even managed to fit in other faiths" [emphasis mine]

In what manner did Kendricks fit in other faiths ? Van Biema provides a few details:

"Explaining why Jesus' famous sermon took place on a mount, she reminds the students that Matthew was writing for Jews, and a mount is where Moses received the Ten Commandments. "So, supposedly," she says, "Jesus is the new covenant, the new law, for the Jewish people."

It's impossible to quite tell from the context how to read this, and it might be quite innocuous, but I have to wonder if there are any Jewish students in Kendricks class. Regardless, there's a vast gulf between Dave Van Biema's relatively warm and cuddly version of Bible classes in Texas public schools and political realities in Texas that may soon have a bearing on Bible classes in the Lone Star State.

As I've written up in a separate story, a bill coming up for a vote in the Texas State House would mandate that Texas high schools offer elective Bible courses and teach from a curriculum demonstrated to be baldy, religiously partisan and which promotes a falsified version of American history. Texas State Rep. Warren Chisum's House Bill 1287 may not make its way into law, but Texas has pioneered "Abstinence-Only" sex ed ( or mis-ed as it were )and "Faith Based" prisons and gave America George W. Bush, so there's no good reason for faith in this latest experiment.

[ from

Two Perspectives On Bible Classes In Texas ]

Texas may be the epicenter of aggressive Christian nationalism in the United States (some would credit Oklahoma) and the Lone Star state also functions, in pioneering, developing and testing avante-guard approaches for advancing theocratic programs and legislation, much the same way as California does in pioneering new fashions which then spread out across America.

Last Friday, in a conversation with a representative for the Texas Freedom Network, a nonprofit group that opposes the legislative agenda of the Texas Christian right, TFN Communications Director Dan Quinn told me about a bill, introduced by Texas State Rep. Warren Chisum, that would mandate that Texas public schools offer elective Bible classes and require those classes use the more overtly biased of the two national curriculum for Bible class, from the National Council On Bible Curriculum in Public Schools, an organization whose board members have openly advocated the need for an American theocracy. NCBCPS founder Elizabeth Ridenour says she was commanded by God to bring the Bible back to public schools....

....per Dave Van Biema's presentation, Bible classes in Texas seem banal, nonthreatening, and perky. In reality, Texas faces the possibility of a legislative decree forcing Texas high schools to teach Bible classes from a curriculum referencing that pushes Christian nationalist ideology and revisionist (fake, that is) United States history. And who may bring such a law into being ? None other than Texas State Rep. Warren Chisum, who recently circulated a memo that, as far as anti-Semitic conspiracy theory goes, was nipping at the heels of the Protocols of The Elders Of Zion.

As Dann Quinn, from the Texas Freedom Network summed up Rep. Chisum for me, The man is a one-man wrecking ball tearing down separation of church and state."

OK, back to "Why We Should Teach The Bible In Public School"...

At a number of points in the story, and also simply by generally failing to acknowledge that non-Christians might be part of the controversy over Bible classes in public schools, Time's senior religion correspondent

seems to suggest that Christian beliefs, specifically Christian right beliefs, are the only true expressions of Christianity, that liberal Christians are little more than atheists in disguise, and that all other religious beliefs on Earth are invalid and only Christians can achieve a fully meaningful life. Time's story has vanished 45 million moderate to liberal American Christians from the debate over the Bible in schools but Americans with non-Christian religious and philosophical beliefs, Muslims, Jews, atheists, and so on, fare even worse....

Welcome to America, 2007.

The last two sentences of Dave Van Biema's Time Magazine article concerning the Bible in public schools are:

"what is required in teaching about the Bible in our public schools is patriotism: a belief that we live in a nation that understands the wisdom of its Constitution clearly enough to allow the most important book in its history to remain vibrantly accessible for everyone."

Thus, Van Biema concludes his story ; those are the two sentences Americans who read the Time story are most likely to take with them. Van Biema seems to suggest there's a Constitutional right, enjoyed by American citizens, to a "vibrantly accessible" Bible and that making the Bible "vibrantly accessible" is a patriotic duty of American citizens. In effect, Time Magazine's senior religion correspondent appears to declare everyone who does not support teaching the Bible in public schools to be unpatriotic. Meanwhile, scripture from no other religious tradition apparently merits such "patriotic" promotion.

But, there's far worse mischief at play in Time Magazine's latest edition cover story. The story coda discussed above could be interpreted in other ways, possibly, but it fits into a pattern, in the Time story, in which the conflict over the teaching of the Bible in public schools gets depicted as a struggle between the "religious right" and the "secular left". The religious Christian left, Jews, Muslims, Buddhists, Taoists, adherents to Native North American religious traditions, atheists and agnostics, all but Christians are excluded, apparently, from the discussion and don't merit mention in "Why We Should Teach The Bible In Public Schools", and that "virtual religious and ethnic cleansing", whether inadvertant or not, mirrors the religious supremacy to be found on the Christian right. If minorities, do not merit inclusion in the discussion over the teaching of Christian scriptures in public schools, they are moving towards dhimmitude and American Democracy may be sicker then we suppose and Christian nationalism closer than we suspect.

The sentiments expressed in Time's cover story and the very depiction of the debate, as a struggle between fundamentalist Christianity and the "secular left" should be considered scandalous (see analysis, next paragraph), and the Anti-Defamation League, among other minority rights groups, should demand Time Magazine and Van Biema issue an apology, But whether it gets airplay in American national media discourse or not, Time's message is clear: a naked declaration of Christian nationalism, an expression of Christian supremacy suggesting that all but Americans on the Christian right are second class citizens. Welcome to the new America and thank you, Time Magazine, for making things so plain.

The central ideological frame of Time's story is the same narrative frame to be found in Tim LaHaye's Apocalyptic fiction "Left Behind" book series (and turned into a video game too) and which underlies the sensibility of much of American fundamentalist Christianity ; the idea of, essentially, an ongoing, elemental war between religion, defined solely as right wing Christianity, and atheism, manifested in the United States as a clash between a 'truly Christian' American right and an allegedly secular ( read as "atheist" ) American left. For many on the Christian right, the narrative is rooted in an apocalyptic dualism which posits what is at base a war between good and evil . Some in this vein, such as Tim LaHaye, see Public schools as incorrigably satanic in nature:

"[S]ecular humanists have long advocated a one-world government--which, of course, they feel that they alone are qualified to run. John Dewey is famous for destroying the learning process for millions of children and young people because he was more interested in teaching atheism, evolution, self autonomy, and a socialistic worldview instead of reading, writing, and math."

Many others on the Christian right see public education is satanically influenced but not irretrievably so. Restoring Bible classes to public schools could set things right says Elizabeth Ridenour, head of the National Council On Bible Curriculum In Public Schools, whose secret Bible course curriculum ( reporters can't get copies, nor can school districts unless the agree to teach the curriculum first ) is riddled with revisionist takes on American history based on fake quotes, misquotes, lies and distortions - fake history, in short ( the NCBCPS is now the subject of an ongoing expose at Talk To Action ) .

Time's acceptance of that bigoted mythic narrative could hardly make the likes of James Dobson, Tim Lahaye, and John Hagee happier. By implication, the US left is irreligious and the only form of valid religious belief in the equation is right-wing Christianity : no Buddhists, Muslims, Jews, or Unitarians need apply. Having thus excluded vast swaths of the American electorate from the debate over the Bible in public schools, Time's Van Biema proceeds to a flourish of Solomonic wisdom by splitting the difference Between the warring ideological claims of the these two groups he's laid out, the Christian right and the "secular left". Hence.... the truth must lie in the middle !

There's more too. Where to begin ? Well, one step at a time.....

First, why didn't Time title its story "Why religion should be taught in schools" or "Why school kids should learn about religion" ? Even if the title was chosen purely for its controversial, sensationalist, merit the choice seems to exclude non-Christians as undeserving of even a nod. But, human consequences spring from such Christianity-centric perspectives. In a recent unfortunate incident, a Delaware Jewish family protesting loud and intrusive Christian sectarian religious displays was hounded, amidst death threats, from town. Why shouldn't the Bible be taught in schools ? - In some areas of the United States, those who object to that question are now more likely to be viewed as unreasonable troublemakers than as Americans exercising their rights to be free from state sanctioned and imposed religious beliefs.

Time Magazine's April 2, 2007 "Bible" issue should present a wake up call to Americans, who value church state separation in any form, on how far United States culture has drifted into a nascent Christian nationalism ; when a leading national weekly news magazine trumpets Christian nationalist themes, to little notice so far, and the same week a bloc of thirty-odd Congressional legislators mostly from the GOP announces, on the capital steps and apparently wearing the authority of their office and the federal sanction that presumes, that it is organizing "national prayer", again to little notice, well.....

The hard American Christian right faction that drives the advance of aggressive Christian nationalism is far from a majority but nonetheless represents the most energized and best organized faction in American politics today. There was a time in American history when "under God" was not in the "Pledge Of Allegiance", when the "National Prayer Breakfast" was not enshrined as part of Washington DC political culture, when the US Justice Department wasn't packed with acolytes of Pat Robertson's Regent University such as Monica Goodling, before Church Courts, before Teen Mania's Battle Cry and when public declarations, by Pentagon officials, that their religious loyalties supercedes their loyalty to the United States, might have provoked outrage. Was America of the 1940's less fully patriotic than now ? Presumeably not, nor less religious one would suppose.

But memories of the time when American political atmosphere was not suffused with soupy piety and Christian supremacist presumption have faded and we've come to a point, now, where Christian nationalism crowds other religious and philosophical beliefs from the "public square" and its ideas colonize the positions of Democratic Party politicians and seep into imagination of many Americans, perhaps including Time Magazine's editors and writers, who no longer can imagine why it should bother Jews, Muslims, or any other non-Christians when government resources are used to promote and endorse sectarian religious beliefs that seem to imply that no religion other than Christianity is fully legitimate.

The cover story of next week's American edition of Time Magazine concludes with the following assertion : "what is required in teaching about the Bible in our public schools is patriotism. The conflation of patriotism with Christianity is Christian nationalism, or Christian supremacy, at its most naked. Teaching the Bible in American public schools, writes Time Magazine's senior correspondent for religion in the year 2007, is patriotic because patriotism is "a belief that we live in a nation that understands the wisdom of its Constitution clearly enough to allow the most important book in its history to remain vibrantly accessible for everyone."

What ?

Time Magazine seems to be getting into the Christian historical revisionism business, and if "Why We Should teach The Bible In Public School" had advanced Holocaust revisionist ideas Dave Van Biema and the editors who approved his story would almost certainly be out on the streets. But, Time and Van Biema pushed Christian historical revisionism, so they'll likely get a pass even though such revision feeds anti-Semitism too. It sounds so positive though, so bouncy ; Jews, Muslims, and non Christians shouldn't be at all offended by Bible classes in American public schools. In fact, such classes are a right enjoyed by all American citizens and based on the "vibrantly accessible Bible" principle found somewhere in the United States Constitution, suggests Time's Dave Van Biema.

Whatwhatwhat ?

Does Time's Dave an Biema really believe the United States Constitution mandates that the Bible be made "vibrantly accessible" to all American citizens ? Have Constitutional scholars for hundreds of years now missed this "vibrant access" clause ? Far too little public attention has been paid to the thriving cottage industry of Christian historical revisionism, promoted by David Barton and others, that works to replace current historical understanding on the nature of church-state separation in American government with a fraudulent history in which church state separation, as constitutional scholars have for many decades generally understood that principle , never existed. America was always a Christian nation, claims Barton and his Christian nationalist cohorts, and the implication for those who fall for this con is that those to object to government endorsement and support of partisan Christianity, that excludes not only some Christians but people of other religious and philosophical beliefs, are troublemakers.

One of the engines powering the advance of American Christian nationalism is what could be called "the myth of worse and worse" or "the cult of perpetual decline". For decades, American Christian right leaders have attributed a whole host of social ills, just about anything conceivable but tooth-decay, to the lack of Bible classes in American public schools. But readers of this Time story will hear nothing about that. Instead, they'll get a whopping dose of Christian nationalist ideological pablum asserting that the Bible is indispensible to America's school children, that the only people who oppose teaching the Bible in schools are irreligious, and that the US Constitution sanctions Bible classes, too, under a mysterious principle of the Constitutional right to a "vibrantly accessible Bible". In short, America will get conned.

In "Why We Should Teach The Bible In Public School", David Van Biema cites some justifications for teaching the Bible in schools that sound reasonable unless scrutinized : it is true that the Bible is a popular and influential book and a key to a great deal of Western literature and history. Fine. As Biema puts it:

THE BIBLE IS THE MOST influential book ever written. Not only is the Bible the best-selling book of all time, it is the best-selling book of the year every year.

Shakespeare refers heavily to the Bible, but:

If literature doesn't interest you, you also need the Bible to make sense of the ideas and rhetoric that have helped drive U.S. history. "The shining city on the hill"? That's Puritan leader John Winthrop quoting Matthew to describe his settlement's convenantal standing with God. In his Second Inaugural Address, Abraham Lincoln noted sadly that both sides in the Civil War "read the same Bible" to bolster their opposing claims. When Martin Luther King Jr. talked of "Justice rolling down like waters" in his "I Have a Dream" speech, he was consciously enlisting the Old Testament prophet Amos, who first spoke those words. The Bible provided the argot--and theological underpinnings--of women's suffrage and prison-reform movements.

From there, Van Biema's argument becomes shaky ; he notes that knowledge of the Bible would help secular Americans ( who Van Biema considers, it seems, to all be liberals ) better understand religious rhetoric wielded by George W. Bush and other politicians. Possibly.

But then the claims become quite grandiose:

Without the Bible and a few imposing secular sources we face a numbing horizontality in our culture--blogs, political announcements, ads. The world is flat, sure. But Scripture is among our few means to make it deep.

The implication is stark. Scripture, but Christian scripture, only the Christian Bible enables and enriches life in profound ways and makes human experience all that it can be.  So, for Muslims, Hindus, Buddhists, Jains, and people from countless other religious traditions the world is one dimensional...

What ?

And what of Jews ? Per Van Van Biema's claim, would their adherence to the Old Testament but not the New Testament mean they would get to live in a world slightly more dimensional than the one dimensional world of the Hindus, Buddhists, Muslims, and so on ?  Would Jews live in perhaps a one and a half dimensional world ?

OK : Non Christians live in some dreary gray world of thin meaning, Jews fare a little better, Christians live in fullest technicolor at the height of human dimensionality ! Got it.

To be fair, Van Biema might have intended, in referring to the Bible as a primary source of meaning, that the Bible should code for religious traditions in general. But Time Magazine reaches millions of people around the world, and if its editors failed to pick up such an apparent expression of Christian supremacy that would suggest such religious ideology is spreading into the US mainstream. There are other interpretations possible, yes, but none of those lead to a place that appears welcoming to non-Christian religious beliefs. Exclusion is exclusion, and there's a lot of it in this Time story; religious minorities seem not be relevant to the debate in the teaching of the Bible in public schools, and the debate depicted is solely between "secularists" and the "religious right". But liberal American Christians, and there are ten of millions, get no mention either -- as if they do not exist.

So having worked arguments, for Bible classes, that are firmly rooted in bigoted, exclusionary Christian right religious supremacist presumptions, Dave Van Biema throws out one last zinger of a rhetorical question : "Doesn't secular teaching about the Bible play into the hands of the religious right and the secular left?" His answer splits the difference between the warring camps - the truth lies in the middle ! Does teaching about the Bible play into the hands of both groups ? Van Biema triumphantly answers "YES. BOTH. WHICH MAY SUGGEST THAT EACH is exaggerating its claim.".

So, if we split the difference between the Christian right and the "secular left", we get..... Jim Wallis ? Who knows, but the construction is ludicrous and Dave Van Biema has apparently forgotten, among other parties, the 45 million or so Americans in denominations represented by the National Council Of Churches that hasn't, as far as I know, been pushing for Bible classes in public schools.

Van Biema - besides rendering non-Christians handicapped or less than fully human through their mistaken choices of religious belief - has also disappeared much of the entire Democratic Party or implied that liberal Christians aren't, well, real Christians. They're faux Christians whose Christianity is unworthy of even a nod, basically atheists in disguise.

Is any of this intentional on Dave Van Biema's part ? Or has his brain been so fully colonized by Christian right supremacist ideology that, for him, the only fully valid religious doctrine on Earth issues from sources such as the TV and radio studios of Focus On The Family or the pulpit of John Hagee ?

It seems a harsh thing to write, but it appears that the senior religion writer for Time, secular or not, lives within ideological frames constructed by the Christian right.. whether he knows it or not.

There's something else I'd like to address:

The reasons Van Biema cites for Bible classes in America's public schools, religiously bigoted though they may sound, are not the core reasons put forth within the Christian right itself.

The reasons Van Biema cites, in his article, for teaching the Bible in public schools, may fly in polite national circles based on their rationalist gloss  but they are not the darkly conspiratorial, sometimes hateful reasons advanced by Christian right leaders, they are not what gets shouted from pulpit to pulpit and broadcast in harangues over Christian right media empires across the nation, to tens of millions of Americans, on why the Bible should be taught in Americans public schools. In that narrative, the Bible is the linchpin of a national morality held to be in free fall, with dire consequences ahead ; a threat of divine punishment, some say held, looms over the country unless Americans come to their senses and teach the Bible to America's children.

Evidence cited for the alleged moral decline include a decline in marriage, legalized abortion, increased access to pornography, and the increasing willingness of gays and lesbians to make their sexual preferences public : to be out of the closet in other words. But, are crime, murder, rape, divorce, teen pregnancy, STD rates, and other commonly cited proxies for societal wellbeing actually increasing ? No, and by those measures America society has been growing steadily healthier since the early 1990's.

In the end, the "moral collapse" narrative that drives much of the Christian right push for teaching the Bible in classrooms is not rooted in facts. Rather, it's a dark mythos, an argot of conspiratorial menace in which the purported catastrophic wave of immorality threatening the national social fabric gets attributed to dark, sinister crypto-communist conspiracies, ultimately satanic in origin, of "secularists", liberals, socialists, criminals, sexual perverts, and sometimes Jews. New York, LA, and Hollywood are held to be especially strong centers of contagion that await, perhaps, punishment via tidal waves, earthquakes, hurricanes, and nuclear blasts.

And, there you have it. Dave Van Biema should know that too.

As if the message, of Christian supremacy, hasn't been made perfectly clear, "Why We Should Teach The Bible In Public School" concludes with a non-to-subtle coda. : "what is required in teaching about the Bible in our public schools is patriotism: a belief that we live in a nation that understands the wisdom of its Constitution clearly enough to allow the most important book in its history to remain vibrantly accessible for everyone.". Is the Bible inaccessible to some Americans ? Who ? Or is the Bible, in Biema's opinion, not "vibrantly accessible" enough because it is not taught not just in churches but in public schools as well ?

"Vibrant access" to the Bible, as a right, is not enshrined in the US Constitution, nor is the obligation to tell the truth codified as a responsibility of United States citizens and American journalists and, barring a national referendum to overhaul the foundational document for American government, that's the way things will remain.

Useful Background Reading To This Story

Some groups on the Christian right, such as The National Council On Bible Curriculum In Public Schools, want to "reform" public education by bringing the Bible "back" in schools. The National Council On Bible Curriculum In Public Schools (NCBCPS) is a stealth effort associated with the far right Council On National Policy and led by a woman who has said God has commanded her to bring the Bible back into public education.

[ to read more, see:  Chuck Norris Wants To Kick Secularism's Ass, Pummel Bible Into Public Schools ? ]

Other Christian right forces want to simply destroy public education altogether...

Amway fortune heir Dick DeVos has been a leader in the war against public education. Notably, too, DeVos' brother in law Erik Prince is another pioneer of bold privatization efforts : Prince is the founder of Blackwater USA, perhaps the most powerful private army in the world and the subject of a new book by Jeremy Scahill.

 For an overview of the Christian Right's war on public education, see:

DeVos Wages War On Public Education, But Meet His Brother In Law...

Digg!

Tagged as: time, theocracy, schools, christian

Bruce Wilson writes for Talk To Action, a blog specializing in faith and politics.


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Fine, have the bible in class
Posted by: bookie on Mar 30, 2007 5:58 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
as long as they also teach and compare all the other religions to christianity. And as long as they present the atheist point of view.

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» RE: Fine, have the bible in class Posted by: OhioPatriot
Swift-Boating Reality?
Posted by: Michael LaFlow on Mar 30, 2007 6:11 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I don't understand the argument. Please explain. The strategies that have been pushed by the religious right which have led us to our current military, economic and diplomatic crises would NOT have occurred if they had more access to the Bible?

Is the argument that the zeal of religious, political and corporate leaders to increase their political power, triumph over Islam, or get rich through war, caused them to forget about the 7 deadly sins, or thou shalt not kill? That if they had vibrant access to the Bible, they would have not been blinded by delusions of religious, political or economic grandeur?

Or are they worried that the Iraq war, profiteering and scandals have exposed the totalitarian agenda of the religious/political/corporate axis and the best defense is a strong offense? If everyone unquestioningly accepted Biblical imagery, those leaders could more easily control with impunity?

I once met a man at the airport who asserted that Bush was directed by God because Bush used Biblical phrases to explain his decisions. Is this the goal to which Time magazine wants to contribute? Why would a major media company want to indoctrinate children into a single, centralised way of thinking? It's not 1984.

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So, which is it Wilson?
Posted by: Sojourner on Mar 30, 2007 6:58 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"...the senior religion writer for Time, secular or not, lives within ideological frames constructed by the Christian right.. whether he knows it or not."

Or

"The reasons Van Biema cites for Bible classes in America's public schools, religiously bigoted though they may sound, are not the core reasons put forth within the Christian right itself."

He's stuck in a Christian right framework but doesn't know what that means? He doesn't realize its basis? Or is he, as the critique suggests, just whitewashing bigotry?

I gave up at that point, even while I am heavily sympathetic with a deconstruction of Time's snow job; that it is a sales pitch seems clear.

And technically speaking, from a widely-shared scholarly consensus, the New Testament has a heavy dose of neo-Platonic Greek philosophy called Hellenism to go along with its Hebraic roots. Since the NT is a composite, shouldn't its parent influences be given credit for being "most important"?

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I take it you are upset about this?
Posted by: etisoppa on Mar 30, 2007 7:02 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I take it you are upset about the heavy handed nature of what is presently going on.

Yet every time you and this site refuse to mention or do a story on the mind assault technology that these techno-religio-fascist are using and I KNOW YOU ALL KNOW,..
every time you do so you give support to them.

Like the silence that occurred in the fascist societies of the 1930's.

See sites like: http://360.yahoo.com/etisoppa
http://www.freedomfchs.com/

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NO WONDER "OUR CHILDREN ISN'T LEARNING" gwb
Posted by: VZEQICVA on Mar 30, 2007 7:47 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have no axe to grind with the bible. It just seems as though more and more 'stuff' is being included in what is loosely defined as education. Our children are not keeping up with the rest of the world in the subjects that prepare them for higher education or a job. Math, reading, language, geography
history, sciences, music & art, reasoning skills. What about the ability to express themselves and hold their own in an argument. Thanks, ANNA

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NO WONDER "OUR CHILDREN ISN'T LEARNING" gwb
Posted by: VZEQICVA on Mar 30, 2007 7:47 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have no axe to grind with the bible. It just seems as though more and more 'stuff' is being included in what is loosely defined as education. Our children are not keeping up with the rest of the world in the subjects that prepare them for higher education or a job. Math, reading, language, geography
history, sciences, music & art, reasoning skills. What about the ability to express themselves and hold their own in an argument. Thanks, ANNA

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it's a coordinated campaign...
Posted by: bluepilgrim on Mar 31, 2007 1:22 AM   
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See also:
http://www.csmonitor.com/2007/0323/p09s01-coop.htm

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*Almost* wish I subscribed to Time
Posted by: orwellwasn'tdreaming on Mar 31, 2007 7:12 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
so that I could cancel my subscription in some loud, dramatic way. At least I shall petition the local library to cancel theirs.

When I was at school (graduated in 1964), there was a short section on the bible in one of our literature classes, with some attention to the psalms as I recall. There's wonderful lyrical writing there. And Song of Solomon was deliciously dirty to teenagers. Of course, we also discussed Mein Kampf and its ramifications in political science.

Perhaps snippets of the bible *ought* to be taught--both testaments, along with samples from other religions' texts--in poli sci classes. Of course all of the many contradictions should be made clear, and it should be made plain that this is a sort of compendium of people's diaries and political views, most written long after the fact, and whose words have been twisted and changed by myriad translations either by design or in error. An important subject should be how it's been used as an excuse for violence, hate, power grabbing, warmongering, repression, and viciousness through the centuries--with emphasis on the past decade or so.

I have no religious beliefs and hate having god, the bible, and all such things authoritarian forced upon me. I'm not interested in having my tax dollars used to have it bludgeon children, too.

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» RE: Good move, but of course Posted by: orwellwasn'tdreaming
» RE: Good move, but of course Posted by: brasilaron
Right Wing Takeover
Posted by: NoPCZone on Mar 31, 2007 7:34 AM   
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History will record that the extreme corporatist right wing gang, masquerading under the guise of orthodox Christianity and Judaism completed it's takeover of US media sometime around Y2K. The next time some wing-nut complains about a liberal bias in US media, laugh at them heartily.

If we do not restore some balance and an appreciation for unvarnished truth in our media, we might as well turn out the lights. Our nation and the hard fought traditions of a liberal , secular governance is being taken from us before our very eyes. Meanwhile, a corporate media and the bought and Paid for government feeds the citizens a steady diet of bread & circuses. It's how Rome fell.

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» RE: ight Wing Takeover Posted by: etisoppa
It's ok to laugh at Christians now.
Posted by: bornxeyed on Mar 31, 2007 9:11 AM   
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This is the book that should be in every public school library.
Caesar's Messiah: The Roman Conspiracy to Invent Jesus

Joseph Atwill presents pretty compelling evidence that Christianity was invented by the Romans, specifically by the Emporer Titus Flavius, to defuse militant Judaism in the first century.

If this book isn't in your children's public school library I suggest you demand that it be made "vibrantly accessible".

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I estimate that this blogger could have cancelled his subscription to Time...
Posted by: ABetterFuture on Mar 31, 2007 10:54 AM   
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...84.7 times in the span it took him to preview the issue for us. Moreover, doing so--just once, let alone 84.7 times--would have directly solved the "problem" created by his disapproval of Time's editorial decisions.

Perhaps the lengthy vent was more fulfilling than actually addressing the problem?

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Somebody run a pully down Jefferson's grave...
Posted by: truthteller on Mar 31, 2007 12:39 PM   
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And attach it to a generator, because it would be a shame to waste all the energy from Tom's spinning corpse when he hear's about this outrage. There were three things that Jefferson wanted to be remembered for, and the Presidency was not one of them. One of them was his authorship of the Virginia Statutes of Religious Freedom, which guaranteed the right of all Virginians to their freedom of religious belief - of whatever kind. Sad to see supposedly "mainstream" Time Magazine falling prey to these lying bastards.

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vibrantly accessible inquisition
Posted by: liberalibrarian on Mar 31, 2007 11:22 PM   
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I am a public librarian. I'm a Unitarian-Universalist. The Bible is in every public library--several copies, different versions, concordances. It can be checked out. It's in reference if the one you want is checked out. In any decent public library, one can also find the Bhagavad Gita, the Quran, the Tao Te Ching, along with the latest Tim LaHaye (which is in fiction)...
If that is not vibrantly accessible, then I don't know what is.

Don't take Time off the library shelves--let many many people read this terrible tidings of the possible distruction of American Religious Freedom of and from Religion. Jefferson, Madison and Adams were all either Unitarians or Deists. Even Benjamin Franklin, mostly considered a Quaker, said he was a deist.

I intend to photocopy the article and cover and send it to as many of my liberal friends as possible, and to write to Time as well. I hope this article puts them out of business. As to the sanctimonious neo-con Xtian wingnuts pushing us to armageddon, I almost wish I weren't Universalist--then I would believe in Hell.. oh well.

Thanks Alternet for continuing to speak out against the true and imminent distruction of a grand experiment in "the course of human events".

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Cliff notes or Dummies book?
Posted by: liberalibrarian on Mar 31, 2007 11:36 PM   
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BTW--the cover looks like a cross between Cliff Notes and a Dummies book--maybe a new jacket cover is in order...

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Easter Has Been Cancelled
Posted by: pcushniesr on Apr 1, 2007 5:10 AM   
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They found the body.
Amazing how many utterly blank stares I have gotten from christians after telling this joke. They literally don't understand the basic underpinning of their own stupid religion. How can we expect the damned fools, the great unwashed of the religious masses, to understand the larger social implications of public religious indoctination? Anyway, I don't believe this eruption of christian flatulence will last. Remember, today is April Fools Day and any moment now Alternet is surely going to jump up and yell "Fooled ya!"

Aren't you?

Well, even if it's all for real, the seeds of religion's demise, as I have said elsewhere, are sown within its own craziness. This I believe.

And remember: God is a lie, religion is a hoax, and the two are maintained by the fraudulent to manipulate the ignorant.

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There is some basis to this
Posted by: l_m_n on Apr 1, 2007 6:21 AM   
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As a current undergrad in college, I can say I would have loved a good comparative religion class in HS. What I mean is that I want someone, from a secular scholarly point of view, to help me understand more of the social and political positions that exist in, say, the Sunni and Shia sects, or the Fundies down south. Where in the Bible/Koran did these ideas develop? That is powerful knowledge for every American to have, considering our deep involvement in both.

Teaching the Bible/Koran/Torah in schools, if done critically could even take away the biggest weapon of the Religious Right: misusing the Bible to their advantage. Example: look at the ridiculous "gays are an abomination" passage they keep repeating. I know that is blatant picking and choosing of very out-of-date moral codes, BUT, so many people don't. And they would have, if they had been given a second opinion on the Bible by their school.

Just because a few liberals know what they're talking about does not mean the rest of the nation has the background in the subject matter to understand and agree. Give them the opportunity!

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April Fools!
Posted by: sparkster on Apr 1, 2007 6:42 AM   
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Ok, so the article is dated 3-31. That was an oversight.

It has to be an April Fools stunt. Seriously. Think about it.

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Still no Comment on my Mind-Assault Technology Comment?
Posted by: etisoppa on Apr 1, 2007 12:23 PM   
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Now, my contention is not with Christianity. But it is the people who are presently up to their eye-balls in this agenda.

They are the sort of people who corrupt the teaching's of Christ, ( or any religion for that matter) into fascism and then refuse to understand this about themselves. They must be right and everyone else wrong ( or they will smear and undercut you, or worse, until you are perceived as being
wrong.)

They are running (ruining) US and Western foreign policy especially in the Middle East. And worse yet, they are "slicker" than you all realize. But they are not infallible as Iraq, Lebanon etc., is proving. However, they feel they should be, infallible, so they are going to keep trying.

Ruddy Giuliani running for President!! The (former)Public Prosecutor who committed the heinous crime of destroying crime-scene evidence of the biggest crime scene in US history.
Doing so in slick surreptitious stealth when all were in shock
and mourning and did not have the presence of mind to say "Stop! What is going on here?"

Yes, they are going to keep trying, and doing so with "slicknessā€ while violating constitutions and International Law, and TRUE Christian ethics and morality ( and such standards of corresponding religions and secular humanities) with their mind-assault technologies.

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RE: Right wing (all wing) takeover
Posted by: etisoppa on Apr 1, 2007 12:31 PM   
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Just the media? They have captured the US Gov., the Democratic and Republican Parties....and by George 41 through 43, they have captured almost everything. James Watt said they would and they did. The real John Birch from back when were warning us.. we wrote them off as nut-cases. ( Even they have been "taken-over")

It is a shame and a disgrace that this should happen to the trail-blazing democracy of Jefferson when there are now how many 10's of millions of college-educated citizens with how much disposable incomes. And they are putting up with and even indulging in this crap!

Drop the "N" in NWO call it the CWO, "C" for Conspirator's

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Religion OUT of schools!
Posted by: bettyn on Apr 2, 2007 11:11 AM   
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If I had kids, the last thing I'd allow them to face is being forcefed this goofy mythology the way I was. It's ridiculous and I knew it was BS the first time I heard it....as a little kid.

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Which Bible, Which Theology
Posted by: brainvib on Apr 2, 2007 11:20 AM   
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There is the King Jame version of the Bible. There is the Catholic version of the bible. Which bible is Time suggesting be used. There are differences. Teaching the bible results in teaching Theology. Which Theology will be taught Catholic, Episcopalian, Lutheran, Methodist, Baptist, Presbyterian, Amish? In other words which form of Christianity will the state recognize as the prefered relgion in direct violation of the constitution. This is also a direct insult to the Jews, Muslim, Hindu, Budists and other non Christian citizens of this country.
Always remember the greatest threat this country faces to the liberty, freedom and democracy that has made it great comes from the religious right.

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I guess Time Magazine is reporting from some parallel universe...
Posted by: katz22br on Apr 2, 2007 12:59 PM   
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...where up is down, Humvees are eco-friendly transportation, religion and patriotism are synonymous, and... you can get cotton from sheep. Hey, it's in one of their "Most Popular" articles, available here.

In case the link doesn't work, or if you prefer not to use it, just go to Time and look up "51 Ways To Save The Environment", then go to #7, "Hang Up a Clothes Line" (by Bryan Walsh).

Here's the "pearl of knowledge", pasted from the article:
"You could make your own clothes with needle and thread using 100% organic cotton sheared from sheep you raised on a Whole Foods diet, but the environmental quality of your wardrobe is ultimately determined by the way you wash it. A recent study by Cambridge University's Institute of Manufacturing found that 60% of the energy associated with a piece of clothing is spent in washing and drying it. Over its lifetime, a T shirt can send up to 9 lbs. of carbon dioxide into the air."

eeeeesh!!!

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Anne Gilbert
Posted by: Eln on Apr 2, 2007 2:07 PM   
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I can see teaching the Bible as literature. Sure, the English language has been influenced and enriched by certain translations of the Bible, just as it has been influenced and enriched by Shakespeare, and in much the same way. But I do not think we should just roll over and "teach the Bible in public schools". I can see teaching the Bible(or Biblical literature)as part of, say a "history of religion" or "comparative religion". But to teach b>onlythe Bible, and only in a "Christian" context, is simply marginalizing millions of perfectly good, decent people of other faiths or no faith at all, as somehow not "patriotic".

Incidentally, yes, I saw the Time Magazine article earlier this mornign, and I was quite uneasy about it, although I didn't have time to read it thoroughly.
Anne G

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Embarrassing illiteracies
[