T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
735.1 | Johnny doesn't care what's right or wrong. He thinks he's God. | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Mon Oct 04 1993 00:26 | 9 |
| Because we have created a society of "The God[ess] Within", where right
and wrong is self-defined and self-serving.
A society of Laws rather than Love.
"Right and Wrong" is morality, and we have lost the ability to teach or
legislate morality.
/john
|
735.2 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Who will rid me of this meddlesome priest? | Mon Oct 04 1993 07:53 | 3 |
| RE: .1 That pretty much sums it up doesn't it.
Alfred
|
735.3 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Friend, will you be ready? | Mon Oct 04 1993 08:39 | 4 |
|
Sure does
|
735.4 | more to it | THOLIN::TBAKER | DOS with Honor! | Mon Oct 04 1993 10:07 | 13 |
| This has to be quick.
"Johnny" implies youth. As a person grows s/he needs guidence,
needs to be taught right and wrong. But as a person matures
s/he needs to internalize what is indeed real, right and wrong.
The answers s/he comes up with are not always the ones that
everyone likes.
Listening to the "God within" is a *very* subtle and difficult
thing to do. To think that whatever the mind tells you is the
"God within" is folly. There's more to it than that.
Tom
|
735.5 | | AIMHI::JMARTIN | | Mon Oct 04 1993 12:18 | 4 |
| Do you think the feminist and womans rights movements have anything to
do with it?
-Jack
|
735.6 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Who will rid me of this meddlesome priest? | Mon Oct 04 1993 12:41 | 10 |
|
>Do you think the feminist and womans rights movements have anything to
>do with it?
No. The pro-choice movement on the other hand has something to do
with it. It encourages a lack of respect for life and the idea that
"if it's inconvenient it's bad." These things contribute to a
confusion over right and wrong.
Alfred
|
735.7 | laws .ne. morality | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (DTN 223-8576, MSO2-2/A2, IM&T) | Mon Oct 04 1993 13:52 | 27 |
| re Note 735.1 by COVERT::COVERT:
> Because we have created a society of "The God[ess] Within", where right
> and wrong is self-defined and self-serving.
I'm not so sure about that. It is just as possible, and I
believe it is more true, that we have taught our children the
wrong things than that we've taught them to do whatever feels
right, i.e., they are following their consciences, as a moral
person should, but that their consciences have not been well
formed.
A gang member, for example, is following a group morality,
but a terrible one.
> A society of Laws rather than Love.
I certainly agree with this. In I Timothy 1:9, Paul writes
that "the law is not made for a righteous man, but for the
lawless and disobedient." Laws don't bring about moral
societies, instead they are more like a backup system in the
event of moral failure. We see our legislatures thrashing
about criminalizing more things, or adding to the penalties,
as if this would make a major change in the behavior of
people in society. It doesn't.
Bob
|
735.8 | It don't come easy | THOLIN::TBAKER | DOS with Honor! | Mon Oct 04 1993 13:53 | 17 |
| > "if it's inconvenient it's bad." These things contribute to a
> confusion over right and wrong.
That's not unlike complaining that the democrats make it difficult
to be a republican.
You are responible for your own behavior. You can take your
standard from a book, a cult, a social group or you can look
into your own heart and get it there.
The problem is that many people who claim to look in to their
own heart, don't. They take what is convenient. The problem
is not what is in the heart. It's like blaming someone's actions
on the Bible when he never even looked at it, even if he claimed
to be a christian.
Tom
|
735.9 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Pacifist Hellcat | Mon Oct 04 1993 14:46 | 28 |
| >Because we have created a society of "The God[ess] Within", where right
>and wrong is self-defined and self-serving.
I would say just the opposite is true. Central to the beliefs of Quakers
is the concept of "that of God[dess] within." Yet you won't find many, if
*any*, Quakers accused of drive-by shootings. This is not to say that Quakers
don't go to jail. Many Quakers have been sentenced to jail for refusing
conscription, protesting runaway militarization, and for other reasons of
conscience.
You see, if you believe that there is something of the Divine within, then
you must believe that it is not exclusive to you -- that everyone, even your
enemies, even criminals, even the last, the least, and the lost, has an
unspeakably Sacred Something about them.
>A society of Laws rather than Love.
I agree here. I seem to recall hearing that the U.S. produces more lawyers
per capita than any other country in the world.
>"Right and Wrong" is morality, and we have lost the ability to teach or
>legislate morality.
"Teach" at home, in church, or in the schools? In what ways? Verbally?
By example?
Peace,
Richard
|
735.10 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Who will rid me of this meddlesome priest? | Mon Oct 04 1993 15:47 | 33 |
|
>>"Right and Wrong" is morality, and we have lost the ability to teach or
>>legislate morality.
>
>"Teach" at home, in church, or in the schools? In what ways? Verbally?
>By example?
Certainly the church still has some ability but except for private
schools teaching right and wrong seems to be all but impossible. This is
one reason I have grown increasingly concerned with government run
schools.
One other thing that is important to remember is that we don't live in
a vacuum. There was a time when influences were all close to home and
largely under family control. My father, who was born in the US, didn't
learn English until he was about 6 years old. Even then he only spoke
English at school. His neighbors and family who were all part of the
same value system and attended the same churches all spoke the same
language. So there was little contrasting values until later in life.
Of course back then even the government run schools tended to support
the "Christian" values of most of those who went there.
What with TV and an increasingly mobile society this is less common. We
have TV, radio (which has changed since my fathers day), and a school
environment that conflicts with rather than supports morality. Children
are presented with more contrasts of morality than they once were. This
is confusing. And it comes at a time when the economic situation
permits parents less time to guide their children than they once had.
What is missing is not so much parental "ability" but the support
system that used to exist.
Alfred
|
735.11 | Warning: Hot Button Alert | TINCUP::BITTROLFF | Theologically Impaired | Wed Oct 06 1993 14:29 | 22 |
| Well, I've been read-mostly here for the last few months, but this touches on a
bit of a hot button for me, so...
The tone of several of the notes in this topic imply that without religion you
*can't* have morality. BULLS***! (and the asterisks don't translate to 'eye':^)
There are no absolute moral values, they are taught. All you have to do is look
at the mores of different societies to realize this. As a few quick examples,
in some societies nudity is immoral, in others it is the norm. Did tribes of
headhunters in Africa consider themselves immoral? I doubt it. Morality is
defined and taught by society. Religion can help propogate a particular view of
morality to a large number of society, but it is not the only or final view.
The assertation that you can only be moral if you are a Christian, or that
believing in yourself rather than some outside moral authority always leads
to self serving actions show a complete lack of understanding for non
religious people.
I can go into examples, and give my reasons for today's problems (they
probably aren't too far from the mainstream here), but for now I just wanted
to make the point that Christians DO NOT have a monopoly on morality.
Steve
|
735.12 | immorality and sin | JUPITR::MNELSON | | Wed Oct 06 1993 17:54 | 51 |
| re: .11
Religion is not just morals and morals are not the end-all of religion.
Religions attempt to put into human words and actions an expression of
Who God IS, who we are, and what our relationship to/with Him should
be, and how we obtain that relationship. We seek to relate to that
which is outside our material world and even our cultures, yet which
affects both.
The Christian/Jewish Commandments do not deal with the issue of dress
codes. It does have to do with what is sinful or abominations in God's
Righteousness. Those actions, dress, or circumstances that have been
shown, through experience, to lead to sin or seem to promote sin become
considered to be immoral in a society. This is based on experience
rather than Christian doctrine and it does vary from society to society
and over time within a society.
The dress choice of a prostitute, for example, is a 'packaging
tool' to elicit a certain response; the Christian church considers the
response it ilicits sinful so it considers the wearing of that type of
garb to be 'invitations to sin' and therefore immoral.
Societies may be slow to change their view of what is immoral, such as
in the change of dress, but it does change. This is certainly seen
throughout time and in different societies today.
At the same time, there are some things that both the Jewish religion
and Christian religion has considered sinful throughout its history
because it has been revealed through scripture to be abominations to
God. Such sins will forever remain sins because God has spoken on these
things and He is the same Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow in His
complete Perfect Righteousness.
Sin, particularly grave sin, threatens our relationship with God. He
does not turn away from us, but we from Him. We choose that which is
not His Way, His Truth, or His Life. God gives us complete free will,
even to choose to be without Him for all eternity. Therefore, God
ultimatly does not choose our destiny, but we do by choosing to be
obedient to His Way, or by choosing the other road that leads away from
Him.
Violations of moral constraints within a society may or may not lead to
sinful acts. However, for the sake of our eternal souls, we are told to
avoid not only sins, but the near occasions of sins. We are also
reminded that we must avoid putting stumbling blocks (temptations)
before others.
Mary
|
735.13 | A clarification | TINCUP::BITTROLFF | Theologically Impaired | Wed Oct 06 1993 20:52 | 14 |
| Hi Mary,
I did not intend to imply that religion was only about morals. What I was
condemning was the notion that without religion a person cannot have morals,
or that the morals of a religious person (your choice of religions and
accompanying moral code) are automatically more 'righteous' than the morals
of a non-religious person.
For the most part, I don't disagree with the rest of your rather well written
note about where morals derive from and how they change, except that I of
course attribute the moving forces to be the pressure of society (the same
pressure that I believe creates religions) rather than divine.
Steve
|
735.14 | more than a societal creation | JUPITR::MNELSON | | Thu Oct 07 1993 11:54 | 57 |
| re: .13
If religions were created only by societial pressures (rather than by
the Divine) then they would be reflections of all that the masses
within the society desired. There would not be this great conflict
between society and religion that seems to be in just about every
society. Most religions go against the grain of the demands of
society; they are counter-cultural.
The Christian religion formed and developed among tremendous
persecution to the point that it is considered the Age of the Martyrs;
this persecution lasted for 300 years! Its adherents chose poverty
and possible death to keep their faith. There were no 'worldly
advantages' that explains this phenomenon of faith or that would support
the thesis that Christianity was mearly a man-made religion based on
societial pressures.
The witness of Christian martyrs throughout history bears testimony to
this in each age. A good study of this is the way faith was kept alive
under penalty of death or imprisionment in the former Soviet Union and
the Iron Curtain countries.
Everyone, even athiests, have a belief system which can, in the broad
sense, be considered a religion. Many religions ARE man-made based on
societial pressures. These, however, do not worship the True God, but
rather idols of man's own creation. Anything can become an idol, it is
what we value the most and give most of our time and resources towards
and it is where we expect to find our security. In this day and age
this is often ourselves (man is god) or money, science, education,
our 'castle', etc.. Such idols generally have mass appeal and they do
not demand a counter-cultural belief or faith walk.
Many people live the God-given Christian religion on such a low level
of 'engagement' that it gives the appearance of being nothing more than
a man-made morality constraint. In both Jewish and Christian scripture,
[OT and NT] there is the concept of the 'remnant'; this is the group of
people who really live a relationship with God as He wills. THESE are
the people who truly give witness to God.
Those who want to support the thesis that religions are all man made
and result from societial forces and pressures can certainly look
exclusivly at those who just go through the motions and live their
faith on the most mundane level. The true challenge is to study the
stellar examples of religious faith [lives, writings, teachings of
the martyrs and Saints; the historical development of Christianity
during universal persecution, the unity of scripture over 4000 years,
the longevity of religious faith and tenets over 4000 years, etc.]
and fit these testimonies of God into the thesis.
Peace of Jesus,
Mary
|
735.15 | how 'bout Ghandi? | DLO15::FRANCEY | | Thu Oct 07 1993 13:33 | 6 |
| So, tell me Mary: Wasn't Ghandi's religion "real" - at least for him?
Shalom,
Ron
|
735.16 | in passing... | JUPITR::MNELSON | | Thu Oct 07 1993 15:59 | 20 |
| re: .15
Ron, in contrast to Christianity?
Since God created everything and maintains everything in Him, there is
a certain amount of God revealed in non-Christian religions and in
things like nature and science. However that which is created is not
the Creator and therefore should not be worshiped.
I do not know anything about Ghandi's worship or what he considered
God so I can't comment. Considering his life, it seems that he made
himself open to the work of the Holy Spirit.
Even those who worship household idols think they have a true
religion, but as the Psalmist says, they are without any real power
and are mute.
A short response.
Mary
|
735.17 | an interpretation | DLO15::FRANCEY | | Thu Oct 07 1993 16:17 | 28 |
| Mary,
Here's a crack at a brief statement or where I'm coming from (or where
I'm at).
God reveals Godself to many people in many ways. For me, God and the
attributes of God, God's teachings are made know (to me) thru the life,
death, resurrection of Jesus the Christ. And so, my beliefs are
predicated on my continuing understanding and revelation of God made
known thru Christ Jesus.
Now, for others in the world, God may very well make known Godself thru
other means - and, I believe, those ways are just as revealing to them
as the ways made known to me are to me.
My feelings are that to believe anything else which "requires" God to
reveal Godself within certain human-specified parameters is to restrict
God's powers, reign, God's design. I am immediately led to the
supporting scripture of Mat 25:31-45 (or so) which deals with the
"anonymous Christ" - the One to whom you are doing things for even thou
you did not recognize you were doing so to him.
So, for me, God has presented God's character thru Jesus, scripture,
reason and revelation - to others God may have chosen to do otherwise -
that's ok with me - after it, it's ok with God.
:-)
|
735.18 | | TLE::COLLIS::JACKSON | DCU fees? NO!!! | Thu Oct 07 1993 16:56 | 9 |
| Re: .11
I agree with you, Steve, that Christians have no exclusive claim
to morality. Anyone can choose to follow a moral code (with
some success and some failure if it is closely aligned with
God's morals). Christians have the advantage of having the
Spirit working within them to help them do what is right.
Collis
|
735.19 | in agreement | JUPITR::MNELSON | | Thu Oct 07 1993 17:52 | 33 |
| re: .17
Actually, I agree with you and I'd say so does my Church teachings
as far as the ability of non-Christian people to know God and to
act according to God's Will.
That does not mean that Jesus Christ is not the only way to salvation;
it means that while not knowing Him personally, they accepted the
Truth of Him, that is, the Way of life that mirrors Him. Ghandi's
non-violence would be one example of this.
The person who calls himself Christian yet does not accept the life
that Jesus taught and led [forgiveness, non-violence, service, the
cross, humility, obedience, etc.] has not really accepted God. Rather
that person testifies by the way they live their life that there is
a "better way" [resentment, violence, greed, self-indulgence,
arrogance, pride, rebellion, etc.].
When we ARE introduced to the person of Jesus Christ and His Gospel
and church, we should recognize the Way, Truth and Life. To reject
Christ at this point in favor of 'something else' can be quite a
grave choice although only God can judge each person.
For those who have been given much, much is expected of them; those
who have been given little, little is expected. I have far less
concern for the state of the Hindu soul in the middle of India who
has never heard the Good News as I do over Christians who live a
perfunctory faith, marginalizing Christ to one hour a week or seeking
their happiness in worldly things as if God has nothing to offer!
Peace,
Mary
away in
|
735.20 | a resouce on ecumenism | DLO15::FRANCEY | | Thu Oct 07 1993 18:26 | 17 |
| Mary,
I'm just going to have to pick up a book that I was given as a
graduation gift from Dot some three years ago and try once again to get
thru it. It's a VERY difficult book to read as all his books are:
Hans Kung's "Ecumenism in the Third Millenia".
Are you still banned from reading his books? If so, you may be the
lucky one as they sure are tough (for me) reading. But, perhaps he
will touch on some of this stuff we are discussing. Actually, he NEVER
just touches! His "On Being a Christian" must be at least four inches
thick!
Shalom,
Ron
|
735.21 | A reply | TINCUP::BITTROLFF | Theologically Impaired | Thu Oct 07 1993 20:44 | 80 |
| re: .14
This probably isn't the topic for this particular debate, feel free to move it.
If religions were created only by societial pressures (rather than by
the Divine) then they would be reflections of all that the masses
within the society desired. There would not be this great conflict
between society and religion that seems to be in just about every
society. Most religions go against the grain of the demands of
society; they are counter-cultural.
I disagree completely with this. Religions are reflections of what a SUBSET of
the masses within the society desire. The conflict is between different subsets
of society. A subset of like minded people band together and call it a
religion, attempting to convert others to their point of view. Depending on the
fervor of the conversion attempts other portions of society resist with varying
degrees of passion (for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction).
This is where your conflict comes from.
The Christian religion formed and developed among tremendous
persecution to the point that it is considered the Age of the Martyrs;
this persecution lasted for 300 years! Its adherents chose poverty
and possible death to keep their faith. There were no 'worldly
advantages' that explains this phenomenon of faith or that would support
the thesis that Christianity was mearly a man-made religion based on
societial pressures.
So? Persecuted groups form and stay together all the time. I can think of a lot
of 'martyrs' in Waco that withstood 'persecution'. Over the eons many religions
have been persecuted, they have also caused much persecution of those that
chose not to agree with them. Since no one religion has managed to convert the
entire planet does that mean that this 'phenomenon of non-faith' was inspired
by God? Persecution is not the sole province of Christians, at one time or
another most faiths can point to their persecution. Most can also, sadly,
see examples of where they were the persecutor. Than religion survived in Russia
is no more amazing than free thought surviving the inquisition.
Everyone, even athiests, have a belief system which can, in the broad
sense, be considered a religion. Many religions ARE man-made based on
societial pressures. These, however, do not worship the True God, but
rather idols of man's own creation. Anything can become an idol, it is
what we value the most and give most of our time and resources towards
and it is where we expect to find our security. In this day and age
this is often ourselves (man is god) or money, science, education,
our 'castle', etc.. Such idols generally have mass appeal and they do
not demand a counter-cultural belief or faith walk.
What you are saying here is that ALL religions are man-made except yours. The
conflict here should be obvious. I consider your True God an idol of mans
creation, just as you probably consider the gods of other religions as creations
of man. (What is a faith walk?)
I agree with your assertion that many people are 'Christians of Convenience'.
When I said that religions are man made, I was not using these to prove it.
Studying martyrs proves nothing for you, Jim Jones followers were martyrs, the
folks in Waco were martyrs, there are atheist martyrs. Dying for a cause you
believe in is also not the sole province of religion. There are millions of
people that have died for political reasons. There are also martyrs from all
religions, which is the 'one true religion'. For some reason Christians (and
to be fair, any group) feel that they have the monopoly on pain and suffering,
and that the sacrifices of competing religions really don't count. You also
speak of the unity of the scriptures. In other notes presented here Richard
has provided just a few examples that show the writings to be anything but
unified. They are also not consistent, or in many cases logical. As to the
4000 years thesis, there are several major religions that have been around that
long (or longer), which is correct? If any one have been around that long but
is wrong, then logically you must admit they could ALL be wrong.
You have shown me nothing that I don't regard as the behaviour of normal human
beings. I see no evidence of divine anything in any of your points.
Steve
P.S. I normally don't get into this type of discussion here, I truly have no
desire to attempt to sway anyone from their faith. Someone touched a bit of a
raw nerve and I responded. Although I would be happy to debate this point for
as long as anyone cares to answer, I will also drop the discussion or take it
private if it is making anyone uncomfortable. I am, after all, a guest in this
forum... :^)
|
735.22 | God will have the last word. | CSC32::KINSELLA | Why be politically correct when you can be right? | Fri Oct 08 1993 13:38 | 11 |
|
America has a sin problem. God has been banned by our government
from our schools. People refuse to recognize God. Sadly enough,
someday God will refuse to recognize them and He will ban them
from heaven.
God is dead. - Nietzsche
Nietzsche is dead. - God
Jill
|
735.23 | | GRIM::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Fri Oct 08 1993 13:59 | 10 |
| Re: .22 Jill
> God is dead. - Nietzsche
> Nietzsche is dead. - God
Nietzsche never claimed that he would live forever, so why should his death
invalidate his theory that God is dead?
-- Bob
|
735.24 | :^) | CSC32::KINSELLA | Why be politically correct when you can be right? | Fri Oct 08 1993 14:04 | 9 |
|
Because God is not dead. Someone cannot be alive and dead at
the same time and I have a relationship with Him. It's not
possible to have a relationship with a dead person. It tends
to be very one sided. Anyway the point being that Nietzsche was
finite in life as well as wisdom, God is infinite in both.
Jill
|
735.25 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Pacifist Hellcat | Fri Oct 08 1993 14:53 | 6 |
| Talk about twisting words! The "God is dead" statement means something
entirely different when it's not taken out of context!
See note 6.72.
Richard
|
735.26 | clarification | THOLIN::TBAKER | DOS with Honor! | Fri Oct 08 1993 17:10 | 12 |
| Way back in .16 Mary said:
> Even those who worship household idols think they have a true
> religion, but as the Psalmist says, they are without any real power
> and are mute.
People, certainly not Hindus, do *NOT* worship idols. They no
more worship idols than do Christians worship a few boards of
wood made into a cross. It is what the object represents. It
helps to have a symbol upon which to focus. No more than that.
Tom
|
735.27 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Sat Oct 09 1993 21:43 | 30 |
| In "The Splendor of Truth", John Paul II makes some observations relevant
to this topic:
32. Certain currents of modern thought have gone so far as to "exalt
freedom to such an extent that it becomes an absolute, which would then be
the source of values". This is the direction taken by doctrines which have
lost the sense of the transcendent which are explicitly atheist. The
individual conscience is accorded the status of a supreme tribunal of moral
judgment which hands down categorical and infallible decisions about good
and evil. To the affirmation that one has a duty to follow one's conscience
is unduly added the affirmation that one's moral judgment is true merely by
the fact that it has its origin in the conscience. But in this way the
inescapable claims of truth disappear, yielding their place to a criterion
of sincerity, authenticity and "being at peace with oneself", so much so
that some have come to adopt a radically subjectivistic conception of moral
judgment.
As is immediately evident, "the crisis of truth" is not unconnected with
this development. Once the idea of a universal truth about the good,
knowable by human reason, is lost, inevitably the notion of conscience also
changes. Conscience is no longer considered in its primordial reality as an
act of a person's intelligence, the function of which is to apply the
universal knowledge of the good in a specific situation and thus to express
a judgment about the right conduct to be chosen here and now. Instead,
there is a tendency to grant to the individual conscience the prerogative
of independently determining the criteria of good and evil and then acting
accordingly. Such an outlook is quite congenial to an individualist ethic,
wherein each individual is faced with his own truth, different from the
truth of others. Taken to its extreme consequences, this individualism
leads to a denial of the very idea of human nature.
|
735.28 | | GRIM::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Sun Oct 10 1993 01:39 | 3 |
| Well, he would say that, being the Pope...
-- Bob
|
735.29 | disappointed | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (DTN 223-8576, MSO2-2/A2, IM&T) | Sun Oct 10 1993 08:51 | 18 |
| re Note 735.27 by COVERT::COVERT:
> Conscience is no longer considered in its primordial reality as an
> act of a person's intelligence, the function of which is to apply the
> universal knowledge of the good in a specific situation and thus to express
> a judgment about the right conduct to be chosen here and now.
I'm always HIGHLY suspicious of claims to "universal
knowledge" as a point to settle an argument, since in almost
every case the argument wouldn't exist if such "universal
knowledge" really existed.
In very much the same way, appeals to "common sense" and
"natural law" are made to try to settle an argument in a way
that seems logical, even scientific, but which is in fact an
appeal to "gut" or emotion.
Bob
|
735.30 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Pacifist Hellcat | Sun Oct 10 1993 17:08 | 18 |
| Something's missing here. I've heard that an overwhelming majority
of people who are sentenced to prison for violent crimes were physically and/
or sexually abused as children. And I know from confidences shared with me
that there are many, many more people who were abused as children than simply
those who are convicted of violent crimes.
I remember when I was in high school, a popular teacher, trusted
and confided in by many of the students on campus, made a comment to a class
I was in that we would not believe how common incest was. He was right.
Mind you, this was in 1962, when we supposedly still had traditional family
values. Those "family values" managed to keep issues of abuse well suppressed.
Jesus said, "You shall know the truth. And the truth will set you
free." Certainly, the truth isn't always pleasant, and freedom isn't always
an easy thing to bear.
Shalom,
Richard
|
735.31 | Means something entirely different? Explain. | CSC32::KINSELLA | Why be politically correct when you can be right? | Mon Oct 11 1993 14:15 | 27 |
| 735.25
So Richard am I supposed to believe from the "entire" quote (6.72) that
Nietzsche was a good Christian guy? From this quote he still appears
to have a problem in that he thought man had the power to possess and
destroy God and that He didn't know that atonement for our sins was
complete with the acceptance of Jesus' sacrifice on the cross.
>"God is dead. God remains dead. And we have killed him. How shall
> we, the murderers of all murderers console ourselves ? That which
> was the holiest and mightiest of all that the world has yet possessed
> has bled to death under our knives - who will wipe this blood
> off us ?"
> -Friedrich Neitzsche
You may also want to remember that Hitler promoted and waged his war of
destruction for a perfect Arian race based on a book by Neitzsche, I
think the name was "The Super Man." Every German pilot had a copy of
this book, it was their "bible." Neitzche was to Hitler what Marx was
to Stalin. Anyone care to recall how many people died in the WWII
period based on the pursuit of the philosophies of these 2 men?
Neitzsche hardly appeared to be a man of faith in God and his
commandments and that quote does nothing to support that he does.
Maybe you see it differently, if so, please explain because I just
don't see what your point was about my twisting his words.
Thanks, Jill
|
735.32 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Pacifist Hellcat | Mon Oct 11 1993 18:12 | 3 |
| Anybody else wanna field .31?
Richard
|
735.33 | I didn't ask anybody else... | CSC32::KINSELLA | Why be politically correct when you can be right? | Mon Oct 11 1993 19:15 | 9 |
|
Richard, I'd like for you to answer. You said I twisted his words
by using them out of context. I don't think I did. I think the
full quote supports what I said. I'm asking you to tell me what
you see in his words because obviously it's not what I see. I
think we interpretted his words differently, but since I don't know
how you interpretted his words, it's hard to have a discussion on this.
Jill
|
735.34 | Basically, I was throwing my hands into the air | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Pacifist Hellcat | Mon Oct 11 1993 22:09 | 11 |
| Jill .33,
It's just that my understanding of what the author was trying to
say is so foreign to what you apparently believe his words say, I
have no idea where to even start.
I was hoping someone wiser than me would elucidate upon the much
maligned quote, sharing with us what the author was authentically
trying to say.
Richard
|
735.35 | Internal pointer | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Pacifist Hellcat | Mon Oct 11 1993 22:10 | 3 |
| New topic, "God is dead." Note 741
Richard
|
735.36 | READ THE BOOK! | SALEM::PORTER | Mike Porter, 285-2125, NIO/A19 | Mon Nov 08 1993 16:08 | 21 |
| Here I was hoping to find a discussion of the book "WHY JOHNNY
CAN'T TELL RIGHT FROM WRONG" by (I don't remember his first name)
Kilpatrick. His contention is that schools should be teaching morality,
mainly through reading stories with moral messages in them. He would
include stories from the Bible in the list of reading materials. He
would also expect schools to demand correct behavior from its students
and be intolerant of deviant behavior.
Even an atheist like myself would have no problem with including
Bible stories in reading lists in public schools. To exclude them, I
think, would be making a law respecting the establisment of religion.
Mr. Kilpatrick goes into great detail in pointing out where our
society has accepted a philosophy of moral relativism throughout our
culture and the grave consequences of it doing so. I have neither the
time nor the space here to go into detail about the book. It is a great
read whatever your religious beliefs may be. Another great read dealing
with the same subject is Thomas Lickona's "EDUCATING FOR CHARACTER."
Mike
|
735.37 | | GRIM::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Mon Nov 08 1993 21:01 | 10 |
| Re: .36
> Even an atheist like myself would have no problem with including
> Bible stories in reading lists in public schools. To exclude them, I
> think, would be making a law respecting the establisment of religion.
I disagree, Mike. To require them would be making a law respecting the
establishment of religion.
-- Bob
|
735.38 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Who will rid me of this meddlesome priest? | Tue Nov 09 1993 06:54 | 5 |
| RE: .37 I got the impression that Mike was talking about *allowing*
not *requiring* Bible stories. I see a difference. The Courts seem
not to.
Alfred
|
735.39 | Thanks for the support. | SALEM::PORTER | Mike Porter, 285-2125, NIO/A19 | Tue Nov 09 1993 14:26 | 26 |
| Thank you, Alfred, for the support. There is a difference between
"allowing" and "requiring" specific material in an ethics, or character
course. It would seem to me intolerant to specifically exempt some
stories from the class because they are of or from a religious point of
view. Bible stories are the basis of the moral teachings of the vast
majority of American citizens, and as far as I know, we still allow
citizens to be religious.
I think it wrong to exempt stories from the course if they are
from the Bible, from some other religious text, or even from an author
with an obvious religious affiliation, such as C. S. Lewis of I. B.
Singer. Our society is suffering from a rapid decline in the level of
civility and we are in need of any stories, from whatever source, which
may help to stem the tide.
That said, I do have a problem with posting the Ten Commandments
on the wall of a publis school room. The Ten Commandments do have a
place in character education, but not as the exclusive basis of
morality. The first Commandment implies that if you do not believe in
or worship a supernatural supreme being then you are by definition
immoral. I contend that you don't have to believe it the supernatural
to be moral. Western Civilization has a long history of non-theistic
ethical teachings going all the way back to Aristotle.
Mike
|
735.40 | | GRIM::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Tue Nov 09 1993 18:01 | 14 |
| Re: .39 Mike
> Thank you, Alfred, for the support. There is a difference between
> "allowing" and "requiring" specific material in an ethics, or character
> course. It would seem to me intolerant to specifically exempt some
> stories from the class because they are of or from a religious point of
> view.
If public schools are "allowed" to use the Bible to teach ethics, doesn't
this suggest that students would be "required" to study the Bible?
Wouldn't the schools be placed in the position of endorsing the teachings
of the Bible and hence be promoting religion?
-- Bob
|
735.41 | REPLY TO BOB | SALEM::PORTER | Mike Porter, 285-2125, NIO/A19 | Tue Nov 09 1993 22:51 | 30 |
| BOB,
I must respectfully disagree that reading "morality tales" from
the Bible is "teaching" or promoting religion. The Bible is one of many
sources of moral lessons; religion has no monopoly on morality.
As an atheist I consider myself a very moral person and I even agree
with some of the moral teachings of the Bible, but by no means all of
them. As I stated, the first Commandment I do not consider a proper
basis for morality.
What I think has happened is that we have taken Jefferson's
prescription that the first amendment to the constitution requires a
separation of church and state to rather rediculous extremes. I doubt
that Jefferson (along with Lincoln and Aristotle one of my heroes)
would agree that the separation of church and state means that people
with religious views or those who derive their views from religious
texts should be excluded from public discourse.
I think it proper that public schools "educate for character."
What the curriculum should contain for reading materials is of course
subject to debate and I doubt that you would find any two people to
agree on all the texts to be used. The Bible is only one source for
moral teaching. I think that to completely exclude the moral teachings
of the Bible would give the student an incomplete picture of what it
means to be moral in our society. And as a further caveat, I think the
selection of what texts to use for teaching morality should obviously
take age into consideration.
Mike
|
735.42 | | GRIM::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Wed Nov 10 1993 09:23 | 16 |
| Mike,
If the goal is to "educate for character" and in order to achieve that goal
"morality tales" are read from the Bible, I think it's unavoidable that
the school will be in a position of teaching and promoting religion. It
sounds like we're not going to agree about that.
Now if the Bible readings were just a small part of an ethics course that
also included a wide variety of other secular and religious material that
would be OK, but the impression I get from 735.36 is that the author of
"Why Johnny Can't Tell Right From Wrong" really does want the schools to
prompte Christian values. The blasting of "moral relativism" was a dead
giveaway.
-- Bob
|
735.43 | SOMEWHAT IN AGREEMENT | SALEM::PORTER | Mike Porter, 285-2125, NIO/A19 | Wed Nov 10 1993 14:11 | 20 |
| Bob,
I realize that your not having read the book I am refering to and
my inability to do it justice is part of our communication problem.
Kilpatrick, in his book, devotes a very long appendix listing
recommended reading for students of different grade levels. The only
religious text he has put in his list is a book of Bible stories, not
the Bible itself. The rest of the books are secular in nature, if you
accept the writings of C. S. Lewis and I. B. Singer as secular.
I am not promoting the use of the Bible as the main ethics text
but as one of the sources of moral teachings. Again, despite my devote
atheism, I can't see how you can exclude a work that the vast majority
of Americans use as the basis of their moral beliefs from an ethics
curriculum. I would suggest using "Bible stories" in the early grades
and the Bible itself as a reference at the high school level and
beyond.
- Mike
|
735.44 | | GRIM::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Wed Nov 10 1993 17:50 | 25 |
| Re: .43 Mike
> I realize that your not having read the book I am refering to and
> my inability to do it justice is part of our communication problem.
Yes, possibly. If I had the time I'd read Kilpatrick's book, just to know
what the other side was up to.
> The rest of the books are secular in nature, if you
> accept the writings of C. S. Lewis and I. B. Singer as secular.
C. S. Lewis is definitely a Christian apologist, although I wouldn't object
to using the Narnia stories in elementary schools (they have a subtle
Christian slant, but I enjoyed them a lot when I was younger). I'm not
familiar with I. B. Singer.
> Again, despite my devote
> atheism, I can't see how you can exclude a work that the vast majority
> of Americans use as the basis of their moral beliefs from an ethics
> curriculum.
Because the Constitution protects religious minorities from being subjected
to a religion established by the majority.
-- Bob
|
735.45 | In the Olden Days | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Pacifist Hellcat | Wed Nov 10 1993 18:06 | 12 |
| In my Speech (Public Speaking) class in high school, we were instructed
that we could use narratives from the Bible during the we time we were
working on using written materials in public speaking, as long as we
didn't turn it into a sermon. It was okay, for example, to use the
story of David and Goliath, just as it would be to use a story from
an American Indian heritage.
Ironically, the students who we thought were most likely to take
advantage of the allowance never did.
Peace,
Richard
|
735.46 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Who will rid me of this meddlesome priest? | Thu Nov 11 1993 09:17 | 11 |
|
>If public schools are "allowed" to use the Bible to teach ethics, doesn't
>this suggest that students would be "required" to study the Bible?
>Wouldn't the schools be placed in the position of endorsing the teachings
>of the Bible and hence be promoting religion?
How is this different from requiring students to read Edith Hamalton's
"Mythology"? Are you saying that such schools are endorsing the
teaching of those myths and hence promoting religion?
Alfred
|
735.47 | | AKOCOA::FLANAGAN | honor the web | Thu Nov 11 1993 09:26 | 20 |
| Mythology when read in school is read as mythology. I would have no
problem with the Bible being taught in school as mythology.
Would you?
In fact, how about a course in Parallel stories in mythology?
Using the Bible is tricky because it means something different to every
person and it would take a truly outstanding teacher to use the Bible
and at the same time respect all the differences.
I think it is even hard at theological school where there are people
believing in the Bible as the word of God all the way to the bible as
inspired mythology and everthing in the middle. Every instructor also
has her/his view and must also respect everyone else's faith while
challenging everyone. I can understand the alternative of not using
the Bible in public school if the teachers are not proficient at using
it well.
Patricia
|
735.48 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Who will rid me of this meddlesome priest? | Thu Nov 11 1993 10:14 | 17 |
|
>Mythology when read in school is read as mythology. I would have no
>problem with the Bible being taught in school as mythology.
>
>Would you?
No, I wouldn't have trouble with the Bible being taught as mythology.
As long as the teachers make it clear that they are not denigrating
people who believe in it as religion. I don't remember hearing people
who held on to the old Norse myths denigrated and would assume the
same would hold true for Jews and Christians.
Of course this is only an issue in government run school and it's a
shame we have to have them. We wouldn't if more people cared about
education.
Alfred
|
735.49 | ! | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (DTN 223-8576, MSO2-2/A2, IM&T) | Thu Nov 11 1993 10:30 | 9 |
| re Note 735.48 by CVG::THOMPSON:
> I don't remember hearing people
> who held on to the old Norse myths denigrated ...
You mean you actually had some old Norse believers in your
classes?
Bob
|
735.50 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Who will rid me of this meddlesome priest? | Thu Nov 11 1993 10:45 | 8 |
|
> You mean you actually had some old Norse believers in your
> classes?
Not that I know of but I suspect there were some in the neighborhood.
It's not a completely dead religion you know.
Alfred
|
735.51 | I am my own God | COMET::DYBEN | Grey area is found by not looking | Fri Nov 12 1993 08:24 | 16 |
|
-1-10
.....I thank you all for re-affirming my decision to send my son to
a private school :-) Why can't Johnie tell right from wrong? I suspect
in part it is because Johnie's parents can decide for themselves. The
new age movement has made everything to relative. Truth is subjective.
Some idiot declared God was dead back in the sixites and ever sense
we have been trying to fillthe void with the secular humanist mush.
S.A.T. scores are down, drugs and crime are up.. I hope whomever is
keeping score notices the success to fail ratio of the liberal social
engineers!!!!!!!!!
David
|
735.52 | | CFSCTC::HUSTON | Steve Huston | Fri Nov 12 1993 10:41 | 22 |
| re: .51
>in part it is because Johnie's parents can decide for themselves. The
>new age movement has made everything to relative. Truth is subjective.
I assume you meant Johnny's parents _can't_ decide for themselves...
Actually I was rolling this around my head this morning. Not only can't
Johnny's parents decide, but even if they have an idea of what's right,
they wouldn't want to "push their views" on poor Johnny, who they think
should develop his own idea of right/wrong. Johnny's been abandoned to
the secular humanist mush.
>I hope whomever is
>keeping score notices the success to fail ratio of the liberal social
>engineers!!!!!!!!!
I think they are. However, they refuse to re-examine the basic premise
of their world view. They'll keep trying to bend it and kick it instead
of realizing it's flawed at it's base.
-Steve
|
735.53 | | COMET::DYBEN | Grey area is found by not looking | Fri Nov 12 1993 10:46 | 8 |
|
-1
...yes I meant can't! Furgive my speling errs, I is a produkt of
the liberal sko90,skool, sckooly system.
David :-)
|
735.54 | We'll just blame your liberal education | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Pacifist Hellcat | Fri Nov 12 1993 17:32 | 8 |
| Note 735.51
> Some idiot declared God was dead back in the sixites....
The idiot lived quite a bit before the '60s. See topic 741.
Peace,
Richard
|
735.55 | A non-biblical proverb | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Pacifist Hellcat | Fri Nov 12 1993 22:21 | 27 |
| There's an old African proverb: "It takes a whole village to raise a child."
Yes, it doesn't come from the Bible. Truth is not confined to the Bible
alone.
I know the truth of this particular proverb. I have not neglected to teach
my children morality. My children have a strong sense of right and wrong, of
good and evil. Yet, my children are not immune from immoral behavior.
There are influences in the lives of our children which are at times stronger
than parental guidance. Yes, what happens in the schools, but not necessarily
in the classroom, can negatively influence our children. Contrary to
conventional thinking, I can just about gaurantee that an overwhelming
majority of our public school teachers do not promote, encourage or endorse
gang rivalries, rioting, looting, drive-by shootings, substance abuse,
sexual activity outside a committed, dyadic relationship, and a live-for-
today attitude.
It takes a whole village (community) to raise a child.
Many of us are busy pointing fingers and blaiming the schools, TV, rock
music, those d**n liberals, the human potential movement and everything
else, while at the same time abdicating our own responsibility in guiding
children. It's like we have no sense of future, either. It's like we've
chosen to believe that other people's children are none of our business.
Richard
|
735.56 | | COMET::DYBEN | Grey area is found by not looking | Sat Nov 13 1993 07:20 | 27 |
|
-1
Although I disagree with your roll up I must say that you made your
point quite well.
> do not advocate, gang riots, violence and drug abuse, etc
By not endorsing and applying the word of God they are at the root
of the problem ( at!, not thee).
Problems most encountered by Teachers
1950's 1980's +
1.) Running in the hall 1.) Drugs
2.) Talking out of turn 2.) Gang violence
etc, etc, etc,
David
|
735.57 | Results not Effort | COMET::DYBEN | Grey area is found by not looking | Sat Nov 13 1993 07:27 | 15 |
|
.......ps
CNN reported earlier this year that college S.A.T. scores were down
again. Oddly enough they also reported that " self worth" was at an
all time time. Why? A list of words which a board of educators
recommended be removed from use was provided to the public. Some
of the words were " Excellence, winner," etc etc It was explained
that such words would intimidate or exasperate(sp) the little tikes.
This is just another example of this years psycho babble explanation
for why Johny is failing.
David
|
735.58 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Friend will you be ready? | Sat Nov 13 1993 09:09 | 18 |
|
I recently received a tape from Focus on the Family. On it was a brief
speech made by Gary Bower (sp?) who talked about a woman who had taught
school several years ago and remembered class starting by her saying "Good
morning class" and the class responding "Good morning Miss Smith". she
left the classroom for several years and raised her own family and returned
to the class and started with "Good morning class", and was met with the
response "Shut up b*tch", followed up laughter from the rest of the class.
And the question Mr Bower poses is "What happened in America between 'good
morning miss Smith' and 'shutup b*tch'?
Perhaps I'll post Mr Bowers comments as I have the time.
Jim
|
735.59 | A few words about teachers | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Pacifist Hellcat | Sat Nov 13 1993 12:31 | 25 |
| Tomorrow, Sunday, November 14th, in recognition of National Education
Week, my church, Calvary United Methodist Church, is honoring all educators
and support staff with special worship service and a gift for each of our
honored guests to take home.
Teachers in the United States do not share the place of respect they
do in other industrialized, not necessarily Christian, countries. A good
portion of teachers are underpaid. Over half the teachers teaching right
now will be retired or have left the profession for some other field by
the year 2000. Who will replace them? I don't have the stats at my
fingertips, but very few kids feel any desire to become teachers. Of
those who do, very few are high academic achievers.
My pastor was talking with a group of teachers recently about
what values they'd like to instill in their students. Take a guess what
those values they came up with were. Would they include integrity? dedication?
hard work? respecting others? My guess is that your list would come very
close to theirs. These values are being instilled in the children of other
countries; non-Christian, non-prayer in public school countries, I might add.
I've heard the spiel Pat Robertson puts forth making the connection
between the lack of prayer in schools and most other modern societal ills.
It's convincing if you don't look any further.
Richard
|
735.60 | | COMET::DYBEN | Grey area is found by not looking | Sat Nov 13 1993 14:43 | 9 |
|
-1
I honor results not effort! National Education Week should be a time
where we all fly our flags upside down and at half mast! Granted some
teachers are not the problem,maybe it's the admin.
David
|
735.61 | maybe, maybe, maybe | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Pacifist Hellcat | Sat Nov 13 1993 16:40 | 18 |
| .60
And then again, maybe it's us.
Maybe if our teachers were supported instead of maligned, maybe if we
paid them a wage commiserate with the task we require them to do, maybe
if we curb our selfish, disrespectful kids who are their students,
maybe if we held educators in as high esteem as they do in Japan, maybe
if we spent the kind of money on schools that the Pentagon does in
preparation to kill and destroy, maybe if we gave kids a reason to want
to excel in school, maybe...just maybe...things would improve.
Our friend Alfred seems to take matters of education very seriously.
As I recall, he serves or served on a school board. What are your
observations, Alfred??
Peace,
Richard
|
735.62 | | COMET::DYBEN | Grey area is found by not looking | Sat Nov 13 1993 18:03 | 9 |
|
We spend more on education than ever before and the result is less.
Yes parents are o blame to. I will hold teachers in high esteem when
they earn it. As far as increases in salary go, I wold be glad to
offer teachers and parents a commision plan. By the way Richard what
do you think of the school voucher proposal that was killed last year?
David
|
735.63 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Pacifist Hellcat | Sat Nov 13 1993 18:27 | 18 |
| .62 We also have the largest ever pupil to teacher ratio. If
you were required to have 6 years or more of expensive college
education and you had a choice of becoming an elementary school
teacher starting out at $15,000 per year or go into business
at $28,000 per year, which would you choose?
If your reward for stirring imaginations, stimulating curiousity,
and trying to make the mundane come alive in the minds of our children,
was chronic criticism, verbal and sometimes physical abuse, constant
pressure to accomplish more and more with less and less, would you
want to become a teacher??
Richard
PS I don't know what killed the school voucher proposal. I don't
know why Amendment 2 passed, either. I don't even know how Reagan
got away with 2 terms!
|
735.64 | | COMET::DYBEN | Grey area is found by not looking | Sat Nov 13 1993 18:50 | 8 |
|
> I don't even know why Reagun
:-)
David
|
735.65 | and to think teachers complained that I didn't write enough | CVG::THOMPSON | Who will rid me of this meddlesome priest? | Sat Nov 13 1993 22:13 | 107 |
| I believe that it is quite true that respect for teachers is something
that parents must teach their children. Children behave and learn much
better when their parents respect the teachers. Children are very
sensitive to such things. I remember when my wife was working as a
teachers aide in a local public school. One student hit (that word
doesn't quite do justice to the act) an other student. My wife wanted
to hold the child after school as punishment but the parent refused
to allow it. It was "inconvenient". The school lacked the ability
or will, I'm not 100% sure which, to fight the parent. My wife did
keep the child in from a recess so he didn't get off completely free
but think about the lesson he learned.
We often tie respect in with income. I heard a parent say once that
they didn't respect the Principal because how could you respect
someone who only made $35k/year? Imagine that! But in general I
don't believe that income is the only, or even the best way, to show
respect. I don't believe that teachers anywhere in the world are
really highly paid by local standards. And I note that it would not
be a huge cut in pay for me with 18 years and a Masters degree to
go from SR S/W engineer to step 16 in the Masters track in my local
school system. No the real difference is in attitude.
In Japan teachers and parents meet at least once a year. Sounds like
the US no? Actually it's quite different. The teacher visits the
parents in their home. Before the teacher comes the whole house is
cleaned. The father, and this is very key in Japan, comes home from
work to meet with the teacher. This shows by solid example that the
teacher is a respected and important teacher. This is respect. Just
as we teach our children that love is not shown only though money
neither is respect ad honor.
If you study who does well in American schools you will find some
common threads. The strongest of these is that students who do well
come from homes and local cultures that value education and teachers
in more then a monetary sense. Asian cultures and the Jewish culture
stand out in this regard. Remember the song from Fiddler In The Roof
about a husband? "For father make him a scholar" Rich or poor the
scholar, the teacher, the student are all valued in the Jewish
tradition. Children from cultures and families that value education
can go to the same crowded schools with the same under paid teachers
and learn and learn and learn.
I think that lack of respect is a key part of the failures in
education today. Not just respect for teachers but for other students.
A year ago a student came to try out the school I served on the board
of. She has a weight problem and was having a rough time of it in her
school. During the day one of the students, I'm sad to say, made fun
of her. The other girls immediately went to the principal who suspended
the student on the spot. His parents had to come and get him. When
the girls mother came to get her see told her mother that "they have
jerks here too. But here they know how to handle them."
Several points I want to make with this story. First, the other girls
knew that this was inappropriate and disrespectful behavior. Second,
they knew that action would be taken. Not hoped it would be taken.
Knew. This is important. Lastly, action was taken and taken in a
timely fashion. There were consequences. A failure to respect an
other student was not to be tolerated. When students respect each
other the atmosphere is much more conducive to education. Students
who feel free to make mistakes or ask questions learn more. Respect
allows this to happen.
I strongly believe that a Christian school makes it easier to teach
respect if only because of the Christian belief that we are all
brothers and sisters in Christ. Also that we are part of the body
of Christ. A community with a common bond. I believe this is true
of other religious related schools to varying degrees but I lack
first hand knowledge. In public schools it's all too easy to focus
on differences. A failing I see no way around in a multi cultural
society. It's easier in mono cultural societies where everyone
looks alike and has a strong common set of core values and beliefs.
When I went to grade school in a public school we heard Bible reading
and sang hymns. It was a common culture and a common base. Was it
fair to non Christians? Probably not and for that reason that doesn't
happen any more. The problem is that no other common culture or
common base replaced it. The high school I went to, also public,
had a common culture - engineering. It had a common base academic
excellence. When you are told at freshmen orientation that you, all
of you, are in the top 10% of all high school students in a city
or perhaps 100,000 high school freshmen it gives you something to
live up to. Most schools, alas, don't have something like that.
So is the lack of Bible values the cause of the decline of public
schools? In at least some sense it is. Only though because it wasn't
replaced with something solid enough to base a supportive culture on.
There has been talk of secular humanism in education, and ethical
Relativism, and a lack of consistent values. All, to some extent
true. Though perhaps not as much the real problem as some would like
to label them. It's like hydrogen. Hydrogen is not a poisonous gas.
We breath it all the time. However if the concentration of hydrogen
pushes out the oxygen we'll die just as surely as if poison were
introduced. And even poison, carbon monoxide for example, will not
kill in mild doses. But it will if it gets too high.
What's happened to education is that the concentration of good stuff
has dropped too low. It makes the effects of the other stuff, which
was always there, too high. My son can handle the ideas he and I
disagree with in his schools because there are enough ideas we do
agree with to keep him from getting down. I'm not sure that's the
case in some public schools. When he's done with school he'll be
strong. His ideas and beliefs will have been tested and backed with
thought and information. He'll be ready for the real world. But
kids need to be sheltered enough to let them grow.
Alfred
|
735.66 | Some subjects I just can't shut up on | CVG::THOMPSON | Who will rid me of this meddlesome priest? | Sat Nov 13 1993 22:21 | 28 |
|
> .62 We also have the largest ever pupil to teacher ratio. If
Pupil to teacher ratios are misleading and over rated, IMHO, as a
measure of support for education and achievement. I note that the
average teacher in Japan has twice as many students as her American
counter part. What she does have is more preperation time and more
parental support. Also the school my son attended had an average
class size 20% larger than his public school cohorts. The local
public middle school turned out only 5 more Presidential Academic
Fitness award winners then his school. Something like 25-29 even
though the public school had 6 times as many students. I credit
parental support for the difference. Not class size and not social
class either. The public and private schools have very very similar
demographics. You'd be surprised how similar.
>If your reward for stirring imaginations, stimulating curiousity,
>and trying to make the mundane come alive in the minds of our children,
>was chronic criticism, verbal and sometimes physical abuse, constant
>pressure to accomplish more and more with less and less, would you
>want to become a teacher??
The down side here sounds a whole lot like my lot in my present
group. Seriously. And yes, actually, the more I think about it the
more I want to be a teacher. I never would have thought that 20
years ago.
Alfred
|
735.67 | pointer to a conference | CVG::THOMPSON | Who will rid me of this meddlesome priest? | Sat Nov 13 1993 22:23 | 4 |
| BTW, I host a conference on education at LSTARK::EDUCATION_ISSUES
for any interested.
Alfred
|
735.68 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Pacifist Hellcat | Sun Nov 14 1993 11:44 | 7 |
| .65-67 Why, thank you, Alfred! I even *appreciated* your insights
on the points on which we're at variance!
:-)
Shalom,
Richard
|
735.69 | Encouragement to become a teacher | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Pacifist Hellcat | Wed Nov 17 1993 17:18 | 12 |
| I would like to give Alfred a word of encouragement.
If you do decide to change careers, Alfred, I would like to see you
become a teacher. I believe you would make a good one. I would entrust
my own child's mind to your classroom.
I have learned much from having teachers who didn't all think like each
other.
Peace,
Richard
|