Baptists
consider public school exodus
Southern
Baptists should remove their children from public schools and find Christian
education alternatives. At least that’s what two Southern Baptists are
saying in a resolution they submitted for consideration at the
denomination’s annual convention in June.
The
resolution, co-authored by Thomas C. Pinkney, an Alexandria, Va., man who was
once second vice president of the Southern Baptist Convention (SBC), and Bruce
Shortt, a Houston lawyer, makes two main points: (1) Christian parents are
responsible for the education of their children, and (2) The education public
schools offer is the antithesis of what Christian children should be learning.
The
measure begins by citing several biblical passages that admonish parents to
teach their children, and points to the Bible’s instruction that
“The fear of the Lord is the beginning of knowledge.”
The
resolution then makes a case for why public schools are unacceptable for
Christian children. “Government schools are by their own confession
humanistic and secular in their instruction, and the education offered by the
government schools is officially Godless,” it says.
The
prevalence of evolutionary theory with contempt for creationism, and the
widespread acceptance of homosexuality in public schools also make the schools
a hostile place for Christians, the measure says.
And
the measure cited studies it says proves that public schools have an adverse
effect on children. “The Nehemiah Institute has discovered through
extensive surveys of student attitudes and beliefs that acceptance of a secular
humanist worldview by Christian children attending government schools has
increased dramatically over the last fifteen years,” the resolution says.
The
authors of the measure say public schools are “anti-Christian” -
and they say it is time for Christians to get out.
The
resolution specifically proposes that: “The Southern Baptist Convention
encourages all officers and members of the Southern Baptist Convention and the
churches associated with it to remove their children from the government
schools and see to it that they receive a thoroughly Christian education, for
the glory of God, the good of Christ’s church, and the strength of their
own commitment to Jesus...”
Pinkney
acknowledged the worth of some public schools, but says the system as a whole
is in a downward spiral. “Some public schools are doing a good job, as
are some teachers who are Christians,” he told The Associated Press.
“But they are in a system that is officially and legally Godless.”
It
is impossible to gauge how many Southern Baptists agree with Pinkney. The
denomination is the largest in the country, reporting some 16.2 million
members. And Pinkney says “hundreds of thousands” of Southern
Baptist families send their children to public schools.
— E.P.
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