Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yep and the pledge of allegiance!
Attempt at humor?
The Pledge of Allegiance is said every day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"God" Is already allowed in public schools. kids can bring a bible to read for instance. They cannot have lessons in a particular religion. And that is a good thing.
Correct. I tried to make this point upthread. Kids can pray during lunch, before a test, and read religious text. Nobody can tell a child otherwise.
Kids can express their own religious beliefs, read religious texts, and pray to any deity they personally choose. God(s) and/or any other divine beings as applicable to an individual's belief system do not need to be "brought back" because they were never forced out. I support this and think it's excellent; I firmly believe that people should have the right to practice any spirituality they wish as long as their actions do not infringe on the rights or freedoms of others. My children occasionally wear religious symbols (not Christian ones) to school and occasionally engage in prayers before high-stakes assignments.
What cannot happen in school, and what many posters seem to want, is school officials promoting the beliefs & practices of one particular religion (Christianity) and guiding students to adhere to its views and/or pray to its deity. I emphatically believe that this should not be supported in public schools in the U.S. & think it would be inappropriate, unethical, and likely unconstitutional.
Anonymous wrote:OP...can you even name the 10 commandments without looking them up? Most can’t and they aren’t very relavant or even appropriate for elementary school (don’t cover your neighbor’s wife...).
This is a ridiculous idea.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"God" Is already allowed in public schools. kids can bring a bible to read for instance. They cannot have lessons in a particular religion. And that is a good thing.
Correct. I tried to make this point upthread. Kids can pray during lunch, before a test, and read religious text. Nobody can tell a child otherwise.
Kids can express their own religious beliefs, read religious texts, and pray to any deity they personally choose. God(s) and/or any other divine beings as applicable to an individual's belief system do not need to be "brought back" because they were never forced out. I support this and think it's excellent; I firmly believe that people should have the right to practice any spirituality they wish as long as their actions do not infringe on the rights or freedoms of others. My children occasionally wear religious symbols (not Christian ones) to school and occasionally engage in prayers before high-stakes assignments.
What cannot happen in school, and what many posters seem to want, is school officials promoting the beliefs & practices of one particular religion (Christianity) and guiding students to adhere to its views and/or pray to its deity. I emphatically believe that this should not be supported in public schools in the U.S. & think it would be inappropriate, unethical, and likely unconstitutional.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"God" Is already allowed in public schools. kids can bring a bible to read for instance. They cannot have lessons in a particular religion. And that is a good thing.
Correct. I tried to make this point upthread. Kids can pray during lunch, before a test, and read religious text. Nobody can tell a child otherwise.
Anonymous wrote:"God" Is already allowed in public schools. kids can bring a bible to read for instance. They cannot have lessons in a particular religion. And that is a good thing.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, yes we should. One cannot kick G-d out of school and hen say Lord why didn't you cover the children? G-d allows tradegies to happen as a wake up call and to call a nation unto repentance. We see that time and time again in the Old Testament with Israel.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You remind me of my relative who just posted this on FB:
"Dear God, Why do you allow so much violence in our schools? Signed, A Concerned Student
Dear Concerned Student. I'm not allowed in schools. -God"
This from a man hasn't set foot in a church since his youngest's christening, which was going on 10 years ago.
You don’t have to go to church to be a Christian or a believer