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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78962 ***
+
+
+
+
+ LITTLE BLUE BOOK NO. =706=
+ Edited by E. Haldeman-Julius
+
+ The Bible: Should It Be in
+ the School Room?
+
+ The Question Considered Legally, Morally
+ and Religiously
+
+ Franklin Steiner
+
+
+ HALDEMAN-JULIUS COMPANY
+ GIRARD, KANSAS
+
+
+
+
+ Copyright, 1924,
+ Haldeman-Julius Company.
+
+ PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
+
+
+
+
+ THE BIBLE: SHOULD IT BE IN THE SCHOOL ROOM?
+
+
+
+
+ INTRODUCTION
+
+
+The fact that certain Protestant churches, strong politically, are
+exerting their efforts to force the teaching of their religion in our
+public schools against law, constitution, equity and the American
+principle of no union of church and state: the further fact that at
+the present time there is in existence a strong Protestant jesuitical
+political secret order trying to put this measure on statute books
+whether the people want it or not, is the author’s sole apology for
+presenting this little book to the public. He claims for it no literary
+merit, but hopes that all who are truly Americans, whether native or
+foreign born, will circulate its facts and arguments.
+
+ FRANKLIN STEINER.
+
+
+
+
+ THE BIBLE: SHOULD IT BE IN THE SCHOOL ROOM?
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER I
+
+_The Bible and the Sects--Shall Any Version of the Book Be Placed in
+This Country’s Common Schools?_
+
+
+A STATEMENT OF THE CASE. A stupendous effort is now being nationally
+made by a particular and special class of our citizens, to place the
+Bible, the text book of the Christian religion, in the curriculum
+of our public schools. From the outset, there arises this curious
+fact: It is that many Christian sects, one of them being the largest
+in number of communicants, to say nothing of individual Christians,
+have strenuously opposed the measure. The Jews, “unto whom were
+committed the oracles of God” (Romans iii, 2) have also expressed their
+disapprobation. Then add to these about two-thirds of our population
+who profess no religion, and we find the movement limited to a small
+section of our people. The fact that advocates of enforced Bible
+reading are so enthusiastic, so intolerant of criticism and opposition,
+and that they would compel the use of the Bible by law causes us to
+inquire seriously into the question. Then the intense opposition of
+religionists as well as of those professing no religion in particular,
+causes us to conclude that the _propriety_ of such an inclusion in our
+public school instruction is the main issue to be considered.
+
+There arises before us the further fact that one class of people are
+vigorously determined upon the use in the schools of a book of which
+they are the partisans, while the world contains many more books of
+the same character. Still another, that those who accept the book as
+an authority are not agreed as to which edition or which version is
+the correct one. Over this controversies have arisen, resulting in law
+suits which have finally had to be decided by supreme courts. Here we
+might surmise the cause of the intense opposition of some to the use
+of the Bible in the schools, and of further discontent and controversy
+should it be placed there. The advocates of the measure, if they think
+themselves able to put it over, would make Bible reading compulsory.
+Should they fail in this, they are agreeable that it should be read at
+the discretion of the teacher. Should they still fail, they will ask
+that _extracts_ be read. As a last resort, they will plead that it be
+not _excluded_ and that it be read “without comment.” They are even
+willing to concede that no child shall be compelled to take part in the
+Bible reading exercise against the will of its parents.
+
+Why, unlike any other school book, should it be read “without comment”?
+Why the exception? The Bible from whatever view we take it, above all
+other books, to be understood, must be commented upon and explained.
+The whole presents a curious medley of circumstances and positions
+which could hardly be duplicated when any other book is proposed for
+use in the school room. All goes to prove that the advocates of the
+proposal are very enthusiastic and determined to force the book in
+the schools, on the best terms that they can obtain. Should any other
+book be proposed for a course of public school education, under the
+same conditions, no one will deny that its use would be unhesitatingly
+rejected.[1]
+
+[1] Religionists in some places are now opposing the use of Wells’
+“Outline of History” in high schools and colleges because some of its
+views are not orthodox and conventional. Yet they, a minority, would
+force their Bible by law upon all.
+
+
+ IS THE BIBLE A RELIGIOUS AND SECTARIAN BOOK?
+
+It is not our purpose to take part in any of the theological
+controversies that in the past or at the present have raged around the
+Bible. Yet, as the teaching of religion seems to be the desideratum of
+the advocates of Bible reading in the schools, as we shall later prove;
+and the opposition to such teaching on the part of others the cause
+of the opposition to such reading, we are compelled to ask and answer
+the query, Is the Bible a religious book? The meaning of the word
+“religion” has been fixed by the best lexicographers and has been so
+utilized by the best writers.
+
+“The outward act or form by which men indicate their recognition of the
+existence of a god or of gods having power over their destiny; to whom
+obedience, service and honor are due.”--Webster’s International.
+
+“An acknowledgment of our obligation to God as our creator, with a
+feeling of reverence and love, and consequent duty or obedience to
+him.”--Worcester.
+
+“A belief in an invisible superhuman power (or powers) conceived of
+after the analogy of the human spirit on which (or whom) man regards
+himself as dependent.”--The Standard Dictionary.
+
+“Any system of faith or worship.”--Imperial Dictionary.
+
+“Action or conduct indicating a belief in, reverence for, and desire to
+please a divine ruling power.”--Oxford Dictionary.
+
+We are aware that a class of modern thinkers define and understand
+religion differently, as does R. B. Westbrook in The Eliminator, page
+12: “We use the word religion as it was used by Cicero, in the sense of
+_Scruple_, implying the consciousness of a natural obligation wholly
+irrespective of what one may believe concerning the gods.”
+
+We must say that in the face of the five definitions first given, added
+to the understanding and use of the word by religionists themselves, a
+revolution in human thought and in the meaning of the English language
+must take place before this can be seriously accepted as the correct,
+understood, prevailing definition.
+
+Following these guides, the best we can obtain, let us ask, Is the
+Bible a religious book? Is its chief object the teaching of religion?
+We think we need adduce no argument to prove that were those portions
+of the Bible which inculcate religious doctrines eliminated, the
+fly-leaves of the book alone would hold most of what remains. No one,
+and least of all a Christian, will deny that it teaches “a belief in an
+invisible superhuman power (or powers) conceived of after the analogy
+of the human spirit”; or that it teaches “a divine ruling power,” “to
+whom obedience, service and honor are due.”
+
+The first three of the ten commandments are strictly religious and in
+no way concern morality. They teach the absurd doctrine that the God of
+the ancient Hebrews was the only God worthy of worship.
+
+The sermon on the mount, which is perhaps more free from strict
+religious teaching than any other portion of the Bible, yet says,
+“Seek ye _first_ the kingdom of God and _his righteousness_ and all
+these things shall be added unto you” (Matt. vi, 33). Here, again, the
+Jewish God is referred to. The most beautiful of Jesus’ teachings are
+his eulogy and defense of children. Even here he strictly maintains
+religious doctrines, as when he says, in Matthew xviii, 6: “But whoso
+shall offend one of these little ones _which believe in me_,” etc.
+
+“In thus looking at the Bible from a distinctly religious point of
+view, we are in perfect harmony with its writers; even with such
+of them as adopt the narrative style, and will therefore engage
+the greatest share of our attention. For when the books of the Old
+Testament were set aside and preserved as a sacred book by the Jews,
+and those of the New Testament were added to them by the Christians, it
+was with no idea of drawing knowledge of nature or history from them,
+but because they recognized them as the rule of faith and conduct;
+and in the same way the writers themselves prepared their works and
+gave publicity to them, not simply or chiefly in order to make their
+readers accurately acquainted with the past, but to promulgate and
+recommend what seemed to them to be religious truth.” (“Bible for
+Learners,” Vol. 1, page 5.) Hence, however much Bible reading advocates
+may cavil about the book as “literature” or “the fountain of morality,”
+there can be no legitimate question of its object being to teach a
+particular religion, and that its purpose in the school room is to do
+the same.
+
+Let us now ask another question, Is the Bible a sectarian book? Let us
+first state that there is no such thing as a cosmopolitan or universal
+religion. Prof. Max Müller, perhaps the greatest authority upon the
+science of religion, has said: “Religion is a mental faculty which,
+independent of, nay, in spite of, sense and reason, enables man to
+apprehend the infinite _under different names and disguises_.”
+
+Hence, man, in an effort to understand the infinite, has formed not
+one but many religions; therefore we have Buddhism, Brahmanism,
+Shintoism, Judaism, the mythology of the Greeks and Romans and
+finally Christianism and Mohammedanism. In recent years there
+has been developed Agnosticism which holds that the infinite is
+incomprehensible. Religions and Bibles are all sectarian to the
+devotees of other religions who do not accept them as true or
+authoritative.
+
+In the face of this broad truth, those who advocate reading the Bible
+in the public school deny that it is sectarian. They would narrow
+their definition of “sect” to that of the Standard Dictionary, which
+defines it as “a body of persons distinguished by peculiarities of
+faith and practice from other bodies adhering to the same general
+system.” But Christianity consists of different bodies distinguished by
+wide “peculiarities of faith and practice.” Some of these have their
+own versions of the Bible, while others base their peculiarities upon
+different interpretations and particular sections of the same version.
+The widely divergent forms of Christianity, from Roman Catholicism
+to Unitarianism, have their foundation and different versions and
+interpretations. Those holding to one set of doctrines and practices
+accept that version which sustains their contentions and reject those
+which do not. Those making the nation-wide propaganda to place the
+Bible in the schools are the Evangelical Protestants, who accept
+the King James version. The question, “Is the King James version
+sectarian?” has caused the long controversy which courts have been
+called on to settle when opponents of Bible reading have taken legal
+action to keep it out of the schools.
+
+There is another English version of the Bible called the “Douay
+version,” which is accepted by Roman Catholics, who not only deny that
+the King James version is the correct one, but affirm that it teaches
+dangerous and damning errors. Protestants retaliate by making the same
+charges against the Douay version. Therefore, to either one of these,
+the principal divisions of Christianity, the Bible of the other is
+sectarian.
+
+Let us give illustrations of the widely variant readings in these two
+principal English versions of the Bible. When we have done so our
+readers can perceive why such a bitter controversy has arisen between
+the partisans of the different transcripts. He will also see the folly
+and injustice of trying to force a book, which has been the center of
+so much bitter animosity, into public schools supported by citizens
+of all religious beliefs, who are compelled by the law of the land to
+send their children there. We will take just a few illustrations from
+hundreds.
+
+In the King James Version 1 Corinthians xv, 51, is translated: “Behold,
+I shew you a mystery; we shall not all sleep, but we shall all be
+changed.” The Douay Version renders the same verse, “Behold, I tell
+you a mystery. We shall all indeed rise again: _but we shall not all
+be changed_.” Luke ii, 14, is translated in the King James, “Glory to
+God in the highest, and on earth _peace to men of good will_.” The
+Protestant “Revised Version” gives it still different:
+
+ “Glory to God in the highest,
+ And on earth _peace among men in whom he is well pleased_.”
+
+The King James Version makes Matthew vi, 11, read, “Give us this
+day our daily bread.” The Douay version says, “Give us this day our
+_super-substantial_ bread.”
+
+We now come to one difference of translation, which perhaps above
+all others is the most startling and would arouse the greatest of
+the theological controversies. Matthew iii, 1–2, reads, in the King
+James Version: “In those days came John the Baptist, preaching in the
+wilderness of Judea, and saying, Repent ye; for the kingdom of heaven
+is at hand.” The Douay Version gives it an entirely different meaning
+when it makes the second verse read: “_Do penance_: for the kingdom of
+heaven is at hand.” This controverted word occurs in the New Testament
+fifty times and is so differently translated in the King James and
+Douay Versions. In the Catholic church penance is one of the seven
+sacraments, while Protestants do not recognize it at all, hence one
+looks upon the Bible of the other as false and as a teacher of false
+doctrines.
+
+A more startling fact arises when we discover that not only are
+Catholics and Protestants divided in opinion as to what the Bible
+means and as to which version gives the correct meaning, but on this
+point Protestant Bible scholars differ widely among themselves. This
+was so notorious that in 1883 a “new version” was given the world.
+While it corrected some mistakes of translation, it was far from being
+acknowledged as satisfactory. We will here give just one illustration,
+selected from many, of differences of translation among Protestant
+Biblical scholars. Job xix, 25–27, is rendered in the King James
+Version: “For I know that my Redeemer liveth, and that he shall stand
+at the latter day upon the earth; and though after my skin worms
+destroy this body, yet in my flesh shall I see God: whom I shall
+see for myself, and mine eyes shall behold, and not another; though
+my reins be consumed within me.” This passage is to be found in the
+Episcopal and other orthodox church funeral rituals. The “redeemer”
+is supposed to be Christ, and Job is supposed to refer to his soul
+in heaven. This is done in defiance of the fact that Job in other
+passages states that death ends all. (See vii, 7–10; xiv, 7–12 and
+xxxiv, 15.) Following are the translations of a number of well-known
+Biblical scholars, which give it a different meaning and state an
+entirely different situation:
+
+ “Yet I know that my Vindicator liveth
+ And will stand at length upon the earth;
+ And though with my skin this body be wasted away,
+ Yet in my flesh shall I see God.
+ Yea, I shall see him my friend;
+ My eyes shall behold him no longer an adversary;
+ For this my soul panteth within me.”
+
+(Translation of the Rev. Dr. Noyes of Harvard Divinity School.)
+
+ “But I know that my avenger liveth;
+ Though it be at the end upon my dust,
+ My witness shall avenge these things,
+ And a curse alight upon mine enemies.”
+
+(Translation of Dr. Dillon, in Skeptics of the Old Testament.)
+
+ “For I know that my Avenger liveth
+ And that hereafter he shall stand upon the earth;
+ And though after my skin this (flesh) be destroyed,
+ Yet even without my flesh shall I see God;
+ Whom I shall see for myself.
+ And mine eyes shall behold, and not another--
+ Though my vitals are wasting away within me.”
+
+(Translation of the Rev. Dr. Albert Barnes, Presbyterian divine and
+commentator.)
+
+ “As for me, I know it--my Avenger liveth,
+ And (lying) in the dust I shall receive his pledge;
+ Shaddai will bring to pass my desire,
+ And as my justifier I shall see God.”
+
+(Translation of the Rev. Dr. T. K. Cheyne, Editor of The Encyclopedia
+Biblica.)
+
+This is one of the many passages in the Bible which in the King James
+Version has been twisted to meet doctrinal ends. Again we repeat,
+that were any other book containing so many controversial meanings,
+especially among those who maintain its efficiency and credibility,
+offered for use in the school room, it would be rejected at once.
+
+Let us be honest with ourselves and with one another, and admit the
+true motive of those who prolong this agitation to place the Bible in
+the public schools. We have said that they represent the Evangelical
+Protestant churches.
+
+The Catholic church maintains its separate schools for the purpose
+of teaching its children the common branches of knowledge side by
+side with its religious doctrines. Protestants send their children to
+the public schools, relying upon their churches and Sunday schools
+alone for religious instruction. As their churches and Sunday schools
+have failed to arouse sufficient interest, they now want to make
+use of the public schools for religious propaganda. Hence their
+Jesuitical attempts to have laws passed forcing their Bible into these
+institutions. Quite naturally in a country whose national Constitution,
+as well as practically all its state constitutions, proclaims divorce
+between church and state, the Catholic, the Jew, the Agnostic, and
+citizens of other opposing beliefs protest.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER II
+
+_The Bible and the Courts--Law, Constitution and the Judges Are Opposed
+to Religion in Our Common Schools._
+
+
+We will begin with fundamentals by calling attention to the first
+amendment to the Constitution of the United States which reads:
+
+“_Congress shall make no law respecting the establishment of religion
+or prohibiting the free exercise thereof._”
+
+While this does not take away from the states the power to establish
+religious observances, it has been repeated, even with stronger
+guarantees, in practically all of our state constitutions. The
+exceptions are New Hampshire, where the constitution can authorize a
+municipality to provide support for Protestant ministers; Pennsylvania
+and Tennessee, where a belief in God and future rewards and punishments
+is a constitutional qualification for office; Arkansas, whose
+constitution declares ineligible to office and incompetent as a witness
+any person who denies the existence of God; and Maryland, where belief
+in future rewards and punishments is essential to competency as a
+witness or juror. Hence, upon the principle of no union of religion
+with the state, our fundamental laws are almost unanimous.
+
+This is distinctly an American idea. In Europe every country except
+Turkey recognized the Christian religion, and all had a state
+church. All the thirteen colonies had the same except Rhode Island,
+Pennsylvania and Delaware. The last two granted religious equality only
+to Protestants. Only in the first was there absolute religious freedom.
+
+Cobb says: “The history of religion and the church in America, as those
+stand related to the civil government, presents features unparalleled
+in the rest of Christendom” ... “a peculiarly American production.”
+(“The Rise of Religious Liberty in America,” page 1.) The churches,
+from the first, opposed the religious liberties of the Constitution,
+and either openly defied them or covertly evaded them. They do the
+same today. “The practical recognition of entire individual freedom
+of thought and action in reference to matters of religion has not,
+however, always been conceded” (Illinois Reports, Vol. 245, page
+341). The present efforts to place the Bible in the schools are a
+manifestation of the old-time evasion and defiance. The orthodox
+church, from the very nature of the pretenses that it makes, has never
+ceased to seek favors from the state and to demand emoluments in one
+form or another.
+
+When a person or an organization lifts a voice in opposition to the
+introduction of the Bible in the school room, bibliolaters immediately
+raise the hue and cry, “Enemy of the Bible!” They do this as a means
+of starting the “odium theologicum.” Their tactics here are intended
+not to answer the arguments of their opponents, but to crush them by
+opprobrium. The statement that opponents of the Bible in the schools
+are necessarily enemies of it is not only untrue, but has no purpose,
+except the intent be to blind the eyes of the public. The Bible as
+a work of literature no more has “enemies” than have the works of
+Shakespeare, Rabelais, Plato, Homer, Milton, or the productions of
+other writers, ancient or modern. It is to the position claimed for
+the Bible and the unwarranted assertions concerning it made by the
+very people who are trying to force it by law into the schools, that
+exception is taken. All have the right to view and interpret the Bible
+as they choose, but no one interpretation should have the prestige of
+the law, considering that there are so many of them and that our law
+recognizes no particular form of religion.
+
+Others raise the hue and cry that the opposition to Bible reading
+in the schools comes from Catholic sources. Even if this were true,
+it would only prove that the Catholic has the right to object to
+another religion in which he does not believe, being crammed down his
+children’s throats by the civil law. The fact that this church, the
+oldest existing Christian church, opposes it, to say nothing of others,
+and of people who belong to no church--and these include two-thirds of
+our population--only demonstrates the injustice of the proposal. To say
+that justice should not be administered, merely because it would be
+granted to a certain people, is a poor argument in favor of injustice.
+Whenever and wherever Catholics attempt to make use of the public
+schools as a place of propaganda for their church, as Protestants are
+doing when they force their Bible there, we will then and there oppose
+them with the same logic we are now advancing against Protestants.
+
+Among the side issues brought forward to befog the minds of the citizen
+is the plea that the Bible should be read in the schools because all
+should know something about it. But have we not a millionaire Bible
+society to publish it, churches, ministers and Sunday school teachers
+numbering into the hundred thousands whose special business is to teach
+and preach this book? Are not these at the disposal of all who want
+such teaching and preaching? The plea is a subterfuge. They want it
+there so that it may be forced, by the authority of law, upon those
+who do not want it. Their plea that they are willing that it be read
+“without comment,” places them logically and morally in an exceedingly
+unenviable position. Those who want the Bible in the school room hold
+the book to be the inspired word of God. Do they want it recognized in
+the schools as such, or not as such, or are they indifferent to either
+position? If either of the last two, would they be so anxious to have
+laws forcing it there? The Bible brings forward multitudes of questions
+of religion, history, science, ethnology, anthropology, archeology,
+morality and so on. In the study of the book are all these to be
+neglected? If they are, the Bible would not be studied intelligently.
+The “without comment” plea is equivalent to a confession that they do
+not want it so studied.
+
+
+ THE OHIO CASE
+
+Where the real merits of the case have been before a court for
+consideration as to the legality of the reading of the Bible in the
+public schools, the decisions have invariably been that it was illegal,
+unconstitutional, and subversive of the rights of those who objected
+to such reading. This is so well recognized now that Bible advocates
+generally, as a last resort, advocate only the reading of a book of
+_extracts_ from the Bible, a proposal to a consideration of which we
+shall give our attention later. The first historic case of interest
+is the Ohio case. The circumstances were these: In the year 1854 the
+school board of the city of Cincinnati adopted a rule requiring that
+a chapter from the Bible be read each morning by the teacher on the
+opening of a public school session. In 1869, the board, acting on the
+protests of citizens who by such reading considered that their rights
+were invaded, repealed this rule. Whereupon, the Protestant church
+people of Cincinnati applied to the Superior Court for an injunction to
+restrain the board from enforcing the repeal. Their plea was, in brief:
+The fact that Protestants were in the majority, and therefore their
+will should be obeyed; that Christianity was the common law of the
+land, and that therefore its teachings could not be denied a place in
+the schools; that the constitution of the Northwest Territory provided
+for the teaching of “religion, morality, and knowledge”; that to keep
+the Bible out of the schools would be to turn the schools over to the
+control of “Infidel sects”; that many children would remain in total
+ignorance of the Bible did they not study it in the common schools.
+
+The school board was represented by two of the ablest lawyers in Ohio,
+Hon. Stanley Matthews, afterwards United States senator, and at the
+time of his death a judge of the Supreme Court of the United States;
+and the Hon. George Hoadley, afterwards governor of Ohio. We quote
+but a part of Judge Matthews’ argument, though all of it is worthy of
+reproduction:
+
+ “I do say that the reading of the Holy Bible in the manner repealed
+ by this resolution, is the teaching of a dogma in religion, held by
+ only a portion of the religious community, objected to by a large
+ part of the others, and that it is in a just, true and sober sense, a
+ merely sectarian book.
+
+ “But it is asked by some, who by asking betray their want of
+ comprehension of the real question: Have Protestants no rights?
+ Cannot the majority of the community insist upon their consciences?
+ Must the right of minorities alone be consulted? Are we to be ruled
+ by Catholics, or Jews, or Infidels? The answer is obvious and easy:
+ _Protestants have no rights_, as such, _which do not at the same
+ time_ and to the same extent belong to Catholics as such, to Jews and
+ Infidels. Protestants have a civil right to enjoy their own belief,
+ to worship in their own way, to read the Bible and teach it as a part
+ of their religion. But they have _no right in_ this respect _to any
+ preference from the state_ or any of its institutions. They have _no
+ right_ to insist upon _Protestant practices at public expense_, or in
+ public buildings, or to turn public schools into seminaries for the
+ dissemination of Protestant ideas.
+
+ “They can claim nothing on the score of conscience which they cannot
+ concede equally to all others. It is not a question of majorities
+ or minorities, for if the conscience of the majority is to be the
+ standard, then there is no such thing as conscience at all. It is
+ against the predominance and power of majorities that the right of
+ conscience are protected: and have need to be.
+
+ “For--and that is the gist of the thing--the reading of the Holy
+ Scriptures in the appropriate commencement of the morning daily
+ exercises of the public school _is the teaching_ of the _religious
+ dogma_ that they are the inspired word of God: and if it were not so
+ held by the Protestant members of this community, there would be no
+ such lawsuit here today as there is.
+
+ “If it were the writings of Epictetus, of Seneca, or of Pliny, or
+ moral philosophy, or anything of human composition and origin only,
+ that taught the purest and highest morality, nobody would be found to
+ pay the expense of filing this bill to compel its daily reading.
+
+ “It is because that exercise is intended, and valued only as it
+ is intended, to teach the Christian doctrine as to the scheme of
+ salvation offered by Christ, and the Protestant doctrine that the
+ book without note or comment is the infallible rule of faith and
+ practice.
+
+ “And therefore I say that the practice to be perpetuated by the
+ power of the civil arm in this suit, is a practice which teaches a
+ _religious dogma_, and in a sectarian sense. And I say that it is
+ so indisputable, it is so self-evident--it is written upon every
+ countenance in this room--that nothing else than that could account
+ for the extraordinary interest taken in this trial and the efforts
+ which are made to secure the interposition of this court.”
+
+The case caused great bitterness of feeling, was hotly contested, and
+finally carried to the Supreme Court of Ohio. There, in December,
+1872, it was decided against the churches and in favor of the school
+board. (See Ohio Reports, Vol. 23, pages 211–254.) The real, practical
+question was, Had the school board the right to adopt what rules it
+pleased, without dictation from the courts? It was held that the Board
+had such a right and that any error the board might make must be
+corrected by the legislature, and not by the courts. But as the church
+people had persisted in lugging in the subject of religion, it was
+necessary to deal with that also. Here the court spoke in no uncertain
+tone. We quote first an extract from the brief submitted by the legal
+representatives of the Board:
+
+ “Superficial teaching should be shunned most of all in this
+ department, for this concerns, not the poor and temporary affairs of
+ the body, but the eternal welfare of the soul; ... But true and full
+ religious instruction, to a Catholic, is the teaching of Catholicism;
+ to a Methodist, of Methodism; to a Presbyterian, of Presbyterianism;
+ in the sense of Spinoza, of Pantheism; and that of Hume, of Deism;
+ to the Baptist mind it involves immersion, etc. Religious men differ
+ at all points, except, perhaps, as to the being of God. Honest
+ differences prevail even as to what books should be included within
+ the meaning of the words ‘Holy Bible.’ Witness the Jew, who regards
+ the Old Testament as alone inspired; the Catholic, who adds the
+ Apocrypha. And the shades of difference as to the true sense and
+ correct meaning of the Bibles are endless.” (pages 218–219.)
+
+Speaking of the constitutions of the United States and of the state of
+Ohio, the Court said: “They, in a sense, speak to _mankind_, and speak
+of the rights of _man_. Neither the words _Christianity_, _Christian_,
+nor _Bible_, is to be found therein.... Some of the very men who helped
+to frame these constitutions were themselves not Christian men.” (page
+246.)
+
+In dilating upon the relations of religion and government, the Court
+unanimously held:
+
+ “We are told that this word religion must mean Christian religion
+ because Christianity is a part of the common law of this country,
+ lying behind and above its constitutions. Those who make this
+ assertion can hardly be serious, and intend the real import of their
+ language. If Christianity is a _law_ of the state, like every other
+ law, it must have a _sanction_. Adequate penalties must be provided
+ to enforce obedience to all its requirements and precepts. No one
+ seriously contends for any such doctrine in this country, or, I might
+ almost say, in this age of the world.” (pages 246–247.)
+
+ “_Legal_ Christianity is a solecism, a contradiction of terms. When
+ Christianity asks the aid of government beyond mere _impartial_
+ protection, it denies itself. Its laws are divine, and not human.
+ Its essential interests lie beyond the reach and range of human
+ governments. _United with the government, religion never rises above
+ the merest superstition; united with religion, government never rises
+ above the merest despotism_; and all history shows us that the more
+ widely and completely they are separated, the better it is for both.”
+ (page 248.)
+
+ “Religion is not--Much less is Christianity or any other system of
+ religion--named in the preamble of the Constitution of the United
+ States as one of the declared _objects_ of government; nor is it
+ mentioned in the clause in question, in our own constitution, as
+ being essential to anything _beyond_ mere human government.” (page
+ 248.)
+
+ “Properly speaking, there is no such thing as religion of state. What
+ we mean by that phrase is, the religion of some individual, or set
+ of individuals, taught and enforced by the state. The state can have
+ no religious opinions; and if it undertakes to enforce the teaching
+ of such opinions, they must be the opinions of some natural person,
+ or class of persons. If it embarks in this business, whose opinions
+ shall it adopt?” (page 249.)
+
+ “But the real question here is, not what is the best religion, but
+ how shall this best religion be secured? I answer, it can best be
+ secured by adopting the doctrine of this seventh section in our own
+ bill of rights, and which I summarize in two words, by calling it the
+ doctrine of _hands off_. Let the state not only keep its own hands
+ off, but let it also see to it that religious sects keep their hands
+ off each other.” (page 250.)
+
+ “Government is an organization for particular purposes. It is not
+ almighty and we are not to look to it for everything. The great bulk
+ of human affairs and human interests is left by any free government
+ to individual enterprise and individual action. Religion is eminently
+ one of those interests lying outside the true and legitimate province
+ of government. Counsel say that to withdraw all religious instruction
+ from the schools would be to put them under the control of ‘Infidel
+ sects.’ This is by no means so. To teach the doctrines of Infidelity,
+ and thereby teach that Christianity is false, is one thing; and to
+ give no instruction on the subject is quite another thing. The only
+ fair and impartial method, where serious objection is made, is to
+ let each sect give its own instructions, elsewhere than in the state
+ schools, where of necessity all are to meet; and to put disputed
+ doctrines of religion among other subjects of instruction, for there
+ are many others, which can more conveniently, satisfactorily, and
+ safely be taught elsewhere.... The principles expressed here are not
+ new.... They are as old as Madison, and were his favorite opinions.
+ Madison, who had more to do with framing the Constitution of the
+ United States than any other man, and whose purity of life and
+ orthodoxy of religious belief no one questions, himself says:
+
+ “‘Religion is not within the purview of human government.’ And again
+ he says, ‘Religion is essentially distinct from human government, and
+ exempt from its cognizance. A connection between them is injurious
+ to both. There are causes in the human breast which insure the
+ perpetuity of religion without the aid of law.’”
+
+ “In his letter to Gov. Livingston, July 10, 1822, he says: ‘I observe
+ with particular pleasure the view you have taken of the immunity
+ of religion from civil government, in every case where it does not
+ trespass on private rights or the public peace. This has always been
+ a favorite doctrine with me.’” (pages 253–254.)
+
+
+ THE WISCONSIN CASE
+
+This case was decided by the supreme court of Wisconsin in March, 1890,
+and a report of it will be found in the Northwestern Reporter, Vol.
+44, pages 967–982. It was an appeal from Rock county, where, in the
+town of Edgerton, a number of citizens had brought action to prevent
+the reading of the King James version of the Bible in the schools of
+the town, for the following reasons: 1, It violates the rights of
+conscience; 2, It compels them to aid in the support of a place of
+worship against their consent; 3, It is sectarian instruction. (pages
+971–972.)
+
+The body of the decision was rendered by Justice Lyon, and was
+concurred in by the entire court. In dealing with the difference
+between the Douay and the King James versions, the Justice said:
+
+ “It is averred in the return that there is no material difference
+ between the King James version of the Bible used in the Edgerton
+ schools, and the Douay version, which is the only one recognized
+ by the Catholic church as correct and complete. It is universally
+ known that there are differences between these two versions in many
+ particulars, which the respective sects regard as material. Hence
+ the averment is against common knowledge, and therefore not well
+ pleaded.” (page 972.)
+
+Concerning the reading of the King James version being sectarian
+instruction Justice Lyon declared:
+
+ “The term ‘sectarian instruction,’ in the constitution, manifestly
+ refers exclusively to instruction in religious doctrines, and the
+ prohibition is aimed only at such instruction as is sectarian; that
+ is to say, instruction in religious doctrines which are believed by
+ some sects and rejected by others. Hence, to teach the existence
+ of a supreme being, of infinite wisdom, power, and goodness, and
+ that it is the highest duty of all men to adore, obey, and love
+ him, is not sectarian, because all religious sects so believe and
+ teach. The instruction becomes sectarian when it goes further, and
+ inculcates doctrine and dogma concerning which the religious sects
+ are in conflict. That the reading from the Bible in the schools,
+ although unaccompanied by any comment on the part of the teacher, is
+ ‘instruction,’ seems to us too clear for argument. Some of the most
+ valuable instruction a person can receive may be derived from reading
+ alone, without any extrinsic aid by way of comment or exposition.
+ The question, therefore, seems to narrow down to this: Is the
+ reading of the Bible in the schools--not merely selected passages
+ therefrom, but the whole of it--sectarian instruction of the pupils?
+ In view of the fact already mentioned, that the Bible contains
+ many doctrinal passages, upon some of which the peculiar creed of
+ almost every sect is based, and that such passages may reasonably
+ be understood to inculcate the doctrines predicated upon them, an
+ affirmative answer to the question seems unavoidable. Any pupil of
+ ordinary intelligence who listens to the reading of the doctrinal
+ portions of the Bible will be more or less instructed thereby in the
+ doctrines of the divinity of Jesus Christ, the eternal punishment
+ of the wicked, the authority of the priesthood, the binding force
+ and efficacy of the sacraments, and many other conflicting sectarian
+ doctrines. A most forcible demonstration of the accuracy of this
+ statement is found in the reports of the American Bible Society of
+ its work in Catholic countries (referred to in one of the arguments),
+ in which instances are given of the conversion of several persons
+ from ‘Romanism’ through the reading of the scriptures alone; that is
+ to say, the reading of the Protestant or King James version of the
+ Bible converted Catholics to Protestants without the aid of comment
+ or exposition. In those cases the reading of the Bible certainly was
+ sectarian instruction. We do not know how to frame an argument in
+ support of the proposition that the reading thereof in the district
+ schools is not also sectarian instruction.” (page 973.)
+
+It having been pleaded by the school board that children were not
+required to remain in the room during Bible reading, if it was against
+the will of their parents, and therefore did not infringe upon their
+rights, the Justice said:
+
+ “The answer of the respondent states that the relators’ children are
+ not compelled to remain in the school room while the Bible is being
+ read, but are at liberty to withdraw therefrom during the reading
+ of the same. For this reason it is claimed that the relators have
+ no good cause for complaint, even though such reading be sectarian
+ instruction. We cannot give our sanction to this position. When, as
+ in this case, a small minority of the pupils in the public school is
+ excluded, for any cause, from a stated school exercise, particularly
+ when such cause is apparently hostility to the Bible, which the
+ majority of the pupils have been taught to revere, from that moment
+ the excluded pupil loses caste with his fellows, and is liable to
+ be regarded with aversion, and subjected to reproach and insult.
+ But it is a sufficient refutation of the argument that the practice
+ in question tends to destroy the equality of the pupils which the
+ constitution seeks to establish and protect, and puts a portion
+ of them to serious disadvantage in many ways with respect to the
+ others.” (page 975.)
+
+Justice Cassody, in concurring, holds that even though no comment is
+made it would be very easy for the teacher if he so desired to make of
+such reading sectarian instruction:
+
+ “Since every translation made by man must be more or less imperfect,
+ and since the application of particular passages is liable to be made
+ with partial apprehension and biased or even distorted judgment, it
+ is easy to perceive how texts of scripture may be read with such
+ an emphasis and tone as to become excessively sectarian. While the
+ members of any particular sect may be willing to have one of their
+ own number read the Bible in the public schools, yet they are not
+ always willing to concede the same to a member of a sect believing
+ in an opposite faith or doctrine. But the law is impartial, and has
+ given no rights to any one sect that is not equally secured to every
+ other.” (page 977.)
+
+He here quotes Judge Thurman of the Ohio Supreme Court as saying:
+
+ “It is not by mere toleration that every individual here is
+ protected in his belief or disbelief. He reposes not upon the
+ leniency of the government, or the liberality of any class or sect
+ of men, but upon his natural, indefeasible rights of conscience,
+ which, in the language of the constitution, are beyond the control or
+ interference of any human authority.” (page 978.)
+
+Is the reading of the Bible worship? Justice Cassody upon this issue
+speaks without reserve, and handles the question without gloves:
+
+ “Certainly, the reading of the holy scriptures, as the eternal
+ word of God, in obedience to the oft-repeated injunction therein
+ contained, whether by the individual in private, or in the family,
+ or in the public assembly, is an essential part of divine worship.
+ Every sermon is based upon some text of scripture. Most prayers
+ are preceded by the reading of some passage of scripture, as an
+ intelligent guide to the thoughts of the worshiper or worshipers. The
+ Sermon on the Mount contains the prayer taught by the blessed Lord.
+ Is it possible for any genuine believer in the Christian religion to
+ read or listen to the reading of that sermon, and especially that
+ prayer, without being filled with a holy sense of honor, reverence,
+ adoration, and homage to Almighty God, which is the very essence of
+ worship? _We must hold that the stated reading of the Bible in the
+ public schools as a text book may be worship within the meaning of
+ the clause of the constitution under consideration._ If, then, such
+ reading of the Bible is worship, can there be any doubt but what the
+ school room in which it is so statedly read is a ‘place of worship’
+ within the same clause of the constitution? Counsel seem to argue
+ that such place of worship should be confined to some church edifice,
+ or place where the members of a church statedly worship. Some of
+ the earlier constitutions, having similar clauses, used the words
+ ‘building’ and ‘church.’ Manifestly the words ‘place of worship’
+ were advisedly used, as applicable to any ‘place’ or structure where
+ worship is statedly held, and which the citizen is ‘compelled to
+ attend,’ or the tax payers are compelled to ‘erect or support.’
+ The mere fact that only a small fraction of the school hours is
+ devoted to such worship, in no way justifies such use, as against
+ an objecting tax payer. If the right be conceded, then the length of
+ time so devoted becomes a matter of discretion. If such right does
+ not exist, then any length of time, however short, is forbidden.”
+ (page 979.)
+
+Justice Orton, in concurring, thus speaks of the evils of even in the
+slightest manner mixing religion with the government:
+
+ “There is no other such source and cause of strife, quarrels, fights,
+ malignant opposition, persecution, and war, and all evil in the
+ state, as religion. Let it once enter into our civil affairs, our
+ government would soon be destroyed. Let it once enter into our common
+ schools, they would be destroyed. Those who made our constitution
+ saw this, and used the most apt and comprehensive language in it to
+ prevent such a catastrophe. It is said that if reading the Protestant
+ version of the Bible in school is offensive to the parents of some
+ of the scholars, and antagonistic to their religious views, their
+ children can retire. They ought not to be compelled to go out of the
+ school for such a reason for a moment. The suggestion itself concedes
+ the whole argument. That version of the Bible is hostile to the
+ belief of many who are taxed to support the common schools and who
+ have equal rights and privileges in them. It is a source of religious
+ and sectarian strife. That is enough. It violates the letter and
+ spirit of the constitution.” (page 981.)
+
+ “It requires but little argument to prove that the Protestant version
+ of the Bible, or any other version of the Bible, is the source of
+ religious strife and opposition, and opposed to the religious belief
+ of many of our people. It is a sectarian book. The Protestants were a
+ very small sect in religion at one time, and they are a sect yet, to
+ the great Catholic church, against whose usages they protested; and
+ so is their version of the Bible sectarian as against the Catholic
+ version. The common school is one of the most indispensable, useful,
+ and valuable civil institutions this state has. It is democratic and
+ free to all alike, in perfect equality, where all the children of
+ our people stand on a common platform, and enjoy the benefits of
+ an equal and common education. An enemy of our common schools is an
+ enemy to our state government.
+
+ “This case is important and timely. It brings before the courts a
+ case of plausible, insidious, and apparently innocent entrance of
+ religion into our civil affairs, and of an assault upon the most
+ valuable provisions of our constitution. These provisions should be
+ pondered and heeded by all of our people, of all nationalities and of
+ all denominations of religion, who desire the perpetuity, and value
+ the blessings of our free government.” (page 982.)
+
+
+ THE NEBRASKA CASE
+
+This case was decided by the supreme court of the state on October 9,
+1902. It was the case of Daniel Freeman vs. School District No. 21,
+appealed from Gage county. The teacher, summoned as a witness, admitted
+having read the Bible; that she considered the exercises conducted
+as religious exercises, held them as such, and believed it to be her
+duty to do so. This teacher was evidently honest, and made no false
+pretenses, which is more than we can say of many others in her position
+and holding her views. Two extracts from the decision of the court are
+worthy of our attention:
+
+ “But if the system of compulsory education is persevered in, and
+ religious worship or sectarian instruction in the public schools
+ is at the same time permitted, parents will be compelled to expose
+ their children to what they deem spiritual contamination, or else,
+ while bearing their share of the burden for the support of public
+ education, provide the means from their own pockets for the training
+ of their offspring elsewhere. It might be reasonably apprehended that
+ such a practice, besides being unjust and oppressive to the persons
+ immediately concerned, would, by its tendency to the multiplication
+ of parochial and sectarian schools, tend forcibly to the destruction
+ of one of the most important, if not indispensable, foundation
+ stones of our form of government. It will be an evil day when
+ anything happens to lower the public schools in public esteem, or to
+ discourage attendance upon them by children of any class.” (page 847.)
+
+ “For more than three centuries it has been the boast and exultation
+ of Protestants and a complaint and grievance of the Roman Catholics
+ that the various translations of the Bible, especially the New
+ Testament, into the vernacular of different peoples, have been the
+ chief controversial weapons of the former and the principal cause of
+ undoing of the latter. For the making of such translations Wickliffe,
+ Tyndale, Luther, and others have been commended and glorified by
+ one party and anathematized by the others. Books containing such
+ translations have been committed to the flames as heretical, and
+ their translators, printers, publishers, and distributors persecuted,
+ imprisoned, tortured and put to death for participating in their
+ production and distribution. The several popular versions differ in
+ some particulars from each other, and all differ from the Catholic
+ canon, both in rendition of passages from which sectarian doctrines
+ are derived by construction and in the number of books or gospels
+ constituting what is regarded as the written record of divine
+ revelation. In addition to this, there are persons who are convinced,
+ upon grounds satisfactory to them, that considerable parts of the
+ writings accepted by all Protestant denominations are not authentic
+ while devout Hebrews maintain that the New Testament itself is not
+ entitled to a place in the true Bible. These diverse opinions have
+ given rise to a great number of religious sects or denominations.
+ To some of these sects the reading in public of any portion of any
+ version of the scriptures unaccompanied by authoritative comment
+ or explanation, or the reading of it privately by persons not
+ commissioned by the church to do so, is objectionable, and an offense
+ to their religious feelings; to some, the utterance of public prayer,
+ except recitations from the Scripture, is a vain and a wicked act;
+ and to some the songs and hymns of praise in which others engage
+ are a stumbling-block and an offense. We do not think it wise or
+ necessary to prolong a discussion of what appears to us an almost
+ self-evident fact--that exercises such as are complained of by the
+ relator in this case both constitute religious worship and are
+ sectarian in their character, within the meaning of the constitution.
+ Nor do we feel inclined to make what might be looked upon as a
+ spurious exhibition of learning by quoting at length from the many
+ judicial decisions and utterances of eminent men in this country
+ concerning the subject.” (pages 846–847.)
+
+A motion for a rehearing of this case was denied.
+
+
+ THE ILLINOIS CASE
+
+This was the case of The People _ex rel._ Jeremiah Ring _et al._,
+Plaintiffs in Error, vs. the Board of Education of District 24, etc.,
+Defendant in Error. It was decided by the Illinois Supreme Court in
+June, 1910, and is to be found in the Reports of the state, Vol. 245,
+pages 334–378.
+
+The situation, briefly stated, was this: Mr. Ring, a Roman Catholic in
+belief, was sending his children to a district school in Scott county,
+Illinois, there being no Catholic school available within reasonable
+distance. Moreover, he was compelled by law to give his children an
+education. In this school certain teachers held religious service
+which included, during school hours, readings from the King James
+version of the Bible, repeating the Lord’s Prayer as written therein,
+and the singing of hymns, among them one entitled, “Grace Enough for
+Me.” During such religious service the pupils were required to rise in
+their seats, fold their hands and bow their heads, and were sometimes
+called on to explain the meaning of passages of scripture read. Mr.
+Ring had brought suit in the District Court of Scott county, where
+it was held that the services were not unjust and not a violation of
+the constitution of Illinois. He thereupon appealed to the Supreme
+Court of the state. Here four important questions were decided, which
+applied not only to Mr. Ring, but to all other citizens not in sympathy
+with what is known as Evangelical Protestant Christianity. The first
+question decided was that “_free enjoyment of religious worship
+includes freedom not to worship_.” This, orthodox religionists have
+been slow to concede, and never before has the right _not to worship_
+been so clearly stated. On this point the court said:
+
+“The wrong arises, not out of the particular version of the Bible or
+form of prayer used--whether that found in the Douay or the King James
+version--or the particular songs sung, but out of the _compulsion_ to
+join in any form of worship.”
+
+The second point decided was that “_children attending public school
+cannot be compelled to join in religious worship_,” and that the
+religious exercises as held in the school “constitute worship within
+the meaning of the Constitution.” The third point decided was that, the
+constitution of Illinois having forbidden the use of school funds for
+sectarian instruction, the giving of such instruction in the schools
+by the teacher is illegal. Most important of all, the fourth point was
+that the reading of the Bible in public schools constitutes sectarian
+instruction. Here the court speaks plainly:
+
+“The Bible, in its entirety, is a sectarian book as to the Jew and
+every believer in any religion other than the Christian religion and as
+to those who are heretical or who hold beliefs that are not regarded as
+orthodox. Whether it be called sectarian or not, its use in the schools
+necessarily results in sectarian instruction.”
+
+In delivering this decision the court gave forth a number of maxims
+worthy of being remembered, among which were:
+
+“All stand equal before the law--the Protestant, the Catholic, the
+Mohammedan, the Jew, the Mormon, the Freethinker, the Atheist. Whatever
+may be the view of the majority of the people, the court has no right,
+and the majority has no right to force that view upon the minority,
+however small.”
+
+Regarding the status of a pupil in a school who is permitted by the
+objection of himself or his parents to refrain from taking part in
+religious exercises, the Court said:
+
+“The exclusion of a pupil from this part of the school exercises in
+which the rest of the school joins, separates him from his fellows,
+puts him in a class by himself, deprives him of his equality with the
+other pupils, subjects him to a religious stigma and places him at a
+disadvantage in the school, which the law never contemplated.”
+
+The decision of the judge of the District Court of Scott county was
+reversed.
+
+At the Illinois constitutional convention of 1920, an attempt was made
+to nullify this decision by inserting the following in the proposed new
+constitution: “The reading of selections from any version of the Old
+and New Testaments in the public schools without comment shall never be
+held to be in conflict with this constitution.”
+
+The object of this was to force the Bible into the schools and to make
+opponents of the tyranny helpless in protest. The people of Illinois,
+however, took the matter in hand, and on December 12, 1922, defeated
+the adoption of the new constitution by a majority of six to one.
+
+
+ THE CALIFORNIA CASE
+
+This case was decided by the Court of Appeals of the state in December,
+1922. It was based on a clause of the Constitution of California
+reading:
+
+“No public money shall ever be appropriated for the support of any
+sectarian school; ... nor shall any sectarian doctrine be taught
+or instruction therein permitted, directly or indirectly, in any
+common schools of this state.” The California court held that “while
+Protestantism may not be a ‘sect’ in the strict interpretation of
+the term, the Protestant Bible contains the precepts of many of the
+Protestant denominations, and the ‘denomination’ is merely another term
+for ‘sect’.”
+
+As the arguments in this case were very largely those used in the other
+cases they are not reproduced here.
+
+The New York Globe, in commenting upon the decision admits that the
+“authorized version” is “technically sectarian literature,” while the
+Brooklyn Citizen admits: “There can be no doubt as to the facts. The
+law is clear.” In California as in Illinois, the churches are going to
+try to nullify this decision by a constitutional amendment.
+
+The following points now seem to be established in law:
+
+First: Any _version_ of the Christian Bible is sectarian to those who
+do not accept it as the inspired word of God.
+
+Second: One version of the Bible accepted by one denomination of
+Christians is sectarian to members of any other denomination which does
+not accept it.
+
+Third: The Bible is distinctly a book of religion, and the teaching of
+it anywhere cannot fail to be construed as religious teaching.
+
+Fourth: Readings from the Bible, accompanied or unaccompanied by prayer
+and the singing of religious hymns, are acts of religious worship.
+
+Fifth: If done in the public school room, during school hours, with the
+pupils present, it thereby makes the public school a place of religious
+worship.
+
+Sixth: As our citizens are compelled by law either to send their
+children to the public schools or by other means provide for them
+an education, the use of the Bible in the school room compels the
+citizen to support and attend a place of worship, thereby violating the
+fundamental American principle of no state religion and no union of
+church and state. The attempts of Protestants to place the Bible in the
+schools are very astute efforts to evade and nullify this principle.
+
+Seventh: No church, or religion is entitled to any special privileges
+at the hands of the government. All the state is bound to do is to
+protect them all in their equal rights.
+
+Eighth: Those professing no religion have the same rights as those who
+do.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER III
+
+_Fifteen Reasons Why the Bible Should Not Be in the School Room_
+
+
+I. _The Question of Religion Involved._ Those who want the Bible read
+in the public schools declare it to be the word of God. Now it either
+is such or it is not. If taught as the word of God, such teaching would
+be religious and therefore, as the courts maintain, unconstitutional.
+If taught as a human production, would the advocates of its use in the
+schools be so enthusiastic to place it there? As we have previously
+observed, the subject of religion cannot be eliminated from any
+study of the Bible. The result would be the dragging of it into the
+public school, where of all places it should not be. It would cause
+dissension, disagreement, and bad feeling and bring about the very
+thing we do not want to happen, the dividing of the children into
+religious groups or sects. The object of our schools above all things
+is to make the forthcoming citizens Americans, not to divide them
+into religious or national coteries. Let religion be taught in the
+churches and Sunday schools. If it is of any value its worth will be
+communicated from these places in the lives of those who attend them.
+If the churches, as many of them as we have, as great effort as they
+make to spread their teachings, and as much wealth as they possess, to
+say nothing of the power of God behind them, cannot make their good
+influence felt without encroaching upon the public secular school,
+we have a right to assume that they are valueless. The Rev. Joseph
+Parker, the eminent English clergyman, who was opposed to thrusting the
+Bible into the schools, said that to do so was a reflection upon the
+ministry. It implied that ministers are unable to do their own work and
+must call upon the schoolmaster to help them.
+
+II. _The Age of the Bible._ A book written over two thousand years
+ago, in the infancy of the human intelligence, before the birth of
+scientific knowledge, has no place as a text book in the schools of
+the twentieth century. But, some will urge, are not other works of
+antiquity studied in the schools? True, but under these circumstances:
+They are used in higher education; they are used for a particular
+purpose, as, for instance, the study of the language, history, or
+habits of an ancient people; there are not the controversies or other
+objectionable features connected with their study that would follow
+the Bible. Why need we go to a book so old as the Bible for our
+ideals? Have we not them among ourselves? We think we have. We think
+our Abraham Lincoln a greater and a better man than Abraham of Ur of
+the Chaldees. We think our Ingersoll and our Webster were greater
+orators than Peter and Paul. We think Shakespeare, Byron, Burns, Moore,
+Shelley, and our own Longfellow were greater poets than the writers
+of the Psalms. We think Darwin knew more about biology, Herschel more
+about astronomy, Lyell more about geology, Mill more about logic and
+political economy, and almost any physician more about medicine and
+surgery than were known by Moses or any other man, real or imagined,
+who it is alleged wrote the Bible. We think that Herbert Spencer was
+a greater philosophical genius of all the biblical writers, and that
+Benjamin Franklin was a wiser and a cleaner man morally than was
+Solomon. We think that Edison has done more good in the world than
+did Ezekiel, and that Isaac Newton proclaimed greater truths than did
+Isaiah. We think that Buddha, Confucius, Manu, and Zoroaster taught as
+good systems of morals as did Jesus. If Jesus died to save the world,
+thousands have also died in behalf of or on account of Jesus so the
+debt has many times been repaid. If Jesus died in behalf of principles
+which he deemed to be good, so did Bruno, Savonarola, Legate, Wightman,
+Ferrer, and others too numerous to mention. Bible virtues of any real
+value are strictly human virtues to be found in all ages and climes,
+among all races and religions. Is it possible that for moral teaching
+we must revert to the book of a people who were so far behind their
+neighbors that except Saul and Jonathan they had “neither sword nor
+spear in the hand of any of the people”? (1 Samuel xiii, 22.) And a
+people who had no blacksmiths, but who “went down to the Philistines
+to sharpen every man his share, and his coulter, and his axe, and his
+mattock”? (verses 19 and 20). And a people who had no mechanics among
+them, but when their king wanted to build a house for himself had to
+send to a “heathen,” Hiram, king of Tyre, for masons and carpenters? (2
+Samuel v, 11.)
+
+III. _The Bible is not a book_, but a collection of books, written
+hundreds of years apart, and arbitrarily, in the midst of great and
+stormy controversy, gathered together in one volume. There was always a
+dispute as to what books should compose it. The Hebrew Bible contains
+thirty-nine books. The King James, or Protestant English, version
+contains sixty-six, while the Roman Catholic or Douay version in
+addition to these contains the Apocrypha, making in all seventy-two.
+These different factions of religionists respectively reject certain
+books the others accept. For a history of the controversies over what
+books should compose the Bible, see Davidson on “The Canon,” “An
+Introduction to the New Testament,” by the Rev. B. W. Bacon, D.D.,
+of the Yale Divinity School, and the article on the Canon in the
+Encyclopedia Biblica.
+
+IV. Unless used for the purpose of teaching some foreign language, any
+book studied in the public schools should be written in the English
+language, not in a foreign or a dead language. The Old Testament was
+written in the ancient Hebrew, practically a dead language at the
+beginning of the alleged Christian era. Many translations have been
+made, of which John E. Remsburg says, after speaking of the English
+versions, Wicliffe’s, Tyndale’s, King James’s, the New Version, and
+the Douay: “The foregoing are but a few of the numerous versions of
+the Bible, ancient and modern, that have appeared. Nearly every nation
+of Europe has had from one to a score. Luther’s version is nearly four
+hundred years old, and yet Germany has seventeen translations and
+consequently seventeen versions before Luther’s was published. England
+had many besides those named.”
+
+V. The Bible should not be read in the public schools because so many
+false and unfounded claims have been made for it, claims that have
+been nullified by the conclusions of modern science and criticism and
+recent investigations and discoveries. These false claims are embodied
+in the popular teaching of the book. It is claimed, for instance, that
+the first five books of the Old Testament were written by Moses in the
+thirteenth century B. C.; that the four gospels of the New Testament
+were written by those whose names appear as the writers; that Paul
+wrote the fourteen epistles that bear his name, and fictitious claims
+are made for other books. In the face of modern scholarship, which has
+submitted the Bible to the same scrutiny and criticism to which other
+books have been submitted, all these claims have been proved false and
+unfounded. This is so clear that the orthodox churches have split over
+the situation, one party accepting the old or traditional view, and the
+other the modern or scientific.
+
+VI. As Archdeacon Farrar has said, all parts of the Bible are not of
+equal value. The sixty-six books bound into one represent every variety
+of literature--poetry, fiction, mythology, drama, legend, tradition,
+and some things possibly historical. Yet the popular teaching of the
+books makes no distinction between them, and uncritically places all
+upon the same level and gives them the same value.
+
+VII. The Bible should not be read in the schools because it relates
+as facts numerous miracles, wonders, and myths, impossible in the
+nature of things, as the established matter-of-fact experience of
+mankind proves, which bear upon their face the marks of ignorance,
+superstition, and fraud. In the ordinary course of life we laugh at
+such narratives and regard them only as fairy tales. Why, then, in the
+instruction of youth should we teach what we ourselves dismiss as the
+fictitious and absurd?
+
+VIII. The history of man proves that he has been enlightened, happy,
+and prosperous to the extent that he has had a knowledge of Nature and
+her laws, and that ignorance, superstition, and misfortune have been
+the result of a lack of knowledge of, and the violation of, these laws.
+In other words, science has been the great enlightener and civilizer.
+Science today is the basis for judgment in all matters pertaining to
+the welfare of the human race. Science has been called classified
+knowledge, or as Professor Clifford has said, it is “organized common
+sense.” “The subject of science is the human universe; that is to say,
+every thing that is, or has been, or may be related to man” (Lectures
+and Essays, page 24, R. P. A. Edition). Science is progressive. It
+depends upon the continued advance of knowledge, is ever alert and
+critical, calls everything into question and accepts nothing as true
+without a preponderance of evidence. The Bible should not be read in
+the schools because the science it teaches is that of a primitive
+and a barbarous age. It was in accordance with the childhood of the
+world, when, as Lydia M. Child says, “In the childhood of the race men
+thought little and believed much, just as children do.” As a book in
+the schools, the Bible, with its flat earth, its metallic firmament,
+making the sun, moon, and stars as lanterns hung out to give light to
+the day and the night, is a mockery and a distortion in this age of the
+world. Its story of creation is a fairy tale only believable in an age
+of ignorance. Its story of the origin of man is childish, being on a
+par with similar myths of ancient peoples.
+
+The Bishop of Oxford (England) has this to say about the teachings of
+these myths to children: “You can hardly exaggerate the disaster it
+has been to the education of children that they have been taught to
+associate with religion things about the creation, the flood, and the
+beginning of our race, which it was infallibly certain, when they grew
+up to read the literature of their time, they would find false and
+would reject as alien to the whole trend of the philosophy, science,
+and history of their time.” This statement, coming from a clergyman of
+such high standing, ought to be conclusive. We have neither the space
+nor the time to dilate upon the conflict between the Bible and science
+and the bitter struggle between religionists and the scientists. The
+story has been written by one of our greatest of historians, Andrew
+Dickson White, in his two large volumes entitled “The Warfare Between
+Science and Theology in Christendom.” It has been written by Draper in
+his “Intellectual Development of Europe” and in his “Conflict Between
+Science and Religion.” Read these works and see clearly the folly and
+the disaster of placing the Bible in the public schools. You will
+not then be surprised that religionists of the type of W. J. Bryan
+are now using their efforts to prevent the teaching of Evolution in
+our public educational institutions. It is only a revival of the old
+conflict between education and ignorance, between superstition and
+knowledge. The cause of it all has been the use of the Bible as a book
+of authority and teaching.
+
+IX. The Bible has no place in the school room because it states as
+facts the grossest absurdities. It speaks of an ax swimming in the
+water (2 Kings vi, 5); it speaks of “an hundred and four score and five
+thousand” men who arose early in the morning only to find that “they
+were all dead corpses” (Isaiah xxxvii, 36); while we read in the ninth
+and tenth chapters of 1 Kings that Solomon had more gold and silver
+than there were in the world at that time; that the spies sent into
+Caanan “cut down from thence a branch with one cluster of grapes, and
+they bare it between two upon a staff” (Numbers xiii, 23); that “we
+saw the giants, and the sons of Anak, which came of the giants: and we
+were in our own sight as grasshoppers, and so we were in their sight”
+(verse 33), and that the rabbit chews its cud like the cow (Lev. ii, 6).
+
+We will call the reader’s attention to the very absurd story of the
+Israelites’ exodus from Egypt, as shown by R. B. Westbrook, in his
+work, “The Eliminator: or Skeleton Keys to Sacerdotal Mysteries”; “The
+number of fighting men who marched out of Egypt is nowhere estimated
+at less than 600,000, and if this represents only one-fifth of the
+population, the latter must have reached 3,000,000. If we cut this down
+one-third, so as to be sure of our figure, we make it 2,000,000 souls.
+The number of the children of Israel who went into Egypt was seventy
+(Ex. i, 5). They sojourned in Egypt 215 years. It could not have been
+430, as would appear from Ex. xii, 40. The marginal chronology makes
+the period 215 years, and there were only four generations to the
+Exodus--namely, Levi, Kohath, Amram, and Moses (Ex. vi. 16, 18, 20).
+How could these people increase in 215 years from seventy souls so as
+to number 600,000 warriors? It would have required an average number
+of 46 children to each father. The twelve sons of Jacob had between
+them only fifty-three sons. At this rate of increase, in the fourth
+generation there would have been only 6,311 males (providing they were
+all living at the time of the Exodus), instead of 1,000,000. If we add
+the fifth generation, who would be mostly children, the total number of
+males would not have exceeded 28,465.
+
+“All the first-born males from a month old and upwards, of those that
+were numbered, were 22,273 (Numbers iii, 43). The lowest computation of
+the whole number of the people at that time is 2,000,000. The number of
+males would be 1,000,000. Dividing the latter number by the number of
+first born gives 44, which would be the average number of boys in each
+family, or about 88 children by each mother. Or, if where the first
+born were females the males were not counted, the number of children by
+each mother would be reduced to forty-four.
+
+“Dan in the first generation had but one son (Gen. xlvi, 23), and
+yet in the fourth generation his descendants had increased to 62,700
+warriors (Num. ii, 26), or 64,400 (Num. xxvi, 43). Each of his sons and
+grandsons must have had about eighty children of both sexes. On the
+other hand, the Levites increased the number of ‘males from a month old
+and upward’ during the thirty-eight years in the wilderness only from
+22,000 to 23,000 (Num. iii, 39; xxvi, 62), and the tribe of Manasseh
+during the same time increased from 32,200 (Num. i, 35) to 52,700
+(xxvi, 34).
+
+“The whole population of Israel were instructed in one single day to
+keep the passover, and actually did keep it (Ex. xii). At the first
+notice of any such feast Jehovah said, ‘I will pass through the land of
+Egypt _this night_.’ The passover was to be killed ‘_at even_’ on the
+same day that Moses received the command.... After midnight of the same
+day the Israelites received notice to start for the wilderness. No one
+was to go out of his house till morning, when they were to take their
+hurried flight with their cattle and herds. How could 2,000,000 people,
+scattered over a wide district, as they must have been with their
+cattle and herds, have gotten ready and taken a simultaneous hurried
+flight at twelve hours’ notice?
+
+“The Israelites, with their flocks and herds, reached the Red Sea, a
+distance of from fifty to sixty miles over a sandy desert, in three
+days! Marching fifty abreast the able-bodied warriors alone would have
+filled up the road for seven miles, and the whole multitude would have
+made a column twenty-two miles long, so that the last of the body could
+not have been started until the front had advanced that distance--more
+than two days’ journey for such a mixed company. Then the sheep and
+cattle must have formed another vast column, covering a much greater
+tract of ground in proportion to their number. Upon what did these two
+millions of sheep and oxen feed in the journey to the Red Sea over a
+desert region, sandy, gravelly, and stony alternately? How did the
+people manage with the sick and infirm, and especially with the seven
+hundred and fifty births that must have taken place in the three days’
+march?” (pages 85, 86, 87.)
+
+In addition to this we need say nothing of the story of the flood or
+other ridiculous Bible tales. The land of Caanan is described in the
+Bible as “a land flowing with milk and honey,” as a rich land, where
+gold and silver were as abundant as stones. We turn from this high
+sounding Jewish boast to the description of it as given by General
+Furlong, of the British army, who had marched over every mile of it:
+
+“The area of Judea and Samaria is, according to the above authority,
+140 × 40 = 5,600 square miles, which I think is certainly one-fourth
+too much, my own triangulation of it giving only 4,500, or a figure of
+about 130 × 35. I will, however, concede the allotment of 5,600, but
+we must remember that, as a rule, the whole is a dismal, rocky, arid
+region, with only intersecting valleys, watered by springs and heavy
+rain from November to February inclusive, and having scorching heats
+from April to September. Even the inhabitable portions of the country
+could support only the very sparsest population, and I speak after
+having marched over it and also a considerable portion of the rest of
+the world. In India we should look upon it as a very poor province;
+in some respects very like the hilly tracts of Mewar or Odeypoor in
+Rajpootana, but in extent, population, and wealth it is less than a
+small principality.”
+
+Why should we place a book in the schools which teaches such falsehoods
+when all around us are the grand truths of Nature?
+
+X. The Bible should not be read in the schools because it teaches
+oriental tyranny and kingcraft, against which our fathers fought and
+offered their life blood. “Fear God, honor the king” (1 Peter ii, 17).
+“Submit yourselves to every ordinance of man for the Lord’s sake:
+whether it be to the king, as supreme; or to the governors, as unto
+them that are sent by him for the punishment of evil doers, and for the
+praises of them that do well” (verses 13 and 14). “Let every soul be
+subject unto the higher powers. For there is no power but of God: the
+powers that be are ordained of God” (Romans xiii, 1). This is contrary
+to the principles of Americanism as taught by the founders of our
+republic, and has no place in the instruction of the young Americans of
+today in our public schools.
+
+XI. As one of the most progressive nations in the world we have granted
+woman equal rights with man. The Bible should not be read in our
+schools because it teaches the subjugation, degradation, and oriental
+slavery of women prevalent in the age and country in which it was
+written. “Unto the woman he said, I will greatly multiply thy sorrow
+and thy conception; in sorrow thou shalt bring forth children: and thy
+desire shall be to thy husband, and he shall rule over thee” (Genesis
+iii, 16). “Wives, submit yourselves to your own husbands” (Col. iii,
+18). “As the church is subject unto Christ so let the wives be subject
+to their own husbands in everything” (Eph. v, 24). “Let your women keep
+silence in the churches, for it is not permitted unto them to speak,
+but they are commanded to be under obedience, as also saith the law.
+And if they would learn anything, let them ask their husbands at home;
+for it is a shame for a woman to speak in church” (1 Cor. xiv, 34, 35).
+“Ye wives, be in subjection to your own husbands.... For after this
+manner in the old time the holy women also, who trusted in God, adorned
+themselves, being in subjection to their own husbands; even as Sarah
+obeyed Abraham calling him lord” (1 Peter iii, 1–6). “Let women learn
+in silence with all subjection. But I suffer not a woman to teach,
+nor to usurp authority over a man, but to be in silence. For Adam
+was first formed, then Eve. And Adam was not deceived, but the woman
+being deceived was in the transgression” (1 Tim. ii, 11–14). Modern
+civilization has bidden defiance to these words of Paul. We would ask
+the good W. C. T. U. ladies who are working to place the Bible in the
+public schools to ponder over these words of the apostle, as well as
+over many other biblical passages. We would call their attention to the
+despicable idea of marriage taught by Jesus in Matt. xix, 10–12, and by
+Paul in the seventh chapter of 1 Corinthians. In the Old Testament the
+father selects a husband for his daughter, and is allowed to sell her
+as a slave (Ex. xxi, 7). Let these ladies, who are the right bower of
+the priest and parson, read and think over this passage: “When a man
+hath taken a wife, and marries her, and it come to pass that she find
+no favor in his eyes, ... then let him write her a bill of divorcement,
+and give it in her hand, and send her out of his house” (Deut. xxiv,
+1). Yet this is not quite so bad as the teaching of Jesus forbidding
+divorce at all except for the cause of adultery. Let them read and
+think of the following:
+
+“Thus saith the Lord, Behold, I will raise up evil against thee in
+thine own house, and I will take thy wives before thine eyes, and give
+them unto thy neighbor, and he shall lie with thy wives in the sight of
+the sun” (2 Samuel xii, 11).
+
+“Their children shall be dashed to pieces before their eyes; their
+houses shall be spoiled and their wives ravished” (Isaiah xiii, 16).
+
+“I will gather all nations against Jerusalem to battle; and the city
+shall be taken, and the houses rifled, and the women ravished” (Zech.
+xiv, 2).
+
+“Let their wives be bereaved of their children and be widows” (Jer.
+xviii, 21).
+
+Wherever the Bible speaks of woman, from the first chapter of Genesis
+to the last chapter of Revelation, its ideas are low and vile. Those
+ideas have no place in the school room and are unfit for the reading of
+children and young people anywhere. The late G. W. Foote once said that
+the day would come when it would be the proud boast of woman that she
+had never contributed a line to the Bible.
+
+XII. The best thoughts of the best men, both Christian and
+non-Christian, at the present day are turned to the question of how
+to avert war, the curse of the world during the past ten years. The
+Bible should not be read in the schools because from cover to cover it
+teaches, commends, authorizes, and lauds the practice of men killing
+each other. The best evidence of this is the Bible itself. The word war
+occurs within its lids just two hundred and thirty-five times--threats
+of war, rumors of war, devastations of war. The following are a few of
+them: “The Lord is a man of war, the Lord is his name” (Exodus xv, 3);
+“He teacheth my hands to war” (1 Sam. xxii, 35). See also Psalms xviii,
+34, and cxliv. “And thou shalt consume all the people, which the Lord
+thy God shall deliver thee, thine eye shall have no pity upon them”
+(Deut. vii, 16); “Of the cities of these people, which the Lord thy God
+doth give thee for an inheritance, thou shalt save nothing alive that
+breatheth; but thou shalt utterly destroy them” (Deut. xx, 16, 17);
+“And they warred against the Midianites, as the Lord commanded Moses;
+and they slew all the males.... And the children of Israel took all the
+women of Midian captives, and their little ones, and took the spoil
+of all their cattle, and all their flocks and all their goods. And
+they burned all their cities wherein they dwelt, and all their goodly
+castles with fire” (Numbers xxxi, 10).
+
+These passages are typical of the Old Testament. To quote further would
+be superfluous and wearisome. In the second chapter of Deuteronomy,
+fourth and eighth verses, we find a thorough justification for the
+marching of the Germans through Belgium in the late European war, an
+outrage against all international law and the established rules of
+justice which govern nations in their intercourse with each other.
+
+Read the fourteenth chapter of Numbers and Deuteronomy ix, 23, and see
+why all of the children of Israel twenty years old and over were doomed
+to spend the remainder of their lives in the wilderness. Why? Because
+they refused to _war_ against the inhabitants of the land of Canaan.
+When the people told Jeremiah that they would go into Egypt where they
+would be free from war (Jeremiah xlii, 14), the Lord replied that war
+would also follow them there and that the sword “shall overtake you
+there in the land of Egypt, and the famine, whereof ye were afraid,
+shall follow close after you there in Egypt; and there ye shall die”
+(verse 16). When Israel and Syria were without a war for three years it
+was considered a matter worthy of special mention (1 Kings xxii, 1);
+and God gave Judah a special dispensation from war. Jesus said: “I came
+not to send peace but a sword” (Matthew x, 34). He said (Luke xxi, 24),
+“And they shall fall by the edge of the sword, and shall be led away
+captive into all nations.” “And he that hath no sword, let him sell
+his garment and buy one” (Luke xxii, 36). But, say some bibliolaters,
+he meant the “sword of the spirit!” Read, however, the fiftieth verse
+of the same chapter; “And one of them smote the servant of the high
+priest, and cut off his right ear.” With what did he do this, the sword
+of the spirit? And there still was war, even in heaven (Rev. xii, 7).
+
+As Archdeacon Farrar well said, “The Bible is a barbarous book, written
+in a barbarous age for a barbarous people.” Do we want this book read
+in our public schools against the best thought, the highest learning
+and the most humanitarian views of this age? The people who advocate
+its reading there require watching.
+
+XIII. The Bible should not be read in the public schools because
+it contradicts itself nearly two hundred times. We will give a few
+illustrations:
+
+“And he said, _Thou shalt not see my face_: for there shall no man see
+me and live” (Ex. xxxiii, 20).
+
+“_And the Lord spake unto Moses face to face_, as a man speaketh unto
+his friend” (11).
+
+“And the men which journeyed with him stood speechless, _hearing a
+voice_, but seeing no man” (Acts ix, 7).
+
+“And they that were with me saw indeed the light, and were afraid; but
+_they heard not the voice_ of him that spake to me” (xxii, 9).
+
+Jesus said, “If any man hear my words, and believe not, _I judge him
+not_: for _I came not to judge the world_, but to save the world” (John
+xii, 47).
+
+“For the Father judgeth no man; _but hath committed all judgment to the
+son_” (v. 22).
+
+“And the anger of _the Lord_ was kindled against Israel, and he moved
+David against them to say, Go, number Israel and Judah” (2 Samuel xxiv,
+1).
+
+“And _Satan_ stood up against Israel, and provoked David to number
+Israel” (1 Chronicles xxi, 1).
+
+“The Jews therefore said unto him, _It is not lawful for us to put any
+man to death_” (John xviii, 31).
+
+“The Jews answered him, We have a law, and _by our law he ought to
+die_” (John xiv, 7).
+
+What women visited the tomb on the morning of the resurrection?
+
+“The first day of the week cometh _Mary Magdalene_, early when it was
+yet dark, unto the sepulchre” (John xx, 1).
+
+“In the end of the Sabbath, as it began to dawn toward the first day
+of the week, came _Mary Magdalene and the other Mary_ to see the
+sepulchre” (Matt. xxviii, 1).
+
+“Now upon the first day of the week, very early in the morning, they
+came unto the sepulchre.... It was _Mary Magdalene, and Joanna, and
+Mary the mother of James, and other women_” (Luke xxiv, 10).
+
+At what time in the morning did they visit the tomb?
+
+“At the rising of the sun” (Mark xvi, 2).
+
+“When it was yet dark” (John xx, 1).
+
+Where did Jesus first appear to his disciples?
+
+“Then said Jesus unto them (the women) Be not afraid; go tell my
+brethren _that they go into Galilee_, into a mountain where Jesus had
+appointed them. And when they saw him they worshiped him; but some
+doubted (Matt. xxviii, 10, 16, 17).
+
+“And they rose up the same hour, and _returned to Jerusalem_, and found
+the eleven gathered together, and them that were with them, saying, The
+Lord is risen indeed, and hath appeared unto Simon.... And as they thus
+spake, Jesus himself stood in the midst of them” (Luke xxiv, 33, 34,
+36).
+
+Did the disciples know that Jesus would arise from the dead? According
+to Mark x, 32, 33 and 34, they did:
+
+“And he took again the twelve, and began to tell them what things
+should happen unto him, saying, Behold, we go up to Jerusalem; and the
+Son of man shall be delivered unto the chief priests, and unto the
+scribes, and they shall condemn him to death, and shall deliver him to
+the Gentiles; and they shall mock him, and shall scourge him, and shall
+spit upon him, and shall kill him; _and the third day he shall rise
+again_.” Yet John xx, 9 distinctly says, “_For as yet they knew not the
+scripture, that he must rise again from the dead._”
+
+Did John the Baptist know Jesus when he came unto him to be baptized?
+He did, according to Matt. iii, 13, 14: “Then cometh Jesus from Galilee
+to Jordan unto John, to be baptized of him. But John forbade him,
+saying, _I have need to be baptized of thee, and comest thou to me?_”
+
+Yet John himself admits that he did not know him:
+
+“_And I knew him not_: but he that sent me to baptize with water, the
+same said unto me, Upon whom thou shalt see the spirit descending and
+remaining on him, the same is he that baptizes with the holy ghost. And
+I saw, and bare record, that this is the Son of God” (John i, 33).
+
+There is also another very material contradiction as to what the
+centurion at the cross said:
+
+“Now when the centurion, and they that were with him, watching Jesus,
+saw the earthquake, and those things that were done, they feared
+greatly, saying, ‘_Truly, this was the Son of God_’” (Matt. xxvii, 54).
+
+Luke gives an entirely different version:
+
+“Now when the centurion saw what was done, he glorified God, saying,
+_Certainly this was a righteous man_” (xxiii, 47).
+
+Are works necessary for salvation, or is faith alone sufficient?
+“Knowing that a man is not justified by the works of the law, but by
+the faith of Jesus Christ, even we have believed in Jesus Christ, that
+we might be justified by the faith of Christ and not by the works of
+the law: for by the works of the law shall no flesh be justified”
+(Galatians ii, 16). “If righteousness come by the law, then Christ is
+dead in vain” (21). “Therefore, we conclude that a man is justified by
+faith without the deeds of the law” (Romans iii, 28).
+
+“But wilt thou know, O vain man, that faith without works is dead”
+(James ii, 20). “For as the body without the spirit is dead, so faith
+without works is dead also” (26). “Ye see then how that by works a man
+is justified, and not by faith only” (24).
+
+“And I appeared unto Abraham, unto Isaac, and unto Jacob by the name of
+God Almighty, _but by my name Jehovah was I not known to them_” (Exodus
+vi, 3). “_And Abraham called the name of the place Jehovah-jireh_”
+(Genesis xxii, 14).
+
+These are but a few of the contradictions of the Bible, selected at
+random from hundreds.
+
+XIV. The Bible should not be read in the public schools because it
+teaches, by direct commands, by the praise of them, by acknowledgment
+of their habitual use as a matter of custom, the taking of intoxicating
+liquors. Many of us may not believe the eighteenth amendment, as
+interpreted by the Volstead act, to be the best means of abrogating the
+evils of intemperance. All thinking men, however, believe that the use
+of alcoholic beverages, considering the evils that result therefrom,
+should be reduced to a minimum. The words “wines” and “strong drink”
+occur in the Bible about two hundred and forty times. Among these are
+to be found some passages condemning drunkenness. This is of no special
+moment, as no moral code in the world upholds intoxication, while the
+Mohammedan Koran distinctly condemns the use of alcoholic liquors
+and stands for total abstinence. In the Bible, total abstinence is
+commanded under special circumstances. For illustration, a Nazarite
+must not drink during the period of his separation. When that period
+is passed he may drink all he wishes. (See Numbers vi, 3, 20.) Jehovah
+said unto Aaron, in his official capacity as high-priest: “Do not drink
+wine or strong drink, thou, nor thy sons with thee, _when ye go into
+the tabernacle of the congregation_, lest ye die” (Leviticus x, 9).
+Why? “That ye may put difference between holy and unholy, and between
+clean and unclean; and that ye may teach the children of Israel all the
+statutes which the Lord hath spoken unto them by the hand of Moses”
+(10, 11). He wanted his priests to be entirely sober when performing
+their priestly functions, and what employer does not? King Lemuel was
+taught by his mother, “It is not for kings, O Lemuel, it is not for
+kings to drink wine nor for princes strong drink: lest they drink and
+forget the law, and pervert the judgment of any of the afflicted”
+(Proverbs xxxi, 4, 5). Yet in the sixth and seventh verses is this
+imperative command as to other people: “Give strong drink unto him that
+is ready to perish, and wine to those that be of heavy hearts. Let him
+drink and forget his poverty and remember his misery no more.”
+
+Moses told the children of Israel: “Ye have not eaten bread, neither
+have ye drank wine or strong drink: that ye may know that I am the Lord
+your God” (Deut. xxix, 6). But this was in the wilderness, where no
+bread or liquors were to be had. But what does he say in the fourteenth
+chapter, twenty-sixth verse, after giving directions as to what is
+lawful to eat? “And thou shalt bestow that money for whatsoever thy
+soul lusteth after, for oxen, or for sheep, _or for wine, or for strong
+drink_, or for whatsoever thy soul desireth.” Jesus said, “Verily I
+say unto you, I will drink no more of the fruit of the vine”--because
+it was wrong to do so? On the contrary, “until that day that I drink
+it new in the kingdom of God” (Mark xiv, 25). We admit such temperance
+passages as are to be found in Proverbs xx, 1, and in Isaiah v, 11.
+These refer strictly to the abuse, not to the moderate use of alcoholic
+liquors.
+
+Let us now look at other passages where the use of intoxicants is not
+only commended but commanded. We have space to refer to but a few of
+them. “Drink no longer water, but use a little wine for thy stomach’s
+sake” (1 Timothy v, 23); “Go thy way, eat thy bread with joy, and drink
+thy wine with a merry heart, for God now accepteth thy good works”
+(Eccles. ix, 7); “Corn shall make the young men cheerful, and new wine
+the maids” (Zech. ix, 17); “They shall plant vineyards and drink the
+wine thereof” (Amos ix, 14); “Wine maketh glad the heart of man” (Ps.
+xiv, 15); “Wine, which cheereth God and man” (Judges iv, 13); “In the
+holy place shalt thou cause the strong wine to be poured unto the
+Lord for a drink offering” (Num. xxviii, 7); “Honor the Lord with thy
+substance, and with the first fruits of all thine increase; so shall
+thy barns be filled with plenty, and thy presses shall burst out with
+new wine” (Proverbs iii, 9, 10).
+
+When God decided that the human race was so bad that he would have to
+drown everybody he selected one man and his family to be saved--Noah.
+Yet when the flood had subsided, and all returned to dry ground, Noah
+got drunk (Genesis ix, 20–24). When God destroyed Sodom and Gomorrah,
+he saved another drunkard, Lot. How this gentleman conducted himself
+while under the influence of wine would not make a very edifying
+subject for a Sunday school lesson (See Genesis xix, 30–38). David got
+drunk himself and danced before the ark in a state of nudity, after
+giving each of all the people “a flagon of wine” (2 Samuel vi, 14, 16,
+19). Yet God said, “David ... a man after mine own heart, which shall
+fulfill all my will” (Acts. xiii, 22). God also gives David two other
+unqualified certificates of character (See 1 Kings xiv, 7, 8; xv, 5).
+When Solomon erected the great temple he gave his laborers “twenty
+thousand baths (nearly 17,500 gallons) of wine” (2 Chronicles ii, 10).
+Jeremiah, one of God’s favorite prophets, tempted the Rechabites, who
+were total abstainers, to drink (See Jeremiah xxxv, 2). Yet this same
+God on another occasion said, “Woe unto him that giveth his neighbor
+drink, that puttest thy bottle to him and makest him drunken” (Habakkuk
+ii, 15).
+
+The first miracle of Jesus was the transforming of water into wine
+(John ii, 3–11), and in Luke vii, 33, 34, are these words: “For John
+the Baptist came neither eating bread, nor drinking wine; and ye say,
+He hath a devil. The Son of man is come eating and drinking; and ye
+say, Behold a gluttonous man, and a wine bibber, a friend of publicans
+and sinners.”
+
+Bible advocates of temperance sometimes quote the following passages
+from Paul, as evidence, to them, of Bible teaching of total abstinence.
+
+“It is good neither to eat flesh, nor to drink wine, nor anything
+whereby thy brother stumbleth, or is made weak.” (Romans xiv:21.)
+
+Also, “Wherefore, if meat make my brother to offend, I will eat no
+flesh while the word standeth, lest I make my brother to offend.” (1
+Corinthians viii:13).
+
+It will be noticed in the first that _flesh_ comes before wine,
+while in the second, wine is not mentioned at all. When you read the
+context in both cases you will find that Paul is merely warning his
+hearers against meat offered to idols and that wine is only mentioned
+incidentally. But when you turn to 1 Timothy, v:23, Paul imperatively
+says, “DRINK NO LONGER WATER, BUT USE A LITTLE WINE FOR THY STOMACH’S
+SAKE, AND THINE OFTEN INFIRMITIES.”
+
+When confronted by these texts and the facts which they carry,
+bibliolaters are driven to the entirely false and fictitious plea that
+Bible wine was not intoxicating, that it might drown but could not
+produce a drunk. We have no space here to discuss this makeshift. If
+the reader is interested and wishes to pursue the subject, we refer him
+to John E. Remsburg’s book, “The Bible,” pages 398–399; to the article
+on “Wine and Strong Drink,” in that monument of scholarship, “The
+Encyclopedia Biblica”; to that well-known orthodox work, Smith’s “Bible
+Dictionary,” and to “Religion and Drink,” by Rev. E. A. Wasson.
+
+Under our liquor laws as at present interpreted a priest, preacher,
+or rabbi is permitted to purchase all the drink he desires for
+“sacramental” purposes, while a physician is limited in the amount he
+can prescribe for his patients. Why this unjust discrimination? If
+liquor is a bad thing, why is it made good in the “sacrament”? This is
+merely a trick common with the church to evade the force of the civil
+law, just as is its effort to force the Bible into the public schools.
+We, as citizens, protest against the unbridled fanaticism or base
+hypocrisy of these people, who deny to others the privileges they claim
+for themselves, then add insult to injury by trying to force upon the
+country by law a book which advocates, teaches, abets, preaches, and
+practices what they want by law forbidden.
+
+XV. The entire idea under which they wish to place the Bible in the
+schools is wrong. Why glorify one book above another? Any book to be
+of service to a reader must be his servant, not his master. The real
+question is, not what does a book say, but what does it say in accord
+with the facts of life, nature, reason and experience? If a book
+answers that test it is not necessary to praise it eternally, to say
+nothing of asking special laws for its recognition. The idea has been
+well expressed by the poet Lowell in these words:
+
+ “Slowly the Bible of the race is writ,
+ And not on paper leaves or leaves of stone;
+ Each age, each kindred, adds a verse to it,
+ Texts of despair or hope, of joy or moan;
+ While swings the sea, while mists the mountains shroud,
+ While thunder’s surges burst on cliffs of cloud,
+ Still at the prophet’s feet the nations sit.”
+
+No volume can be made large enough to contain this BIBLE, yet to it all
+other books must conform.
+
+
+
+
+ Transcriber’s Note
+
+
+Some inconsistencies in spelling, hyphenation, and punctuation have
+been retained.
+
+This file uses _underscores_ to indicate italic text and =equals= to
+indicate bold text. Small capitals changed to all capitals.
+
+p. 8: added “in” after “belief” (Action or conduct indicating a belief
+in)
+
+p. 12: changed “of” to “to” (on earth peace to men of good will)
+
+p. 24: changed “depotism” to “despotism” (never rises above the merest
+despotism)
+
+p. 24: changed “in” to “is” (Much less is Christianity or any other
+system)
+
+p. 24: changed “almightly” to “almighty” (It is not almighty and we are
+not to look)
+
+p. 31: changed “summonded” to “summoned” (The teacher, summoned as a
+witness)
+
+p. 32: changed “ther” to “their” (put to death for participating in
+their production)
+
+p. 41: “Wicliffe’s” left as-printed; this name has many variant
+spellings.
+
+p. 46: changed incorrect citation “xl” to “xlvi” (Gen. xlvi. 23)
+
+p. 61: changed “prohpet’s” to “prophet’s” and “nation’s” to “nations”
+(Still at the prophet’s feet the nations sit)
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78962 ***
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+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78962 ***</div>
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="fm-l">LITTLE BLUE BOOK <abbr title="NUMBER">NO.</abbr> <b>706</b></span><br>
+Edited by E. Haldeman-Julius</p>
+
+<h1 class="p2">The Bible: Should It Be in
+the School Room?</h1>
+
+<p class="center fm-l">The Question Considered Legally, Morally
+and Religiously</p>
+
+<p class="center fm-xl">Franklin Steiner</p>
+
+<p class="center p4 fm-l">HALDEMAN-JULIUS COMPANY<br>
+GIRARD, KANSAS</p>
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</span></p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" aria-hidden="true">
+<div class="chapter">
+<p class="center">Copyright, 1924,<br>
+Haldeman-Julius Company.</p>
+
+<p class="center p4">PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</span></p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" aria-hidden="true">
+<div class="chapter">
+<p class="center fm-xl">THE BIBLE: SHOULD IT BE IN THE
+SCHOOL ROOM?</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" aria-hidden="true">
+<div class="chapter">
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="TABLE_OF_CONTENTS">
+ Table of Contents
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+<nav>
+<table class="autotable toc">
+<tr>
+<td class="tdc">
+<a href="#INTRODUCTION">INTRODUCTION</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdc"><a href="#CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER <abbr title="1">I</abbr></a><br>
+The Bible and the Sects—Shall Any Version of the Book Be Placed in This Country’s Common Schools?
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdc">
+<a href="#Is_the_Bible_a_Religious_and_Sectarian_Book">Is the Bible a Religious and Sectarian Book?</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdc">
+<a href="#CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER <abbr title="2">II</abbr></a><br>
+The Bible and the Courts—Law, Constitution and the Judges Are Opposed to Religion in Our Common Schools.
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdc">
+<a href="#THE_OHIO_CASE">THE OHIO CASE</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdc">
+<a href="#THE_WISCONSIN_CASE">THE WISCONSIN CASE</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdc">
+<a href="#THE_NEBRASKA_CASE">THE NEBRASKA CASE</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdc">
+<a href="#THE_ILLINOIS_CASE">THE ILLINOIS CASE</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdc">
+<a href="#THE_CALIFORNIA_CASE">THE CALIFORNIA CASE</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdc">
+<a href="#CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER <abbr title="3">III</abbr></a><br>
+Fifteen Reasons Why the Bible Should Not Be in the School Room
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+</nav>
+
+<main>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" aria-hidden="true">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="INTRODUCTION">
+ INTRODUCTION
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>The fact that certain Protestant churches,
+strong politically, are exerting their efforts to
+force the teaching of their religion in our public
+schools against law, constitution, equity and
+the American principle of no union of church
+and state: the further fact that at the present
+time there is in existence a strong Protestant
+jesuitical political secret order trying to put
+this measure on statute books whether the people
+want it or not, is the author’s sole apology
+for presenting this little book to the public.
+He claims for it no literary merit, but hopes
+that all who are truly Americans, whether native
+or foreign born, will circulate its facts and
+arguments.</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+ FRANKLIN STEINER.
+</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" aria-hidden="true">
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</span></p>
+ <p class="center fm-xl">
+ THE BIBLE: SHOULD IT BE IN THE
+ SCHOOL ROOM?
+ </p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" aria-hidden="true">
+<div class="chapter">
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_I">
+ CHAPTER <abbr title="1">I</abbr>
+ </h2>
+ <p class="center"><i>The Bible and the Sects—Shall Any Version of
+ the Book Be Placed in This Country’s
+ Common Schools?</i></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="p2"><span class="smcap">A Statement of the Case.</span> A stupendous effort
+is now being nationally made by a particular
+and special class of our citizens, to place
+the Bible, the text book of the Christian religion,
+in the curriculum of our public schools.
+From the outset, there arises this curious fact:
+It is that many Christian sects, one of them
+being the largest in number of communicants,
+to say nothing of individual Christians, have
+strenuously opposed the measure. The Jews,
+“unto whom were committed the oracles of
+God” (Romans <abbr title="3">iii</abbr>, 2) have also expressed their
+disapprobation. Then add to these about two-thirds
+of our population who profess no religion,
+and we find the movement limited to a
+small section of our people. The fact that advocates
+of enforced Bible reading are so enthusiastic,
+so intolerant of criticism and opposition,
+and that they would compel the use of
+the Bible by law causes us to inquire seriously
+into the question. Then the intense opposition
+of religionists as well as of those professing no
+religion in particular, causes us to conclude
+that the <em>propriety</em> of such an inclusion in our
+public school instruction is the main issue to
+be considered.</p>
+
+<p>There arises before us the further fact that
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</span>one class of people are vigorously determined
+upon the use in the schools of a book of which
+they are the partisans, while the world contains
+many more books of the same character. Still
+another, that those who accept the book as an
+authority are not agreed as to which edition or
+which version is the correct one. Over this
+controversies have arisen, resulting in law suits
+which have finally had to be decided by supreme
+courts. Here we might surmise the
+cause of the intense opposition of some to the
+use of the Bible in the schools, and of further
+discontent and controversy should it be placed
+there. The advocates of the measure, if they
+think themselves able to put it over, would
+make Bible reading compulsory. Should they
+fail in this, they are agreeable that it should
+be read at the discretion of the teacher. Should
+they still fail, they will ask that <em>extracts</em> be
+read. As a last resort, they will plead that it
+be not <em>excluded</em> and that it be read “without
+comment.” They are even willing to concede
+that no child shall be compelled to take part
+in the Bible reading exercise against the will
+of its parents.</p>
+
+<p>Why, unlike any other school book, should
+it be read “without comment”? Why the exception?
+The Bible from whatever view we
+take it, above all other books, to be understood,
+must be commented upon and explained. The
+whole presents a curious medley of circumstances
+and positions which could hardly be
+duplicated when any other book is proposed for
+use in the school room. All goes to prove that
+the advocates of the proposal are very enthusiastic
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</span>and determined to force the book in the
+schools, on the best terms that they can obtain.
+Should any other book be proposed for a course
+of public school education, under the same conditions,
+no one will deny that its use would be
+unhesitatingly rejected.&#x2060;<a id="FNanchor_1_1" href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a>&#x2060;</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+<div class="footnote"><p><a id="Footnote_1_1" href="#FNanchor_1_1" class="label">[1]</a> Religionists in some places are now opposing the
+use of Wells’ “Outline of History” in high schools
+and colleges because some of its views are not
+orthodox and conventional. Yet they, a minority,
+would force their Bible by law upon all.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<h3 id="Is_the_Bible_a_Religious_and_Sectarian_Book">
+ <span class="smcap">Is the Bible a Religious and Sectarian Book?</span>
+</h3>
+
+<p>It is not our purpose to take part in any of
+the theological controversies that in the past
+or at the present have raged around the Bible.
+Yet, as the teaching of religion seems to be the
+desideratum of the advocates of Bible reading
+in the schools, as we shall later prove; and the
+opposition to such teaching on the part of
+others the cause of the opposition to such reading,
+we are compelled to ask and answer the
+query, Is the Bible a religious book? The
+meaning of the word “religion” has been fixed
+by the best lexicographers and has been so utilized
+by the best writers.</p>
+
+<p>“The outward act or form by which men indicate
+their recognition of the existence of a
+god or of gods having power over their destiny;
+to whom obedience, service and honor are due.”—Webster’s
+International.</p>
+
+<p>“An acknowledgment of our obligation to
+God as our creator, with a feeling of reverence
+and love, and consequent duty or obedience to
+him.”—Worcester.</p>
+
+<p>“A belief in an invisible superhuman power
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</span>(or powers) conceived of after the analogy of
+the human spirit on which (or whom) man regards
+himself as dependent.”—The Standard
+Dictionary.</p>
+
+<p>“Any system of faith or worship.”—Imperial
+Dictionary.</p>
+
+<p>“<span id="TN9">Action or conduct indicating a belief in</span>, reverence
+for, and desire to please a divine ruling
+power.”—Oxford Dictionary.</p>
+
+<p>We are aware that a class of modern thinkers
+define and understand religion differently,
+as does R. B. Westbrook in <cite class="nonitalic">The Eliminator</cite>,
+page 12: “We use the word religion as it was
+used by Cicero, in the sense of <em>Scruple</em>, implying
+the consciousness of a natural obligation
+wholly irrespective of what one may believe
+concerning the gods.”</p>
+
+<p>We must say that in the face of the five definitions
+first given, added to the understanding
+and use of the word by religionists themselves,
+a revolution in human thought and in
+the meaning of the English language must take
+place before this can be seriously accepted as
+the correct, understood, prevailing definition.</p>
+
+<p>Following these guides, the best we can obtain,
+let us ask, Is the Bible a religious book?
+Is its chief object the teaching of religion? We
+think we need adduce no argument to prove
+that were those portions of the Bible which
+inculcate religious doctrines eliminated, the fly-leaves
+of the book alone would hold most of
+what remains. No one, and least of all a Christian,
+will deny that it teaches “a belief in an
+invisible superhuman power (or powers) conceived
+of after the analogy of the human
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</span>spirit”; or that it teaches “a divine ruling
+power,” “to whom obedience, service and honor
+are due.”</p>
+
+<p>The first three of the ten commandments are
+strictly religious and in no way concern morality.
+They teach the absurd doctrine that the
+God of the ancient Hebrews was the only God
+worthy of worship.</p>
+
+<p>The sermon on the mount, which is perhaps
+more free from strict religious teaching than
+any other portion of the Bible, yet says, “Seek
+ye <em>first</em> the kingdom of God and <em>his righteousness</em>
+and all these things shall be added unto
+you” (<abbr title="Matthew">Matt.</abbr> <abbr title="6">vi</abbr>, 33). Here, again, the Jewish
+God is referred to. The most beautiful of
+Jesus’ teachings are his eulogy and defense of
+children. Even here he strictly maintains religious
+doctrines, as when he says, in Matthew
+<abbr title="18">xviii</abbr>, 6: “But whoso shall offend one of these
+little ones <em>which believe in me</em>,” <abbr>etc.</abbr></p>
+
+<p>“In thus looking at the Bible from a distinctly
+religious point of view, we are in perfect
+harmony with its writers; even with such of
+them as adopt the narrative style, and will
+therefore engage the greatest share of our attention.
+For when the books of the Old Testament
+were set aside and preserved as a sacred
+book by the Jews, and those of the New Testament
+were added to them by the Christians, it
+was with no idea of drawing knowledge of
+nature or history from them, but because they
+recognized them as the rule of faith and conduct;
+and in the same way the writers themselves
+prepared their works and gave publicity
+to them, not simply or chiefly in order to make
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</span>their readers accurately acquainted with the
+past, but to promulgate and recommend what
+seemed to them to be religious truth.” (“Bible
+for Learners,” <abbr title="Volume">Vol.</abbr> 1, page 5.) Hence, however
+much Bible reading advocates may cavil about
+the book as “literature” or “the fountain of
+morality,” there can be no legitimate question
+of its object being to teach a particular religion,
+and that its purpose in the school room is to do
+the same.</p>
+
+<p>Let us now ask another question, Is the Bible
+a sectarian book? Let us first state that there
+is no such thing as a cosmopolitan or universal
+religion. <abbr title="Professor">Prof.</abbr> Max Müller, perhaps the greatest
+authority upon the science of religion, has
+said: “Religion is a mental faculty which, independent
+of, nay, in spite of, sense and reason,
+enables man to apprehend the infinite <em>under
+different names and disguises</em>.”</p>
+
+<p>Hence, man, in an effort to understand the
+infinite, has formed not one but many religions;
+therefore we have Buddhism, Brahmanism,
+Shintoism, Judaism, the mythology of the
+Greeks and Romans and finally Christianism
+and Mohammedanism. In recent years there
+has been developed Agnosticism which holds
+that the infinite is incomprehensible. Religions
+and Bibles are all sectarian to the devotees of
+other religions who do not accept them as true
+or authoritative.</p>
+
+<p>In the face of this broad truth, those who advocate
+reading the Bible in the public school
+deny that it is sectarian. They would narrow
+their definition of “sect” to that of the Standard
+Dictionary, which defines it as “a body of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</span>persons distinguished by peculiarities of faith
+and practice from other bodies adhering to the
+same general system.” But Christianity consists
+of different bodies distinguished by wide
+“peculiarities of faith and practice.” Some of
+these have their own versions of the Bible,
+while others base their peculiarities upon different
+interpretations and particular sections
+of the same version. The widely divergent
+forms of Christianity, from Roman Catholicism
+to Unitarianism, have their foundation and different
+versions and interpretations. Those
+holding to one set of doctrines and practices
+accept that version which sustains their contentions
+and reject those which do not. Those
+making the nation-wide propaganda to place
+the Bible in the schools are the Evangelical
+Protestants, who accept the King James version.
+The question, “Is the King James version
+sectarian?” has caused the long controversy
+which courts have been called on to settle
+when opponents of Bible reading have taken
+legal action to keep it out of the schools.</p>
+
+<p>There is another English version of the Bible
+called the “Douay version,” which is accepted
+by Roman Catholics, who not only deny that
+the King James version is the correct one, but
+affirm that it teaches dangerous and damning
+errors. Protestants retaliate by making the
+same charges against the Douay version. Therefore,
+to either one of these, the principal divisions
+of Christianity, the Bible of the other
+is sectarian.</p>
+
+<p>Let us give illustrations of the widely variant
+readings in these two principal English versions
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</span>of the Bible. When we have done so our
+readers can perceive why such a bitter controversy
+has arisen between the partisans of
+the different transcripts. He will also see the
+folly and injustice of trying to force a book,
+which has been the center of so much bitter
+animosity, into public schools supported by citizens
+of all religious beliefs, who are compelled
+by the law of the land to send their children
+there. We will take just a few illustrations
+from hundreds.</p>
+
+<p>In the King James Version <abbr title="First">1</abbr> Corinthians <abbr title="15">xv</abbr>,
+51, is translated: “Behold, I shew you a mystery;
+we shall not all sleep, but we shall all be
+changed.” The Douay Version renders the
+same verse, “Behold, I tell you a mystery. We
+shall all indeed rise again: <em>but we shall not
+all be changed</em>.” Luke <abbr title="2">ii</abbr>, 14, is translated in
+the King James, “Glory to God in the highest,
+and <span id="TN10">on earth <em>peace to men of good will</em></span>.” The
+Protestant “Revised Version” gives it still different:</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+ <div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">“Glory to God in the highest,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">And on earth <em>peace among men in whom he is well pleased</em>.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p>The King James Version makes Matthew <abbr title="6">vi</abbr>,
+11, read, “Give us this day our daily bread.”
+The Douay version says, “Give us this day our
+<em>super-substantial</em> bread.”</p>
+
+<p>We now come to one difference of translation,
+which perhaps above all others is the
+most startling and would arouse the greatest
+of the theological controversies. Matthew <abbr title="3">iii</abbr>,
+1–2, reads, in the King James Version: “In
+those days came John the Baptist, preaching
+in the wilderness of Judea, and saying, Repent
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</span>ye; for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.”
+The Douay Version gives it an entirely different
+meaning when it makes the second verse
+read: “<em>Do penance</em>: for the kingdom of heaven
+is at hand.” This controverted word occurs in
+the New Testament fifty times and is so differently
+translated in the King James and Douay
+Versions. In the Catholic church penance is
+one of the seven sacraments, while Protestants
+do not recognize it at all, hence one looks upon
+the Bible of the other as false and as a teacher
+of false doctrines.</p>
+
+<p>A more startling fact arises when we discover
+that not only are Catholics and Protestants
+divided in opinion as to what the Bible
+means and as to which version gives the correct
+meaning, but on this point Protestant Bible
+scholars differ widely among themselves. This
+was so notorious that in 1883 a “new version”
+was given the world. While it corrected some
+mistakes of translation, it was far from being
+acknowledged as satisfactory. We will here
+give just one illustration, selected from many,
+of differences of translation among Protestant
+Biblical scholars. Job <abbr title="19">xix</abbr>, 25–27, is rendered
+in the King James Version: “For I know that
+my Redeemer liveth, and that he shall stand
+at the latter day upon the earth; and though
+after my skin worms destroy this body, yet
+in my flesh shall I see God: whom I shall see
+for myself, and mine eyes shall behold, and not
+another; though my reins be consumed within
+me.” This passage is to be found in the Episcopal
+and other orthodox church funeral rituals.
+The “redeemer” is supposed to be Christ,
+and Job is supposed to refer to his soul in
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</span>heaven. This is done in defiance of the fact
+that Job in other passages states that death
+ends all. (See <abbr title="7">vii</abbr>, 7–10; <abbr title="14">xiv</abbr>, 7–12 and <abbr title="34">xxxiv</abbr>,
+15.) Following are the translations of a number
+of well-known Biblical scholars, which give
+it a different meaning and state an entirely
+different situation:</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+ <div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">“Yet I know that my Vindicator liveth</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">And will stand at length upon the earth;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">And though with my skin this body be wasted away,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">Yet in my flesh shall I see God.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">Yea, I shall see him my friend;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">My eyes shall behold him no longer an adversary;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">For this my soul panteth within me.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p>(Translation of the <abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr> <abbr>Dr.</abbr> Noyes of Harvard
+Divinity School.)</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+ <div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">“But I know that my avenger liveth;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">Though it be at the end upon my dust,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">My witness shall avenge these things,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">And a curse alight upon mine enemies.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p>(Translation of <abbr>Dr.</abbr> Dillon, in Skeptics of the
+Old Testament.)</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+ <div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">“For I know that my Avenger liveth</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">And that hereafter he shall stand upon the earth;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">And though after my skin this (flesh) be destroyed,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">Yet even without my flesh shall I see God;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">Whom I shall see for myself.</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">And mine eyes shall behold, and not another—</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">Though my vitals are wasting away within me.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p>(Translation of the <abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr> <abbr>Dr.</abbr> Albert Barnes,
+Presbyterian divine and commentator.)</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+ <div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">“As for me, I know it—my Avenger liveth,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">And (lying) in the dust I shall receive his pledge;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">Shaddai will bring to pass my desire,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">And as my justifier I shall see God.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</span></p>
+
+<p>(Translation of the <abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr> <abbr>Dr.</abbr> T. K. Cheyne,
+Editor of The Encyclopedia Biblica.)</p>
+
+<p>This is one of the many passages in the Bible
+which in the King James Version has been
+twisted to meet doctrinal ends. Again we repeat,
+that were any other book containing so
+many controversial meanings, especially among
+those who maintain its efficiency and credibility,
+offered for use in the school room, it
+would be rejected at once.</p>
+
+<p>Let us be honest with ourselves and with
+one another, and admit the true motive of
+those who prolong this agitation to place the
+Bible in the public schools. We have said that
+they represent the Evangelical Protestant
+churches.</p>
+
+<p>The Catholic church maintains its separate
+schools for the purpose of teaching its children
+the common branches of knowledge side by
+side with its religious doctrines. Protestants
+send their children to the public schools, relying
+upon their churches and Sunday schools
+alone for religious instruction. As their
+churches and Sunday schools have failed to
+arouse sufficient interest, they now want to
+make use of the public schools for religious
+propaganda. Hence their Jesuitical attempts
+to have laws passed forcing their Bible into
+these institutions. Quite naturally in a country
+whose national Constitution, as well as practically
+all its state constitutions, proclaims divorce
+between church and state, the Catholic,
+the Jew, the Agnostic, and citizens of other
+opposing beliefs protest.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" aria-hidden="true">
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</span></p>
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_II">
+ CHAPTER <abbr title="2">II</abbr>
+ </h2>
+ <p class="center"><i>The Bible and the Courts—Law, Constitution
+ and the Judges Are Opposed to Religion
+ in Our Common Schools.</i>
+ </p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="p2">We will begin with fundamentals by calling
+attention to the first amendment to the Constitution
+of the United States which reads:</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">“<i>Congress shall make no law respecting the establishment
+of religion or prohibiting the free
+exercise thereof.</i>”</p>
+
+<p>While this does not take away from the
+states the power to establish religious observances,
+it has been repeated, even with stronger
+guarantees, in practically all of our state constitutions.
+The exceptions are New Hampshire,
+where the constitution can authorize a
+municipality to provide support for Protestant
+ministers; Pennsylvania and Tennessee, where
+a belief in God and future rewards and punishments
+is a constitutional qualification for
+office; Arkansas, whose constitution declares
+ineligible to office and incompetent as a witness
+any person who denies the existence of
+God; and Maryland, where belief in future rewards
+and punishments is essential to competency
+as a witness or juror. Hence, upon
+the principle of no union of religion with the
+state, our fundamental laws are almost unanimous.</p>
+
+<p>This is distinctly an American idea. In
+Europe every country except Turkey recognized
+the Christian religion, and all had a
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</span>state church. All the thirteen colonies had
+the same except Rhode Island, Pennsylvania
+and Delaware. The last two granted religious
+equality only to Protestants. Only in the
+first was there absolute religious freedom.</p>
+
+<p>Cobb says: “The history of religion and the
+church in America, as those stand related to
+the civil government, presents features unparalleled
+in the rest of Christendom” ... “a
+peculiarly American production.” (“The Rise of
+Religious Liberty in America,” page 1.) The
+churches, from the first, opposed the religious
+liberties of the Constitution, and either openly
+defied them or covertly evaded them. They do
+the same today. “The practical recognition of
+entire individual freedom of thought and action
+in reference to matters of religion has
+not, however, always been conceded” (Illinois
+Reports, <abbr title="Volume">Vol.</abbr> 245, page 341). The present efforts
+to place the Bible in the schools are a
+manifestation of the old-time evasion and defiance.
+The orthodox church, from the very
+nature of the pretenses that it makes, has never
+ceased to seek favors from the state and to demand
+emoluments in one form or another.</p>
+
+<p>When a person or an organization lifts a
+voice in opposition to the introduction of the
+Bible in the school room, bibliolaters immediately
+raise the hue and cry, “Enemy of the
+Bible!” They do this as a means of starting
+the “<span lang="la">odium theologicum</span>.” Their tactics here
+are intended not to answer the arguments of
+their opponents, but to crush them by opprobrium.
+The statement that opponents of the
+Bible in the schools are necessarily enemies of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</span>it is not only untrue, but has no purpose, except
+the intent be to blind the eyes of the public.
+The Bible as a work of literature no
+more has “enemies” than have the works of
+Shakespeare, Rabelais, Plato, Homer, Milton,
+or the productions of other writers, ancient
+or modern. It is to the position claimed for
+the Bible and the unwarranted assertions concerning
+it made by the very people who are
+trying to force it by law into the schools, that
+exception is taken. All have the right to view
+and interpret the Bible as they choose, but
+no one interpretation should have the prestige
+of the law, considering that there are so many
+of them and that our law recognizes no particular
+form of religion.</p>
+
+<p>Others raise the hue and cry that the opposition
+to Bible reading in the schools comes
+from Catholic sources. Even if this were true,
+it would only prove that the Catholic has the
+right to object to another religion in which
+he does not believe, being crammed down his
+children’s throats by the civil law. The fact
+that this church, the oldest existing Christian
+church, opposes it, to say nothing of others,
+and of people who belong to no church—and
+these include two-thirds of our population—only
+demonstrates the injustice of the proposal.
+To say that justice should not be administered,
+merely because it would be granted
+to a certain people, is a poor argument in favor
+of injustice. Whenever and wherever
+Catholics attempt to make use of the public
+schools as a place of propaganda for their
+church, as Protestants are doing when they
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</span>force their Bible there, we will then and there
+oppose them with the same logic we are now
+advancing against Protestants.</p>
+
+<p>Among the side issues brought forward to
+befog the minds of the citizen is the plea that
+the Bible should be read in the schools because
+all should know something about it. But
+have we not a millionaire Bible society to publish
+it, churches, ministers and Sunday school
+teachers numbering into the hundred thousands
+whose special business is to teach and preach
+this book? Are not these at the disposal of
+all who want such teaching and preaching?
+The plea is a subterfuge. They want it there
+so that it may be forced, by the authority of
+law, upon those who do not want it. Their
+plea that they are willing that it be read “without
+comment,” places them logically and morally
+in an exceedingly unenviable position.
+Those who want the Bible in the school room
+hold the book to be the inspired word of God.
+Do they want it recognized in the schools as
+such, or not as such, or are they indifferent to
+either position? If either of the last two, would
+they be so anxious to have laws forcing it
+there? The Bible brings forward multitudes
+of questions of religion, history, science, ethnology,
+anthropology, archeology, morality and
+so on. In the study of the book are all these
+to be neglected? If they are, the Bible would
+not be studied intelligently. The “without
+comment” plea is equivalent to a confession
+that they do not want it so studied.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="THE_OHIO_CASE">
+ THE OHIO CASE
+</h3>
+
+<p>Where the real merits of the case have been
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</span>before a court for consideration as to the legality
+of the reading of the Bible in the public
+schools, the decisions have invariably been
+that it was illegal, unconstitutional, and subversive
+of the rights of those who objected to
+such reading. This is so well recognized now
+that Bible advocates generally, as a last resort,
+advocate only the reading of a book of <em>extracts</em>
+from the Bible, a proposal to a consideration of
+which we shall give our attention later. The
+first historic case of interest is the Ohio case.
+The circumstances were these: In the year
+1854 the school board of the city of Cincinnati
+adopted a rule requiring that a chapter from
+the Bible be read each morning by the teacher
+on the opening of a public school session. In
+1869, the board, acting on the protests of citizens
+who by such reading considered that their
+rights were invaded, repealed this rule. Whereupon,
+the Protestant church people of Cincinnati
+applied to the Superior Court for an injunction
+to restrain the board from enforcing
+the repeal. Their plea was, in brief: The fact
+that Protestants were in the majority, and
+therefore their will should be obeyed; that
+Christianity was the common law of the land,
+and that therefore its teachings could not be
+denied a place in the schools; that the constitution
+of the Northwest Territory provided for
+the teaching of “religion, morality, and knowledge”;
+that to keep the Bible out of the schools
+would be to turn the schools over to the control
+of “Infidel sects”; that many children would
+remain in total ignorance of the Bible did they
+not study it in the common schools.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</span></p>
+
+<p>The school board was represented by two of
+the ablest lawyers in Ohio, <abbr title="Honorable">Hon.</abbr> Stanley Matthews,
+afterwards United States senator, and
+at the time of his death a judge of the Supreme
+Court of the United States; and the <abbr title="Honorable">Hon.</abbr>
+George Hoadley, afterwards governor of Ohio.
+We quote but a part of Judge Matthews’ argument,
+though all of it is worthy of reproduction:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>“I do say that the reading of the Holy Bible
+in the manner repealed by this resolution, is the
+teaching of a dogma in religion, held by only a
+portion of the religious community, objected to by a
+large part of the others, and that it is in a just,
+true and sober sense, a merely sectarian book.</p>
+
+<p>“But it is asked by some, who by asking betray
+their want of comprehension of the real question:
+Have Protestants no rights? Cannot the majority
+of the community insist upon their consciences?
+Must the right of minorities alone be consulted?
+Are we to be ruled by Catholics, or Jews, or Infidels?
+The answer is obvious and easy: <em>Protestants
+have no rights</em>, as such, <em>which do not at the
+same time</em> and to the same extent belong to Catholics
+as such, to Jews and Infidels. Protestants
+have a civil right to enjoy their own belief, to
+worship in their own way, to read the Bible and
+teach it as a part of their religion. But they have
+<em>no right in</em> this respect <em>to any preference from the
+state</em> or any of its institutions. They have <em>no right</em>
+to insist upon <em>Protestant practices at public expense</em>,
+or in public buildings, or to turn public
+schools into seminaries for the dissemination of
+Protestant ideas.</p>
+
+<p>“They can claim nothing on the score of conscience
+which they cannot concede equally to all
+others. It is not a question of majorities or minorities,
+for if the conscience of the majority is to be
+the standard, then there is no such thing as conscience
+at all. It is against the predominance and
+power of majorities that the right of conscience are
+protected: and have need to be.</p>
+
+<p>“For—and that is the gist of the thing—the reading
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</span>of the Holy Scriptures in the appropriate commencement
+of the morning daily exercises of the
+public school <em>is the teaching</em> of the <em>religious dogma</em>
+that they are the inspired word of God: and if it
+were not so held by the Protestant members of
+this community, there would be no such lawsuit here
+today as there is.</p>
+
+<p>“If it were the writings of Epictetus, of Seneca,
+or of Pliny, or moral philosophy, or anything of
+human composition and origin only, that taught
+the purest and highest morality, nobody would be
+found to pay the expense of filing this bill to compel
+its daily reading.</p>
+
+<p>“It is because that exercise is intended, and
+valued only as it is intended, to teach the Christian
+doctrine as to the scheme of salvation offered
+by Christ, and the Protestant doctrine that the
+book without note or comment is the infallible rule
+of faith and practice.</p>
+
+<p>“And therefore I say that the practice to be
+perpetuated by the power of the civil arm in this
+suit, is a practice which teaches a <em>religious dogma</em>,
+and in a sectarian sense. And I say that it is so
+indisputable, it is so self-evident—it is written
+upon every countenance in this room—that nothing
+else than that could account for the extraordinary
+interest taken in this trial and the efforts which
+are made to secure the interposition of this
+court.”</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The case caused great bitterness of feeling,
+was hotly contested, and finally carried to the
+Supreme Court of Ohio. There, in December,
+1872, it was decided against the churches and
+in favor of the school board. (See Ohio Reports,
+<abbr title="Volume">Vol.</abbr> 23, pages 211–254.) The real, practical
+question was, Had the school board the
+right to adopt what rules it pleased, without
+dictation from the courts? It was held that
+the Board had such a right and that any error
+the board might make must be corrected by the
+legislature, and not by the courts. But as the
+church people had persisted in lugging in the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</span>subject of religion, it was necessary to deal
+with that also. Here the court spoke in no
+uncertain tone. We quote first an extract
+from the brief submitted by the legal representatives
+of the Board:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>“Superficial teaching should be shunned most of
+all in this department, for this concerns, not the
+poor and temporary affairs of the body, but the
+eternal welfare of the soul; ... But true and full
+religious instruction, to a Catholic, is the teaching
+of Catholicism; to a Methodist, of Methodism; to
+a Presbyterian, of Presbyterianism; in the sense
+of Spinoza, of Pantheism; and that of Hume, of
+Deism; to the Baptist mind it involves immersion,
+<abbr>etc.</abbr> Religious men differ at all points, except, perhaps,
+as to the being of God. Honest differences
+prevail even as to what books should be included
+within the meaning of the words ‘Holy Bible.’ Witness
+the Jew, who regards the Old Testament as
+alone inspired; the Catholic, who adds the
+Apocrypha. And the shades of difference as to
+the true sense and correct meaning of the Bibles
+are endless.” (pages 218–219.)</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Speaking of the constitutions of the United
+States and of the state of Ohio, the Court said:
+“They, in a sense, speak to <em>mankind</em>, and speak
+of the rights of <em>man</em>. Neither the words <em>Christianity</em>,
+<em>Christian</em>, nor <em>Bible</em>, is to be found
+therein.... Some of the very men who
+helped to frame these constitutions were themselves
+not Christian men.” (page 246.)</p>
+
+<p>In dilating upon the relations of religion
+and government, the Court unanimously held:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>“We are told that this word religion must mean
+Christian religion because Christianity is a part
+of the common law of this country, lying behind
+and above its constitutions. Those who make this
+assertion can hardly be serious, and intend the
+real import of their language. If Christianity is a
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</span><em>law</em> of the state, like every other law, it must have
+a <em>sanction</em>. Adequate penalties must be provided
+to enforce obedience to all its requirements and
+precepts. No one seriously contends for any such
+doctrine in this country, or, I might almost say,
+in this age of the world.” (pages 246–247.)</p>
+
+<p>“<em>Legal</em> Christianity is a solecism, a contradiction
+of terms. When Christianity asks the aid of government
+beyond mere <em>impartial</em> protection, it denies
+itself. Its laws are divine, and not human. Its
+essential interests lie beyond the reach and range
+of human governments. <em>United with the government,
+religion never rises above the merest superstition;
+united with religion, government <span id="TN1">never
+rises above the merest despotism</span></em>; and all history
+shows us that the more widely and completely they
+are separated, the better it is for both.” (page 248.)</p>
+
+<p>“Religion is not—<span id="TN11">Much less is Christianity or
+any other system</span> of religion—named in the preamble
+of the Constitution of the United States as
+one of the declared <em>objects</em> of government; nor is
+it mentioned in the clause in question, in our own
+constitution, as being essential to anything <em>beyond</em>
+mere human government.” (page 248.)</p>
+
+<p>“Properly speaking, there is no such thing as
+religion of state. What we mean by that phrase is,
+the religion of some individual, or set of individuals,
+taught and enforced by the state. The state can
+have no religious opinions; and if it undertakes
+to enforce the teaching of such opinions, they must
+be the opinions of some natural person, or class of
+persons. If it embarks in this business, whose
+opinions shall it adopt?” (page 249.)</p>
+
+<p>“But the real question here is, not what is the
+best religion, but how shall this best religion be
+secured? I answer, it can best be secured by adopting
+the doctrine of this seventh section in our own
+bill of rights, and which I summarize in two words,
+by calling it the doctrine of <em>hands off</em>. Let the
+state not only keep its own hands off, but let it
+also see to it that religious sects keep their hands
+off each other.” (page 250.)</p>
+
+<p>“Government is an organization for particular
+purposes. <span id="TN2">It is not almighty and we are not to
+look</span> to it for everything. The great bulk of human
+affairs and human interests is left by any free
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</span>government to individual enterprise and individual
+action. Religion is eminently one of those interests
+lying outside the true and legitimate province of
+government. Counsel say that to withdraw all religious
+instruction from the schools would be to
+put them under the control of ‘Infidel sects.’ This
+is by no means so. To teach the doctrines of Infidelity,
+and thereby teach that Christianity is
+false, is one thing; and to give no instruction on
+the subject is quite another thing. The only fair
+and impartial method, where serious objection is
+made, is to let each sect give its own instructions,
+elsewhere than in the state schools, where of necessity
+all are to meet; and to put disputed doctrines
+of religion among other subjects of instruction, for
+there are many others, which can more conveniently,
+satisfactorily, and safely be taught elsewhere....
+The principles expressed here are not
+new.... They are as old as Madison, and were
+his favorite opinions. Madison, who had more to
+do with framing the Constitution of the United
+States than any other man, and whose purity of
+life and orthodoxy of religious belief no one questions,
+himself says:</p>
+
+<p>“‘Religion is not within the purview of human
+government.’ And again he says, ‘Religion is essentially
+distinct from human government, and
+exempt from its cognizance. A connection between
+them is injurious to both. There are causes in the
+human breast which insure the perpetuity of religion
+without the aid of law.’”</p>
+
+<p>“In his letter to <abbr title="Governor">Gov.</abbr> Livingston, July 10, 1822,
+he says: ‘I observe with particular pleasure the
+view you have taken of the immunity of religion
+from civil government, in every case where it does
+not trespass on private rights or the public peace.
+This has always been a favorite doctrine with
+me.’” (pages 253–254.)</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+
+<h3 id="THE_WISCONSIN_CASE">
+ THE WISCONSIN CASE
+</h3>
+
+<p>This case was decided by the supreme court
+of Wisconsin in March, 1890, and a report of
+it will be found in the Northwestern Reporter,
+<abbr title="Volume">Vol.</abbr> 44, pages 967–982. It was an appeal from
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</span>Rock county, where, in the town of Edgerton,
+a number of citizens had brought action to
+prevent the reading of the King James version
+of the Bible in the schools of the town, for
+the following reasons: 1, It violates the rights
+of conscience; 2, It compels them to aid in the
+support of a place of worship against their
+consent; 3, It is sectarian instruction. (pages
+971–972.)</p>
+
+<p>The body of the decision was rendered by
+Justice Lyon, and was concurred in by the entire
+court. In dealing with the difference between
+the Douay and the King James versions,
+the Justice said:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>“It is averred in the return that there is no
+material difference between the King James version
+of the Bible used in the Edgerton schools, and
+the Douay version, which is the only one recognized
+by the Catholic church as correct and complete.
+It is universally known that there are differences
+between these two versions in many particulars,
+which the respective sects regard as material.
+Hence the averment is against common knowledge,
+and therefore not well pleaded.” (page 972.)</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Concerning the reading of the King James version
+being sectarian instruction Justice Lyon declared:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>“The term ‘sectarian instruction,’ in the constitution,
+manifestly refers exclusively to instruction in
+religious doctrines, and the prohibition is aimed
+only at such instruction as is sectarian; that is to
+say, instruction in religious doctrines which are
+believed by some sects and rejected by others.
+Hence, to teach the existence of a supreme being,
+of infinite wisdom, power, and goodness, and that
+it is the highest duty of all men to adore, obey, and
+love him, is not sectarian, because all religious
+sects so believe and teach. The instruction becomes
+sectarian when it goes further, and inculcates doctrine
+and dogma concerning which the religious
+sects are in conflict. That the reading from the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</span>Bible in the schools, although unaccompanied by
+any comment on the part of the teacher, is ‘instruction,’
+seems to us too clear for argument.
+Some of the most valuable instruction a person
+can receive may be derived from reading alone,
+without any extrinsic aid by way of comment or
+exposition. The question, therefore, seems to narrow
+down to this: Is the reading of the Bible in
+the schools—not merely selected passages therefrom,
+but the whole of it—sectarian instruction of
+the pupils? In view of the fact already mentioned,
+that the Bible contains many doctrinal passages,
+upon some of which the peculiar creed of almost
+every sect is based, and that such passages may
+reasonably be understood to inculcate the doctrines
+predicated upon them, an affirmative answer to the
+question seems unavoidable. Any pupil of ordinary
+intelligence who listens to the reading of the doctrinal
+portions of the Bible will be more or less instructed
+thereby in the doctrines of the divinity of
+Jesus Christ, the eternal punishment of the wicked,
+the authority of the priesthood, the binding force
+and efficacy of the sacraments, and many other
+conflicting sectarian doctrines. A most forcible
+demonstration of the accuracy of this statement is
+found in the reports of the American Bible Society
+of its work in Catholic countries (referred to in
+one of the arguments), in which instances are given
+of the conversion of several persons from ‘Romanism’
+through the reading of the scriptures alone;
+that is to say, the reading of the Protestant or
+King James version of the Bible converted Catholics
+to Protestants without the aid of comment or exposition.
+In those cases the reading of the Bible
+certainly was sectarian instruction. We do not
+know how to frame an argument in support of the
+proposition that the reading thereof in the district
+schools is not also sectarian instruction.” (page 973.)</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>It having been pleaded by the school board
+that children were not required to remain in
+the room during Bible reading, if it was against
+the will of their parents, and therefore did not
+infringe upon their rights, the Justice said:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>“The answer of the respondent states that the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</span>relators’ children are not compelled to remain in
+the school room while the Bible is being read, but
+are at liberty to withdraw therefrom during the
+reading of the same. For this reason it is claimed
+that the relators have no good cause for complaint,
+even though such reading be sectarian instruction.
+We cannot give our sanction to this position. When,
+as in this case, a small minority of the pupils in
+the public school is excluded, for any cause, from
+a stated school exercise, particularly when such
+cause is apparently hostility to the Bible, which the
+majority of the pupils have been taught to revere,
+from that moment the excluded pupil loses caste
+with his fellows, and is liable to be regarded with
+aversion, and subjected to reproach and insult.
+But it is a sufficient refutation of the argument
+that the practice in question tends to destroy the
+equality of the pupils which the constitution seeks
+to establish and protect, and puts a portion of them
+to serious disadvantage in many ways with respect
+to the others.” (page 975.)</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Justice Cassody, in concurring, holds that
+even though no comment is made it would be
+very easy for the teacher if he so desired to
+make of such reading sectarian instruction:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>“Since every translation made by man must be
+more or less imperfect, and since the application
+of particular passages is liable to be made with
+partial apprehension and biased or even distorted
+judgment, it is easy to perceive how texts of scripture
+may be read with such an emphasis and tone
+as to become excessively sectarian. While the
+members of any particular sect may be willing to
+have one of their own number read the Bible in
+the public schools, yet they are not always willing
+to concede the same to a member of a sect believing
+in an opposite faith or doctrine. But the
+law is impartial, and has given no rights to any
+one sect that is not equally secured to every other.”
+(page 977.)</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>He here quotes Judge Thurman of the Ohio
+Supreme Court as saying:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>“It is not by mere toleration that every individual
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</span>here is protected in his belief or disbelief. He reposes
+not upon the leniency of the government,
+or the liberality of any class or sect of men, but
+upon his natural, indefeasible rights of conscience,
+which, in the language of the constitution, are beyond
+the control or interference of any human
+authority.” (page 978.)</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Is the reading of the Bible worship? Justice
+Cassody upon this issue speaks without reserve,
+and handles the question without gloves:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>“Certainly, the reading of the holy scriptures,
+as the eternal word of God, in obedience to the oft-repeated
+injunction therein contained, whether by
+the individual in private, or in the family, or in the
+public assembly, is an essential part of divine worship.
+Every sermon is based upon some text of
+scripture. Most prayers are preceded by the reading
+of some passage of scripture, as an intelligent
+guide to the thoughts of the worshiper or worshipers.
+The Sermon on the Mount contains the prayer
+taught by the blessed Lord. Is it possible for any
+genuine believer in the Christian religion to read
+or listen to the reading of that sermon, and
+especially that prayer, without being filled with a
+holy sense of honor, reverence, adoration, and
+homage to Almighty God, which is the very essence
+of worship? <em>We must hold that the stated reading
+of the Bible in the public schools as a text book
+may be worship within the meaning of the clause
+of the constitution under consideration.</em> If, then,
+such reading of the Bible is worship, can there
+be any doubt but what the school room in which it
+is so statedly read is a ‘place of worship’ within
+the same clause of the constitution? Counsel seem
+to argue that such place of worship should be confined
+to some church edifice, or place where the
+members of a church statedly worship. Some of
+the earlier constitutions, having similar clauses,
+used the words ‘building’ and ‘church.’ Manifestly
+the words ‘place of worship’ were advisedly used, as
+applicable to any ‘place’ or structure where worship
+is statedly held, and which the citizen is ‘compelled
+to attend,’ or the tax payers are compelled to
+‘erect or support.’ The mere fact that only a
+small fraction of the school hours is devoted to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</span>such worship, in no way justifies such use, as
+against an objecting tax payer. If the right be
+conceded, then the length of time so devoted becomes
+a matter of discretion. If such right does
+not exist, then any length of time, however short,
+is forbidden.” (page 979.)</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Justice Orton, in concurring, thus speaks of
+the evils of even in the slightest manner mixing
+religion with the government:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>“There is no other such source and cause of
+strife, quarrels, fights, malignant opposition, persecution,
+and war, and all evil in the state, as
+religion. Let it once enter into our civil affairs,
+our government would soon be destroyed. Let it
+once enter into our common schools, they would be
+destroyed. Those who made our constitution saw
+this, and used the most apt and comprehensive
+language in it to prevent such a catastrophe. It
+is said that if reading the Protestant version of the
+Bible in school is offensive to the parents of some
+of the scholars, and antagonistic to their religious
+views, their children can retire. They ought not to
+be compelled to go out of the school for such a
+reason for a moment. The suggestion itself concedes
+the whole argument. That version of the
+Bible is hostile to the belief of many who are
+taxed to support the common schools and who have
+equal rights and privileges in them. It is a source
+of religious and sectarian strife. That is enough.
+It violates the letter and spirit of the constitution.”
+(page 981.)</p>
+
+<p>“It requires but little argument to prove that
+the Protestant version of the Bible, or any other
+version of the Bible, is the source of religious strife
+and opposition, and opposed to the religious belief
+of many of our people. It is a sectarian book. The
+Protestants were a very small sect in religion at
+one time, and they are a sect yet, to the great
+Catholic church, against whose usages they protested;
+and so is their version of the Bible sectarian
+as against the Catholic version. The common
+school is one of the most indispensable, useful, and
+valuable civil institutions this state has. It is
+democratic and free to all alike, in perfect equality,
+where all the children of our people stand on a
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</span>common platform, and enjoy the benefits of an
+equal and common education. An enemy of our
+common schools is an enemy to our state government.</p>
+
+<p>“This case is important and timely. It brings
+before the courts a case of plausible, insidious, and
+apparently innocent entrance of religion into our
+civil affairs, and of an assault upon the most
+valuable provisions of our constitution. These provisions
+should be pondered and heeded by all of
+our people, of all nationalities and of all denominations
+of religion, who desire the perpetuity, and
+value the blessings of our free government.” (page
+982.)</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+
+<h3 id="THE_NEBRASKA_CASE">
+ THE NEBRASKA CASE
+</h3>
+
+<p>This case was decided by the supreme court
+of the state on October 9, 1902. It was the
+case of Daniel Freeman <abbr title="versus" lang="la">vs.</abbr> School District <abbr title="Number">No.</abbr>
+21, appealed from Gage county. <span id="TN3">The teacher,
+summoned as a witness</span>, admitted having read
+the Bible; that she considered the exercises
+conducted as religious exercises, held them as
+such, and believed it to be her duty to do so.
+This teacher was evidently honest, and made
+no false pretenses, which is more than we can
+say of many others in her position and holding
+her views. Two extracts from the decision
+of the court are worthy of our attention:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>“But if the system of compulsory education is
+persevered in, and religious worship or sectarian
+instruction in the public schools is at the same
+time permitted, parents will be compelled to expose
+their children to what they deem spiritual contamination,
+or else, while bearing their share of
+the burden for the support of public education, provide
+the means from their own pockets for the
+training of their offspring elsewhere. It might be
+reasonably apprehended that such a practice, besides
+being unjust and oppressive to the persons
+immediately concerned, would, by its tendency to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</span>the multiplication of parochial and sectarian
+schools, tend forcibly to the destruction of one of
+the most important, if not indispensable, foundation
+stones of our form of government. It will be an
+evil day when anything happens to lower the public
+schools in public esteem, or to discourage attendance
+upon them by children of any class.” (page
+847.)</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>“For more than three centuries it has been the
+boast and exultation of Protestants and a complaint
+and grievance of the Roman Catholics that
+the various translations of the Bible, especially the
+New Testament, into the vernacular of different
+peoples, have been the chief controversial weapons
+of the former and the principal cause of undoing
+of the latter. For the making of such translations
+Wickliffe, Tyndale, Luther, and others have been
+commended and glorified by one party and anathematized
+by the others. Books containing such
+translations have been committed to the flames as
+heretical, and their translators, printers, publishers,
+and distributors persecuted, imprisoned, tortured
+and <span id="TN4">put to death for participating in their production</span>
+and distribution. The several popular versions
+differ in some particulars from each other, and all
+differ from the Catholic canon, both in rendition
+of passages from which sectarian doctrines are derived
+by construction and in the number of books
+or gospels constituting what is regarded as the
+written record of divine revelation. In addition to
+this, there are persons who are convinced, upon
+grounds satisfactory to them, that considerable
+parts of the writings accepted by all Protestant
+denominations are not authentic while devout
+Hebrews maintain that the New Testament itself
+is not entitled to a place in the true Bible. These
+diverse opinions have given rise to a great number
+of religious sects or denominations. To some of
+these sects the reading in public of any portion of
+any version of the scriptures unaccompanied by
+authoritative comment or explanation, or the reading
+of it privately by persons not commissioned by
+the church to do so, is objectionable, and an offense
+to their religious feelings; to some, the utterance
+of public prayer, except recitations from the
+Scripture, is a vain and a wicked act; and to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</span>some the songs and hymns of praise in which others
+engage are a stumbling-block and an offense. We
+do not think it wise or necessary to prolong a discussion
+of what appears to us an almost self-evident
+fact—that exercises such as are complained
+of by the relator in this case both constitute religious
+worship and are sectarian in their character,
+within the meaning of the constitution. Nor do we
+feel inclined to make what might be looked upon
+as a spurious exhibition of learning by quoting at
+length from the many judicial decisions and utterances
+of eminent men in this country concerning
+the subject.” (pages 846–847.)</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>A motion for a rehearing of this case was
+denied.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="THE_ILLINOIS_CASE">
+ THE ILLINOIS CASE
+</h3>
+
+<p>This was the case of The People <abbr><i>ex rel.</i></abbr> Jeremiah
+Ring <abbr><i>et al.</i></abbr>, Plaintiffs in Error, <abbr title="versus" lang="la">vs.</abbr> the
+Board of Education of District 24, <abbr>etc.</abbr>, Defendant
+in Error. It was decided by the Illinois
+Supreme Court in June, 1910, and is to be
+found in the Reports of the state, <abbr title="Volume">Vol.</abbr> 245,
+pages 334–378.</p>
+
+<p>The situation, briefly stated, was this: <abbr>Mr.</abbr>
+Ring, a Roman Catholic in belief, was sending
+his children to a district school in Scott county,
+Illinois, there being no Catholic school available
+within reasonable distance. Moreover, he
+was compelled by law to give his children an
+education. In this school certain teachers held
+religious service which included, during school
+hours, readings from the King James version
+of the Bible, repeating the Lord’s Prayer as
+written therein, and the singing of hymns,
+among them one entitled, “Grace Enough for
+Me.” During such religious service the pupils
+were required to rise in their seats, fold their
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</span>hands and bow their heads, and were sometimes
+called on to explain the meaning of passages
+of scripture read. <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Ring had brought
+suit in the District Court of Scott county,
+where it was held that the services were not
+unjust and not a violation of the constitution
+of Illinois. He thereupon appealed to the Supreme
+Court of the state. Here four important
+questions were decided, which applied not only
+to <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Ring, but to all other citizens not in
+sympathy with what is known as Evangelical
+Protestant Christianity. The first question decided
+was that “<em>free enjoyment of religious
+worship includes freedom not to worship</em>.”
+This, orthodox religionists have been slow to
+concede, and never before has the right <em>not
+to worship</em> been so clearly stated. On this
+point the court said:</p>
+
+<p>“The wrong arises, not out of the particular
+version of the Bible or form of prayer used—whether
+that found in the Douay or the King
+James version—or the particular songs sung,
+but out of the <em>compulsion</em> to join in any form
+of worship.”</p>
+
+<p>The second point decided was that “<em>children
+attending public school cannot be compelled to
+join in religious worship</em>,” and that the religious
+exercises as held in the school “constitute
+worship within the meaning of the Constitution.”
+The third point decided was that, the
+constitution of Illinois having forbidden the
+use of school funds for sectarian instruction,
+the giving of such instruction in the schools
+by the teacher is illegal. Most important of
+all, the fourth point was that the reading of
+the Bible in public schools constitutes sectarian
+instruction. Here the court speaks plainly:</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</span></p>
+
+<p>“The Bible, in its entirety, is a sectarian
+book as to the Jew and every believer in any
+religion other than the Christian religion and
+as to those who are heretical or who hold beliefs
+that are not regarded as orthodox. Whether
+it be called sectarian or not, its use in the
+schools necessarily results in sectarian instruction.”</p>
+
+<p>In delivering this decision the court gave
+forth a number of maxims worthy of being
+remembered, among which were:</p>
+
+<p>“All stand equal before the law—the Protestant,
+the Catholic, the Mohammedan, the
+Jew, the Mormon, the Freethinker, the Atheist.
+Whatever may be the view of the majority of
+the people, the court has no right, and the
+majority has no right to force that view upon
+the minority, however small.”</p>
+
+<p>Regarding the status of a pupil in a school
+who is permitted by the objection of himself
+or his parents to refrain from taking part in
+religious exercises, the Court said:</p>
+
+<p>“The exclusion of a pupil from this part of
+the school exercises in which the rest of the
+school joins, separates him from his fellows,
+puts him in a class by himself, deprives him
+of his equality with the other pupils, subjects
+him to a religious stigma and places him at
+a disadvantage in the school, which the law
+never contemplated.”</p>
+
+<p>The decision of the judge of the District
+Court of Scott county was reversed.</p>
+
+<p>At the Illinois constitutional convention of
+1920, an attempt was made to nullify this decision
+by inserting the following in the proposed
+new constitution: “The reading of selections
+from any version of the Old and New
+Testaments in the public schools without comment
+shall never be held to be in conflict with
+this constitution.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</span></p>
+
+<p>The object of this was to force the Bible into
+the schools and to make opponents of the
+tyranny helpless in protest. The people of
+Illinois, however, took the matter in hand, and
+on December 12, 1922, defeated the adoption of
+the new constitution by a majority of six to
+one.</p>
+
+
+<h3 id="THE_CALIFORNIA_CASE">
+ THE CALIFORNIA CASE
+</h3>
+
+<p>This case was decided by the Court of Appeals
+of the state in December, 1922. It was
+based on a clause of the Constitution of California
+reading:</p>
+
+<p>“No public money shall ever be appropriated
+for the support of any sectarian school; ...
+nor shall any sectarian doctrine be taught or
+instruction therein permitted, directly or indirectly,
+in any common schools of this state.”
+The California court held that “while Protestantism
+may not be a ‘sect’ in the strict interpretation
+of the term, the Protestant Bible
+contains the precepts of many of the Protestant
+denominations, and the ‘denomination’
+is merely another term for ‘sect’.”</p>
+
+<p>As the arguments in this case were very
+largely those used in the other cases they are
+not reproduced here.</p>
+
+<p>The New York Globe, in commenting upon
+the decision admits that the “authorized version”
+is “technically sectarian literature,”
+while the Brooklyn Citizen admits: “There
+can be no doubt as to the facts. The law is
+clear.” In California as in Illinois, the
+churches are going to try to nullify this decision
+by a constitutional amendment.</p>
+
+<p>The following points now seem to be established
+in law:</p>
+
+<p>First: Any <em>version</em> of the Christian Bible
+is sectarian to those who do not accept it as
+the inspired word of God.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</span></p>
+
+<p>Second: One version of the Bible accepted
+by one denomination of Christians is sectarian
+to members of any other denomination which
+does not accept it.</p>
+
+<p>Third: The Bible is distinctly a book of
+religion, and the teaching of it anywhere cannot
+fail to be construed as religious teaching.</p>
+
+<p>Fourth: Readings from the Bible, accompanied
+or unaccompanied by prayer and the
+singing of religious hymns, are acts of religious
+worship.</p>
+
+<p>Fifth: If done in the public school room,
+during school hours, with the pupils present,
+it thereby makes the public school a place of
+religious worship.</p>
+
+<p>Sixth: As our citizens are compelled by law
+either to send their children to the public
+schools or by other means provide for them an
+education, the use of the Bible in the school
+room compels the citizen to support and attend
+a place of worship, thereby violating the fundamental
+American principle of no state religion
+and no union of church and state. The
+attempts of Protestants to place the Bible in
+the schools are very astute efforts to evade
+and nullify this principle.</p>
+
+<p>Seventh: No church, or religion is entitled
+to any special privileges at the hands of the
+government. All the state is bound to do is
+to protect them all in their equal rights.</p>
+
+<p>Eighth: Those professing no religion have
+the same rights as those who do.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" aria-hidden="true">
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</span></p>
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_III">
+ CHAPTER <abbr title="3">III</abbr>
+ </h2>
+ <p class="center"><i>Fifteen Reasons Why the Bible Should Not Be
+ in the School Room</i>
+ </p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="p2"><abbr title="1">I.</abbr> <i>The Question of Religion Involved.</i> Those
+who want the Bible read in the public schools
+declare it to be the word of God. Now it either
+is such or it is not. If taught as the word of
+God, such teaching would be religious and
+therefore, as the courts maintain, unconstitutional.
+If taught as a human production,
+would the advocates of its use in the schools
+be so enthusiastic to place it there? As we
+have previously observed, the subject of religion
+cannot be eliminated from any study
+of the Bible. The result would be the dragging
+of it into the public school, where of all
+places it should not be. It would cause dissension,
+disagreement, and bad feeling and
+bring about the very thing we do not want
+to happen, the dividing of the children into
+religious groups or sects. The object of our
+schools above all things is to make the forthcoming
+citizens Americans, not to divide them
+into religious or national coteries. Let religion
+be taught in the churches and Sunday
+schools. If it is of any value its worth will
+be communicated from these places in the lives
+of those who attend them. If the churches, as
+many of them as we have, as great effort as
+they make to spread their teachings, and as
+much wealth as they possess, to say nothing
+of the power of God behind them, cannot make
+their good influence felt without encroaching
+upon the public secular school, we have a right
+to assume that they are valueless. The <abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr>
+Joseph Parker, the eminent English clergyman,
+who was opposed to thrusting the Bible
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</span>into the schools, said that to do so was a reflection
+upon the ministry. It implied that
+ministers are unable to do their own work
+and must call upon the schoolmaster to help
+them.</p>
+
+<p><abbr title="2">II.</abbr> <i>The Age of the Bible.</i> A book written
+over two thousand years ago, in the infancy
+of the human intelligence, before the birth of
+scientific knowledge, has no place as a text
+book in the schools of the twentieth century.
+But, some will urge, are not other works of
+antiquity studied in the schools? True, but
+under these circumstances: They are used in
+higher education; they are used for a particular
+purpose, as, for instance, the study of the
+language, history, or habits of an ancient people;
+there are not the controversies or other
+objectionable features connected with their
+study that would follow the Bible. Why need
+we go to a book so old as the Bible for our
+ideals? Have we not them among ourselves?
+We think we have. We think our Abraham
+Lincoln a greater and a better man than Abraham
+of Ur of the Chaldees. We think our Ingersoll
+and our Webster were greater orators
+than Peter and Paul. We think Shakespeare,
+Byron, Burns, Moore, Shelley, and our own
+Longfellow were greater poets than the writers
+of the Psalms. We think Darwin knew more
+about biology, Herschel more about astronomy,
+Lyell more about geology, Mill more about
+logic and political economy, and almost any
+physician more about medicine and surgery
+than were known by Moses or any other man,
+real or imagined, who it is alleged wrote the
+Bible. We think that Herbert Spencer was a
+greater philosophical genius of all the biblical
+writers, and that Benjamin Franklin was a
+wiser and a cleaner man morally than was
+Solomon. We think that Edison has done more
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</span>good in the world than did Ezekiel, and that
+Isaac Newton proclaimed greater truths than
+did Isaiah. We think that Buddha, Confucius,
+Manu, and Zoroaster taught as good systems
+of morals as did Jesus. If Jesus died to save
+the world, thousands have also died in behalf
+of or on account of Jesus so the debt has many
+times been repaid. If Jesus died in behalf of
+principles which he deemed to be good, so did
+Bruno, Savonarola, Legate, Wightman, Ferrer,
+and others too numerous to mention. Bible
+virtues of any real value are strictly human
+virtues to be found in all ages and climes,
+among all races and religions. Is it possible
+that for moral teaching we must revert to the
+book of a people who were so far behind their
+neighbors that except Saul and Jonathan they
+had “neither sword nor spear in the hand of
+any of the people”? (<abbr title="First">1</abbr> Samuel <abbr title="13">xiii</abbr>, 22.) And
+a people who had no blacksmiths, but who
+“went down to the Philistines to sharpen every
+man his share, and his coulter, and his axe,
+and his mattock”? (verses 19 and 20). And a
+people who had no mechanics among them, but
+when their king wanted to build a house for
+himself had to send to a “heathen,” Hiram,
+king of Tyre, for masons and carpenters? (<abbr title="Second">2</abbr>
+Samuel <abbr title="5">v</abbr>, 11.)</p>
+
+<p><abbr title="3">III.</abbr> <i>The Bible is not a book</i>, but a collection
+of books, written hundreds of years apart,
+and arbitrarily, in the midst of great and
+stormy controversy, gathered together in one
+volume. There was always a dispute as to
+what books should compose it. The Hebrew
+Bible contains thirty-nine books. The King
+James, or Protestant English, version contains
+sixty-six, while the Roman Catholic or Douay
+version in addition to these contains the
+Apocrypha, making in all seventy-two. These
+different factions of religionists respectively
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</span>reject certain books the others accept. For a
+history of the controversies over what books
+should compose the Bible, see Davidson on
+“The Canon,” “An Introduction to the New
+Testament,” by the <abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr> B. W. Bacon, <abbr class="spell">D.D.</abbr>, of
+the Yale Divinity School, and the article on
+the Canon in the Encyclopedia Biblica.</p>
+
+<p><abbr title="4">IV.</abbr> Unless used for the purpose of teaching
+some foreign language, any book studied in
+the public schools should be written in the
+English language, not in a foreign or a dead
+language. The Old Testament was written in
+the ancient Hebrew, practically a dead language
+at the beginning of the alleged Christian
+era. Many translations have been made,
+of which John E. Remsburg says, after speaking
+of the English versions, <span id="TN5">Wicliffe’s</span>, Tyndale’s,
+King James’s, the New Version, and the
+Douay: “The foregoing are but a few of the
+numerous versions of the Bible, ancient and
+modern, that have appeared. Nearly every nation
+of Europe has had from one to a score.
+Luther’s version is nearly four hundred years
+old, and yet Germany has seventeen translations
+and consequently seventeen versions before
+Luther’s was published. England had
+many besides those named.”</p>
+
+<p><abbr title="5">V.</abbr> The Bible should not be read in the public
+schools because so many false and unfounded
+claims have been made for it, claims
+that have been nullified by the conclusions of
+modern science and criticism and recent investigations
+and discoveries. These false claims
+are embodied in the popular teaching of the
+book. It is claimed, for instance, that the first
+five books of the Old Testament were written
+by Moses in the thirteenth century <abbr class="spell">B.&nbsp;C.</abbr>;
+that the four gospels of the New Testament
+were written by those whose names appear as
+the writers; that Paul wrote the fourteen
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</span>epistles that bear his name, and fictitious
+claims are made for other books. In the face
+of modern scholarship, which has submitted
+the Bible to the same scrutiny and criticism to
+which other books have been submitted, all
+these claims have been proved false and unfounded.
+This is so clear that the orthodox
+churches have split over the situation, one
+party accepting the old or traditional view,
+and the other the modern or scientific.</p>
+
+<p><abbr title="6">VI.</abbr> As Archdeacon Farrar has said, all
+parts of the Bible are not of equal value. The
+sixty-six books bound into one represent every
+variety of literature—poetry, fiction, mythology,
+drama, legend, tradition, and some things
+possibly historical. Yet the popular teaching
+of the books makes no distinction between
+them, and uncritically places all upon the same
+level and gives them the same value.</p>
+
+<p><abbr title="7">VII.</abbr> The Bible should not be read in the
+schools because it relates as facts numerous
+miracles, wonders, and myths, impossible in
+the nature of things, as the established matter-of-fact
+experience of mankind proves, which
+bear upon their face the marks of ignorance,
+superstition, and fraud. In the ordinary course
+of life we laugh at such narratives and regard
+them only as fairy tales. Why, then, in the
+instruction of youth should we teach what we
+ourselves dismiss as the fictitious and absurd?</p>
+
+<p><abbr title="8">VIII.</abbr> The history of man proves that he
+has been enlightened, happy, and prosperous
+to the extent that he has had a knowledge of
+Nature and her laws, and that ignorance, superstition,
+and misfortune have been the result
+of a lack of knowledge of, and the violation
+of, these laws. In other words, science has
+been the great enlightener and civilizer. Science
+today is the basis for judgment in all
+matters pertaining to the welfare of the human
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</span>race. Science has been called classified knowledge,
+or as Professor Clifford has said, it is
+“organized common sense.” “The subject of
+science is the human universe; that is to say,
+every thing that is, or has been, or may be
+related to man” (Lectures and Essays, page
+24, <abbr>R. P. A.</abbr> Edition). Science is progressive.
+It depends upon the continued advance of
+knowledge, is ever alert and critical, calls
+everything into question and accepts nothing
+as true without a preponderance of evidence.
+The Bible should not be read in the schools
+because the science it teaches is that of a primitive
+and a barbarous age. It was in accordance
+with the childhood of the world, when,
+as Lydia M. Child says, “In the childhood of
+the race men thought little and believed much,
+just as children do.” As a book in the schools,
+the Bible, with its flat earth, its metallic firmament,
+making the sun, moon, and stars as
+lanterns hung out to give light to the day and
+the night, is a mockery and a distortion in this
+age of the world. Its story of creation is a
+fairy tale only believable in an age of ignorance.
+Its story of the origin of man is childish,
+being on a par with similar myths of
+ancient peoples.</p>
+
+<p>The Bishop of Oxford (England) has this to
+say about the teachings of these myths to children:
+“You can hardly exaggerate the disaster
+it has been to the education of children that
+they have been taught to associate with religion
+things about the creation, the flood, and
+the beginning of our race, which it was infallibly
+certain, when they grew up to read
+the literature of their time, they would find
+false and would reject as alien to the whole
+trend of the philosophy, science, and history of
+their time.” This statement, coming from a
+clergyman of such high standing, ought to be
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</span>conclusive. We have neither the space nor
+the time to dilate upon the conflict between
+the Bible and science and the bitter struggle
+between religionists and the scientists. The
+story has been written by one of our greatest
+of historians, Andrew Dickson White, in his
+two large volumes entitled “The Warfare Between
+Science and Theology in Christendom.”
+It has been written by Draper in his “Intellectual
+Development of Europe” and in his
+“Conflict Between Science and Religion.” Read
+these works and see clearly the folly and the
+disaster of placing the Bible in the public
+schools. You will not then be surprised that
+religionists of the type of W. J. Bryan are now
+using their efforts to prevent the teaching of
+Evolution in our public educational institutions.
+It is only a revival of the old conflict
+between education and ignorance, between superstition
+and knowledge. The cause of it
+all has been the use of the Bible as a book of
+authority and teaching.</p>
+
+<p><abbr title="9">IX.</abbr> The Bible has no place in the school
+room because it states as facts the grossest absurdities.
+It speaks of an ax swimming in the
+water (<abbr title="Second">2</abbr> Kings <abbr title="6">vi</abbr>, 5); it speaks of “an hundred
+and four score and five thousand” men
+who arose early in the morning only to find
+that “they were all dead corpses” (Isaiah
+<abbr title="37">xxxvii</abbr>, 36); while we read in the ninth and
+tenth chapters of <abbr title="First">1</abbr> Kings that Solomon had
+more gold and silver than there were in the
+world at that time; that the spies sent into
+Caanan “cut down from thence a branch with
+one cluster of grapes, and they bare it between
+two upon a staff” (Numbers <abbr title="13">xiii</abbr>, 23);
+that “we saw the giants, and the sons of Anak,
+which came of the giants: and we were in
+our own sight as grasshoppers, and so we were
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</span>in their sight” (verse 33), and that the rabbit
+chews its cud like the cow (<abbr title="Leviticus">Lev.</abbr> <abbr title="2">ii</abbr>, 6).</p>
+
+<p>We will call the reader’s attention to the very
+absurd story of the Israelites’ exodus from
+Egypt, as shown by R. B. Westbrook, in his
+work, “<cite class="nonitalic">The Eliminator: or Skeleton Keys to
+Sacerdotal Mysteries</cite>”; “The number of fighting
+men who marched out of Egypt is nowhere
+estimated at less than 600,000, and if this represents
+only one-fifth of the population, the
+latter must have reached 3,000,000. If we cut
+this down one-third, so as to be sure of our
+figure, we make it 2,000,000 souls. The number
+of the children of Israel who went into
+Egypt was seventy (<abbr title="Exodus">Ex.</abbr> <abbr title="1">i</abbr>, 5). They sojourned
+in Egypt 215 years. It could not have been
+430, as would appear from <abbr title="Exodus">Ex.</abbr> <abbr title="12">xii</abbr>, 40. The
+marginal chronology makes the period 215
+years, and there were only four generations to
+the Exodus—namely, Levi, Kohath, Amram,
+and Moses (<abbr title="Exodus">Ex.</abbr> <abbr title="6">vi.</abbr> 16, 18, 20). How could
+these people increase in 215 years from seventy
+souls so as to number 600,000 warriors? It
+would have required an average number of 46
+children to each father. The twelve sons of
+Jacob had between them only fifty-three sons.
+At this rate of increase, in the fourth generation
+there would have been only 6,311 males
+(providing they were all living at the time of
+the Exodus), instead of 1,000,000. If we add
+the fifth generation, who would be mostly children,
+the total number of males would not
+have exceeded 28,465.</p>
+
+<p>“All the first-born males from a month old
+and upwards, of those that were numbered,
+were 22,273 (Numbers <abbr title="3">iii</abbr>, 43). The lowest
+computation of the whole number of the people
+at that time is 2,000,000. The number of
+males would be 1,000,000. Dividing the latter
+number by the number of first born gives 44,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</span>which would be the average number of boys in
+each family, or about 88 children by each
+mother. Or, if where the first born were females
+the males were not counted, the number
+of children by each mother would be reduced
+to forty-four.</p>
+
+<p>“Dan in the first generation had but one
+son (<span id="TN6"><abbr title="Genesis">Gen.</abbr> <abbr title="46">xlvi</abbr>, 23</span>), and yet in the fourth generation
+his descendants had increased to 62,700
+warriors (<abbr title="Numbers">Num.</abbr> <abbr title="2">ii</abbr>, 26), or 64,400 (<abbr title="Numbers">Num.</abbr>
+<abbr title="26">xxvi</abbr>, 43). Each of his sons and grandsons
+must have had about eighty children of both
+sexes. On the other hand, the Levites increased
+the number of ‘males from a month
+old and upward’ during the thirty-eight years
+in the wilderness only from 22,000 to 23,000
+(<abbr title="Numbers">Num.</abbr> <abbr title="3">iii</abbr>, 39; <abbr title="26">xxvi</abbr>, 62), and the tribe of Manasseh
+during the same time increased from 32,200
+(<abbr title="Numbers">Num.</abbr> <abbr title="1">i</abbr>, 35) to 52,700 (<abbr title="26">xxvi</abbr>, 34).</p>
+
+<p>“The whole population of Israel were instructed
+in one single day to keep the passover,
+and actually did keep it (<abbr title="Exodus">Ex.</abbr> <abbr title="12">xii</abbr>). At
+the first notice of any such feast Jehovah said,
+‘I will pass through the land of Egypt <em>this
+night</em>.’ The passover was to be killed ‘<em>at even</em>’
+on the same day that Moses received the command....
+After midnight of the same day
+the Israelites received notice to start for the
+wilderness. No one was to go out of his house
+till morning, when they were to take their hurried
+flight with their cattle and herds. How
+could 2,000,000 people, scattered over a wide
+district, as they must have been with their
+cattle and herds, have gotten ready and taken
+a simultaneous hurried flight at twelve hours’
+notice?</p>
+
+<p>“The Israelites, with their flocks and herds,
+reached the Red Sea, a distance of from fifty
+to sixty miles over a sandy desert, in three
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</span>days! Marching fifty abreast the able-bodied
+warriors alone would have filled up the road
+for seven miles, and the whole multitude would
+have made a column twenty-two miles long, so
+that the last of the body could not have been
+started until the front had advanced that distance—more
+than two days’ journey for such
+a mixed company. Then the sheep and cattle
+must have formed another vast column, covering
+a much greater tract of ground in proportion
+to their number. Upon what did these
+two millions of sheep and oxen feed in the journey
+to the Red Sea over a desert region, sandy,
+gravelly, and stony alternately? How did the
+people manage with the sick and infirm, and
+especially with the seven hundred and fifty
+births that must have taken place in the three
+days’ march?” (pages 85, 86, 87.)</p>
+
+<p>In addition to this we need say nothing of
+the story of the flood or other ridiculous Bible
+tales. The land of Caanan is described in the
+Bible as “a land flowing with milk and honey,”
+as a rich land, where gold and silver were as
+abundant as stones. We turn from this high
+sounding Jewish boast to the description of it
+as given by General Furlong, of the British
+army, who had marched over every mile of it:</p>
+
+<p>“The area of Judea and Samaria is, according
+to the above authority, 140 <abbr title="times">×</abbr> 40 = 5,600
+square miles, which I think is certainly one-fourth
+too much, my own triangulation of it
+giving only 4,500, or a figure of about 130 <abbr title="times">×</abbr> 35.
+I will, however, concede the allotment of 5,600,
+but we must remember that, as a rule, the
+whole is a dismal, rocky, arid region, with only
+intersecting valleys, watered by springs and
+heavy rain from November to February inclusive,
+and having scorching heats from April
+to September. Even the inhabitable portions
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</span>of the country could support only the very
+sparsest population, and I speak after having
+marched over it and also a considerable portion
+of the rest of the world. In India we
+should look upon it as a very poor province;
+in some respects very like the hilly tracts of
+Mewar or Odeypoor in Rajpootana, but in extent,
+population, and wealth it is less than a
+small principality.”</p>
+
+<p>Why should we place a book in the schools
+which teaches such falsehoods when all around
+us are the grand truths of Nature?</p>
+
+<p><abbr title="10">X.</abbr> The Bible should not be read in the
+schools because it teaches oriental tyranny and
+kingcraft, against which our fathers fought
+and offered their life blood. “Fear God, honor
+the king” (<abbr title="First">1</abbr> Peter <abbr title="2">ii</abbr>, 17). “Submit yourselves
+to every ordinance of man for the Lord’s sake:
+whether it be to the king, as supreme; or to
+the governors, as unto them that are sent by
+him for the punishment of evil doers, and for
+the praises of them that do well” (verses 13
+and 14). “Let every soul be subject unto the
+higher powers. For there is no power but of
+God: the powers that be are ordained of God”
+(Romans <abbr title="13">xiii</abbr>, 1). This is contrary to the
+principles of Americanism as taught by the
+founders of our republic, and has no place in
+the instruction of the young Americans of today
+in our public schools.</p>
+
+<p><abbr title="11">XI.</abbr> As one of the most progressive nations
+in the world we have granted woman equal
+rights with man. The Bible should not be
+read in our schools because it teaches the subjugation,
+degradation, and oriental slavery of
+women prevalent in the age and country in
+which it was written. “Unto the woman he
+said, I will greatly multiply thy sorrow and thy
+conception; in sorrow thou shalt bring forth
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</span>children: and thy desire shall be to thy husband,
+and he shall rule over thee” (Genesis
+<abbr title="3">iii</abbr>, 16). “Wives, submit yourselves to your
+own husbands” (<abbr title="Colossians">Col.</abbr> <abbr title="3">iii</abbr>, 18). “As the church
+is subject unto Christ so let the wives be subject
+to their own husbands in everything”
+(<abbr title="Ephesians">Eph.</abbr> <abbr title="5">v</abbr>, 24). “Let your women keep silence
+in the churches, for it is not permitted unto
+them to speak, but they are commanded to be
+under obedience, as also saith the law. And if
+they would learn anything, let them ask their
+husbands at home; for it is a shame for a
+woman to speak in church” (<abbr title="First Corinthians">1 Cor.</abbr> <abbr title="14">xiv</abbr>, 34,
+35). “Ye wives, be in subjection to your own
+husbands.... For after this manner in the
+old time the holy women also, who trusted in
+God, adorned themselves, being in subjection to
+their own husbands; even as Sarah obeyed
+Abraham calling him lord” (<abbr title="First">1</abbr> Peter <abbr title="3">iii</abbr>, 1–6).
+“Let women learn in silence with all subjection.
+But I suffer not a woman to teach, nor
+to usurp authority over a man, but to be in
+silence. For Adam was first formed, then Eve.
+And Adam was not deceived, but the woman
+being deceived was in the transgression” (<abbr title="First Timothy">1
+Tim.</abbr> <abbr title="2">ii</abbr>, 11–14). Modern civilization has bidden
+defiance to these words of Paul. We would
+ask the good <abbr class="spell">W. C. T. U.</abbr> ladies who are working
+to place the Bible in the public schools to
+ponder over these words of the apostle, as well
+as over many other biblical passages. We would
+call their attention to the despicable idea of
+marriage taught by Jesus in <abbr title="Matthew">Matt.</abbr> <abbr title="19">xix</abbr>, 10–12,
+and by Paul in the seventh chapter of <abbr title="First">1</abbr> Corinthians.
+In the Old Testament the father selects
+a husband for his daughter, and is allowed
+to sell her as a slave (<abbr title="Exodus">Ex.</abbr> <abbr title="21">xxi</abbr>, 7). Let
+these ladies, who are the right bower of the
+priest and parson, read and think over this
+passage: “When a man hath taken a wife,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</span>and marries her, and it come to pass that she
+find no favor in his eyes, ... then let him
+write her a bill of divorcement, and give it in
+her hand, and send her out of his house”
+(<abbr title="Deuteronomy">Deut.</abbr> <abbr title="24">xxiv</abbr>, 1). Yet this is not quite so bad
+as the teaching of Jesus forbidding divorce at
+all except for the cause of adultery. Let them
+read and think of the following:</p>
+
+<p>“Thus saith the Lord, Behold, I will raise
+up evil against thee in thine own house, and
+I will take thy wives before thine eyes, and
+give them unto thy neighbor, and he shall lie
+with thy wives in the sight of the sun” (<abbr title="Second">2</abbr>
+Samuel <abbr title="12">xii</abbr>, 11).</p>
+
+<p>“Their children shall be dashed to pieces
+before their eyes; their houses shall be spoiled
+and their wives ravished” (Isaiah <abbr title="13">xiii</abbr>, 16).</p>
+
+<p>“I will gather all nations against Jerusalem
+to battle; and the city shall be taken, and the
+houses rifled, and the women ravished” (<abbr title="Zechariah">Zech.</abbr>
+<abbr title="14">xiv</abbr>, 2).</p>
+
+<p>“Let their wives be bereaved of their children
+and be widows” (<abbr title="Jeremiah">Jer.</abbr> <abbr title="18">xviii</abbr>, 21).</p>
+
+<p>Wherever the Bible speaks of woman, from
+the first chapter of Genesis to the last chapter
+of Revelation, its ideas are low and vile. Those
+ideas have no place in the school room and are
+unfit for the reading of children and young
+people anywhere. The late G. W. Foote once
+said that the day would come when it would
+be the proud boast of woman that she had never
+contributed a line to the Bible.</p>
+
+<p><abbr title="12">XII.</abbr> The best thoughts of the best men, both
+Christian and non-Christian, at the present
+day are turned to the question of how to avert
+war, the curse of the world during the past
+ten years. The Bible should not be read in
+the schools because from cover to cover it
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</span>teaches, commends, authorizes, and lauds the
+practice of men killing each other. The best
+evidence of this is the Bible itself. The word
+war occurs within its lids just two hundred and
+thirty-five times—threats of war, rumors of
+war, devastations of war. The following are a
+few of them: “The Lord is a man of war, the
+Lord is his name” (Exodus <abbr title="15">xv</abbr>, 3); “He
+teacheth my hands to war” (<abbr title="First Samuel">1 Sam.</abbr> <abbr title="22">xxii</abbr>, 35).
+See also Psalms <abbr title="18">xviii</abbr>, 34, and <abbr title="144">cxliv.</abbr> “And thou
+shalt consume all the people, which the Lord
+thy God shall deliver thee, thine eye shall
+have no pity upon them” (<abbr title="Deuteronomy">Deut.</abbr> <abbr title="7">vii</abbr>, 16); “Of
+the cities of these people, which the Lord thy
+God doth give thee for an inheritance, thou
+shalt save nothing alive that breatheth; but
+thou shalt utterly destroy them” (<abbr title="Deuteronomy">Deut.</abbr> <abbr title="20">xx</abbr>,
+16, 17); “And they warred against the Midianites,
+as the Lord commanded Moses; and they
+slew all the males.... And the children of
+Israel took all the women of Midian captives,
+and their little ones, and took the spoil of all
+their cattle, and all their flocks and all their
+goods. And they burned all their cities wherein
+they dwelt, and all their goodly castles with
+fire” (Numbers <abbr title="31">xxxi</abbr>, 10).</p>
+
+<p>These passages are typical of the Old Testament.
+To quote further would be superfluous
+and wearisome. In the second chapter of Deuteronomy,
+fourth and eighth verses, we find a
+thorough justification for the marching of the
+Germans through Belgium in the late European
+war, an outrage against all international law
+and the established rules of justice which govern
+nations in their intercourse with each
+other.</p>
+
+<p>Read the fourteenth chapter of Numbers and
+Deuteronomy <abbr title="9">ix</abbr>, 23, and see why all of the children
+of Israel twenty years old and over were
+doomed to spend the remainder of their lives
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</span>in the wilderness. Why? Because they refused
+to <em>war</em> against the inhabitants of the land of
+Canaan. When the people told Jeremiah that
+they would go into Egypt where they would
+be free from war (Jeremiah <abbr title="42">xlii</abbr>, 14), the Lord
+replied that war would also follow them there
+and that the sword “shall overtake you there
+in the land of Egypt, and the famine, whereof
+ye were afraid, shall follow close after you
+there in Egypt; and there ye shall die” (verse
+16). When Israel and Syria were without a
+war for three years it was considered a matter
+worthy of special mention (<abbr title="First">1</abbr> Kings <abbr title="22">xxii</abbr>, 1);
+and God gave Judah a special dispensation from
+war. Jesus said: “I came not to send peace
+but a sword” (Matthew <abbr title="10">x</abbr>, 34). He said (Luke
+<abbr title="21">xxi</abbr>, 24), “And they shall fall by the edge of
+the sword, and shall be led away captive into
+all nations.” “And he that hath no sword, let
+him sell his garment and buy one” (Luke <abbr title="22">xxii</abbr>,
+36). But, say some bibliolaters, he meant the
+“sword of the spirit!” Read, however, the
+fiftieth verse of the same chapter; “And one
+of them smote the servant of the high priest,
+and cut off his right ear.” With what did he
+do this, the sword of the spirit? And there
+still was war, even in heaven (<abbr title="Revelation">Rev.</abbr> <abbr title="12">xii</abbr>, 7).</p>
+
+<p>As Archdeacon Farrar well said, “The Bible
+is a barbarous book, written in a barbarous
+age for a barbarous people.” Do we want this
+book read in our public schools against the
+best thought, the highest learning and the
+most humanitarian views of this age? The
+people who advocate its reading there require
+watching.</p>
+
+<p><abbr title="13">XIII.</abbr> The Bible should not be read in the
+public schools because it contradicts itself
+nearly two hundred times. We will give a few
+illustrations:</p>
+
+<p>“And he said, <em>Thou shalt not see my face</em>:
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</span>for there shall no man see me and live” (<abbr title="Exodus">Ex.</abbr>
+<abbr title="33">xxxiii</abbr>, 20).</p>
+
+<p>“<em>And the Lord spake unto Moses face to face</em>,
+as a man speaketh unto his friend” (11).</p>
+
+<p>“And the men which journeyed with him
+stood speechless, <em>hearing a voice</em>, but seeing
+no man” (Acts <abbr title="9">ix</abbr>, 7).</p>
+
+<p>“And they that were with me saw indeed
+the light, and were afraid; but <em>they heard not
+the voice</em> of him that spake to me” (<abbr title="22">xxii</abbr>, 9).</p>
+
+<p>Jesus said, “If any man hear my words, and
+believe not, <em>I judge him not</em>: for <em>I came not to
+judge the world</em>, but to save the world” (John
+<abbr title="12">xii</abbr>, 47).</p>
+
+<p>“For the Father judgeth no man; <em>but hath
+committed all judgment to the son</em>” (<abbr title="verse">v.</abbr> 22).</p>
+
+<p>“And the anger of <em>the Lord</em> was kindled
+against Israel, and he moved David against
+them to say, Go, number Israel and Judah” (<abbr title="Second">2</abbr>
+Samuel <abbr title="24">xxiv</abbr>, 1).</p>
+
+<p>“And <em>Satan</em> stood up against Israel, and provoked
+David to number Israel” (<abbr title="First">1</abbr> Chronicles
+<abbr title="21">xxi</abbr>, 1).</p>
+
+<p>“The Jews therefore said unto him, <em>It is not
+lawful for us to put any man to death</em>” (John
+<abbr title="18">xviii</abbr>, 31).</p>
+
+<p>“The Jews answered him, We have a law,
+and <em>by our law he ought to die</em>” (John <abbr title="14">xiv</abbr>, 7).</p>
+
+<p>What women visited the tomb on the morning
+of the resurrection?</p>
+
+<p>“The first day of the week cometh <em>Mary Magdalene</em>,
+early when it was yet dark, unto the
+sepulchre” (John <abbr title="20">xx</abbr>, 1).</p>
+
+<p>“In the end of the Sabbath, as it began to
+dawn toward the first day of the week, came
+<em>Mary Magdalene and the other Mary</em> to see the
+sepulchre” (<abbr title="Matthew">Matt.</abbr> <abbr title="28">xxviii</abbr>, 1).</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Now upon the first day of the week, very
+early in the morning, they came unto the sepulchre....
+It was <em>Mary Magdalene, and
+Joanna, and Mary the mother of James, and
+other women</em>” (Luke <abbr title="24">xxiv</abbr>, 10).</p>
+
+<p>At what time in the morning did they visit
+the tomb?</p>
+
+<p>“At the rising of the sun” (Mark <abbr title="16">xvi</abbr>, 2).</p>
+
+<p>“When it was yet dark” (John <abbr title="20">xx</abbr>, 1).</p>
+
+<p>Where did Jesus first appear to his disciples?</p>
+
+<p>“Then said Jesus unto them (the women)
+Be not afraid; go tell my brethren <em>that they
+go into Galilee</em>, into a mountain where Jesus
+had appointed them. And when they saw him
+they worshiped him; but some doubted (<abbr title="Matthew">Matt.</abbr>
+<abbr title="28">xxviii</abbr>, 10, 16, 17).</p>
+
+<p>“And they rose up the same hour, and <em>returned
+to Jerusalem</em>, and found the eleven
+gathered together, and them that were with
+them, saying, The Lord is risen indeed, and
+hath appeared unto Simon.... And as they
+thus spake, Jesus himself stood in the midst
+of them” (Luke <abbr title="24">xxiv</abbr>, 33, 34, 36).</p>
+
+<p>Did the disciples know that Jesus would arise
+from the dead? According to Mark <abbr title="10">x</abbr>, 32, 33
+and 34, they did:</p>
+
+<p>“And he took again the twelve, and began
+to tell them what things should happen unto
+him, saying, Behold, we go up to Jerusalem;
+and the Son of man shall be delivered unto the
+chief priests, and unto the scribes, and they
+shall condemn him to death, and shall deliver
+him to the Gentiles; and they shall mock him,
+and shall scourge him, and shall spit upon
+him, and shall kill him; <em>and the third day he
+shall rise again</em>.” Yet John <abbr title="20">xx</abbr>, 9 distinctly
+says, “<em>For as yet they knew not the scripture,
+that he must rise again from the dead.</em>”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</span></p>
+
+<p>Did John the Baptist know Jesus when he
+came unto him to be baptized? He did, according
+to <abbr title="Matthew">Matt.</abbr> <abbr title="3">iii</abbr>, 13, 14: “Then cometh Jesus
+from Galilee to Jordan unto John, to be baptized
+of him. But John forbade him, saying,
+<em>I have need to be baptized of thee, and comest
+thou to me?</em>”</p>
+
+<p>Yet John himself admits that he did not
+know him:</p>
+
+<p>“<em>And I knew him not</em>: but he that sent me to
+baptize with water, the same said unto me,
+Upon whom thou shalt see the spirit descending
+and remaining on him, the same is he that
+baptizes with the holy ghost. And I saw, and
+bare record, that this is the Son of God” (John
+<abbr title="1">i</abbr>, 33).</p>
+
+<p>There is also another very material contradiction
+as to what the centurion at the cross
+said:</p>
+
+<p>“Now when the centurion, and they that were
+with him, watching Jesus, saw the earthquake,
+and those things that were done, they feared
+greatly, saying, ‘<em>Truly, this was the Son of
+God</em>’” (<abbr title="Matthew">Matt.</abbr> <abbr title="27">xxvii</abbr>, 54).</p>
+
+<p>Luke gives an entirely different version:</p>
+
+<p>“Now when the centurion saw what was
+done, he glorified God, saying, <em>Certainly this
+was a righteous man</em>” (<abbr title="23">xxiii</abbr>, 47).</p>
+
+<p>Are works necessary for salvation, or is
+faith alone sufficient? “Knowing that a man
+is not justified by the works of the law, but
+by the faith of Jesus Christ, even we have believed
+in Jesus Christ, that we might be justified
+by the faith of Christ and not by the
+works of the law: for by the works of the
+law shall no flesh be justified” (Galatians <abbr title="2">ii</abbr>,
+16). “If righteousness come by the law, then
+Christ is dead in vain” (21). “Therefore, we
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</span>conclude that a man is justified by faith without
+the deeds of the law” (Romans <abbr title="3">iii</abbr>, 28).</p>
+
+<p>“But wilt thou know, O vain man, that faith
+without works is dead” (James <abbr title="2">ii</abbr>, 20). “For
+as the body without the spirit is dead, so faith
+without works is dead also” (26). “Ye see then
+how that by works a man is justified, and not
+by faith only” (24).</p>
+
+<p>“And I appeared unto Abraham, unto Isaac,
+and unto Jacob by the name of God Almighty,
+<em>but by my name Jehovah was I not known to
+them</em>” (Exodus <abbr title="6">vi</abbr>, 3). “<em>And Abraham called
+the name of the place Jehovah-jireh</em>” (Genesis
+<abbr title="22">xxii</abbr>, 14).</p>
+
+<p>These are but a few of the contradictions
+of the Bible, selected at random from hundreds.</p>
+
+<p><abbr title="14">XIV.</abbr> The Bible should not be read in the
+public schools because it teaches, by direct
+commands, by the praise of them, by acknowledgment
+of their habitual use as a matter of
+custom, the taking of intoxicating liquors.
+Many of us may not believe the eighteenth
+amendment, as interpreted by the Volstead act,
+to be the best means of abrogating the evils
+of intemperance. All thinking men, however,
+believe that the use of alcoholic beverages, considering
+the evils that result therefrom, should
+be reduced to a minimum. The words “wines”
+and “strong drink” occur in the Bible about
+two hundred and forty times. Among these
+are to be found some passages condemning
+drunkenness. This is of no special moment, as
+no moral code in the world upholds intoxication,
+while the Mohammedan Koran distinctly
+condemns the use of alcoholic liquors and
+stands for total abstinence. In the Bible, total
+abstinence is commanded under special circumstances.
+For illustration, a Nazarite must not
+drink during the period of his separation. When
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</span>that period is passed he may drink all he
+wishes. (See Numbers <abbr title="6">vi</abbr>, 3, 20.) Jehovah
+said unto Aaron, in his official capacity as
+high-priest: “Do not drink wine or strong
+drink, thou, nor thy sons with thee, <em>when ye
+go into the tabernacle of the congregation</em>, lest
+ye die” (Leviticus <abbr title="10">x</abbr>, 9). Why? “That ye
+may put difference between holy and unholy,
+and between clean and unclean; and that ye
+may teach the children of Israel all the statutes
+which the Lord hath spoken unto them by
+the hand of Moses” (10, 11). He wanted his
+priests to be entirely sober when performing
+their priestly functions, and what employer
+does not? King Lemuel was taught by his
+mother, “It is not for kings, O Lemuel, it is
+not for kings to drink wine nor for princes
+strong drink: lest they drink and forget the
+law, and pervert the judgment of any of the
+afflicted” (Proverbs <abbr title="31">xxxi</abbr>, 4, 5). Yet in the
+sixth and seventh verses is this imperative
+command as to other people: “Give strong
+drink unto him that is ready to perish, and
+wine to those that be of heavy hearts. Let him
+drink and forget his poverty and remember
+his misery no more.”</p>
+
+<p>Moses told the children of Israel: “Ye have
+not eaten bread, neither have ye drank wine
+or strong drink: that ye may know that I am
+the Lord your God” (<abbr title="Deuteronomy">Deut.</abbr> <abbr title="29">xxix</abbr>, 6). But this
+was in the wilderness, where no bread or
+liquors were to be had. But what does he say in
+the fourteenth chapter, twenty-sixth verse, after
+giving directions as to what is lawful to eat?
+“And thou shalt bestow that money for whatsoever
+thy soul lusteth after, for oxen, or for
+sheep, <em>or for wine, or for strong drink</em>, or for
+whatsoever thy soul desireth.” Jesus said,
+“Verily I say unto you, I will drink no more
+of the fruit of the vine”—because it was wrong
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</span>to do so? On the contrary, “until that day
+that I drink it new in the kingdom of God”
+(Mark <abbr title="14">xiv</abbr>, 25). We admit such temperance
+passages as are to be found in Proverbs <abbr title="20">xx</abbr>, 1,
+and in Isaiah <abbr title="5">v</abbr>, 11. These refer strictly to the
+abuse, not to the moderate use of alcoholic
+liquors.</p>
+
+<p>Let us now look at other passages where the
+use of intoxicants is not only commended but
+commanded. We have space to refer to but a
+few of them. “Drink no longer water, but use
+a little wine for thy stomach’s sake” (<abbr title="First">1</abbr> Timothy
+<abbr title="5">v</abbr>, 23); “Go thy way, eat thy bread with
+joy, and drink thy wine with a merry heart,
+for God now accepteth thy good works” (<abbr title="Ecclesiastes">Eccles.</abbr>
+<abbr title="9">ix</abbr>, 7); “Corn shall make the young men cheerful,
+and new wine the maids” (<abbr title="Zechariah">Zech.</abbr> <abbr title="9">ix</abbr>, 17);
+“They shall plant vineyards and drink the wine
+thereof” (Amos <abbr title="9">ix</abbr>, 14); “Wine maketh glad
+the heart of man” (<abbr title="Psalms">Ps.</abbr> <abbr title="14">xiv</abbr>, 15); “Wine, which
+cheereth God and man” (Judges <abbr title="4">iv</abbr>, 13); “In
+the holy place shalt thou cause the strong wine
+to be poured unto the Lord for a drink offering”
+(<abbr title="Numbers">Num.</abbr> <abbr title="28">xxviii</abbr>, 7); “Honor the Lord with
+thy substance, and with the first fruits of all
+thine increase; so shall thy barns be filled
+with plenty, and thy presses shall burst out
+with new wine” (Proverbs <abbr title="3">iii</abbr>, 9, 10).</p>
+
+<p>When God decided that the human race was
+so bad that he would have to drown everybody
+he selected one man and his family to be saved—Noah.
+Yet when the flood had subsided,
+and all returned to dry ground, Noah got drunk
+(Genesis <abbr title="9">ix</abbr>, 20–24). When God destroyed Sodom
+and Gomorrah, he saved another drunkard, Lot.
+How this gentleman conducted himself while
+under the influence of wine would not make
+a very edifying subject for a Sunday school
+lesson (See Genesis <abbr title="19">xix</abbr>, 30–38). David got drunk
+himself and danced before the ark in a state of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</span>nudity, after giving each of all the people “a
+flagon of wine” (<abbr title="Second">2</abbr> Samuel <abbr title="6">vi</abbr>, 14, 16, 19). Yet
+God said, “David ... a man after mine own
+heart, which shall fulfill all my will” (Acts.
+<abbr title="13">xiii</abbr>, 22). God also gives David two other unqualified
+certificates of character (See <abbr title="First">1</abbr> Kings
+<abbr title="14">xiv</abbr>, 7, 8; <abbr title="15">xv</abbr>, 5). When Solomon erected the
+great temple he gave his laborers “twenty thousand
+baths (nearly 17,500 gallons) of wine”
+(<abbr title="Second">2</abbr> Chronicles <abbr title="2">ii</abbr>, 10). Jeremiah, one of God’s
+favorite prophets, tempted the Rechabites, who
+were total abstainers, to drink (See Jeremiah
+<abbr title="35">xxxv</abbr>, 2). Yet this same God on another occasion
+said, “Woe unto him that giveth his
+neighbor drink, that puttest thy bottle to him
+and makest him drunken” (Habakkuk <abbr title="2">ii</abbr>, 15).</p>
+
+<p>The first miracle of Jesus was the transforming
+of water into wine (John <abbr title="2">ii</abbr>, 3–11), and in
+Luke <abbr title="7">vii</abbr>, 33, 34, are these words: “For John
+the Baptist came neither eating bread, nor
+drinking wine; and ye say, He hath a devil.
+The Son of man is come eating and drinking;
+and ye say, Behold a gluttonous man, and a
+wine bibber, a friend of publicans and sinners.”</p>
+
+<p>Bible advocates of temperance sometimes
+quote the following passages from Paul, as evidence,
+to them, of Bible teaching of total abstinence.</p>
+
+<p>“It is good neither to eat flesh, nor to drink
+wine, nor anything whereby thy brother stumbleth,
+or is made weak.” (Romans <abbr title="14">xiv</abbr>:21.)</p>
+
+<p>Also, “Wherefore, if meat make my brother
+to offend, I will eat no flesh while the word
+standeth, lest I make my brother to offend.”
+(<abbr title="First">1</abbr> Corinthians <abbr title="8">viii</abbr>:13).</p>
+
+<p>It will be noticed in the first that <em>flesh</em> comes
+before wine, while in the second, wine is not
+mentioned at all. When you read the context in
+both cases you will find that Paul is merely
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</span>warning his hearers against meat offered to
+idols and that wine is only mentioned incidentally.
+But when you turn to <abbr title="First">1</abbr> Timothy, <abbr title="5">v</abbr>:23,
+Paul imperatively says, “DRINK NO LONGER
+WATER, BUT USE A LITTLE WINE FOR
+THY STOMACH’S SAKE, AND THINE OFTEN
+INFIRMITIES.”</p>
+
+<p>When confronted by these texts and the facts
+which they carry, bibliolaters are driven to the
+entirely false and fictitious plea that Bible wine
+was not intoxicating, that it might drown but
+could not produce a drunk. We have no space
+here to discuss this makeshift. If the reader
+is interested and wishes to pursue the subject,
+we refer him to John E. Remsburg’s book,
+“<cite class="nonitalic">The Bible</cite>,” pages 398–399; to the article on
+“Wine and Strong Drink,” in that monument
+of scholarship, “<cite class="nonitalic">The Encyclopedia Biblica</cite>”; to
+that well-known orthodox work, Smith’s “<cite class="nonitalic">Bible
+Dictionary</cite>,” and to “<cite class="nonitalic">Religion and Drink</cite>,” by
+<abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr> E. A. Wasson.</p>
+
+<p>Under our liquor laws as at present interpreted
+a priest, preacher, or rabbi is permitted
+to purchase all the drink he desires for “sacramental”
+purposes, while a physician is limited
+in the amount he can prescribe for his
+patients. Why this unjust discrimination? If
+liquor is a bad thing, why is it made good in
+the “sacrament”? This is merely a trick common
+with the church to evade the force of the
+civil law, just as is its effort to force the Bible
+into the public schools. We, as citizens, protest
+against the unbridled fanaticism or base
+hypocrisy of these people, who deny to others
+the privileges they claim for themselves, then
+add insult to injury by trying to force upon the
+country by law a book which advocates, teaches,
+abets, preaches, and practices what they want
+by law forbidden.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</span></p>
+
+<p><abbr title="15">XV.</abbr> The entire idea under which they wish
+to place the Bible in the schools is wrong. Why
+glorify one book above another? Any book to
+be of service to a reader must be his servant,
+not his master. The real question is, not what
+does a book say, but what does it say in accord
+with the facts of life, nature, reason and experience?
+If a book answers that test it is not
+necessary to praise it eternally, to say nothing
+of asking special laws for its recognition. The
+idea has been well expressed by the poet Lowell
+in these words:</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+ <div class="poetry">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class="verse indent0">“Slowly the Bible of the race is writ,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">And not on paper leaves or leaves of stone;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">Each age, each kindred, adds a verse to it,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">Texts of despair or hope, of joy or moan;</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">While swings the sea, while mists the mountains shroud,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1">While thunder’s surges burst on cliffs of cloud,</div>
+ <div class="verse indent1"><span id="TN7">Still at the prophet’s feet the nations sit</span>.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p>No volume can be made large enough to contain
+this BIBLE, yet to it all other books must
+conform.</p>
+
+</main>
+
+<div class="transnote">
+<h2 class="nobreak">Transcriber’s Note</h2>
+
+<p>
+Some inconsistencies in spelling, hyphenation, and punctuation have been
+retained.
+</p>
+
+<ul>
+<li>
+A <a href="#TABLE_OF_CONTENTS">table of contents</a> was added.
+</li>
+<li>
+<abbr title="page">p.</abbr> 8: added “in” after “belief” (<a href="#TN9">Action or conduct indicating a belief in</a>)
+</li>
+<li>
+<abbr title="page">p.</abbr> 12: changed “of” to “to” (<a href="#TN10">on earth peace to men of good will</a>)
+</li>
+<li>
+<abbr title="page">p.</abbr> 24: changed “depotism” to “despotism” (<a href="#TN1">never rises above the merest despotism</a>)
+</li>
+<li>
+<abbr title="page">p.</abbr> 24: changed “in” to “is” (<a href="#TN11">Much less is Christianity or any other system</a>)
+</li>
+<li>
+<abbr title="page">p.</abbr> 24: changed “almightly” to “almighty” (<a href="#TN2">It is not almighty and we are not to look</a>)
+</li>
+<li>
+<abbr title="page">p.</abbr> 31: changed “summonded” to “summoned” (<a href="#TN3">The teacher, summoned as a witness</a>)
+</li>
+<li>
+<abbr title="page">p.</abbr> 32: changed “ther” to “their” (<a href="#TN4">put to death for participating in their production</a>)
+</li>
+<li>
+<abbr title="page">p.</abbr> 41: “<a href="#TN5">Wicliffe’s</a>” left as-printed; this name has many variant spellings.
+</li>
+<li>
+<abbr title="page">p.</abbr> 46: changed incorrect citation “xl” to “xlvi” (<a href="#TN6">Gen. xlvi. 23</a>)
+</li>
+<li>
+<abbr title="page">p.</abbr> 61: changed “prohpet’s” to “prophet’s” and “nation’s” to “nations” (<a href="#TN7">Still at the prophet’s feet the nations sit</a>)
+</li>
+</ul>
+
+</div>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78962 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
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+This book, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
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+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+
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+[Project Gutenberg](https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for eBook [#78962](https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/78962)