Teaching the heaviest books
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I believe that it could be beneficial if objective teachers teach
religious texts from an academic perspective to late high school
students. Religious texts are not only a means of religious beliefs
and spiritual guidance, but also instrumental tools in providing a
historical and cultural lesson. Religion has been the common
denominator shared among all civilizations. In many ways religion, in
the past or present, has played a tremendous role in shaping the
political and social avenues within societies. Thus its value, when
studied from an academic perspective, can become a critical tool for
such fields as anthropology, philosophy and history. Nonetheless, I
would not favor it as a mandatory curriculum nor as a replacement of
other literary works.
IMAM MOUSTAFA AL-QAZWINI
Islamic Educational Center
of Orange County
Costa Mesa
While the authors of the Bible would have been dismayed by the
suggestion that they had a literary purpose, and while treating the
Bible as literature may distract the reader from the Bible’s deeper
intent, a student can hardly attain a true appreciation of literature
without knowing the highly stylized narratives of Genesis, the
majestic prose of the prophets and the superb poetry of the Psalms,
all included within the covers of the most influential book of all
time.
The biblical epic gives voice to all the joys, sorrows and hopes
that well up in humankind. It merits to be approached as a work of
literature, one that has enriched man’s cultural level and elevated
his civilization.
No work of literature rivals the Bible in inspiring creative
endeavor. In poetry, drama and fiction, its literary influence is
unparalleled. The German author, Heinrich Heine, wrote 200 years ago
that “Sunrise and sunset, promise and fulfillment, birth and death,
the whole human drama, everything is in this book. It is the Book of
Books, Biblia.”
In every country and society, writers have drawn upon the themes
and characters of the Bible and employed them in their reworkings of
eternal motifs: God and man, good and evil, right and wrong, love,
envy, as well as man’s battles for truth, freedom and justice.
“Paradise Lost,” “East of Eden,” “The Way of All Flesh,” “The Sun
Also Rises,” “The Good Earth,” “Gone With the Wind,” “The Grapes of
Wrath” and so many other classics owe their inspiration to the
biblical treasure trove.
Of course, Shakespeare was steeped in the Bible. The Bible’s
influence throughout the English language can be seen in such phrases
as, “the mark of Cain,” “the sweat of his brow,” “eat forbidden
fruit,” “man does not live by bread alone,” “the skin of his teeth,”
“the sleep of the just,” “sow the wind and reap the whirlwind,” “can
a leopard change its spots,” “you can’t take it with you,” “there is
nothing new under the sun,” “the apple of his eye,” “out of the
mouths of babes,” “at their wit’s end,” and “at death’s door.”
A student can benefit greatly from a literary approach to the
Bible. The searing drama of Job, the meditative verses of the Psalms,
the love poems of the Song of Songs, the terrifying eulogy of
Lamentations, the memorable stories of Joseph, Samson and Esther. The
Bible is supreme in the world of letters. It is for good reason that
it is the number one bestseller!
RABBI MARK MILLER
Temple Bat Yahm
Newport Beach
Why read about a cup of coffee instead of tasting it yourself? The
satisfaction is in the drinking. In Zen, we emphasize direct
experience rather than words, even if the words have been deemed
Scripture or sutras. This does not deny that scholarship is of value,
but sharply critiques its overemphasis and recognizes its
limitations.
If the purpose of proposals to teach the Bible in public schools
were literary and not indoctrination, why would they not also include
the Tao Te Ching, the Koran, the Shobogenzo or writings from the
Native American traditions indigenous to our continent? From my own
experience teaching classes in comparative religion at Cal State
Fullerton, I know that texts from the world’s religious traditions
can and should be taught as part of a well-rounded education.
Teachers at the elementary and secondary school level would need a
curriculum designed with community participation, specialized
training in the world’s religious traditions and clear guidelines
about principles of interfaith dialogue, diversity and first
amendment religious liberties. More to the point, it can be very
difficult to find any kind of reading that many students will
actually do.
THE REV. DEBORAH BARRETT
Zen Center of Orange County
Costa Mesa
“The Bible as Literature” was a course regularly offered by the
English department at the University of California during my 1964 to
1988 stint in Berkeley. I took this course for academic credit as an
undergraduate and audited it as a graduate student. During those 24
years, at least three different professors taught the course; two
were Christian, one was Jewish.
I know one professor, an Episcopalian, took considerable care to
not “incorporate doctrinal aspects” as he and I had many
conversations to this end during my tenure as Episcopal/Anglican
campus minister with Cal.
It certainly was possible for him and an English department, at a
clearly very secular public educational institution, to teach the
all-time bestseller’s literary forms: short stories, letters,
orations, wise sayings, prophecies, laws, history, songs and poetry.
In his 1966 book, “The Bible and the Schools,” then-Supreme Court
Justice William O. Douglas shows that the framers of our Constitution
insured that the First Amendment provided for tolerance of all
religions and preference for none. Douglas argued that an American
can be “a believer or a nonbeliever, a churchman or an atheist, a
proselytizer (recruiter) or a hermit” -- as he or she chooses. He
contended that this was the historic right the Supreme Court upheld
when it declared prescribed prayer and official Bible reading in the
public schools to be unconstitutional.
So, “Bible as Literature” courses could surely be well-taught by
believers or nonbelievers, people with faith in God or atheists, but
certainly not by proselytizers and probably not by hermits ... at
least not in Orange County.
THE VERY REV. CANON
PETER D. HAYNES
St. Michael & All Angels
Episcopal Church
Corona del Mar
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