¶ … secular society, Christian values, beliefs, and worldviews are systematically excluded from the educational system. Parents who can afford costly private schools can help inculcate their children into a Biblical worldview, but the majority of Christians who cannot do this and whose children attend public schools need to find ways to resolve the ideological conflicts presented to their children. Children regularly receive disparate information about crucial issues such as those related to gender roles and norms, human sexuality, and the origin of life on earth. While all of these core topics challenge Christian educators to adapt their curricula to conform to legal and societal expectations, the most contentious of these might be the evolution and intelligent design debate. Christian educators continue to struggle with presenting a more balanced worldview to their students, but legal and societal expectations persist in silencing minority voices. One of the most important contemporary issues in education, intelligent design, shows how Biblical principles sometimes clash with legal and societal expectations.
One of the foundational principles in the Bible is the creation of the universe by God, a perspective not espoused by the legal, educational, cultural, or scientific establishment. "In the Beginning, God created the heavens and the Earth," (Genesis 1:1). While a specifically Christian education can straightforwardly incorporate the intelligent design model into its curriculum, a secular school administration cannot except in specific contexts and not alongside evolution teachings in science courses (Anti-Defamation League, n.d.). The most recent legal challenges to intelligent design have therefore led to the Center for Science and Culture (2015) recommending that intelligent design be actively removed from all school curricula in favor of a new approach that instead discusses "both scientific strengths and weaknesses of evolution." In this way, evolution can be discussed in a more sensible and open manner without introducing the Christian concepts of creation, which might offend secular educators, parents, and lawmakers.
American law has wavered on the issue of how to teach both evolution and intelligent design. Recent trends have suggested that intelligent design may be taught in courses that provide overviews of religion and other elements of culture but not in science courses (Anti-Defamation League, n.d.). However, the Center for Science and Culture (2015) further points out, "there is nothing unconstitutional about voluntarily discussing the scientific theory of design in the classroom." When intelligent design is discussed in "an objective and pedagogically appropriate manner," then it should be discussed alongside its counterparts like the theory of evolution. It is interesting that "the political urge to defend science education against the threats of religious orthodoxy, understandable though it is, has resulted in a counterorthodoxy, supported by bad arguments, and a tendency to overstate the legitimate scientific claims of evolutionary theory," (Nagel, 2008, p. 187). In other words, backlash against Christians in American society has led to an unintelligent presentation of the theory of evolution.
The 1925 Scopes trial was the first of many important legal debates over the teaching of evolution in public schools. In this case, a school teacher named John Scopes had been teaching evolution in his public school classrooms in Tennessee. William Jennings Bryan, future president, presided over the case; "he believed that evolution theory led to dangerous social movements. And he believed the Bible should be interpreted literally," ("Scopes Trial," n.d.). Scopes was fined for "violating the law" of the state of Tennessee ("Scopes Trial," n.d). A lot has changed since 1925. Since then, the Scopes trial decision has been overturned, particularly in the case of Edwards v. Aguillard, in 1987. In Edwards v. Aguillard, the Supreme Court of the United States overturned what was known as the Balanced Treatment act in Louisiana, which required the teaching of Creationism where evolution was taught and vice-versa. Essentially, the Balanced Treatment Act maintained that teachers in a science class would have needed to teach both evolution and intelligent design, or neither one. The result was a "culmination of a series of court battles and cultural conflicts that can be traced to the famous Scopes trial of 1925 in Dayton, Tennessee" (Center for Science and Culture, 2015, p. 461).
Clearly, the origin of humanity is a contentious issue in current American culture, politics, and society. Christians have been marginalized in this debate, their views ridiculed by the secular majority. Even when intelligent design is discussed in a similar pedagogical manner as the theory of evolution, it has become too controversial for Christian teachers...
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