First up from the God Machine this week is a look at Donald Trump’s unexpected endorsement of legislation to allow “Bible Literacy” classes in American public schools. The Washington Post reported:
President Trump gave his blessing Monday to lawmakers in several states who are pushing legislation to allow Bible literacy classes in public schools.
“Numerous states introducing Bible Literacy classes, giving students the option of studying the Bible,” Trump wrote in a morning tweet. “Starting to make a turn back? Great!”
As is often the case, the president’s missive followed on the heels of a segment that aired on Fox News’ morning program.
In this case, it’s important to emphasize that Trump, whether he knew this or not, was referring to proposed legislation at the state level, not the federal level, which may never actually become law. Presidents have no formal role to play in state-based education policy.
That said, there is also a degree of irony to Trump weighing on the subject: those who see “II Corinthians,” and think it says, “Two Corinthians,” probably shouldn’t be promoting the virtues of biblical literacy.
But what struck me as especially notable was the president’s rhetorical question: “Starting to make a turn back?” It was a reminder that for Trump, making America “great again,” means taking deliberate steps backwards. In this case, the Republican appears to have in mind public-school classrooms that promote the religious views of his conservative allies.
For the record, there’s nothing necessarily problematic — legally or scholarly — with public schools providing secular courses on religious history or the literary significance of religious texts. That said, as my friend Rob Boston explained this week, “So-called ‘Bible literacy’ courses may look all right on the surface, but you don’t have to probe too deeply to expose serious problems. Often, these courses are just a cover to bring a fundamentalist interpretation of the Bible into public schools. Essentially, they’re Sunday School lessons masquerading as legitimate instruction.”
It’s likely the public will soon hear more about these courses, with or without the White House’s assistance. As USA Today recently reported, “The proposals are getting more attention because they’re linked to a common source: an initiative called Project Blitz coordinated by conservative Christian political groups.”









