[1]
Last month, a week before the Senate seat of the liberal
icon
Edward M. Kennedy fell into Republican hands,
his legacy suffered another blow that was perhaps just as damaging, if less
noticed. It happened during what has become an annual spectacle in the culture
wars.
[2]
Over two days, more than a hundred people — Christians, Jews, housewives, naval
officers, professors; people outfitted in everything from business suits to
military fatigues to turbans to baseball caps — streamed through the halls of
the William B. Travis Building in Austin, Tex., waiting for a chance to stand
before the semicircle of 15 high-backed chairs whose occupants made up the
Texas
State Board of Education. Each petitioner had three minutes to say his or her
piece.
[3]
“Please keep César Chávez” was the message of an elderly Hispanic man with a
floppy gray mustache.
[4]
“Sikhism is the fifth-largest religion in the world and should be included in
the curriculum,” a woman declared.
[5]
Following the appeals from the public, the members of what
is the most influential state board of education in the country, and one of the
most politically conservative, submitted their own proposed changes to the new
social-studies curriculum guidelines, whose adoption was the subject of all the
attention — guidelines that will affect students around the country, from
kindergarten to 12th grade, for the next 10
years. Gail Lowe — who publishes a twice-a-week newspaper when she is not
grappling with divisive education issues — is the official chairwoman, but the
meeting was dominated by another member. Don McLeroy, a small, vigorous man with
a shiny pate and bristling mustache, proposed amendment after amendment on
social issues to the document that teams of professional educators had drawn up
over 12 months, in what would have to be described as a single-handed display of
archconservative political strong-arming.
[6]
McLeroy moved that Margaret Sanger, the birth-control
pioneer, be included because she “and her followers promoted eugenics,” that
language be inserted about
Ronald Reagan’s “leadership in restoring
national confidence” following
Jimmy Carter’s presidency and that students be
instructed to “describe the causes and key organizations and individuals of the
conservative resurgence of the 1980s and 1990s, including Phyllis Schlafly, the
Contract With America, the
Heritage Foundation, the Moral Majority and the
National Rifle Association.” The injection of
partisan politics into education went so far that at one point another
Republican board member burst out in seemingly embarrassed exasperation, “Guys,
you’re rewriting history now!” Nevertheless, most of McLeroy’s proposed
amendments passed by a show of hands.
[7]
Finally, the board considered an amendment to require
students to evaluate the contributions of significant Americans. The names
proposed included
Thurgood Marshall,
Billy Graham,
Newt Gingrich,
William F. Buckley Jr.,
Hillary Rodham Clinton and Edward Kennedy. All
passed muster except Kennedy, who was voted down.
[8]
This is how history is made — or rather, how the hue and cry of the present and
near past gets lodged into the long-term cultural memory or else is allowed to
quietly fade into an inaudible whisper. Public education has always been a
battleground between cultural forces; one reason that Texas’ school-board
members find themselves at the very center of the battlefield is, not
surprisingly, money. The state’s $22 billion education fund is among the largest
educational endowments in the country. Texas uses some of that money to buy or
distribute a staggering 48 million textbooks annually — which rather strongly
inclines educational publishers to tailor their products to fit the standards
dictated by the Lone Star State. California is the largest textbook market, but
besides being bankrupt, it tends to be so specific about what kinds of
information its students should learn that few other states follow its lead.
Texas, on the other hand, was one of the first states to adopt statewide
curriculum guidelines, back in 1998, and the guidelines it came up with (which
are referred to as TEKS — pronounced “teaks” — for Texas Essential Knowledge and
Skills) were clear, broad and inclusive enough that many other states used them
as a model in devising their own. And while technology is changing things,
textbooks — printed or online —are still the backbone of education.
[9]
The cultural roots of the Texas showdown may be said to
date to the late 1980s, when, in the wake of his failed presidential effort, the
Rev.
Pat Robertson founded the
Christian Coalition partly on the logic that
conservative Christians should focus their energies at the grass-roots level.
One strategy was to put candidates forward for state and local school-board
elections — Robertson’s protégé,
Ralph Reed, once said, “I would rather have a
thousand school-board members than one president and no school-board members” —
and Texas was a beachhead. Since the election of two Christian conservatives in
2006, there are now seven on the Texas state board who are quite open about the
fact that they vote in concert to advance a Christian agenda. “They do vote as a
bloc,” Pat Hardy, a board member who considers herself a conservative Republican
but who stands apart from the Christian faction, told me. “They work consciously
to pull one more vote in with them on an issue so they’ll have a majority.”
[10]
This year’s [2010's] social-studies review has drawn the most attention for the battles
over what names should be included in the roll call of history. But while
ignoring Kennedy and upgrading Gingrich are significant moves, something more
fundamental is on the agenda. The one thing that underlies the entire program of
the nation’s Christian conservative activists is, naturally, religion. But it
isn’t merely the case that their Christian orientation shapes their opinions on
gay marriage, abortion and government spending. More elementally, they hold that
the United States was founded by devout Christians and according to biblical
precepts. This belief provides what they consider not only a theological but
also, ultimately, a judicial grounding to their positions on social questions.
When they proclaim that the United States is a “Christian nation,” they are not
referring to the percentage of the population that ticks a certain box in a
survey or census but to the country’s roots and the intent of the founders.
[11]
The Christian “truth” about America’s founding has long been taught in Christian
schools, but not beyond. Recently, however — perhaps out of ire at
what they see
as an aggressive, secular, liberal agenda in Washington and perhaps also because
they sense an opening in the battle, a sudden weakness in the lines of the
secularists — some activists decided that the time was right to try to reshape
the history that children in public schools study. Succeeding at this would help
them toward their ultimate goal of reshaping American society. As Cynthia
Dunbar, another Christian activist on the Texas board, put it, “The philosophy
of the classroom in one generation will be the philosophy of the government in
the next.”
[12]
I
met Don McLeroy last November in a dental office — that is to say, his dental
office — in a professional complex in the Brazos Valley city of Bryan, not far
from the sprawling campus of Texas A&M University. The buzz of his hygienist at
work sounded through the thin wall separating his office from the rest of the
suite. McLeroy makes no bones about the fact that his
professional
qualifications have nothing to do with education. “I’m a dentist, not a
historian,” he said. “But I’m fascinated by history, so I’ve read a lot.”
[13]
Indeed, dentistry is only a job for McLeroy; his real passions are his faith and
the state board of education. He has been a member of the board since 1999 and
served as its chairman from 2007 until he was demoted from that role by the
State Senate last May because of concerns over his religious views. Until now
those views have stood McLeroy in good stead with the constituents of his
district, which meanders from Houston to Dallas and beyond, but he is currently
in a heated re-election battle in the Republican primary, which takes place
March 2.
[14]
McLeroy is a robust, cheerful and inexorable man, whose personality is perhaps
typified by the framed letter T on the wall of his office, which he earned as a
“yell leader” (Texas A&M nomenclature for cheerleader) in his undergraduate days
in the late 1960s. “I consider myself a Christian fundamentalist,” he announced
almost as soon as we sat down. He also identifies himself as a
young-earth
creationist who believes that the earth was created in six days, as the book of
Genesis has it, less than 10,000 years ago. He went on to explain how his
Christian perspective both governs his work on the state board and guides him in
the current effort to adjust American-history textbooks to highlight the role of
Christianity. “Textbooks are mostly the product of the liberal establishment,
and they’re written with the idea that our religion and our liberty are in
conflict,” he said. “But Christianity has had a deep impact on our system.
The
men who wrote the Constitution were Christians who knew the Bible. Our idea of
individual rights comes from the Bible. The Western development of the
free-market system owes a lot to biblical principles.”
[15]
For McLeroy, separation of church and state is a myth perpetrated by secular
liberals. “There are two basic facts about man,” he said. “He was created in the
image of God, and he is fallen. You can’t appreciate the founding of our country
without realizing that the founders understood that. For our kids to not know
our history, that could kill a society. That’s why to me this is a huge thing.”
[16]
“This” — the Texas board’s moves to bring Jesus into American history — has
drawn anger in places far removed from the board members’ constituencies.
(Samples of recent blog headlines on the topic: “Don McLeroy Wants Your Children
to Be Stupid” and “Can We Please Mess With Texas?”) The issue of Texas’
influence is a touchy one in education circles. With some parents and educators
elsewhere leery of a right-wing fifth column invading their schools, people in
the multibillion textbook industry try to play down the state’s sway. “It’s not
a given that Texas’ curriculum translates into other states,” says Jay Diskey,
executive director of the school division for the Association of American
Publishers, which represents most of the major companies. But Tom Barber, who
worked as the head of social studies at the three biggest textbook publishers
before running his own editorial company, says, “Texas was and still is the most
important and most influential state in the country.” And James Kracht, a
professor at Texas A&M’s college of education and a longtime player in the
state’s textbook process, told me flatly, “Texas governs 46 or 47 states.”
[17]
Every year for the last few years, Texas has put one subject area in its TEKS up
for revision. Each year has brought a different controversy, and Don McLeroy has
been at the center of most of them. Last year, in its science re-evaluation, the
board lunged into the evolution/creationism/intelligent-design debate.
The
conservative Christian bloc wanted to require science teachers to cover the
“strengths and weaknesses” of the theory of evolution, language they used in the
past as a tool to weaken the rationale for teaching evolution. The battle made
headlines across the country; ultimately, the seven Christian conservatives were
unable to pull another vote their way on that specific point, but the finished
document nonetheless allows inroads to creationism.
[18]
The fallout from that fight cost McLeroy his position as chairman.
“It’s the
21st century, and the rest of the known world accepts the teaching of evolution
as science and creationism as religion, yet we continue to have this debate
here,” Kathy Miller, president of the Texas Freedom Network, a watchdog group,
says. “So the eyes of the nation were on this body, and people saw how
ridiculous they appeared.” The State Legislature felt the ridicule. “You have a
point of view, and you’re using this bully pulpit to take the rest of the state
there,” Eliot Shapleigh, a Democratic state senator, admonished McLeroy during
the hearing that led to his ouster. McLeroy remains unbowed and talked
cheerfully to me about how, confronted with a statement supporting the validity
of evolution that was signed by 800 scientists, he had
proudly been able to
“stand up to the experts.”
[19]
The idea behind standing up to experts is that the scientific establishment has
been withholding information from the public that would show flaws in the theory
of evolution and that it is guilty of what McLeroy called an “intentional
neglect of other scientific possibilities.” Similarly, the Christian bloc’s
notion this year to bring Christianity into the coverage of American history is
not, from their perspective, revisionism but rather an uncovering of truths that
have been suppressed. “I don’t know that what we’re doing is redefining the role
of religion in America,” says Gail Lowe, who became chairwoman of the board
after McLeroy was ousted and who is one of the seven conservative Christians.
“Many of us recognize that Judeo-Christian principles were the basis of our
country and that many of our founding documents had a basis in Scripture. As we
try to promote a better understanding of the Constitution, federalism, the
separation of the branches of government, the basic rights guaranteed in the
Bill of Rights, I think it will become evident to students that the founders had
a religious motivation.”
[20]
Plenty of people disagree with this characterization of the founders, including
some who are close to the process in Texas. “I think the evidence indicates that
the founding fathers did not intend this to be a Christian nation,” says James
Kracht, who served as an expert adviser to the board in the textbook-review
process. “They definitely believed in some form of separation of church and
state.”
[21]
There is, however, one slightly awkward issue for hard-core secularists who
would combat what they see as a Christian whitewashing of American history: the
Christian activists have a certain amount of history on their side.
[22]
In 1801, a group of Baptist ministers in Danbury, Conn.,
wrote a letter to the new president,
Thomas Jefferson, congratulating him on his
victory. They also had a favor to ask. Baptists were a minority group, and they
felt insecure. In the colonial period, there were two major Christian factions,
both of which derived from England. The Congregationalists, in New England, had
evolved from the Puritan settlers, and in the South and middle colonies, the
Anglicans [later Episcopalians]
came from the Church of England. Nine colonies developed state
churches, which were supported financially by the colonial governments and whose
power was woven in with that of the governments. Other Christians — Lutherans,
Baptists, Quakers — and, of course, those of other faiths were made unwelcome,
if not persecuted outright.
[23]
There was a religious element to the American Revolution, which was so
pronounced that you could just as well view the event in religious as in
political terms. Many of the founders, especially the Southerners, were
rebelling simultaneously against state-church oppression and English rule. The
Connecticut Baptists saw Jefferson — an anti-Federalist who was bitterly opposed
to the idea of establishment churches — as a friend. “Our constitution of
government,” they wrote, “is not specific” with regard to a guarantee of
religious freedoms that would protect them. Might the president offer some
thoughts that, “like the radiant beams of the sun,” would shed light on the
intent of the framers? In his reply, Jefferson said it was not the place of the
president to involve himself in religion, and he expressed his belief that the
First Amendment’s clauses — that the government must not establish a state
religion (the so-called establishment clause) but also that it must
ensure the
free exercise of religion (what became known as the free-exercise clause) —
meant, as far as he was concerned, that there was
“a wall of separation between
Church & State.”
[24]
This little episode, culminating in the famous “wall of separation” metaphor,
highlights a number of points about teaching religion in American history. For
one, it suggests — as the Christian activists maintain —
how thoroughly the
colonies were shot through with religion and how basic religion was to the cause
of the revolutionaries. The period in the early- to mid-1700s, called the Great
Awakening, in which populist evangelical preachers challenged the major
denominations, is considered a spark for the Revolution. And if religion
influenced democracy then, in the Second Great Awakening, decades later, the
democratic fervor of the Revolution spread through the two mainline
denominations and resulted in a massive growth of the sort of populist churches
that typify American Christianity to this day.
[25]
Christian activists argue that American-history textbooks
basically ignore religion — to the point that they distort history outright —
and mainline religious historians tend to agree with them on this. “In American
history, religion is all over the place, and wherever it appears, you should
tell the story and do it appropriately,” says Martin Marty, emeritus professor
at the
University of Chicago, past president of the
American Academy of Religion and the American Society of Church History and
perhaps the unofficial dean of American religious historians. “The goal should
be natural inclusion. You couldn’t tell the story of the Pilgrims or the
Puritans or the Dutch in New York without religion.” Though conservatives would
argue otherwise, James Kracht said the absence of religion is not part of a
secularist agenda: “I don’t think religion has been purposely taken out of U.S.
history, but I do think textbook companies have been cautious in discussing
religious beliefs and possibly getting in trouble with some groups.”
[26]
Some conservatives claim that earlier generations of textbooks were frank in
promoting America as a Christian nation. It might be more accurate to say that
textbooks of previous eras portrayed leaders as generally noble, with strong
personal narratives, undergirded by faith and patriotism. As Frances FitzGerald
showed in her groundbreaking 1979 book “America Revised,” if there is one thing
to be said about American-history textbooks through the ages it is that the
narrative of the past is consistently reshaped by present-day forces.
Maybe the
most striking thing about current history textbooks is that they have lost a
controlling narrative. America is no longer portrayed as one thing, one people,
but rather a hodgepodge of issues and minorities, forces and struggles. If it
were possible to cast the concerns of the Christian conservatives into secular
terms, it might be said that they find this lack of a through line and purpose
to be disturbing and dangerous. Many others do as well, of course. But the
Christians have an answer.
[27]
Their answer is rather specific. Merely weaving important religious trends and
events into the narrative of American history is not what the Christian bloc on
the Texas board has pushed for in revising its guidelines. Many of the points
that have been incorporated into the guidelines or that have been advanced by
board members and their expert advisers slant toward portraying America as
having a divinely preordained mission. In the guidelines — which will be
subjected to further amendments in March and then in May — eighth-grade history
students are asked to “analyze the importance of the Mayflower Compact, the
Fundamental Orders of Connecticut and the Virginia House of Burgesses to the
growth of representative government.” Such early colonial texts have long been
included in survey courses, but why focus on these in particular? The
Fundamental Orders of Connecticut declare that the state was founded “to
maintain and preserve the liberty and purity of the Gospel of our Lord Jesus.”
The language in the Mayflower Compact — a document that McLeroy and several
others involved in the Texas process are especially fond of — describes the
Pilgrims’ journey as being “for the Glory of God and advancement of the
Christian Faith” and thus instills the idea that America was founded as a
project for the spread of Christianity. In a book she wrote two years ago,
Cynthia Dunbar, a board member, could not have been more explicit about this
being the reason for the Mayflower Compact’s inclusion in textbooks; she quoted
the document and then said, “This is undeniably our past, and it clearly
delineates us as a nation intended to be emphatically Christian.”
[28]
In the new guidelines, students taking classes in U.S.
government are asked to identify traditions that informed America’s founding,
“including Judeo-Christian (especially biblical law),” and to “identify the
individuals whose principles of law and government institutions informed the
American founding documents,” among whom they include Moses. The idea that the
Bible and Mosaic law provided foundations for American law has taken root in
Christian teaching about American history. So when
Steven K. Green, director of
the Center for Religion, Law and Democracy at Willamette University in Salem,
Ore., testified at the board meeting last month in opposition to the board’s
approach to bringing religion into history, warning that the
Supreme Court has forbidden public schools from
“seeking to impress upon students the importance of particular religious values
through the curriculum,” and in the process said that the founders “did not draw
on Mosaic law, as is mentioned in the standards,” several of the board members
seemed dumbstruck. Don McLeroy insisted it was a legitimate claim, since the
Enlightenment took place in Europe, in a Christian context. Green countered that
the Enlightenment had in fact developed in opposition to reliance on biblical
law and said he had done a lengthy study in search of American court cases that
referenced Mosaic law. “The record is basically bereft,” he said. Nevertheless,
biblical law and Moses remain in the TEKS.
[29]
The process in Texas required that writing teams, made up mostly of
teachers, do
the actual work of revising the curriculum, with the aid of experts
who were
appointed by the board. Two of the six experts the board chose are well-known
advocates for conservative Christian causes. One of them, the Rev. Peter
Marshall, says on the Web site of his organization, Peter Marshall Ministries,
that his work is “dedicated to helping to restore America to its Bible-based
foundations through preaching, teaching and writing on America’s Christian
heritage and on Christian discipleship and revival.”
[30]
“The guidelines in Texas were seriously deficient in bringing out the role of
the Christian faith in the founding of America,” Marshall told me. In a document
he prepared for the team that was writing the new guidelines, he urged that new
textbooks mold children’s impressions of the founders in particular ways: “The
Founding Fathers’ biblical worldview taught them that human beings were by
nature self-centered, so they believed that the supernatural influence of the
Spirit of God was needed to free us from ourselves so that we can care for our
neighbors.”
[31]
Marshall also proposed that children be taught that the
separation-of-powers
notion is “rooted in the Founding Fathers’ clear understanding of the sinfulness
of man,” so that it was not safe for one person to exercise unlimited power, and
that “the discovery, settling and founding of the colonies happened because of
the biblical worldviews of those involved.” Marshall recommended that textbooks
present America’s founding and history in terms of motivational stories on
themes like the Pilgrims’ zeal to bring the Gospel of Jesus Christ to the
natives.
[32]
One recurring theme during the process of revising the
social-studies guidelines was the desire of the board to stress the concept of
American exceptionalism, and the Christian bloc has repeatedly emphasized that
Christianity should be portrayed as the driving force behind what makes America
great. Peter Marshall is himself the author of a series of books that recount
American history with a strong Christian focus and that have been staples in
Christian schools since the first one was published in 1977. (He told me that
they have sold more than a million copies.) In these history books, he employs a
decidedly unhistorical tone in which the guiding hand of Providence shapes
America’s story, starting with the voyage of
Christopher Columbus. “Columbus’s heart belonged
to God,” he assures his readers, and he notes that a particular event in the
explorer’s life “marked the turning point of God’s plan to use Columbus to raise
the curtain on His new Promised Land.”
[33]
The other nonacademic expert, David Barton, is the
nationally known leader of WallBuilders, which describes itself as dedicated to
“presenting America’s forgotten history and heroes, with an emphasis on our
moral, religious and constitutional heritage.” Barton has written and lectured
on the First Amendment and against separation of church and state. He is a
controversial figure who has argued that the U.S. income tax and the
capital-gains tax should be abolished because they violate Scripture (for the
Bible says, in Barton’s reading, “the more profit you make the more you are
rewarded”) and who pushes a Christianity-first rhetoric. When the
U.S. Senate invited a Hindu leader to open a
2007 session with a prayer, he objected, saying: “In Hindu [sic], you have not
one God, but many, many, many, many, many gods. And certainly that was never in
the minds of those who did the Constitution, did the Declaration when they
talked about Creator.”
[34]
In his recommendations to the Texas school board, Barton wrote that students
should be taught the following principles which, in his reading, derive directly
from the Declaration of Independence: “1. There is a fixed moral law derived
from God and nature. 2. There is a Creator. 3. The Creator gives to man certain
unalienable rights. 4. Government exists primarily to protect God-given rights
to every individual. 5. Below God-given rights and moral laws, government is
directed by the consent of the governed.”
[35]
A
third expert, Daniel L. Dreisbach, a professor of justice, law and society at
American University who has written extensively on First Amendment issues,
stressed, in his recommendations to the guideline writers about how to frame the
revolutionary period for students, that the founders were overwhelmingly
Christian; that the deistic tendencies of a few — like Jefferson — were an
anomaly; and that most Americans in the era were not just Christians but that
“98 percent or more of Americans of European descent identified with
Protestantism.”
[36]
If the fight between the “Christian nation” advocates and mainstream thinkers
could be focused onto a single element, it would be the “wall of separation”
phrase. Christian thinkers like to point out that it does not appear in the
Constitution, nor in any other legal document — letters that presidents write to
their supporters are not legal decrees. Besides which, after the phrase left
Jefferson’s pen it more or less disappeared for a century and a half — until
Justice Hugo Black of the Supreme Court dug it out of history’s dustbin in 1947.
It then slowly worked its way into the American lexicon and American life,
helping to subtly mold the way we think about religion in society. To
conservative Christians, there is no separation of church and state, and there
never was. The concept, they say, is a modern secular fiction. There is no legal
justification, therefore, for disallowing crucifixes in government buildings or
school prayer.
[37]
David Barton reads the “church and state” letter to mean that Jefferson
“believed, along with the other founders, that the First Amendment had been
enacted only to prevent the federal establishment of a national denomination.”
Barton goes on to claim, “ ‘Separation of church and state’ currently means
almost exactly the opposite of what it originally meant.” That is to say, the
founders were all Christians who conceived of a nation of Christians, and the
purpose of the First Amendment was merely to ensure that no single Christian
denomination be elevated to the role of state church.
[38]
Mainstream scholars disagree, sometimes vehemently. Randall
Balmer, a professor of American religious history at
Barnard College and writer of the documentary
“Crusade: The Life of Billy Graham,” told me: “David Barton has been out there
spreading this lie, frankly, that the founders intended America to be a
Christian nation. He’s been very effective. But the logic is utterly screwy. He
says the phrase ‘separation of church and state’ is not in the Constitution.
He’s right about that. But to make that argument work you would have to argue
that the phrase is not an accurate summation of the First Amendment. And Thomas
Jefferson, who penned it, thought it was.” (David Barton declined to be
interviewed for this article.) In his testimony in Austin, Steven Green was
challenged by a board member with the fact that the phrase does not appear in
the Constitution. In response, Green pointed out that many constitutional
concepts — like judicial review and separation of powers — are not found
verbatim in the Constitution.
[39]
In what amounts to an in-between perspective, Daniel Dreisbach — who wrote a
book called “Thomas Jefferson and the Wall of Separation Between Church and
State” — argues that the phrase “wall of separation” has been misapplied in
recent decades to unfairly restrict religion from entering the public sphere.
Martin Marty, the University of Chicago emeritus professor, agrees. “I think
‘wall’ is too heavy a metaphor,” Marty says. “There’s a trend now away from it,
and I go along with that. In textbooks, we’re moving away from an unthinking
secularity.” The public seems to agree. Polls on some specific church-state
issues — government financing for faith-based organizations and voluntary prayer
in public schools — consistently show majorities in favor of those positions.
[40]
Then too, the “Christian nation” position tries to trump
the whole debate about separation of church and state by portraying the era of
the nation’s founding as awash in Christianity. David Barton and others pepper
their arguments with quotations, like one in which
John Adams, in a letter to Jefferson, refers to
American independence as having been achieved on “the general Principles of
Christianity.” But others find just as many instances in which one or another of
the founders seems clearly wary of religion.
[41]
In fact, the founders were rooted in Christianity — they
were inheritors of the entire European Christian tradition — and at the same
time they were steeped in an Enlightenment rationalism that was, if not opposed
to religion, determined to establish separate spheres for faith and reason. “I
don’t think the founders would have said they were applying Christian principles
to government,” says
Richard Brookhiser, the conservative columnist
and author of books on
Alexander Hamilton, Gouverneur Morris and George
Washington. “What they said was ‘the laws of nature and nature’s God.’ They
didn’t say, ‘We put our faith in Jesus Christ.’ ” Martin Marty says: “They had
to invent a new, broad way. Washington, in his writings, makes scores of
different references to God, but not one is biblical. He talks instead about a
‘Grand Architect,’ deliberately avoiding the Christian terms, because it had to
be a religious language that was accessible to all people.”
[42]
Or, as Brookhiser rather succinctly summarizes the point:
“The founders were not as Christian as those people would like them to be,
though they weren’t as secularist as
Christopher Hitchens would like them to be.”
[43]
THE TOWN OF Lynchburg, Va., was founded in 1786 at the site
of a ferry crossing on what would later be called the James River. During the
Civil War, it was a Confederate supply post, and in 1864 it was the site of one
of the last Confederate victories. In 1933,
Jerry Falwell was born in Lynchburg, the son of
a sometime bootlegger. In 1971 — in an era of pot smoking and war protests — the
Rev. Jerry Falwell inaugurated Liberty University on one of the city’s seven
hills. It was to be a training ground for Christians and a bulwark against moral
relativism. In 2004, three years before his death, Falwell completed another
dream by founding the Liberty University School of Law, whose objective, in the
words of the university’s current chancellor, Jerry Falwell Jr., is “to
transform legislatures, courts, commerce and civil government at all levels.”
[44]
I visited the law-school building in late fall, with the
remnants of Hurricane Ida turning the Blue Ridge Mountains skyline into a series
of smudges. The building’s crisp, almost militaristic atmosphere bespeaks a
seriousness of purpose; and the fact that it houses, as one of its training
facilities, the only full-scale replica of the
U.S. Supreme Court chamber points to the
school’s ambitions.
[45]
I
had come to sit in on a guest lecture by Cynthia Dunbar, an assistant law
professor who commutes to Lynchburg once a week from her home in Richmond, Tex.,
where she is a practicing lawyer as well as a member of the Texas board of
education. Her presence in both worlds — public schools and the courts —
suggests the connection between them that Christian activists would like to
deepen. The First Amendment class for third-year law students that I watched
Dunbar lead neatly merged the two components of the school’s program: “lawyering
skills” and “the integration of a Christian worldview.”
[46]
Dunbar began the lecture by discussing a national day of thanksgiving that Gen.
George Washington called for after the defeat of the British at Saratoga in 1777
— showing, in her reckoning, a religious base in the thinking of the country’s
founders. In developing a line of legal reasoning that the future lawyers in her
class might use, she wove her way to two Supreme Court cases in the 1960s, in
both of which the court ruled that prayer in public schools was
unconstitutional. A student questioned the relevance of the 1777 event to the
court rulings, because in 1777 the country did not yet have a Constitution. “And
what did we have at that time?” Dunbar asked. Answer: “The Declaration of
Independence.” She then discussed a legal practice called “incorporation by
reference.” “When you have in one legal document reference to another, it pulls
them together, so that they can’t be viewed as separate and distinct,” she said.
“So you cannot read the Constitution distinct from the Declaration.” And the
Declaration famously refers to a Creator and grounds itself in “the Laws of
Nature and of Nature’s God.” Therefore, she said, the religiosity of the
founders is not only established and rooted in a foundational document but
linked to the Constitution. From there she moved to “judicial construction and
how you should go forward with that,” i.e., how these soon-to-be lawyers might
work to overturn rulings like that against prayer in schools by using the
founding documents.
[47]
Jay Sekulow, chief counsel of the American Center for Law and Justice, a
Christian legal center, told me that the notion of connecting the Declaration of
Independence and the Constitution is “part of a strategy to give a clear
historical understanding of the role of religion in American public life” that
organizations like his have been pursuing for the last 10 or 15 years.
[48]
Besides the fact that incorporation by reference is usually
used for technical purposes rather than for such grandiose purposes as the
reinterpretation of foundational texts, there is an oddity to this tactic.
“The
founders deliberately left the word ‘God’ out of the Constitution — but not
because they were a bunch of
atheists and deists,” says
Susan Jacoby, author of “Freethinkers: A History
of American Secularism.” “To them, mixing religion and government meant
trouble.” The curious thing is that in trying to bring God into the
Constitution, the activists — who say their goal is to follow the original
intent of the founders — are ignoring the fact that the founders explicitly
avoided religious language in that document.
[49]
And here again there is a link to Texas. David Barton specifically advised the
writers of the Texas guidelines that textbooks “should stipulate (but currently
do not) that the Declaration of Independence is symbiotic with the Constitution
rather than a separate unrelated document.”
[50]
In 2008, Cynthia Dunbar published a book called “One Nation Under God,” in which
she stated more openly than most of her colleagues have done the argument that
the founding of America was an overtly Christian undertaking and laid out what
she and others hope to achieve in public schools. “The underlying authority for
our constitutional form of government stems directly from biblical precedents,”
she writes. “Hence, the only accurate method of ascertaining the intent of the
Founding Fathers at the time of our government’s inception comes from a biblical
worldview.”
[51]
Then she pushes forward: “We as a nation were intended by God to be a light set
on a hill to serve as a beacon of hope and Christian charity to a lost and dying
world.” But the true picture of America’s Christian founding has been
whitewashed by “the liberal agenda” — in order for liberals to succeed “they
must first rewrite our nation’s history” and obscure the Christian intentions of
the founders. Therefore, she wrote, “this battle for our nation’s children and
who will control their education and training is crucial to our success for
reclaiming our nation.”
[52]
After the book came out, Dunbar was derided in blogs and newspapers for a
section in which she writes of “the inappropriateness of a state-created,
taxpayer-supported school system” and likens sending children to public school
to “throwing them into the enemy’s flames, even as the children of Israel threw
their children to Moloch.” (Her own children were either home-schooled or
educated in private Christian schools.) When I asked, over dinner in a
honky-tonk steakhouse down the road from the university, why someone who felt
that way would choose to become an overseer of arguably the most influential
public-education system in the country, she said that public schools are a
battlefield for competing ideologies and that it’s important to combat the
“religion” of secularism that holds sway in public education.
[53]
Ask Christian activists what they really want — what the goal is behind the
effort to bring Christianity into American history — and they say they merely
want “the truth.” “The main thing I’m looking for as a state board member is to
make sure we have good standards,” Don McLeroy said. But the actual ambition is
vast. Americans tell pollsters they support separation of church and state, but
then again 65 percent of respondents to a 2007 survey by the First Amendment
Center agreed with the statement that “the nation’s founders intended the United
States to be a Christian nation,” and 55 percent said they believed the
Constitution actually established the country as a Christian nation. The
Christian activists are aware of such statistics and want to build on them, as
Dunbar made clear. She told me she looks to John Jay’s statement that it is the
duty of the people “of our Christian nation to select and prefer Christians for
their rulers” and has herself called for a preference for selecting Christians
for positions of leadership.
[54]
Dunbar’s book lays out the goal: using courts and public schools to fuse
Christianity into the nation’s founding. It may be unlikely that it will be
attained any time soon, in which case the seeding of Texas’ history-textbook
guidelines with “Christian nation” concepts may be mostly symbolic. But symbols
can accumulate weight over time, and the Christian activists are in it for the
long haul. Some observers say that over time their effort could have
far-reaching consequences. “The more you can associate Christianity with the
founding, the more you can sway the future Supreme Court,” Martin Marty says.
“That is what Pat Robertson was about years ago. Establish the founders as
Christians, and you have it made.”
[55]
“BROWN BEAR, BROWN BEAR, What Do You See?” It’s not an especially
subversive-sounding title, but the author of this 1967 children’s picture book,
Bill Martin Jr., lost his place in the Texas social-studies guidelines at last
month’s board meeting due to what was thought to be un-American activity — to be
precise, “very strong critiques of capitalism and the American system.” Martin,
the creator of 300 children’s books, was removed from the list of cultural
figures approved for study by third graders in the blizzard of amendments
offered by board members.
[56]
Over all, the TEKS guidelines make for impressive reading. They are thoughtful
and deep; you can almost feel the effort at achieving balance. Poring down the
long columns and knowing that the 1998 version of these guidelines served as the
basis for textbooks in most U.S. states, you even begin to feel some hope for
the future.
[57]
What is wrong with the Texas process, according to many
observers, is illustrated by the fate of Bill Martin Jr. The board has the power
to accept, reject or rewrite the TEKS, and over the past few years, in language
arts, science and now social studies, the members have done all of the above.
Yet few of these elected overseers are trained in the fields they are reviewing.
“In general, the board members don’t know anything at all about content,” Tom
Barber, the textbook executive, says. Kathy Miller, the watchdog, who has been
monitoring the board for 15 years, says, referring to Don McLeroy and another
board member: “It is the most crazy-making thing to sit there and watch a
dentist and an insurance salesman rewrite curriculum standards in science and
history.
Last year, Don McLeroy believed he was smarter than the
National Academy of Sciences, and he now
believes he’s smarter than professors of American history.” In this case, one
board member sent an e-mail message with a reference to “Ethical Marxism,” by
Bill Martin, to another board member, who suggested that anyone who wrote a book
with such a title did not belong in the TEKS. As it turned out, Bill Martin and
Bill Martin Jr. are two different people. But by that time, the author of “Brown
Bear, Brown Bear” was out. “That’s a perfect example of these people’s lack of
knowledge,” Miller says. “They’re coming forward with hundreds of amendments at
the last minute. Don McLeroy had a four-inch stack of amendments, and they all
just voted on them, whether or not they actually knew the content. What we
witnessed in January was a textbook example of how not to develop textbook
standards.”
[58]
Before the January board meeting, one of the social-studies curriculum writers,
Judy Brodigan, told me that she was very pleased with the guidelines her team
produced. After the meeting, with its 10-hour marathon of amendments by board
members, she spoke very differently. “I think they took a very, very good
document and weakened it,” she said. “The teachers take their work seriously. I
do believe there are board members on the ultraright who
have an agenda. They
want to make our standards very conservative and fit their viewpoint. Our job is
not to take a viewpoint. It’s to present sides fairly. I thought we had done
that.”
[59]
Regarding religion, the writing teams had included in their guidelines some of
the recommendations of the experts appointed by the Christian bloc but had
chosen to ignore most. I was led to expect that the January meeting would see a
torrent of religion amendments, in which Don McLeroy would reinsert items that
the team failed to include, just as he did with other subjects in the past. Last
November, over dinner at a Tex-Mex restaurant across the street from the Texas
A&M campus, McLeroy vowed to do so, saying, “I’ll get the details in there.” At
that time, he and others were full of information and bravado as they pushed
toward the “Christian nation” goal. But at the January meeting, while there were
many conservative political amendments, there were only a few religion
amendments. When I talked to him afterward, he shrugged it off in an
uncharacteristically vague way. “We’re basically happy with things,” he said.
[60]
It’s possible a wave of religion amendments will come in the next meeting, in
March, when American government will still be among the subjects under review.
But the change of tone could signal a shift in strategy. “It could be that they
feel they’ve already got enough code words sprinkled throughout the guidelines,”
Kathy Miller says. The laws of Nature and Nature’s God. Moses and the Bible
“informing” the American founding. “The Glory of God and advancement of the
Christian Faith” as America’s original purpose. “We’ve seen in the past how one
word here or there in the curriculum standards gets seized upon by the far-right
members at adoption time,” Miller says. “In the science debate, the words
‘intelligent design’ did not appear, but they used ‘strengths and weaknesses’ as
an excuse to pitch a battle. The phrase became a wedge to try to weaken the
theory of evolution, to suggest that scientists had serious problems with it.
We’ve seen the board use these tiny fragments to wage war on publishers.”
[61]
This squares with what Tom Barber, the textbook executive, told me: that in the
next stage in the Texas process, general guidelines are chiseled into fact-size
chunks in crisp columns of print via backroom cajoling. “The process of
reviewing the guidelines in Texas is very open, but what happens behind the
scenes after that is quite different,” Barber says. “McLeroy is kind of the
spokesman for the social conservatives, and publishers will work with him
throughout. The publishers just want to make sure they get their books listed.”
[62]
To give an illustration simultaneously of the power of ideology and Texas’
influence, Barber told me that when he led the social-studies division at
Prentice Hall, one conservative member of the board told him that the 12th-grade
book, “Magruder’s American Government,” would not be approved because it
repeatedly referred to the U.S. Constitution as a “living” document. “That book
is probably the most famous textbook in American history,” Barber says. “It’s
been around since World War I, is updated every year and it had invented the
term ‘living Constitution,’ which has been there since the 1950s. But the social
conservatives didn’t like its sense of flexibility. They insisted at the last
minute that the wording change to ‘enduring.’ ” Prentice Hall agreed to the
change, and ever since the book — which Barber estimates controlled 60 or 65
percent of the market nationally — calls it the “enduring Constitution.”
[63]
Last fall, McLeroy was frank in talking about how he applies direct pressure to
textbook companies. In the language-arts re-evaluation, the members of the
Christian bloc wanted books to include classic myths and fables rather than
newly written stories whose messages they didn’t agree with. They didn’t get
what they wanted from the writing teams, so they did an end run around them once
the public battles were over. “I met with all the publishers,” McLeroy said. “We
went out for Mexican food. I told them this is what we want. We want stories
with morals, not P.C. stories.” He then showed me an e-mail message from an
executive at Pearson, a major educational publisher, indicating the results of
his effort: “Hi Don. Thanks for the impact that you have had on the development
of Pearson’s Scott Foresman Reading Street series. Attached is a list of some of
the Fairy Tales and Fables that we included in the series.”
[64]
If there has been a shift in strategy, politics may have
brought it about. The Christian bloc may have determined it would be wiser to
work for this kind of transformational change out of the public gaze. Of the
seven members of the Christian bloc, Ken Mercer is in a battle to keep his seat,
Cynthia Dunbar recently announced she won’t run for re-election and after 11
years of forceful advocacy for fundamentalist causes on the Texas state board,
during which time he was steadfastly supported by everyone from Gov.
Rick Perry — who originally picked him as
chairman — to tea-party organizers, Don McLeroy is now facing the stiffest
opposition of his career. Thomas Ratliff, a well-connected lobbyist, has squared
off against McLeroy in the Republican primary and is running an aggressive
campaign, positioning himself as a practical, moderate Republican. “I’m not
trying to out-conservative anyone,” Ratliff told me. “I think the state board of
education has lost its way, and the social-studies thing is a prime example.
They keep wanting to talk about this being a Christian nation. My attitude is
this country was founded by a group of men who were Christians but who didn’t
want the government dictating religion, and that’s exactly what McLeroy and his
colleagues are trying to do.”
[65]
Ratliff has received prominent endorsements and has
outraised McLeroy in the neighborhood of 10 to 1. But hard-core conservatives
tend to vote in primaries. Anyone looking for signs of where the
Republican Party is headed might scan the
results of the Texas school-board District 9 Republican primary on the morning
of March 3. If Don McLeroy loses, it could signal that the Christian right’s
recent power surge has begun to wane. But it probably won’t affect the next
generation of schoolbooks. The current board remains in place until next
January. By then, decisions on what goes in the Texas curriculum guidelines will
be history.
Russell Shorto is a contributing writer for the magazine. His most recent book
is ‘‘Descartes’ Bones: A Skeletal History of the Conflict Between Faith and
Reason.’’ Instructor's note: On March 2, 2010, McLeroy lost the Republican primary to Thomas Ratliff; McLeroy's term on the Texas State Board of Education ended in 2011.
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