| Although the Supreme Court
only recently struck down school prayer in Engle v. Vitale (1962) and
mandatory Bible readings in Abington v. Schempp (1963), legal scholar
Green (Willamette Univ.) argues that the origins of these legal battles are
grounded in earlier 19th-century educational battles regarding Bible reading in
public schools and government funding of parochial schools. Catholics challenged
nonsectarian Bible reading as Protestant oriented, and Protestants countered
with no-funding legislation to sever government funding from parochial schools.
Green disputes the argument that nonsectarian and no-funding policies were
simple anti-Catholic posturing, contending that they drew from more principled
constitutional and philosophical arguments over church and state policy that
grew in sophistication throughout the century. Increasing educational
secularizing trends culminated in the Blaine Amendments, which sought to amend
the Constitution to prohibit states from funding public education. Although it
failed to pass, several states adopted its core principles and divorced public
funds from religious education. In summary, Green reminds readers that modern
Supreme Court rulings were not products of sudden secularizing trends in the
20th century, but rather were grounded in a more than century-long debate over
the separation of church and state. Summing Up: Highly recommended. All
academic levels/libraries. -- M. S. Hill, Gordon College |
3 comments:
Interesting book that I will have to take a look at. I know that in the early 19th century before the larger waves of poorer Irish immigrants, NYC's fairly well-to-do Catholics successfully applied for funding from the Common School Fund for the parochial Catholic schools. “Children who are made to commence their daily exercises by prayer,” the Catholic trustees argued, “are not likely from that circumstance to be worse citizens than those who do not follow that practice, nor receive any religious instructions.” Qtd in Leo Raymond Ryan, Old St. Peter's, 243. I think the later waves of Irish immigration drastically changed the scene for Catholic inclusion.
Paul, you forgot about this one: http://usreligion.blogspot.com/2012/02/steven-k.html
I know you had to wait for it and all but....
Chris: Whoops! My bad. Post corrected now!
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