February 15, 2026

More Bible Teaching in Public Schools: What Could Possibly Go Wrong?

020319-65-Religion-Education
More Bible Teaching in Public Schools: What Could Possibly Go Wrong?

More Bible Teaching in Public Schools: What Could Possibly Go Wrong?
Donald Trump at 2015 Values Voter Summit, image from CNN coverage

There are many reasons to be deeply skeptical of the current push by right-wing organizations for more Bible teaching in public schools.


More Bible Teaching in Public Schools: What Could Possibly Go Wrong?

By Peter Montgomery


A national campaign to undermine church-state separationโ€”Project Blitzโ€”encourages like-minded state lawmakers to introduce legislation designed to move more of the Religious Rightโ€™s worldview into lawโ€”and into public schools. This week President Trump gave an endorsement-by-tweet to one specific Project Blitz goalโ€”getting more public schools to teach about the Bible.

There are many reasons to be deeply skeptical of the current push by right-wing organizations for more Bible teaching in public schools. Religious Right activists have turned public schools into culture-war battlegrounds, routinely denouncing Supreme Court rulings from the 1960s that upheld church-state separation by forbidding state-sponsored prayer and devotional Bible readings in public schools.

One of Project Blitzโ€™s promoters is โ€œhistorianโ€ David Barton, a Republican political activist whose WallBuilders organization promotes a Christian-nation approach to U.S. history that has been widely discredited by actual historians. Making the Bible a primary textbook in American public schools is one of the goals of Christian nationalist political operative David Lane, who hosted President Trump at one of his events during the 2016 presidential campaign.

Earlier this month, controversial Florida legislator and pastor Kimberly Daniels filed HB 195, legislation that would amend a current state law that permits school districts to offer elective Bible classes. Danielsโ€™ bill would require every school district in the state to offer a set of courses about religion, the Hebrew scriptures, and the Christian Bible. Daniels, a self-described โ€œdemon busterโ€ and โ€œapostle,โ€ has sponsored other Project Blitz legislation, including a bill to require public schools to post โ€œIn God We Trustโ€ in โ€œa conspicuous place.โ€ (That legislation became law last year.) God TV celebrated the introduction of Danielsโ€™ new bill, saying it brought Florida โ€œ[o]ne step close to seeing prayer in public schools again.โ€

Courts have ruled that teaching about the Bibleโ€”as literature, for example, or as comparative religionโ€”is constitutional in public schools, but using the Bible for indoctrination or proselytizing is not. Teaching about the Bibleโ€™s role in history is permissible; teaching the Bible as if its stories are factual history is not.

In order to help school officials understand and navigate these tricky legal waters, People For the American Way Foundation worked with scholars and organizations across the political spectrum to produce โ€œThe Bible & Public Schools: a First Amendment Guide,โ€ which was published in 1999 by the Freedom Forumโ€™s First Amendment Center and the National Bible Association. The guide makes clear that teaching the Bible in public schools in a neutral and academic way requires a serious commitment to, among other things, the selection and training of qualified teachers.

Itโ€™s not easy to do correctly, especially if thereโ€™s no will or effort to do so.

In 2000, People For the American Way Foundation published โ€œThe Good Book Taught Wrong,โ€ the results of an in-depth investigation of the way โ€œBible Historyโ€ was being taught in 14 Florida school districts. The investigation, grounded in written course materials obtained by PFAW Foundation, documented that all of the school districts had been โ€œviolating the U.S. Constitution by teaching the Bible from a religious perspectiveโ€”often assuming teachers and students were Christianโ€”or using the Bible as if it were a history textbook or otherwise failing to provide objective and secular instruction.โ€

Among the details included in the PFAWF report were this question which appeared on tests in two high schools: โ€œWhy is it hard for a non-Christian to understand things about God?โ€ Another high school exam question asked, โ€œIf you had a Jewish friend who wanted to know if Jesus might be the expectant [sic] Messiah, which book [of the Gospels] would you give him?โ€ Another lesson asked, โ€œWho, according to Jesus is the father of the Jews?โ€ The answer: โ€œThe devil.โ€

The Texas Freedom Network Education Fund has published multiple reports on the way Bible classes have been taught in that stateโ€™s public schools.  Southern Methodist University religious studies professor Mark Chancey has documented that classes were being taught from a right-wing fundamentalist Christian standpoint, including a literal interpretation of the Bible, with materials โ€œdesigned to evangelize rather than provide an objective study of the Bibleโ€™s influence.โ€

In addition, noted Chancey in a report originally published in 2006, Bible courses often fostered โ€œnotions of American identity as distinctively Christian,โ€ using videos and materials from Bartonโ€™s WallBuilders. Chancey described WallBuildersโ€™ โ€œAmericaโ€™s Godly Heritageโ€ video as โ€œso inaccurate in its content and so unabashedly sectarian in its goals that one federal court has prohibited its use in public schools.โ€

Danielsโ€™ new bill requiring all Florida school districts to offer multiple courses on the Bible includes language stipulating that the courses must maintain religious neutrality and not promote or disfavor any particular religious outlook. Thatโ€™s a good thing. But as the PFAWF and TFN studies make clear, itโ€™s one thing to require neutrality, and itโ€™s another thing to ensure that course materials, teacher training, and actual classroom practice reflect those legal requirements.

If states continue to expand teaching about the Bible in public schools, there will be a lot of work for parents, teachers and other concerned individuals to make sure that public officials are providing oversight and accountability to ensure that schools are respecting the Constitution as well as the rights of all students.


Originally published by Right Wing Watch, 01.30.2019, a project of People for the American Way, a program of Open Society Foundations, under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported license.