The Rise
of Spiritual Illiteracy
Jack
Kemp
Victoria
Knox, Tea Party Nation columnist, had previously posted a comment in reply to
my article "Can this help legally support Christmas & Hannukah displays?" which lead to a discussion between
us involving a book I recently finished.
The subject
was speculation on how to advocate for Christmas and Hannukah
displays and Ms. Knox stated that she believed a public building's Christmas
display of a crèche should be legally allowed in America. I replied that she would
have to activate the religious faith of millions of Christians to get enough
political pressure to have her desire come true, namely in the form of new
elected officials to support her position. But there is also
an underlying cultural and educational assumption here of religious literacy
among American voters. This assumption is not wholly warranted today, as
author and prison church ministry leader Charles Colson knows.
In an
increasingly secular society, not every nominal Christian may know who is
actually depicted in a crèche in a Nativity scene. Is this an outrageous
statement on my part? Fifty years ago, it would have been.
In Charles
Colson's "The Sky is Not Falling," there is a section called
"The Rise of Spiritual Illiteracy" in Chapter 14 which states:
BEGIN QUOTE
January 2001:
America's newly elected president delivers his inaugural address. Commenting on
it, Dick Meyer of CBS News confesses, "There were a few phrases in the
speech I just didn't get. One was, 'When we see the wounded traveler on the
road to Jericho, we will not pass on the other side." Meyers concludes,
"I hope there's not a quiz."
SECTION
OMITTED
...Consider
pollster George Barna says only a small percentage of
Americans can name the Ten Commandments, and only 42 percent can identify who
preached the Sermon on the Mount. As Oxford theologian Alister
McGrath explains, "In an increasingly secular culture, fewer and fewer
people outside the Christian community have any real understanding of what
Christians believe."
END QUOTE
This
spiritual illiteracy is mirrored among American Jews as well. As I wrote at
American Thinker in December of 2004
in "Spirit and sensitivity:"
http://www.americanthinker.com/2004/12/spirit_and_sensivity.html
QUOTE
Last year, my
father died and, in chance conversations with two liberal Jews, I used a common
Yiddish & Hebrew phrase, Uleh leh
shulem ("He rose to Heaven to his Peace").
They didn't know what I was talking about. One had the decency to admit it and
asked me what the phrase meant. The other was just embarrassed by her ignorance
when I had to explain it in order to continue our conversation. When I was
growing up in the Bronx 50 years ago, this common Yiddish phrase was familiar
to every Jew, from an illiterate immigrant to a typical homemaker to a college
graduate New York City public school teacher.
It is my
contention that these same assimilated liberal Jews who didn't recognize the
phrase are the very ones who feel most threatened by a Nativity scene on a
courthouse lawn, or the singing of Christmas carols, because they are the most
alienated from their own religion and culture. The bigger the assimilation, the
more they fear losing their identity by merely singing - or even hearing -
"Jingle Bells."
END QUOTE
I could add
to this now, that I've met at least one Jew in a synagogue who didn't know the
Hebrew name for the Book of Genesis (It's "Behresheet"
in Sephardic or Israeli Hebrew and "Beraishis"
in Askenazi/European Hebrew).
But Charles
Colson (and myself) are not throwing up our hands in
resignation. Colson's above mentioned "The Sky is Not Falling" goes
on to talk about public schools across the nation having Released Time Bible
Education and mentions the Bible Literacy Project http://www.bibleliteracy.org/site/Curriculum/index.htm
which teaches the Bible as literature and part of our cultural heritage in
schools. This has support "ranging from the American Jewish Committee to
the National Association of Evangelicals to the American Federation of
Teachers" who all reviewed this program.
I could add
that a few years ago in New York, the recently deceased atheist intellectual
and writer Christopher Hitchens, author of "God is not Great"
(a screed against faith) was being interviewed at a dinner by the Freedom
Center and Front Page website founder David Horowitz. I - and about 200 others
- were in attendance as Christopher Hitchens casually
admitted that he sent his young daughter to a Quaker School so that she would
learn about the Bible and would not be illiterate of the basic literature of
Western Civilization.
So there you
have it. If Victoria Knox - or anyone else - is looking for support for
legalizing crèches in an American environment where many people can't tell you
who spoke the Sermon on the Mount (hint: His initials are "J.C."),
they should seriously consider involvement in projects of spreading knowledge
of the Scriptures to young people - and adults - as a first step. One can't
call for someone's spiritual knowledge to rise up like Lazarus from the grave
if that someone doesn't know who Lazarus was.