The RenewaNation Review 2018 Volume 10 Issue 1 | Page 23

records to understand the past. However, no written records exist for the prehistory of humankind.”  3 What about the record that begins with “In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth”? But that record mentions God, and he’s a religious consideration. So the distant past has to be analyzed without this ancient written record.   When a historian tries to understand the history of civili- zation without the Bible, the result is conclusions that distort what it means to be human. Here’s what McGraw-Hill says a few paragraphs later.   “The agricultural revolution of the New Stone Age ... dramatically changed human patterns of living. The plant- ing of grains and vegetables provided a regular supply of food. ... An increase in food production in these regions led to a significant growth in human population and the growth of cities. Efforts to control the flow of water for farming also led to organized governments in these new urban civilizations. A civilization is a complex culture in which large numbers of human beings share a number of common elements. Six of the most important basic char- acteristics of civilizations are cities, government, religion, social structure, writing, and art.”  4   According to this analysis, the heart of the human story is the discovery of “the planting of grains and vegetables.” Or to state it more broadly, science and technology form the core of human life and progress. Science and technology gave us civilization, and civilization (after enough time) gave us things like religion.   If you swallow that, you are well on your way to being a committed secularist. Science is essential. Religion, by comparison, is marginal. A child who adopts that view will not necessarily oppose religion, but he will not see it as central to life.   And when it comes to analyzing current events—like unrest in the Middle East—he will likely adopt the view that McGraw-Hill offers in the last chapter of the textbook.   “Much of the terrorism in the Middle East is aimed against the West. One reason Middle Eastern terrorists have targeted Westerners can be traced to Western investment in the Middle East oil industry. ... This industry brought wealth to ruling families ... but most citizens remained very poor. They often blamed the West, especially the United States, for supporting the ruling families.”  5   Why is there so much violence in the Middle East? Oil and money. Oil is traded in such a way that many people in the Middle East are left in poverty. This suggests that if we evenly distribute the wealth in that region, strife and warfare will disappear. That’s how you think if you’re a secularist.   Anyone who thinks that way is not living in the real world. In the real world, people are religious, and their religious beliefs play a central role in how they view the world and how they behave. If you do not understand the role of religion in people’s lives—and how to evaluate religion from Scripture—you do not understand the world. What Makes Education Christian? This is the reason Christian education is so important. Chris- tian teachers and parents—using Christian textbooks—can shape the thinking of students from a biblical worldview. They can show young people that the human race has been religious from its first day. God made us in his own image (Gen 1:26). This is the reason all human societies have been religious in some way. They can also teach that God made us with the ability and the desire to exercise dominion over the earth (Gen 1:28). From the very beginning, therefore, we have developed culture (Gen 2:20-24). Very early in the human story, we developed civilization (Gen 4:17-22), and we have continued to do so to the current day.   In all of this, science and technology have played an important role—their development is a natural result of God’s calling on our lives. What is central to human life is religion. In a fallen world, religion is most often twisted by sinfulness and misunderstanding. The answer to this problem is not avoiding religion. The answer is to seek God’s redemption in religion and from that, in all of life.   This search for redemption should be one of the main goals of instruction in any subject, especially in social stud- ies. If it’s done well, it will prepare students to live richly redemptive lives wherever they go. The public school won’t help with this. Christian education can. It’s worth every penny.  Dr. Bryan Smith has worked in Christian education for over twenty years. He has been a classroom teacher as well as a textbook author. Currently, he serves at BJU Press as the Bible Integration Senior Manager. In this position, he assists authors and teachers in the work of integrating faith and learning in the classroom. Bryan holds a Ph.D. in Old Testament Interpretation. He and his wife, Becky, have six children. FOOTNOTES 1. The American Heritage College Dictionary, Third Edition (Houghton Mifflin Company, 1993). 2. James A. Banks, Our Community and Beyond (McGraw-Hill Education, 2013), p. 31. 3. Jackson J. Spielvogel, World History & Geography: Modern Times (McGraw- Hill Education, 2014), p. 4. 4. Ibid., pp. 4-5. 5. Ibid., p. 458. 23