The RenewaNation Review 2019 Volume 11 Issue 1 | Page 18

3.5 million years ago.”  8 When historians use numbers in the millions, how much leeway does the word around grant? There is no reference here to controversies regarding Lucy and how much we don’t know (in fact cannot know) about a creature that (supposedly) lived millions of years ago. Indeed, the phrase “unusually complete skeleton” can mislead students. From Doug Henderson of the Creation Museum, “Even though Lucy is fairly complete for a mammal fossil (47 of 207 bones found), the bones are most- ly small fragments with many pieces missing. Other speci- mens have been found, but they are far more fragmentary. No matter how complete, all fossils must be interpreted. Some interpretation is always left to the imagination of the person doing the reconstruction.”  9 LITERATURE So far we’ve looked at one “ultimate question”—where do we come from? Answering two others—Why are we here? Where are we going?—is sometimes attempted in secular textbooks as well, but they cannot answer them scripturally. When using selections from the Bible in literature text- books, secular works cannot treat them in the same way as a Christian text could. Thus, in Holt McDougal’s Liter- ature: Grade 12 Teacher’s Edition, instructional strategies include comparing Christ’s parable of the prodigal son with parables by Aesop and the “teachings of Confucius,” which “[offer] guidance in human affairs.” 10 Students are “[invit- ed] ... to share proverbs, parables, fables, or other wisdom literature” 11 in class—an unspoken assumption that all such literature is as valid as are the words of Christ. A secular text may be lauded for including portions of a Christian work such as Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress, but coming from a secular worldview, its writers fail to get crit- ical details correct. • “Eventually, with the guidance of the charismatic Calvinist preacher, John Gifford, Bunyan ‘experienced God’s light.’” 12 (What, exactly, does that mean? The text does not explain further. A Christian text would explain more clearly Bunyan’s salvation experience.) • “The Celestial City is defined as ‘the heavenly reward for living a just life.’” 13 (Any true believer and, indeed, Bunyan himself, could tell you this is a complete misrepresentation of salvation.) Perhaps at the other end of the literary spectrum from Pilgrim’s Progress is Walt Whitman’s Song of Myself. Even here, when the poet touches on the afterlife, “[The dead] are alive and well somewhere, The smallest sprout shows there is really no death,” the Christian (true) perspective is not given place. “In lines 38–45, the speaker presents a view of death and the afterlife. Many cultures have beliefs about the afterlife; for example, Hindus believe in reincarnation, based 18 upon the good and bad actions of a person in earlier lives. Have students compare and contrast the view presented in these lines with beliefs in their culture and other beliefs with which they may be familiar.” 14 A Christian text would take the discussion one step further and have students discuss how biblical views of death, heaven, and hell differ from those of all other belief systems. When dealing with the works of Emily Dickinson, the same text reads, “Love, loss. Joy, death. When you focus on life’s real meaning, you explore its essential truths. These truths, of course, are the natural focus of poets. For instance, in the poems that follow, Emily Dickinson has a great deal to say about death and dying. But does she—or any other poet—speak for you? What do you think about such weighty matters as death, success, and solitude? What is your truth?” 15 [emphasis mine] CONCLUSION Of course, such examples could go on and on, but I believe the point is made that secular texts, even when they do not include egregiously offensive material or blatantly anti-Christian philosophies, by their very nature must omit or misrepresent the Christian perspective. They leave things undone. But because we are responsible for passing scrip- tural truth on to the next generation, Christian educators, parents, and pastors must not be guilty of having little to say about things left undone. ■ NOTE: The author is grateful for the use of research materials provided by Rachel Santopiet- ro, MEd, and Margaret Wooten, PhD. Steve Skaggs, MEd, serves as Content Director at BJU Press in Greenville, South Carolina. He has been involved in Christian education for over thirty years. ENDNOTES 1. This example is not intended to be taken as a blanket endorsement of the film. Vertigo must be viewed with biblical discernment, which is the same point I am making about textbooks. 2. Ken Ham, “Creation: ‘Where’s the Proof?’” accessed April 16, 2018. https://answersingen- esis.org/creationism/creation-myths/creation-wheres-the-proof. Emphases in original. 3. American Museum of Natural History, et al., Life Science (Columbus, OH: McGraw-Hill Education, 2017), 186. Please note that texts used as examples in this article were chosen more or less at random, not because they are egregiously “bad” but because they are typical of nearly all secular textbooks. 4. Ibid., 195. Emphasis in original. 5. Ibid., 831. 6. Roger B. Beck, et al., World History: Patterns of Interaction (Orlando, FL: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company, 2012), 5. 7. Moses’ writings date back to ca. 1550–1400 BC. 8. Beck, 7. 9. Doug Henderson, “Bringing Lucy to Life,” accessed April 18, 2018. https://answersingen- esis.org/human-evolution/lucy/bringing-lucy-to-life. See also http://www.creationwiki. org/Australopithecus_afarensis. 10. Janet Allen, et al., Literature: Grade 12 (Orlando, FL: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publish- ing Company, 2012), 485. 11. Ibid. 12. Ibid., 504. 13. Ibid., 511. 14. Janet Allen, et al., Literature: Grade 11 (Orlando, FL: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publish- ing Company, 2012), 536. 15. Ibid., 547. Emphasis mine.