The RenewaNation Review 2019 Volume 11 Issue 1 | Page 22

New England Primer. This edition of the Primer differed somewhat from the 1777 version but still used biblical imagery. 75 years and are still used today in some private schools. McGuffey wrote in the Preface to the Fourth Reader: “From no source has the author drawn more copiously, in his selec- tions, than from the sacred Scriptures. For this, he certainly apprehends no censure. In a Christian country, that man is to be pitied, who at this day, can honestly object to imbuing the minds of youth with the language and spirit of the Word of God.”  5 Other prominent textbooks from early America were thoroughly Christian as well. The contrast of biblical education in early America with today’s secular education is evident when comparing the definition of words from Webster’s original Dictionary, published in 1828, with modern dictionaries. Webster used thousands of Scripture references and defined words biblically. Modern dictionaries give humanistic definitions. Consider, for example, the word immoral. In his original definition of this word Webster wrote, “Every action is immoral which contravenes any divine precept, or which is contrary to the duties men owe to each other.”  6 To Webster, divine precept was the standard to judge immorality. Today, the standard is quite different, as reflected in the defini- tion of immoral in modern dictionaries. Webster’s New World Dictionary defines immoral as “not in conformity with accepted principles of right and wrong behavior.”  7 The standard for immoral behavior today has become what the consensus of the population thinks. Man, rather than God, has been declared the judge of right and wrong conduct. Man becomes his own god. 22 MODERN SECULAR TEXTS Modern textbooks have been completely sanitized of their early Christian content. Many people have documented this change but none so thoroughly as Professor Paul C. Vitz in a government-funded study he conducted in the 1980s on whether bias exists in public school textbooks. His study clearly showed that bias and censorship exist and that the nature of the bias is clear: “Religion, traditional family values, and conservative political and economic positions have been reliably excluded from children’s textbooks.”  8 Vitz wrote that while the bias may not be deliberate, a “secular and liberal mindset appears to be responsible.”  9 And he points out that the bias is primarily manifested by exclusion. As an example, “Sixty representative social studies textbooks were carefully evaluated,” and “none of the books covering grades one through four contain one word referring to any religious activity in contemporary American life.” 10 While these social studies texts mention the family, “the idea that marriage is the origin and foundation of the fami- ly is never presented. Indeed, the words marriage, wedding, husband, wife, do not occur once in these books.” 11 It is not surprising why so many Americans today reject the biblical view of the family. The social studies texts frequently presented “role models” but “not one contemporary role model is conservative and male.” High school U.S. history texts almost completely ignored major religious events of the past two hundred years