The RenewaNation Review 2019 Volume 11 Issue 1 | Page 25

The larger battle, however, is in history standards commit- tees, which determine the specific historical material the students will be expected to learn. 13 What will a successful student of history know when he finishes his K–12 educa- tion? What will he be able to do? What attitudes will he evidence? How will he make his decisions? As the stan- dards committee makes these determinations, it is setting the course for future textbook development since textbook publishers will seek to conform to the standards and thereby raise the likelihood that a given state will adopt their text(s). WHAT ARE WE FIGHTING OVER? At the heart of the controversy is what the study of history is all about. History is not simply the reciting of a series of events in chronological order or the memorization of facts. A historian seeks to discover the meaning of history—to identify causes and effects, 14 trends, and bases for success or failure. That means that he has to interpret the events as well as describe them. More fundamentally, he has to define success and failure; he has to base his telling of the story on a moral foundation. 15 That is at its core a religious task, a theo- logical one. 16 It should be no surprise that attempts to teach history in an allegedly nonreligious system are chaotic, with varying factions doing battle for their own perspectives. Perhaps a couple of examples, culled from a previous Renewanation Review article written by my colleague, Dr. Bryan Smith, will help illustrate this point. McGraw-Hill is a leading publisher for public schools. The following is an excerpt from their first-grade social studies textbook. It’s how they teach Thanksgiving Day. “A long time ago, Pilgrims came to live in America. Their lives were very hard. They had trouble growing enough food. A group of Native Americans helped the Pilgrims. They showed the Pilgrims how to grow new crops. The Pilgrims wanted to thank the Native Americans for their help. They invited the Native Americans for a special meal. This day became known as Thanksgiving Day.” Anything missing? From this account, a child learns that the Pilgrims were giving thanks to Native Americans, and God had no place in the celebration. 17 And from a seventh-grade world history textbook, “Much of the terrorism in the Middle East is aimed against the West. One reason Middle Eastern terrorists have targeted Western- ers can be traced to the 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.” Dr. Smith evaluates this view: This suggests that if we even- ly 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. 18 In short, the controversy over history standards is a conflict of worldviews. On one side is naturalism, which says that humans exist by random chance, that we are self-determiners, that we can define our own values, and that if we do it right, we can continue to evolve our social and governmental structures into utopias. On the other side is the Judeo-Christian view, based in English common law that drove the thinking of the American Founders. BRINGING THE BIBLE TO BEAR So what is a biblical worldview? How does it inform our study of history? How much freedom does it give us in the setting of standards and the consequent selection of textbooks? A biblical worldview begins with the follow- ing concepts: • There is a God who is the Creator of all things. • God’s will is the standard of right and wrong. • God is telling a story in history; it has a beginning, middle, and end; it makes sense. He is sovereign, work- ing out His will in “the affairs of men and nations.” 19 • Humans are responsible for their decisions and actions. They are expect- ed to think and behave in ways 25