The RenewaNation Review 2019 Volume 11 Issue 1 | Page 42

HIDDEN MESSAGES IN PUBLIC SCHOOL CLASSROOMS: AN INTERVIEW WITH SUNNY BARRETT By Dr. Josh Mulvihill IN 2015, an encounter with an atheist teacher opened Sunny Barrett’s eyes to the worldview messages being taught in public school classrooms. Today, Sunny is diligently working to help her daughters develop a biblical worldview. She is the mother of two public school daughters who are eight and eleven years old. Dr. Josh Mulvihill spoke with Sunny about why worldview matters, what messages children are being taught in public school classrooms, and how parents can train their public school children to devel- op a biblical worldview. WHY DOES WORLDVIEW MATTER FOR PARENTS, GRANDPARENTS, AND PASTORS? Children spend most of their day in school. Worldview touches everything they learn. As a result, we need to know what is going on in the classroom and around us in culture. We can’t put our head in the sand while our kids are being fed false ideology. My children are dealing with big, complex issues at school. For example, one teacher handed out an abridged version of the code of Hammurabi with 35 laws and said, “You know this came before the Ten Commandments.” The 42 teacher alluded to this fact to make my daughter question her beliefs. The teacher also inferred that the Mosaic Law was not special since every civilization in history had similar laws. This was a tactic to discredit Christianity by making it appear that the Mosaic Law copied the Hammurabi code of law. My daughter and I discussed that parallel laws against similar issues in society did not prove plagiarism, as the teacher was inferring. I needed to teach Old Testament covenants. We reviewed how the Law of Moses was rooted in the worship of one God. Mosaic Law was given to reveal sin and point to man’s need of a Savior. None of this was recognized in Hammurabi’s laws or any other law out there, and there was no provision for forgiveness. This type of experience happens on a weekly basis. Some- times they aren’t this obvious. It gives me the opportunity to have conversations with my daughters. It can be over- whelming, but I give it to the Lord. I pray the armor of God over them, for spiritual discernment to be in the girls and the favor to be upon the teachers. We can’t be there to see or hear everything, so we pray that God brings false ideology to our kids’ attention.