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Netherland was conquered by Caesar around 0 BC and was under Roman control until the Batavian revolt around 100 AD. By 1,000 AD the whole of Netherland had been converted to christianity and was part of the Holy Roman Empire.Snorri1234 wrote:Oh yes our culture certainly has those influences. What you said however was that it was based on them.
Wait, how does that justify teaching Christianity in schools again? 51%? What?Harijan wrote:Netherland was conquered by Caesar around 0 BC and was under Roman control until the Batavian revolt around 100 AD. By 1,000 AD the whole of Netherland had been converted to christianity and was part of the Holy Roman Empire.Snorri1234 wrote:Oh yes our culture certainly has those influences. What you said however was that it was based on them.
Netherland has been Christian for about 700 years longer than Anywhere in America and specifically the United states. If Netherland is only "influenced" by judeo-christian culture then the United States certainly cannot be considered "based" in the same.
Netherland's modern history is just as entrenched in judeo-christian history as Italy, France, Germany, or even Rome itself.
As of 2002 Netherland's population religious break down
31% roman catholic
13% dutch reform
7% Calvinist
5.5% muslim
2.5% other
41% none
51% of the population considers themselves members of a christian denomination.
As of 2001 75% of the United States population considered themselves Christian.
So when you go home today take note of all the Christmas decorations and remember that your country has been christian longer and deeper than not only the United States, but most of Europe as well.
We had a similar class, only it was for a semester (i was at a public school) we learned about the above religions, along with a short bit on Jainism, Sikhism, and the Native American Religions. Our teacher had a hard time getting permission from the school board to even have the class, but once they finally gave in, they saw how great an idea it was and have expanded it to both high schoolsviperbitex wrote:when I was in high school, we spent an entire trimester on religions. We studied that root, reason, and rise of Christianity, Judaism, Islam, Hinduism, and Buddhism. It was awesome. We were taught about the different religions, their beliefs, and their customs. Learning about religions helped me and others make our own choices about faith. Teaching about religion and Preaching religion are two different things.
What? Your own post is far from "clean & kind"!Bavarian Raven wrote:we all know religions like to "brainwash" people so should religion be banned from schools and the such so students can think freely?
I MEAN IN SCHOOLS ALONE!!!
and before you all start ripping into me i want to try and have an open "kind" and "clean" debate on the topic...so if you want to flame me, go to flame wars!!!
Why is that? Math only has one answer, science only has one real answer (we just don't have it yet). The "side" that Christianity presents has no scientific basis, hence doesn't belong in a science class. A class in philosophy would be a much better choice.Napoleon Ier wrote:An education must present two sides.
Im not arguing for creationsism, which I find ridiculous, read my post. To an extent, why not teach it? Let the kids decide...Frigidus wrote:Why is that? Math only has one answer, science only has one real answer (we just don't have it yet). The "side" that Christianity presents has no scientific basis, hence doesn't belong in a science class. A class in philosophy would be a much better choice.Napoleon Ier wrote:An education must present two sides.
1. YesNobunaga wrote:... OK, a few Yes or No questions (opinions, explanations welcome)
... In US public schools, should the following be permitted?
... 1. Kids praying (on their own or in groups of kids) before lunch.
... 2. Kids wearing "Jesus Loves You" shirts.
... 3. Teachers wearing "Jesus Loves You" shirts.
... 4. Teachers wearing "Who would Jesus bomb?" shirts. (seen those?)
... 5. A student Christian club using school facilities (meeting in a classroom after school, ie)
... 6. Prayers said during school hours for all students after some great tragedy (9/11, whatever)
... 7. A school-wide "Moment of Silence" in the same situation
... 8. Kids wearing those little hats Jews wear (forgot what they are called)
... 9. Teachers in those hats.
... That's it.
...
1. YesNobunaga wrote:... OK, a few Yes or No questions (opinions, explanations welcome)
... In US public schools, should the following be permitted?
... 1. Kids praying (on their own or in groups of kids) before lunch.
... 2. Kids wearing "Jesus Loves You" shirts.
... 3. Teachers wearing "Jesus Loves You" shirts.
... 4. Teachers wearing "Who would Jesus bomb?" shirts. (seen those?)
... 5. A student Christian club using school facilities (meeting in a classroom after school, ie)
... 6. Prayers said during school hours for all students after some great tragedy (9/11, whatever)
... 7. A school-wide "Moment of Silence" in the same situation
... 8. Kids wearing those little hats Jews wear (forgot what they are called)
... 9. Teachers in those hats.
... That's it.
...
Which is why I don't consider the USA to be based on religious traditions except for a number actually being based on them.Harijan wrote:Netherland was conquered by Caesar around 0 BC and was under Roman control until the Batavian revolt around 100 AD. By 1,000 AD the whole of Netherland had been converted to christianity and was part of the Holy Roman Empire.Snorri1234 wrote:Oh yes our culture certainly has those influences. What you said however was that it was based on them.
Netherland has been Christian for about 700 years longer than Anywhere in America and specifically the United states. If Netherland is only "influenced" by judeo-christian culture then the United States certainly cannot be considered "based" in the same.
Netherland's modern history is just as entrenched in judeo-christian history as Italy, France, Germany, or even Rome itself.
As of 2002 Netherland's population religious break down
31% roman catholic
13% dutch reform
7% Calvinist
5.5% muslim
2.5% other
41% none
51% of the population considers themselves members of a christian denomination.
As of 2001 75% of the United States population considered themselves Christian.
So when you go home today take note of all the Christmas decorations and remember that your country has been christian longer and deeper than not only the United States, but most of Europe as well.
1. YesNobunaga wrote:... OK, a few Yes or No questions (opinions, explanations welcome)
... In US public schools, should the following be permitted?
... 1. Kids praying (on their own or in groups of kids) before lunch.
... 2. Kids wearing "Jesus Loves You" shirts.
... 3. Teachers wearing "Jesus Loves You" shirts.
... 4. Teachers wearing "Who would Jesus bomb?" shirts. (seen those?)
... 5. A student Christian club using school facilities (meeting in a classroom after school, ie)
... 6. Prayers said during school hours for all students after some great tragedy (9/11, whatever)
... 7. A school-wide "Moment of Silence" in the same situation
... 8. Kids wearing those little hats Jews wear (forgot what they are called)
... 9. Teachers in those hats.
... That's it.
...
Actually, that phrase is no where in the constitution. Only that no religion will be made the official religion of the country. That is all.demon7896 wrote:the constitution calls for a separation of church and state or school, i forgot