The Nation: David Hines and Murray Burton
On The Nation: Lisa Owen interviews David Hines and
Murray Burton
Youtube clips from the
show are available here.
Well,
it’s a David and Goliath battle, and who you think is who
will probably depend on which side you’re on. Should we or
should we not teach Bible in schools? This week Jeff
McClintock’s legal action over his daughter being taught
Bible lessons in class was thrown out of court. He’s
appealing the decision on Tuesday, but in the meantime we
thought we’d put the issue before the court of public
opinion. So I’m joined by David Hines from the Secular
Education Network and Murray Burton from the Churches
Education Commission. Good morning to both of
you.
David Hines: Good
morning.
Murray Burton: Good morning.
If I
can start with you first, Mr Burton, we are a secular
society. There is a clear separation between the church and
the state, so why should the Christian religion be taught at
schools?
Burton: Well, I think if you
look back at the history of New Zealand, Christian values
are absolutely really dynamic in terms of forming how we
live and work in our society, and I think those values are
still holding us together today, and that’s what we enjoy
doing when we get invited into schools.
So
there you go, Mr Hines, it’s a foundation of our society,
Christian fundamental beliefs.
Hines:
Well, values did exist before Jesus came along. There are
friendly people in Hindu countries, in Muslim countries. Why
does Christianity want to hog the market and say, ‘We’re
the only ones who have got values’?
On that
question, why are you preaching to these kids in school?
Isn’t that the place where they should learn maths and
English and those kinds of topics? Why
religion?
Burton: Well, there’s a
couple of great things, Lisa, in that when we go in, we
share Christian— talk about Christian values. We don’t
preach. We do use the Bible. We do talk about Christian
belief, but we do it in quite creative ways, and I think
that enables kids to form an opinion. It’s about choices,
so we’re invited in, and they make the choice as to what
they might do later in life in terms of the information
given to them, just like anything. I’ll tell you another
good thing. There’s actually increasing research around
the fact that Christian values connected with a school
situation do produce amazing academic results. Now, if you
look in the league tables any time in The New Zealand
Herald, who does well? Private religious schools, state
integrated schools. Isn’t that
interesting?
When you talk about using
creative ways to get the message out, what do you mean? What
are you using in class?
Burton: Okay,
so we use modern technology. We use role-plays. We don’t
just stand up the front deliver like that, so we use quite a
creative and well-established set of materials and so on to
actually engage kids in learning.
Mr Hines, so
they’re saying they’re not preaching; they’re
teaching. The materials that they’re using, what’s your
problem with those?
Hines: It is
preaching. This is one of the main syllabuses used by the
Churches Education Commission. I read the first 17 lessons
– half a year’s lessons. Every one of them was about
God, ‘God made you. God loves you. God sent his son,
Jesus. God wrote the Bible.’ There are hardly any values
in those 17 lessons. Two of the 17 had lessons which did
have values in them about friendship, and it says, ‘God
wants you to be friends,’ as though Christians have got
the market on it. It’s a very biased form of Christianity.
It’s evangelism. It is deceitful
evangelism.
Deceitful evangelism, is
it?
Burton: We’ve got a great
curriculum called Life Choices. In the last while, we’ve
been reviewing it, as any organisations do. In reviewing our
curriculum, we only have one official curriculum from the
1st of July, and that is Life Choices. And I think you’ll
find it quite an incredibly good curriculum, David. I think
that it does major on Christian values, it is about choices,
and it does reference us back to how we need these values to
live our lives. Take, for example, values out of your
family; what happens? Take Christian values out of politics,
out of how to run a business, how to run a school; we’ve
got problems, haven’t we?
But it’s not
just Christian values, is it? Yet it’s Christian values
that you’re teaching. What about other religions? Why not
Judaism? Why not teach kids about
Islam?
Burton: Now, the law allows
that to be done. Other religions can easily come to school.
They can take the half hour that we’ve got the privilege
of using at the moment, and that can be done as well. And we
live in a pluralist society, so that if they all have a
contribution to our very multicultural nation, so we have no
problem with that whatsoever. We look at the New Zealand
census 2013. 48% said they were Christian. That’s pretty
significant, isn’t it?
When I look at the
materials, and I have had a look at some of these materials,
one unit teaches kids that God made day and night and that
God also made animals. Another says that God is the
shepherd. These are Christian articles of faith. They are
not matters of fact, are
they?
Burton: There is a lot of fact,
but, of course, we could debate that all day in terms of is
the Bible a historically dependable document. We think it
is. It’s the bestseller in the world. Within the Bible,
there are a whole range of stories which David and I could
debate all day, but I tell you what, look at the principles
coming out of the scriptures and you’ll find ways to
live.
That is the point, isn’t it? That is
the point. These things are open to debate. They are
articles of faith and not matters of fact. Aren’t we
teaching our kids matters of fact – mathematics, how to
read and write?
Burton: Absolutely,
fact is very important. Teach a kid how to Google and work
out whether it’s fact or whether it’s an opinion,
that’s a very interesting example that we need kids to be
critical thinkers. We’re not doing critical thinking.
We’re actually engaging them in that. We’re engaging
their minds, their hearts, their emotions and so on, and
we’re not preaching at them too. So we just take the
opportunity to talk about those things that pull us all
together.
Really not preaching? Hand on heart,
can you tell me that this is not about encouraging people to
believe in God? Hand on
heart?
Burton: It’s Christian
belief, yes, it is. We’re talking directly about Christian
belief, and we’re talking about the Bible.
Hines: It is
evangelical Christian belief.
Burton: But we can’t do
that in a classroom, can we? We can’t actually preach in a
classroom. We can’t actually evangelise in a classroom.
All we can do—
But you
just—
Hines: But you do. You do
constantly. We took these syllabuses to Professor Paul
Morris at Victoria University, and he said, ‘None of these
is appropriate for a group of mixed people because it
clashes with their views. It should not be presented to
Muslim kids, even Christian kids.’ He said, ‘It’s
inappropriate for many Christians.’ Many Christians are
not evangelical. I’m a Christian. I’m not evangelical. I
don’t believe the Bible is true word for word. My beliefs
are misrepresented by the rubbish that you are teaching.
Christians do not believe the things you say. There are a
minority of Christians that are evangelical like yourself,
who believe in hell. Do you believe in—?
Burton: 650
schools invite us in every week. They invite us in. These
are smart principals from boards who actually have thought
through this and realised that Christian values are so
important to the way we think and live.
Hines: They are
misinformed. Many of the schools do not even know who is
taking their Bibles in Schools lessons. I took a survey of
schools two years ago, and I found about a quarter of the
people who had CEC lessons in them didn’t know it was CEC
who was running them. They just take- They think,
‘Here’s a nice bible person. Invite them in and give our
teachers a rest for half an hour.’ They do not know what
you are doing. They don’t know that you are using this
syllabus, which is one of the most evangelical syllabuses in
Australasia- Your own organisation doesn’t know- Have you
seen this book?
Burton: Yes, we have.
Hines: Do you
use it?
Burton: We don’t use it, no.
Hines: You do.
It’s being used in Foxton School. It is being used in
Oamaru. Our researchers have found that you disowned this
several years ago and said- Simon Greening spoke at a
meeting where I was present and said you were dropping this
in 2014. You did not drop it. You are still using
it.
Let’s give Mr Burton a right of
reply.
Burton: I understand that, and
I think that, you know, as New Zealand’s largest volunteer
organisation, with over 60,000 volunteers, there will be
times when- there will be situations when the wrong syllabus
may be used. We will address that, we will take action, and
that’s why from the 1st of July, we have Life Choices
only, David, and that will be what will be guiding us
throughout New Zealand in every classroom we go into. And we
go in there knowing- We go in there quite clearly- Here I am
on The Nation saying that we don’t evangelise, so we’re
actually very open and upfront about that, and we stick to
our-
But you are encouraging people to believe
in God. That’s the purpose of it – to encourage people
to believe in God.
Burton: Well, to
consider God, and the foundation of our country.
Hines:
Would you agree that this book is evangelism?
Burton:
It’s not about evangelism, no.
Hines: This book is.
This one is.
Burton: It’s about life choices.
Hines:
No, this is not life ch- I’m talking about
Connect.
Burton: It’s about the scripture- using
stories from scripture to illustrate great ways in which we
should all live.
Hines: This book has at the end of it a
passage which says, ‘This is what to do when a child wants
to become a Christian. Teach them this prayer of confession
of their sins. Take them along to their local church.’
That is evangelism.
Okay. Mr Hines, I just
want to address the point that Mr Burton has raised, which
is schools can opt out of this; it’s up to the board of
trustees. If they don’t want this taught in their schools,
they are fully at liberty to say, ‘We don’t want you.’
So it’s a choice already, isn’t
it?
Hines: It’s a very painful
choice for many, many children, because most non-religious
people do not want to advertise in front of their friends
that they are non-religious, but Bible in Schools, they have
to say- This happened to McClintock. His daughter was opted
out and was humiliated as a result. People are afraid to opt
their kids out, and their parents are afraid to complain. In
one school in the South Island, parents were told- They had
a web page of their own and shared their opposition. The
school got hold of this list of people and said, ‘Stop
your complaints or we will publish your names in our school
newsletter.’ They used blackmail. This is CEC blackmailing
people if they protest against them.
Burton: There’s a
lot of misinformation, Lisa, around this, a lot of emotion,
and even in the McClintock case, it’s not a fait accompli
in terms of what actually really happened. I think we’ve
got to realise that in schools, we move kids around all day,
in and out of classrooms, for a whole range of reasons, and
principals do that. I mean, these are smart people, and I
think that they would be disappointed if they felt that
people were thinking that, you know, ‘Can’t schools
handle this?’ Yes, we can. We can do that, and I think
you’ve got to take the emotion out of it and say, look,
what we’re trying to do is actually really really good for
our country.
Mr Hines, taking the emotion out
of it, what is wrong with kids being taught morals? You
know, do to others as you would like to have done to you;
you know, turn the other cheek; love your enemy. What’s
wrong with those moral
messages?
Hines: Nothing wrong with
those morals, but the wrong this is that the Christians are
presuming that they are the only ones that have it and are
arrogantly sending their amateur teachers in and giving-
These are unprofessional people. They do not know how to be
fair to other religions. They can only see life through a
Christian lens, and they spread prejudice against atheists
and against other religions.
Mr Burton, how do
you think a student who is, say, from a Muslim family would
feel in one of these classes?
Burton:
Certainly, our aim is not to put any other religion down. I
think you’ll find that there’s a lot to be had in the
synergies between the religions, and I think if I look back
to- and I look at some of our classes today – kids are
affirmed, they’re encouraged, their individuality and so
on. There’s a lot of laughter and banter that goes on. And
I don’t think at any one stage, anyone, David, is going to
put someone else down just to elevate ourselves. That’s
not the way we work, and we would address that, David, if
that was the case. If you’re getting feedback around that,
we would address that and make sure that that doesn’t
happen.
Hines: Well, if I get into court, you will get
the feedback from Red Beach School, from schools in the
South Island, of parents who pull their kids out of schools
because they got so much bullying in their schools. This
happened in Tanya’s place. It happened in Red Beach.
It’s happened-
Burton: It’s not good when it
happens.
Hines: Well, it’s been happening there for
years.
All right, we’re out of time, so we
do need to leave it there. Thank you so much, David Hines
and Murray Burton. Thank you to both of you for joining us
this morning.
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