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Texas Approves Mandatory Bible Reading in Schools

The Texas State Board of Education has voted to require public school students to read selected passages from the Bible as part of a new statewide literature curriculum.

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The Republican-controlled board approved the required reading list on Friday by a 9-5-1 vote. The list includes excerpts from the Book of Exodus for fifth-grade students, The Shepherd's Psalm for seventh graders and other biblical passages.

The new curriculum also features works by E.B. White, Shel Silverstein, Aesop, Kurt Vonnegut and Elie Wiesel. It will affect more than five million students enrolled in Texas public schools.

Bible added to mandatory literature list

Board members debated the proposal before the vote, discussing the timeline for implementation and whether the changes would limit teachers' ability to decide which works should be taught in their classrooms.

Supporters cite historical and literary value

Julie Pickren, a Republican member of the Texas State Board of Education, previously told The Texas Tribune that the selected readings are intended to give students a better understanding of the moral and philosophical traditions that have shaped Western civilization.

She said studying original writings, speeches, sermons and other foundational texts allows students to evaluate ideas while gaining a deeper understanding of the principles that have influenced both the United States and Texas.

Supporters have argued that the Bible holds significant literary and historical value and should be studied alongside other influential works.

Critics raise constitutional concerns

Opponents of the measure argued that requiring a state-approved reading list reduces teachers' professional independence.

Board member Evelyn Brooks said teachers have selected classroom books for many years and should retain that responsibility. She argued that imposing a mandatory list takes away their autonomy and said she believes the policy is unconstitutional.

The debate over the proposal focused not only on the inclusion of biblical passages but also on whether the state should dictate required reading for every public school classroom.

Experts question broader impact

Antero Garcia, a professor at Stanford University's Graduate School of Education and a former high school English teacher, described the new curriculum as a major shift in what students across Texas will study during their years in public education.

Garcia said he believes the measure is the first of its kind at the state level and suggested other states with similar political priorities could adopt comparable policies.

He acknowledged that the Bible has long been taught as an important work of literature in secular educational settings and said its literary significance should not be overlooked.

However, Garcia noted that no other religious texts appear on the mandatory reading list. He said repeated exposure to a single religious work throughout students' education, without comparable study of other faith traditions, could influence students toward Christianity over time.

The decision marks a significant change to Texas' public school literature curriculum and is expected to shape classroom instruction across the state's education system.

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Adapted by ASEAN Now. Source 28 June 2026

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Mr Awesome Senior Member

Mr Awesome

Member
5 hours ago, NoDisplayName said:

The proponents of "states rights" will change their minds when Minnesota mandates studying excerpts from the Koran as literature.

Similar to how "religious freedom" is an allah-given human right until those "others" put their holy icons on a hillside overlooking their town, or the church of satan installs a small monument on the courthouse lawn next to the granite block with the 10 commandants etched onto it.

The left will fully support students studying the Koran in Minnesota. Islam is the only religion that the left grants their approval.

LosLobo Platinum Member

LosLobo

Advanced Member
22 minutes ago, Mr Awesome said:

The left will fully support students studying the Koran in Minnesota.


The left US Constitution will fully supports students studying the Koran in Minnesota.

Roadsternut Gold Member

Roadsternut

Advanced Member
16 hours ago, stevenl said:

Its impact doesn't make it a masterpiece.

Source for your claim "From a purely secular, cultural standpoint, the Bible is widely considered one of the greatest literary masterpieces in human history" please,

Generative AI. Word for word, copy pasted. A distilled "opinion" drawn from the Guardian amongst others. He used a machine to think for him.

Problem is, with comparing the Bible, in all its forms to the works of Shakespeare, William wrote everything he published. No one knows who wrote the bible. We know it wasn't one person. It was innumerable peoples, over centuries, chopping, changing, massage the script, Its basically an anthology compiled over centuries by dozens of authors, containing law codes, genealogies, ritual instructions, historical chronicles, letters, and religious teachings alongside passages of extraordinary poetry and narrative. It was not written for literary artistry. So consequently, bits of it, as literature, are <deleted>. The original Aramaic, Greek and Hebrew versions have zero literary value in the modern word. Any impact comes from later English translations. The first go was by John Wycliffe and his followers, and he was frankly a nut job. William Tyndale took a stab at putting the New Testament into what was then modern English, but he put his own spin on things. Myles Coverdale took care of the filthier bits. The King James version was basically Bible by committee; a committee of 47. And like all committees, they would argue the toss between themselves.

The Bible might be extremely influential, but from a literary point of view, its far from it. It lacks any narrative unity, huge junks are, frankly boring, especially the bits that go through genealogies, census records, citing architectural specs, describing in excruciating detail, religious regulations and setting tribal boundaries. It does little to develop characters, in the way Shakespeare did. It uses repetitious language, because that's the style of Hebrew, but in English "and it came to pass" become formulaic.

People confuse its influence with literary value. Its not the yardstick to use to instruct people how to write prose. Saying that its just about spending a couple of days with some selected quotes will actually devalue the influence of the Bible, because those reviews of snippets will lack all context. Imagine thinking you understand Shakespeare you only considered the famous St Swithin’s Day speech from Henry V. It reduces the Bible to a series of memes.

Obviously proponents of this idea don't want this, so they will push for compulsory religious education. When I was growing up, we went to Sunday School. That was the choice of the parents, not the school. I know for a fact that American churches also run sunday schools for kids. Why isn't this enough?

The King James Bible as one of the most influential works in English literary culture than as an unequivocally great literary masterpiece on the same artistic grounds as Shakespeare's plays or the great novels and epics.

Screenshot 2026-06-29 at 21-05-00 From a purely secular cultural standpoint the Bible is widely considered one of the greatest literary masterpieces in human history. Its poetic impact on the English language structural varie[...].png

Roadsternut Gold Member

Roadsternut

Advanced Member
11 hours ago, placnx said:

Ulysses: Do you mean the novel by James Joyce, or the Odyssey by Homer?

People in Appalachia until recently spoke Shakespearean English.

And Shakespearean English is not "old English". Its modern English. Americans everyday use Shakespearean words that the British have long stopped using every day (but we understand what they mean). But its not true people in the Appalachians were recently speaking Shakespearean English. Its their accent which was closer to Shakespeare, not really the words themselves. And you go into stores in some of those islands off North Carolina, and you'd swear you are being served by people from Cornwall who had lived in the US for a bit.

When Americans say "I have gotten tired", they are speaking the same English as Shakespeare. The British wouldn't say that (or rather, they have started saying that, due to the influence of American TV shows). Phrasing that the British dismiss as Americanisms are often actually an archaic form of English (but there are also genuine Americanisms).

Maybe some here were taught Shakespeare using some sort of dumbed down Cliff notes version.

BusyB Platinum Member

BusyB

Advanced Member
On 6/29/2026 at 8:28 AM, fredwiggy said:

In God We Trust is still on our money.

What that means is that money is god and that's all they trust. Anything else is communism.

Jingthing Legendary Member

Jingthing

Advanced Member

Clearly unconstitutional. But to the white nationalist maga fascists that's a feature not a bug.

fredwiggy Star Member

fredwiggy

Advanced Member
57 minutes ago, BusyB said:

What that means is that money is god and that's all they trust. Anything else is communism.

It's based on the country's spiritual faith, which helps it's prosperity.

SiSePuede419 Platinum Member

SiSePuede419

Advanced Member

Matthew 25:31-46

The Sheep and the Goats

Well, MAGA does claim Trump is The GOAT

TRUE

tomazbodner Ruby Member

tomazbodner

Advanced Member

It could be worse. Kids could be forced to read The Art of the Deal.

Emdog Platinum Member

Emdog

Advanced Member

There is a catch: First they will have to teach the little no neck monsters to read. Problem solved

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