The value of education
Is it desirable to encourage greater religious involvement in
American public life and increased recognition of the vital role
played by religion in the building of our country? Is a secular state
and “desacralized” society alien to both Americanism and Judaism?
There are those who embrace a separationist orthodoxy while others
affirm it should not be a wall but a curtain between “church and
state.” In my own community, the unprecedented expansion of Jewish
day school education in America has prompted an increasing number of
Rabbis, Jewish intellectuals and communal leaders to rethink their
earlier opposition to state aid.
I believe it is in America’s best interest to support those
seeking religious education. Government must recognize that every
well-educated citizen is a priceless asset to America’s future. It
cannot be argued that the product of a theological education is going
to be a less profitable investment of government funds, simply
because he engaged in a comprehensive religious education.
I submit that many of the great defenders of our Western values
drew their vision and strength from the moral beliefs presented to
them through religious instruction. It is my view that freedom cannot
be preserved without religion. Certainly, those who truly live out
their faith in America are the ones who attain the utmost
imperviousness to the scourges corroding our society and undermining
its security.
Believing as I do that those who study and apply the tenets of
faith are among the most important building blocks of our society, I
conclude that aiding them in this pursuit can only contribute to the
national good. The wall of division between state and church must
feature gates if that wall is not to blockade our civilization and
starve it to death.
RABBI MARK MILLER
Temple Bat Yahm
Newport Beach
While a student at the Episcopal Theological School, 1968-71, I
received notice from my draft board changing my selective service
classification from exemption as an undergraduate student at Cal to a
“4-D” exemption as a seminarian.
My contemporaries were being drafted and going either to war or
jail; and I’d gone to seminary to examine great questions about God,
human nature, mortality, morality, ethics and Jesus as the Christ,
not to dodge the draft. So I sent my “4-D” card back to my selective
service center asking to be eligible for the draft and protesting
that governmental decisions should not affect my theological studies.
Their response was to send a new “4-D” card with a packet of legal
excerpts saying, essentially, that because I was enrolled at an
accredited school of theology, I had to be classified “4-D” whether
or not I liked it! This began a lengthy exchange from my desk in
Cambridge, Mass., with selective service authorities in North
Hollywood. I was neither drafted nor jailed. I received no
taxpayer-funded scholarships.
I still think that government and theological studies are like oil
and water or, maybe, water and wine. Theological schools are
currently our society’s best resource for study of humanity’s great
questions (God and goodness, morality and human nature) and our
culture craves such examinations. We want to know how God is real and
whether it is an endless void or he is angry or she is just annoyed.
We yearn to know if human nature is basically good or horrid. We
seek understandings of right from wrong. To this end, our government
must find ways of supporting open-ended, nonsectarian,
inter-religious, multi-faith approaches to examination of humanity’s
central questions.
THE VERY REV. CANON
PETER D. HAYNES
St. Michael & All Angels
Episcopal Church
Corona del Mar
Public funds should not be used to pay for the training of clergy
for their ministry. I think most people would not want to see their
tax dollars used to prepare religious leaders to promote viewpoints
with which they strongly disagree, but would affirm their right to do
it on their own dime. The First Amendment ensures that no one
religion or certain favored religions will dominate or be supported
by government, and that all religions can be practiced freely.
The Supreme Court quite rightly upheld exclusion of scholarship
funds by Washington state from students pursing a “devotional
theology” degree. It is noteworthy that the state did not exclude
students from attending a church-affiliated institution (in this
case, Assembly of God) or from taking theology classes. As an
instructor in comparative religion at Cal State Fullerton, I
enthusiastically support the academic study of religions at both the
high school and college levels, and this court decision does not in
any way undermine support for this type of education.
Quite different is the study of theology in preparation for
ministry at a religious institution. As Justice Rehnquist says,
“Training someone to lead a congregation is an essentially religious
endeavor” and “majoring in devotional theology is akin to a religious
calling.” When I studied for my master’s degree in theology at Loyola
University in Chicago, our courses were entirely focused on Catholic
doctrine, history and spirituality, and most students, lay and
clerical, were there to better absorb and espouse Catholic teachings
in their ministries. Some of our classes started with prayer. Justice
Thomas, in his dissent in Locke vs. Davey, makes much of the point
that the study of theology (“the study of the nature of God and
religious truth”) can be academic rather than devotional or designed
to “induce religious faith,” but I am not persuaded that this
distinction should justify public funding of it.
While there may be public funding for those taking some courses in
Buddhism or Zen in public or private universities, I would not expect
to see funding for those who are preparing for leadership at Zen
Centers, temples or monasteries.
THE REV. DEBORAH BARRETT
Zen Center of Orange County
Costa Mesa
I know of several people who worked government jobs and were
forced for one reason or another into retirement early (mostly due to
medical reasons). One even worked for the city of Costa Mesa. The
government offered to retrain them in the field of their choice. They
chose ministry and thus required theological training. I would hate
to have seen them denied this opportunity.
Having said that, the government would need to have a blind eye to
the color of that training. They should not allow Christians to study
and Buddhists not to study. I see no problem with people training for
future occupations with government help as long as the government
isn’t is in the business of discriminating between faiths.
RIC OLSEN
Senior Associate Pastor,
Harbor Trinity Church
Costa Mesa
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.