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On Oct 8, 9:15*am, Gene wrote:
On Thu, 8 Oct 2009 05:24:40 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: Well maybe not. But seeing the creation, religion,evolution thread is getting so long, I thought I'd ask a hypothetical question. Well maybe it's not as hypothetical , but here goes. If an English lit teacher was passing out assignments assignments for students to give a book report. *Various books are chosen, some long , some short. OK, the list has several *options* None are specifically required. Here's a sample list: "To Kill a Mockingbird" "All Quiet one the Western Front" "Gulliver's Travels" "Moby Dick" "The book of Matthew" "Oliver Twist" "The Trial" etc, etc. That is a rather complex question. Would we be describing the reading assignment as a selection of one out of seven fictional books? Or, can you choose the non fiction book versus one of the six novels..... On the face of it, given that there are choices, it would seem to be acceptable. However, I would cry fowl on the basis that the class is *English Literature* which, by definition, are those texts written in English. If we are going to offer everything translated into English as fair game, we might as well just change the course title and syllabus to World Literature. Given the course title, if the teacher is compelled to offer some sort of link to a religious text, I think the Book of Common Prayer would be more appropriate. Notice included is the Gospel account of Matthew. *Would this be considered as promoting religion? Probably, due to the limitations of choice. Christianity is a religion developed from Judaism, all of which developed in the Middle East, a region that spans southwestern Asia, southeastern Europe, and northeastern Africa.... and as far as I can tell really has little to do with "English Literature" either geographically, culturally, linguistically, philosophically, etc. Thus, why offering a Christian text as an acceptable "English Text" without also including the (surely translated) Jewish, Buddhist, Mormon, Sikhism, Zoroastrianism, Islam, Confucianism, Shinto, etc., etc. texts.... without even an honorable mention to Classical Paganism which WAS the original English Religious Literature.... is a bit cloudy. AND! Even if it was required reading. could it be used for literary purposes only? I doubt that it could be, in this context. Authorship/Style? Nobody knows who wrote the Book of Matthew and one can't really discuss Matthew without inclusion of the other three gospels, most notably Mark (and the non-extant Quelle source), from which the Book of Matthew was plagiarized. So, what are you going to ask the students to *do* with that text in an English Literature course? -- Forté Agent 5.00 Build 1171 "Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things you didn't do than by the ones you did do. So, throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover." * - Unknown Grady-White Gulfstream, out of Oak Island, NC. Homepage *http://pamandgene.tranquilrefuge.net/boating/the_boat/my_boat.htm- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - First off, it wasn't a "bible study", Gene. and it wasn't to be such. It was like any other book report. to give an over all critique of what the author was trying to convey. And honestly, I really don't rememebr what I wrte about. that was in 1972 and I dont' have the paper. No one *had* to chose the Matthew account. |
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