Easy as a Sunday Morning | thebereancall.org

TBC Staff

We often complain about public schools and how terribly they’re educating our children these days, continually suggesting one solution after another to improve scores and produce more well-rounded students ready for the real world. Unfortunately, these solutions include everything under the heavens except for the one thing that could actually help: religion.

Let me point your attention to an article I recently came across. The article recapped a webinar by Dr. Pat Fagan, a longtime clinical therapist and social scientist specializing in studies relating to family and religious issues. According to Fagan, children performed better in school when they came from an intact family (no surprise there), but they performed even better when that intact family regularly attended church.

“The impact of religious worship is massive and powerful right throughout education,” Fagan said. “And it is the totally neglected aspect in education research. This is a scandal in the social sciences, that this data is not made known.”

I decided to track down down Fagan’s research myself, and found that the data really did show that children in actively religious and intact families performed better in school than others.

Today we see church attendance in decline, with only 24 percent of U.S. teens noting that religion is very important in their lives. At the same time, we also see academic scores declining, the Nation’s Report Card recently reporting that eighth-grade civics saw its first ever score drop, while eighth-grade history scores are the lowest they’ve been since 1994.
We can push those facts aside and insist there’s no connection … but what if there is, and what if we’re turning a blind eye to the only thing that can really help our children succeed?

I recently went to a Carole Joy Seid seminar on education...and she began her talk by telling parents they can homeschool successfully with just a Bible, a library card, and a good math curriculum. Given the fact that her son was raised and educated on this philosophy (and now has his Ph.D.) maybe she’s on to something. After all, that philosophy fits perfectly with this research from Fagan.

In the end, perhaps improving the academic standing of the nation’s students isn’t as hard as we’ve made it out to be. Perhaps it’s really just as easy as … a Sunday morning.

https://intellectualtakeout.org/2023/05/easy-sunday-morning-annieholmquist/