What the
Media and AU Doesn’t
Want in
Missouri Science Classes
By
Mike Riddle
If you happen to live in or near the state
of Missouri, you may have heard that Answers in Genesis (AiG)
has been in the news quite a bit recently in the aptly named “Show-Me State.”
What turned out to be a speaking engagement in Missouri on May 8th grew into a
statewide controversy, with one of the nation’s leading newspapers, The St. Louis Post-Dispatch, editorializing
against AiG calling us “anti-science.” What brought
on this media barrage?
On Monday, May 8th, I had the opportunity to
speak in a public high school and middle school in Potosi, Missouri. The principal
of the high school—along with the superintendent of
schools—had
invited me more than six months ago to speak about science topics and show
students how science works. On the Friday before, the Washington, DC-based
group Americans United for Separation of Church and State (AU) got wind of
this and issued threats of a lawsuit against the school district if I were
to speak because I would allegedly prompt “students to adopt a creationist
religious alternative…which cannot lawfully be presented…[and]
would be a substantial constitutional violation,” declared AU. Why the threats,
even though it was clear I would not speak on religious subjects? Well, because
I work for AiG, a creation-based ministry, AU deemed
it ‘unconstitutional’ for me to speak in a public school—regardless of the
content of the talks I was to give.
Prior to giving my talk, I had the
presentation reviewed by the superintendent, Potosi science teachers and others
to examine it for any religious content. All agreed that the presentation
contained only science that was relevant to what was being taught in science
classes. The title of the talk (I gave it six times) was The Origin of Life: A Scientific Approach.
Thus the school administrators did not cancel the meetings as demanded by AU in
its May 5 fax/letter.
The day before the school event, I was
contacted by Channel 2 News in St. Louis to do a TV interview. A news crew came
to the church where I was speaking on Sunday. Though the questions posed were
reasonable (and I kept my answers related to science and not the Bible or creation) and said that my
presentation would focus on encouraging students to go into a field of science,
the reporter (or a producer back in the studio) aired very little of what I
said. Most of the attention was given to AU and how my speaking in the school
would be unconstitutional.
The following day, all six of my school presentations
were observed by teachers and the press. No one found fault in what I taught.
Even a member of the press, after hearing my talk, said: “I don’t know why I am
even here.” After each talk, someone from the press interviewed me, and for
some of them, it appeared that they had more interest in creating a sensational
story.
A final TV interview was done in the parking
lot of the school. The questions were hostile and were not designed to really
report on what had occurred that day in the school. She asked, for example: “Why
I was causing so much controversy?” I responded that it was not me causing the
commotion, but the group called Americans United for Separation of Church and
State, who did not even show up (or if they did, lacked the courage to even
speak to me). Also, we did not invite ourselves to the school—the school
district called us.
She then asked why a “religious person”
should be teaching in a science class. I responded by asking her if that means
she would ban great scientists like Isaac Newton or Michael Faraday from
teaching in schools. She appeared flustered by that challenge. The rest of her
questions centered on religion and why I was there. I continued to answer each
of her questions with a challenge or question back to her, which continued to
keep her off guard (sometimes she had to agree with me). To my knowledge, that
interview has never aired, but I don’t wonder why.
As I reflect on that hectic Monday in front
of the classes and the media, it reinforced the fact that not only are our
children held hostage by misleading and false science (“molecules-to-man”
evolution), but that the secular news media is often more interested in
sensationalism than telling the full story. In addition, the media is often
more inclined to portray Americans United for Separation of Church and State in
a positive light.
As I have read the news stories and TV
reports that came out regarding my visit I could not find any mention made by
the press that my talk was strictly scientific and relevant to what the
students were learning in their science classes.
Looking back, I have come to realize that in
today’s culture wars in the United States, we no longer have to be concerned
just with the secular media and a secular school system turning the minds
of young people and adults against the Bible;
we also see a self-appointed and so-called “civil liberties” watchdog group
(AU) that is often joining by the ACLU and People for the American Way as
a trinity of opposition to anything that would question evolutionary dogma
in the classroom. In the “Show-Me” state, most students still continue to
be prevented by these three groups from being shown the real nature of science
as it relates to the origin of life. So much for encouraging
the development of critical thinking skills for students, one of the hallmarks
of education and scientific inquiry.
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Mike Riddle is a speaker and curriculum
writer for Answers in Genesis–USA headquartered in Hebron, KY. To learn more about AiG
visit their web site at www.answersingenesis.org.