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I'm delighted to be here, and
I see a very eager class today. And I'm sure you've learned a
lot until now. But the area that I've been asked to cover is the
history of public education in this country. And I don't know
how many of you have read my book, Is Public Education Necessary? How many have read it? Well,
good, then you have an idea of what I'm going to be discussing.
I strongly suggest that you do get the book when it's becomes
available shortly. It will be published by the Paradigm
Company, the same company that published NEA Trojan Horse and
American Education. The interesting thing about that
book was I had originally intended to write a critique of contemporary
education and I thought it would be a good idea to start the book
with a kind of summary of how public education got started
in this country. And I thought that I could devote
a single chapter, the first chapter of that book, to the origin of
public education. And the question that I wanted
to answer was why did the American people turn to the government
to become their educator? Why did the American people give
government the responsibility of education when they were so
freedom-loving? It was so contrary to what had
gone on prior to that period. Certainly it was, there's no
mention of education in the Constitution. We had the freest education system
in the world. And certainly we had the best
educated people in the world. So why, what was it that made
the American people turn to government? Turn over education to the government? So that the government would
own and operate the schools in America. Well, I thought that
I could answer that question very quickly, but it took me
four years of laborious research. And by the time I was through,
I had 12 chapters just on the origin. And I decided to... that that in and of itself would
make a good book, so I have the book published with the same
original title, Is Public Education Necessary? But that book only
covers public education from the origins, its colonial origins,
up to about the 1840s in this country. The NEA book really
picks up where the other book left off and brings the story
down to the present. But I discovered in doing this
historical survey that American education can really be divided
into three very distinct periods. The first period, beginning with
the colonial days, goes to about, I'd say, 1820 or 1830 at the
very latest. And I call this period, this
first period, the Calvinist period. Why do I call it the Calvinist
period? Because at that time, most Americans still believed
that the The spiritual content of education
was very important. Much more important than any
secular content. In other words, because they
believed that the purpose of life was to glorify God. That's the way people thought
in those days. The purpose of life was to glorify
God and therefore an education should be built around that idea.
And the original schools that were founded in this country
were basically religious institutions. They were founded that way because
that was Calvin's idea of what education was about. You know,
this country was founded basically on the ideas of John Calvin.
And there's a very interesting pamphlet that I picked up the
other day entitled, The Influence of Calvin and Calvinism Upon
the American Heritage. And there's no doubt in my mind
and in the minds of many other scholars, particularly Reverend
Rush Dooney, that If there hadn't been a John Calvin, there would
have never been a United States of America as we know it. Certainly
not the way, certainly there would have never been an American
Revolution because John Calvin was quite distinct from Martin
Luther in his view of government. You see, Luther did not see the church as really
being separated from the state. He saw them more or less as one.
And he made an arrangement with the princes, the German princes,
whereby they would become the heads of the churches in their
principality. So there was a very close cooperation
between Luther and the state, or the government. And when Luther
created schools, there was this idea that they would also serve
the the polity of the community now
Calvin came from an entirely different tradition of course
he was born some years later Luther preceded him but Calvin
fled from France as a refugee he was persecuted by the French
king and therefore he understood the power of the state to persecute
religion and he had no love of the state per se when he settled
in Geneva of course Geneva was a republic was not a monarchy
and Because he was persecuted and his idea was that the church
should be independent of the state He maintained that idea
of independence from the state The church would influence the
state but remain completely independent of it That's interesting that The first reforms Calvin wished
to see introduced in Geneva concerned the Lord's Supper, church, praise,
religious instruction of youth, and the regulation of marriage.
Calvin did three things for Geneva, all of which went far beyond
its walls. He gave its church a trained ministry, its homes
an educated people who could give a reason for their faith.
and the whole city and heroic soul which enabled the little
town to stand forth as the citadel and city of refuge for the oppressed
Protestants of Europe. So you have that tradition of
the Protestants being a persecuted, the Calvinists being a persecuted
sect in Europe. And of course, the reason why
the Calvinists came to the United, or came to the colonies, to the
New World, was because they wanted to create an uncompromising Bible
commonwealth, in a place where they could. Now I'm sure that
there are Christians in this country today who would love
to do the same thing, if only they could find some continent,
some uninhabited continent, and they'd leave all this garbage
behind in the United States, you know. But unfortunately we've got to
stay, we have nowhere to go unless somebody wants to find a pleasant
planet somewhere else, but the Lord has not ordained another
world for us he's given us and put us in this world we were
made for this this particular planet and so we shall have to
make our way here but you can see what I mean that they were
separative the Puritans they did not like what Queen Elizabeth
they didn't like the the brand of Christianity that Queen Elizabeth
espoused and they felt that the Anglican Church was too hierarchical
the Queen was the head of the church they wanted an independent
church and they wanted a commonwealth in which God was sovereign and
God's law was supreme and so they came here. Now what kind
of schools do you think that people like that would create
in a commonwealth like this? No sooner had they gotten off
the boats and as you know Plymouth was settled in 1620 but the real,
the really important settlement took place in Boston which was
settled in around 1630 And by 1635, you had the creation of
Harvard College. Now here in the middle of the
wilderness, a settlement of perhaps about 5,000 Christians at the
time, Puritans, Calvinists, they were already teaching Latin,
Greek, and Hebrew to the future leaders, particularly the ministers,
because to them, The Bible was central, and of course these
were the languages of theological literature and of the Bible.
Greek, Latin, and Hebrew. These were very important to
understanding the Bible. And in 1647, the legislature
of Massachusetts enacted a law, what is known as the first public
school law in America. I know that whenever you pick
up a history of public education in this country, they always
start there. They always say, well, the Calvinists started
it all. But this is what the law said, this is what they wanted.
This is the reason why they created these schools. What they did
was create community schools. And the reason they said was
this, and I quote it incidentally in If Public Education is Necessary,
so when you get hold of that book, you'll have the full quote. It's on page 273 of your book,
The Christian History of the Constitution of the United States,
if you want to read it along with me. It being one chief project
of that old deluder, Satan, to keep men from the knowledge of
the scriptures as in former times, by keeping them in an unknown
tongue, that is, the scriptures were not published in the language
of the population, they were written in a language that the
population could not read either in Latin or in Greek, so that
in these latter times, by persuading from the use of tongues, that
so at least the true sense and meaning of the original might
be clouded and corrupted with false glosses of deceivers to
the end that learning may not be buried in the graves of our
forefathers in church and commonwealth the lord assisting our endeavors
and then the uh their quote ends it was therefore ordered that
every township containing 50 families or householders should
forthwith set up a school in which children might be taught
to read and write and that every township containing 100 families
or householders should set up a school in which boys might
be fitted for entering Harvard College. Harvard was started
first, but then they realized they needed preparatory schools
for Harvard. And that's why they passed this
law requiring the community to set up school, but you will see
they were for a religious purpose. And it's interesting that they
refer to Satan It being one chief project of that old deluder Satan
to keep men from the knowledge of the scriptures. Of course
it is Satan's goal is to separate man from God. He's been working
at it ever since the Garden of Eden. To separate man from God. And he's done a pretty good job.
If you look at the history of the human race. He did such a
good job that God had to flood the earth. And then of course
when after the flood And God made a covenant with Noah, he
said he would never do that again, giving the human race a second
chance. And of course the rainbow, which
is now being used by the New Age as their symbol, but the
rainbow of course was the symbol of the covenant between God and
Noah, that he would never again carry out such an awful catastrophe. God has tried to reconcile himself
with man. He's tried to bridge the gap
that was created in the Garden of Eden. And so he finally reached
Abraham, chose Abraham, and chose the Jewish people as his means
of once again establishing a relationship with the human race. And then
of course, so he formed a covenant with Abraham and the chosen people. And of course, with the coming
of Christ, then the covenant was extended to all of mankind.
You can see a very, very clear plan in how all of this, in God's
way of reconciling itself with the human race. And every, every
foot of the way, Satan is always there, fighting to prevent human
beings from reaching God and trying to separate those who
have a relationship with God trying to separate them because
where does Satan want us all to be? He wants us all in hell
and he gets an awful lot of people in hell and but that has been
his that has been his goal so it's interesting that the founders
of the first public schools in America were so aware of that
that they said it being the one chief project of that old deluded
Satan to keep men from the knowledge of the scriptures therefore we
must have schools to make sure that the youngsters know the
scriptures The interesting thing today is
that Satan owns the public schools in America today because religion
has been completely removed from them. He's taken over. But getting
back to that early period, that will come later on when I discuss
the present. But back in those days, that
was the reason. They wanted to make sure that the youngsters
had a sufficient religious upbringing. And so the schools were basically
Calvinistic in their nature and in their purpose. because men
believed that the purpose of life was to glorify God. Well, it's interesting that at
Harvard University, it wasn't quite a university then, but
at the college, it did not take very long for Satan to begin
doing his work among the intellectuals. Interesting that that's where
Satan finds the most fertile field within the schools, among
the intellectuals. And it was at Harvard that the
Unitarian heresy began to arise. And as a matter of fact, the
Great Awakening, who is the famous leader of the Great Awakening?
No, no, not Whitfield, Jonathan. Oh, Jonathan Edwards, yes. Jonathan
Edwards, in fact, was a reaction to the liberalization of the
clergy. And he brought a much stronger
brand of Calvinism. to America in the 1740s, which
provided the basis for the revolution in this country. It was Jonathan
Edwards' brand of Calvinism that gave the emotional impetus to
the revolution. But Harvard had its first liberal
president, believe it or not, in around 1700. So that the Calvinist
commonwealth was under attack from the very beginning. The schools, gradually private
schools began to replace some of the public schools because
they weren't terribly efficient. And as the colony grew and commerce
and there were different denominations coming into New England, you
had more private schools being founded than the so-called community
or common schools as they were known. Well, the Unitarian heresy is very
important to understand because it really is the beginning of
American liberalism. What was it that the Unitarians
did not like about Calvinism? What of course they did not like
was Calvin's view of man. That man was innately depraved,
that he was the fallen creature, fallen in the garden and of course
was a flawed to praise character and of course
in Catholic theology it's known as original sin but Calvin's
view was much stronger because he had he didn't he never minced
words the beauty about Calvin is that he was absolutely honest
and forthright and he had no particular love for the intellectuals
because he was one of them himself he had spent all of his life
in universities and he knew exactly what they were like And he loved
to cut them down to size, you know. He knew about, he knew
their pride. He knew this intellectual pride
and he knew what it did to people. And so he told it like it is. What human nature is like. Of
course he didn't have the benefit of seeing Adolf Hitler and Joseph
Stalin and Pol Pot and a few other choice human beings. But
he would not have been surprised. He would not have been surprised
by Joseph Mengele. He would have said, well, there
you are, that's human nature. When you separate man from God,
and he thinks he's God, he's capable of the worst atrocities
and barbarisms. And Joseph Mengele came from
a good German family. He went to the university. He
had all the advantages of German culture and civilization, and
yet he was just as barbaric as any savage. perhaps even more so because
he had that brilliance and cleverness to do what he did. But Calvin's
view of human nature went against the Unitarian grain. First of
all, they didn't like the idea of sin. And you can understand
why. Sinners don't want to be told
that they're sinning. And they decided that Christ was not divine.
Now it's interesting that they denied the divinity of Christ.
They said he was a great teacher. I don't know how an imposter
can become a great teacher or a liar. I've never read anywhere
where the Unitarians were ever questioned on that point. Well,
if Christ is such a great teacher, how come he's an imposter? After
all, if he is what he says he is, he is divine. But they decided
that Christ was not divine. They decided the man was not
innately depraved, that he was innately good. that he was in
fact perfectible. And that Calvin's views of human
nature were almost a libel against the human race. But after all, man was simply,
this was a How would you say a wish fulfillment? If you tell
a man that he's evil and depraved, he's going to act evil and depraved.
If you tell him he's wonderful, that he's basically good, perfectible,
he'll be good and perfectible. And so what they did was they
decided to get religion out of the school, to get Calvinism
out of the school. Now I would venture to say that
basically the Unitarians were hypocrites who used religious
rhetoric really to just undermine Christianity in general, that
they were basically headed toward atheism. That their brand of
Christianity simply does not hold water. And the pay dirt
was when Emerson made his speech at Harvard University, his famous
speech to the Divinity School, which so scandalized even conservative
Unitarians, who thought he had gone too far, because he just
about said that, you know, it's all a lot of... the Old and New
Testament is just a lot of mythology, and then he went off on this
pantheism. That was the new wave of the
future pantheism, imported from Germany. Hegelianism, imported
from Germany. Well, it was the Unitarians who
started the public school movement. It's very interesting. I began,
when I was doing research on that, on how the movement for
public education got started, I came across all kinds of names
of people, organizations, but I didn't know what the common
denominator was until I began to piece all of these people
together. And it turned out they were all Unitarians. So obviously
what had happened was this. The Calvinists believed in salvation
through God, through Jesus Christ. The Unitarians decided that salvation
could only be attained through education. Because even though
they denied that man was innately depraved, they still had to deal
with the problem of evil. Why does man do the evil things
he does? What is the cause of evil? Well,
they said the cause of evil is ignorance, poverty, and social
injustice. Those are the causes of evil.
So if we get rid of ignorance, then we can get rid of poverty,
and once we get rid of poverty then we will have eliminated
social injustice, we will have a perfect society, no reason
for people to be evil. And that would be the means of
human salvation, of human perfectibility, and so they said Obviously we've
got to get rid of this religious training that tells people that
they are innately depraved and that their only salvation is
through Jesus Christ. And this is exactly what they
did. They proceeded to create a public school system that would
be secular or non-sectarian. They couldn't go completely over
into a secular education. First they had to go into a non-sectarian,
a kind of watered-down Christianity with which everyone could agree.
Now at the same time that the Unitarians were preaching their new brand
of salvation, something else was going on in Europe. A man
by the name of Robert Owen, the founder of socialism, the father
of socialism, I thought that he had come up
with the most revolutionary idea of all time. He said that man
had absolutely no responsibility for the creation of his own character.
He said all of it is environmental. He said you can train a child
to be a demon or an angel. He said children are plastic.
There's no such thing as innate evil. innate depravity, that
you can train people to be as you want them. He furthermore
said that religion was the cause of all of our problems, of all
the evil in the world, and our competitive capitalist system
was also the cause of evil. So he decided that a communist
system, a totally secular communist system, would solve all of humanity's
problems. You'd have total happiness for
everyone. But he said you've got to start
with the little kids in the schools because that's where it's at.
You have to start molding them very young. You have to get them
away from their parents because their parents have this horrible
influence, particularly religious influence. And first you've got
to get them away from their parents. And so he preached this in New
Lanark, Scotland, where he had his weeding plant. He was a textile manufacturer.
It's interesting how so many of these industrialists become
communists. But in any case, he believed
in it. He believed in it so strongly that he eventually sold his plants
and devoted his entire life to promoting communism. Well, he
came to this country in 1826 or so to set up the first communist
colony, the first secular communist colony in the world. He wanted
to prove that it would work. And the only place where he could
do that was in the United States of America. There's no other
place where he could do that. So he came to the United States
and he went to Indiana and he bought a property that had been
owned by the Rappites. The Rappites were a religious
communal group, a religious group of German origin who had settled
in Harmony, Indiana on the Wabash River. And he bought that property
and created his secular, atheistic communist colony called New Harmony. Well, it attracted a tremendous
amount of attention in the United States. Unitarians were particularly
interested in it. And of course, he attracted a
lot of intellectuals, a lot of academic people. And the colony
lasted all of two years. It was a complete failure after
two years. And the reason he gave for the
failure was that even though you may believe in communism,
If you've been educated under the old system, you simply cannot
adapt yourself to communism. You simply cannot become a good
communist because your early training has spoiled you. And incidentally, that's one
of the reasons why the Marxists believe in killing off all of
the older people, the people who cannot be regenerated and
re-educated. It's one of the reasons they
go in for the elimination of the bourgeoisie, and they mean
extermination, what they mean is the way Pol Pot did it. In
any case, after two years he decided that since people educated
on the old system would never become good communists, therefore,
the communist movement, the socialist movement, should concentrate
on education. Get involved in the public school
movement, and create public schools in America so that the children,
from the very beginning, could be trained to become socialists.
And so he joined with the Unitarians in pushing the public school
movement. But because the Owenites, as
they were called, because they were atheists, and had gotten
such a bad reputation in this country, which was basically
a religious country, because if any of you have read Alexis
de Tocqueville's book about that very same period, you will understand
that de Tocqueville was astonished by the depth of religious faith
in this country. As a matter of fact, he said
the only reason why the American people have so much freedom is because
they are restrained by their faith. They don't go around murdering,
not because the laws tell them not to murder, but because of
their own religious faith. In other words, what the talk was
telling us, that the reason why Americans have so much freedom
is because they have so much self-control. And where does
that self-control come from? their basic religious faith. Well, in any case, so what happened? The Owenites wanted to get involved
in the public school movement, but they could not do it overtly. They did it overtly, but they
had no influence overtly, so they went underground. And so
as early as 1829, you have underground communist cells in the United
States. This is before Karl Marx. Karl Marx, I think, was in knee
pants at the time. So before Karl Marx was even around, the
Communists had already created underground cells in this country
to bring about the public school movement. And
let me quote to you a passage. And how did I find that out?
This was a very interesting discovery on my part. I was doing research
on it and I came across a very interesting man by the name of
Orestes Brownson. Orestes Brownson has an interesting
history himself. He started out as a Presbyterian,
and then he went into Universalism, then to Socialism, then to Unitarianism,
and he finally wound up as a Catholic. But it's interesting why he went
into Catholicism, because at that time, At that time, Protestantism
was going haywire in the United States. All kinds of crazy sects
were being created, and he felt that the only religion that had
any sense of authority was the Catholic Church, and that's why
at that time he finally became a Catholic, and he wrote a wonderful
book called The Convert. I highly recommend it. But in
it he said, he wrote, now he had been recruited by the Owenites,
and he had been a member of that underground organization. And
he wrote about it years later, and I came across this simply
by going through his work with a very fine-toothed comb. It
was like looking for a needle in a haystack, but then finally
I found it, and this is what he writes. He said, but the more
immediate work was to get our system of schools adopted. He's
talking about the Owenites. To this end, it was proposed
to organize the whole union secretly. very much on the plan of the
Carbonari of Europe, of whom at that time I knew nothing.
The members of this secret society were to avail themselves of all
the means in their power, each in his own locality, to form
public opinion in favor of education by the state at the public expense,
and to get such men elected to the legislatures as would be
likely to favor our purposes. how far the secret organization
extended I do not know but I do know that a considerable portion
of the state of New York was organized for I was myself one
of the agents for organizing it so you see the Owenites were
working on an underground level to organize the public school
movement the Unitarians were working above board but the Unitarians
would have nothing to do with the Owenites because the Owenites
were considered beyond the pale with their atheism well by the
time we get so By the 1830s, you had the Unitarians and the
Owenites pushing for public education. The Unitarians wanted this because
that was man's means of salvation through education. The Owenites
wanted it because if you're going to create socialism, you've got
to get the kids into these secular schools, away from religion. You have to start training them
earlier. Well, how were the Protestants brought in on this? What convinced
the Protestants to go along with this public school movement?
Well, also at about that time, the 1830s, something was occurring
which greatly alarmed the Protestants of America, and that was the
massive immigration of Catholics into the United States, particularly
from Ireland and Germany in the 1830s and 40s. This alarmed the
Protestants to the point where they decided that maybe they'd
better jump on this public school bandwagon. They would take it
over. they could take it over, you
see, and protect America from the Catholic influence. They
actually believed that the Pope had a plot to take over the United
States, and there were a number of books written by very well-known
American clergymen, Protestant clergymen, on that whole subject. Lyman Beecher, Calvin Stowe,
and others wrote books on the on the so-called Protestant menace,
I mean the Catholic menace. And so they decided to join the
public school movement. Without them, the public school
movement would have never gotten off the ground because it had
fierce opposition from the Calvinists. The only people who opposed the whole public school movement
were the die-hard Orthodox Calvinists who saw that the elimination
of religion from education was too dangerous. Now, the interesting thing about
this is that when the Catholics came to this country, they at
first thought, gee, free public education, what a wonderful idea.
And they said, let's have public Catholic schools. Well, of course,
this conflicted with the Protestants' goal. The goal of the Protestants
was to create Protestant schools whereby the Catholic children
could be proselytized into Protestantism. Well, the Catholics saw through
this almost immediately. And they decided that they wanted
nothing to do with the Protestant schools. First they tried to
get the government to support Catholic public schools, but
then the legislatures objected because they said, well, if we
have Catholic public schools, We'll have to have Presbyterian
public schools and Lutheran public schools and congregational public
schools so we can't have any sectarian public schools. The public schools must be non-sectarian. And so finally the Catholics
realized that they would not get anywhere and they would have
to create their own schools. This is what one of the Catholic
spokesmen said in the 1850s about the common schools. To give you
an idea of how aware they were of what these schools would become.
They said, so far as Catholics are concerned, the system of
common schools in this country is a monstrous engine of injustice
and tyranny. Practically it operates a gigantic
scheme for proselytism. by numerous secret appliances
and even sometimes by open or imperfectly disguised machinery,
the faith of our children is gradually undermined and they
are trained up to be ashamed of and to abandon the religion
of their fathers. It was bad enough that this was
all done with the money of others, but when it is accomplished at
least in part by our own money, it is really atrocious. It is
not to be concealed or denied that the so-called literature
of this country the taste for which is fostered by our common
schools, and which is constantly brought to bear on the training
of our children, is not of a character to form their tender minds to
wholesome moral principles, much less to solid Christian piety.
In general, so far as it professes to be religious, it is anti-Catholic,
and so far as it is secular, it is pagan." So that's what
the Catholics said about these public schools in the 1850s,
and that's why they created their parochial schools, which of course
became an outstanding system of schools until just recently,
probably maybe 30 or 40 years ago. They were quite good. But
I'll tell you that what I hear of recent development in the
Catholic schools is that they've gone all the way to humanism.
The present parochial school system has been completely taken
over by humanists. In fact, the Catholic Education
Association held its It's a convention in St. Louis in April. And who
do you think was the star speaker there? You think it was an emissary
from the Pope? You think it was an archbishop
of some kind? No, it was Carl Sagan. Mr. Evolution was their chief speaker. So we know where they're at,
they also have been taken over by the humanists. But for quite some time, the
parochial schools were really outstanding schools as far as
the academics are concerned and certainly as far as the Catholic
religion is concerned. Well, the Protestants got on
board, but their joining of the movement was really conditional.
And it's very important to be aware of this because they knew,
they knew that secular education or non-sectarian education had
its dangers for religion. They were quite aware But this
was a dangerous path to take. As a matter of fact, they discussed
it, and they formed a committee to investigate this whole business
and to report back to the association, the General Association of Massachusetts,
which represented the Protestant denominations in the state. The committee filed its report
in 1849, And this is what that report
said. It said, first of all, they did
go along, they decided to go along with public schools, but
this is how they put it. The benefits of this system,
that is the common school system, in offering instruction to all
are so many and so great that its religious deficiencies, especially
since they can be otherwise supplied, that is by Sunday school and
church, do not seem to be a sufficient reason for abandoning it and
adopting in place of it a system of denominational parochial schools. If, however, we were to recommend
any system to take its place, it would be that of private schools
formed by the union of evangelical Christians of different denominations
in which all the fundamental doctrines of Christianity could
be taught. It is, however, a great evil
to withdraw from the established system of common schools the
interest and influence of the religious part of the community
and of course you hear that same argument today Christians should
not leave the public schools because we've got to maintain
that that interest and influence of the religious part of the
community on the whole it seems to be the wisest course at least
for the present to do all in our power to perfect so far as
it can be done not only its intellectual but also its moral and religious
character now then they added a very important proviso which
everyone seems to have forgotten, but this is it. They say, if
after a full and faithful experiment, it should at last be seen that
fidelity to the religious interests of our children forbid a further
patronage of the system, we can unite with the evangelical Christians
in the establishment of private schools in which more full doctrinal
religious instruction may be possible. So there you are. They went into it provisionally. Conditionally. And what you're
seeing today is a fulfillment of that. Parents are taking their children
out of the public schools and putting them in Christian schools.
Christian churches are forming schools all across America. They're
doing exactly what these people would have done had they lived
long enough to see the damage that is being done. So it's happening
naturally now. I'm sure that the Christian churches
that are doing this, that are creating Christian schools, have
never read this report. but they're doing it because
they realize that the public schools have had a, it has been
given a full and faithful experiment, and it has, and it has been a
total and complete failure. Total failure. So they realized
that, they knew what they were doing, but they were so concerned
about the Catholic invasion, as they call it in this country,
and they didn't know to what extent it would continue and
what it would lead to, that one could understand their fears, but nevertheless it had very
profound consequences for the United States. Now, there was
another important philosophical movement going on in the world
that's also very much, very pertinent to the public school movement.
That is the growth of the Hegelian movement in Europe. Hegelianism. Hegelianism? Okay. First it's
the German philosopher Hegel. So you have Hegelianism. Now who was Hegel? Hegel was
a very influential German philosopher. who along with the various religious
liberals in Germany who were going through the Bible tearing
it apart and you know and deciding it was all mythology Hegel decided
that wanted to create a new view of the universe he decided that
Christianity was just a passing phase in man's spiritual development
and that really there was no such there was no God out there
there was no man with a beard sitting on a throne in heaven. In other words, there was no
objective real God separate from mankind. He claimed that all
of the universe was God in the process of perfecting himself.
That's what God was, the entire universe in the process of perfecting
itself and that human beings was the highest manifestation
of God on earth particularly the human intellect was the highest
manifestation of God on earth and in a sense he deified man I have a wonderful quote in my
book I'm sorry that I forgot to bring my book as public education
necessary but I have a marvelous quote from the various critics
of Hegelianism who pointed out that it was even more dangerous,
Hegelianism was more dangerous than atheism because atheism
simply denied the existence of God while Hegelianism deified
man made man into God but in any case Hegel said that since
man is the highest manifestation of God then man's power as institutionalized by the state
was God on earth And that's where you got the idea of the state
being the supreme law. The state being God, through
the Hegelian philosophy. Now, that was a philosophy created
in Germany. How did it get over to the United
States? Well, how do you expect? Through Harvard University. That's
how it got here. Through the intellectuals, the
Unitarian intellectuals, they loved it. Can you imagine these
intellectuals, the pride, puffed up, feeling that now they are
as God? What a beautiful new view of
the world. And of course, the Hegelian philosophy said that
here is the universe, which is God in the process of perfecting
himself or itself or whatever it is. And that this process,
what is the nature of this process? It is the dialectic. It is the
thesis, the antithesis, engaging in some kind of a conflict and
then creating a new thesis or a synthesis. which then becomes
the new thesis, which gets into conflict with the antithesis,
forming a new synthesis, and this is the process of progress. So that actually the whole idea
of the progressive movement stems out of this idea of the dialectic,
this historical inevitable method whereby God is perfecting himself
and man is perfecting himself. Hegel taught that man was getting
better and better, morally better and better through this process,
through this dialectical process. And of course, he imagined that
there was this world spirit. It's all very mystical. And there's
a good deal of Eastern mysticism in it because the Hindus believe
in something like it. I don't know if they believe
in the dialectic part of it, but certainly the whole dialectic
idea comes from the Greeks. That's not new. The Greeks also
believed in some kind of a, this constant struggle. Now, Hegel's
dialectic was brought over into this country and our top educators
became Hegelians, were Hegelians. And that's why the public school
movement was really in the forefront of the development of statism
in this country, that is of the state, the supreme law being
the state. over that there is no such thing
as God's law. You see, in the Pantheist system
there is no such thing as God's law. The state law is God's law,
according to the Pantheists, according to the Hegelians. So
you see all these strands that were working in the United States
to get us away from the original Calvinist idea of man, man's life, the purpose
of his life being to glorify God. The purpose of man's life
became to glorify man. To glorify man and his state. So you had a switch. The early
period, the Calvinist period, which was basically private,
even though you had the common schools. But then you had so
many private academies. That mentality of the American
people was still grounded in the notion that man's purpose
on earth was to glorify God. Now it's very important to understand
that our political documents written by the founding fathers
were all written during the Calvinist period when they believed in
the innate depravity of human nature. As a matter of fact,
that's the reason why we have the kind of constitution and
government we have because there was such a profound distrust
of human nature and of man's capacity for evil
and tyranny. that it was decided that the
best form of government would be that in which power was reduced
with as many small pieces as possible, so that you couldn't
have one great tyrant take over. And that's why we have our division
of powers, you know, the legislature, the judiciary, and the executive,
and we have the states and counties. But the constant breakup, and
of course representative government, the breakup of power, And of
course, the constitutional guarantees, the constitutional restraints
to prevent men from going beyond, in other words, beyond the certain
limits in their behavior. So our government is based on
the Calvinist view of man. Man is innately depraved, cannot
be trusted with power. Well, along came the Hegelians
who said, man is not innately depraved. They said, as a matter
of fact, if you free him, from the restraints placed on him
by the Bible, he is capable of unlimited good. See, another complaint that the
Hegelians and the Unitarians and all these others had was
that God was not very just. Because after all, he made some
people smart and some people dumb, some people rich and some
people poor, some people beautiful and some people ugly. You know,
God is not very just in how he dishes out things. Man is capable
of creating a much more just world. Man's justice is much
better, can be much better than God. And that's the whole, that's
where you get the whole, that's where egalitarianism comes from.
That notion that man is a much better dispenser of justice than
God. So you had all of these ideas
impinging on the minds of men in this country. So that by the
time you have your public schools in place, and then of course
you have the decision on the part of the educators. If they
were going to have public schools, what kind of public schools were
they going to have? They decided to model theirs on the Prussian
public schools. The schools in Prussia. Which
had been created on the basis of the Hegelian idea that the
state is supreme. Now how were the Prussian schools
run? They were highly centralized. highly regulated, you had seminaries
for teachers, teachers were trained by the state, the state owned
the training institutions for teachers, the state owned the
schools, the state decided on the curriculum, the state decided
everything. Centralized, controlled, truant
offices, graded classes, the whole bit. You see, the common
schools in the Calvinist period were town schools, they were
community schools. and they were run by the community.
They chose the books, they picked the teachers. There was no central
authority over them. They were very much like the
congregational churches. The Calvinist churches were independent
institutions and so were the schools. There was no central
authority. But with the adoption of Hegelianism
by the Unitarians and the Olanites, and also by some, by many Protestants,
to them a centralized school system was the centralized controls
centrally chosen textbooks, etc. All of this was a result of the
new Hegelian philosophy that was taking over America. And
this Hegelian period lasts from about 1830 to about the 1890s.
So you have your Calvinist period, from about 1650 through 1830,
and then you have your Hegelian period. Here the purpose of life was
to glorify God, here the purpose of life is to glorify man and
his institutions, his faith. And then beginning in 1890s,
we begin the Progressive period. And that is up to the present.
It's very important to understand the genesis of American liberalism
begins really with the Unitarian heresy. The Unitarians took over
Harvard College. And I consider really this a
very important The Unitarian Takeover of Harvard,
1805. The Unitarian Takeover of Harvard
really begins the liberal period in this country. That is, the
takeover of the education of the institutions of higher education
in this country by the liberals begins in 1805. that new world
view. Humanism stems from the Unitarian
takeover. It began that far back. Because
the Unitarians basically are the humanists of today. They
started with a man-centered view of the world. Even though they,
you might say they were nominally monotheists, But their rejection
of the divinity of Christ indicates that they really were basically
atheists. On the way to atheism, they wouldn't
do it all in one step. But in any case, it starts in
1805. Yale remained a strongly Calvinist institution until the
1840s. Yale falls in about the 1840s or 50s, around that time. I'd say 1850s. Yale went away. of Harvard and then of course
Princeton was probably the last to go Princeton I think lasted
until World War I but Harvard had such an important influence
over the rest of the institutions of higher learning in this country
because Harvard graduated so many people and all of these
men went to different parts of the country they became leaders
in the public school movements in different parts of the country
it was also in the 1850s in the middle of the Hegelian period
1857, where the NEA was founded. National Education Association. Now why was that founded at that
time? Because they believed in the Prussian system. They believed
in the Prussian system. They wanted a national education
system in America, like the Prussians. But you see, ours was divided
up to states. and so they decided that by simply
getting the educators together you could create a kind of national
consensus in America and so you would have the beginning of a
national system of education and they called for a department
of education at the very first organizational meeting they wanted
a department of education with cabinet status at that time because
they wanted the same thing the Prussians had the Prussians had
a minister of education so The NEA wanted a Department of Education. Now, it's interesting to note
that during the Calvinist period, while you had common schools
in New England, the common schools were mainly in New England, you
had also many private schools. And then you had homeschooling. You had homeschooling. Who was
homeschooling in those days? George Washington, Thomas Jefferson,
Abraham Lincoln. At this point in our history,
parents had the unalienable right to educate their children at
home. Nobody even questioned a parent's right to educate their
children at home. It was unquestioned. It was assumed
that parents could do a good job. And in those days, of course,
parents were very capable of doing it. In fact, you had to
know how to read and write before you went to school. Isn't that interesting? You were
expected to know how to read and write before you went to
school. Now, there were also what were known as James schools. And these were, I would say,
like child care. Some lady would open her home
to half dozen, a dozen children in the neighborhood would teach
them how to read and write at the age of six or seven and then
when they were ready to go to school they would either go to school
or continue being tutored. But tutoring certainly was a
very common way of teaching children in those days. Private tutors. The common schools were mainly
in New England and the states to which a New England is migrated,
and New England is migrated across northern New York State, up into
Michigan, over into Ohio, and those areas. And they brought
with them the idea of the common school, that is a school run
by the community. You had a tremendous variety
of educational forms there. The first, you don't get your
first compulsory school attendance law until 1850. So 1850, you have your first
compulsory school attendance law. In Massachusetts. And the rationale for that was,
well, there were a couple of kids who were, you know, roaming
the streets, and they're going to grow up to be ne'er-do-wells,
and so we've got to get them off the streets. That was the
rationale for that. Nobody assumed that that law
abrogated the individual's right to educate their children at
home. That was considered an unalienable right. Very important point. Unalienable
rights. This is another part of the Calvinist
legacy. Unalienable rights. Where do
unalienable rights come from? Right. And they're stated very
clearly in the Declaration of Independence, as you know, all
men are created equal and they are endowed by their creator
with certain unalienable rights, and among these are life, liberty,
and the pursuit of happiness. So our unalienable rights come
from God. Unalienable rights are rights
that cannot be taken away by the state. By their very nature,
they're unalienable. Now when the founding fathers
Well, they didn't give us their own, but they certainly put it
on paper, put it in a form that human beings could understand
it, Americans could understand it. When they announced that we had
unalienable rights, of course, King George was not too happy
about it. And he didn't particularly hand
them to us on a silver platter and said, you know, well, you
can have your independence since you're such nice people, nice guys. Now they had to fight a long
war of six years before they could fulfill that declaration
of independence. The declaration further states
that the purpose of government is to secure the unalienable
rights of its citizens. That is the sole purpose of government. To make sure that the citizens
can exercise their unalienable rights. That's the purpose of
government. So God is supreme, our unalienable
rights are derived from God, and the purpose of government
is to secure these rights for human beings, so that men can
glorify God. Now by the time we get to 1850,
you have your first law that's going to begin to undermine the
unalienable rights of a lot of people, but I think by then these
the psychology and the philosophy of our educators was already
sufficiently corrupt or sufficiently corrupted by Hegelianism and
the new philosophy, the new statism that would make most people unaware
that their unalienable rights were being undermined. I don't
think they were aware of it. As a matter of fact, what happened
during the Civil War was that An awful lot seemed to happen
during the Civil War that escaped the notice of people. The preoccupation
with the war prevented an awful lot of changes to take place
in the philosophy of our people and the philosophy of our intellectuals
that we were not aware of. It's interesting that when we're
taught American history, we're usually taught the political
events. We're taught about the wars, We're taught about inventions. We're taught about, you know,
the Erie Canal and the invention of the steam engine and the Civil
War and then the Spanish-American War and the muckrakers and the
rise of the great industrial empire. But we're never taught
about our intellectual history. What was going on in the minds
of Americans? In the minds of the intellectuals, and yet that
history is I would say probably far more important than any other
aspect of our history. But you see what was happening
to religion during this time. Here your Calvinist orthodoxy
was strong, God is sovereign. In the Hegelian period you had
a tremendous undermining of religious faith in this country. But what
was happening? While the Unitarians, our intellectuals, were going liberal, were liberalizing
the Protestant sect. And I'm sure that most of you
are aware that today virtually all of your major Protestant
sects might as well be Unitarian. I wonder how many of them actually
believe in the divinity of Christ. But it was during that period,
now how come the United States didn't go down the drain during
that, since the intellectuals were so completely taken in by
this liberalism? Well, it's because the constant
influx from Europe of Orthodox people with much stronger religious
faith. They kept, you know, filling
in the gap. And that's what really prevented
the Unitarians from totally secularizing America. Totally eliminating
God from the United States with the constant influx of more religious
people from Europe who came from, who didn't have the university
education. But there you have the tremendous
undermining of the Protestant faith, of the Protestant sect
takes place during that middle period. A slow, it's a slow process. But nevertheless it was taking
place because of those changes in the philosophical ideas among
Americans. Now, the Hegelian period, this
period of course was characterized by high literacy. Why? Because to read the Bible
and to know Latin and Greek and Hebrew, you really had to be
quite, you had to know your language. So the Calvinist period is characterized
by very high literacy. And literacy was very high in
this country. All you have to do is read the newspapers and
documents written at the time. Even read the short stories of
Edgar Allan Poe. You realize what vocabulary was
in those days, how people enjoyed wonderful, complex, verbiage
and sentence structure and all of that. Now the Hegelian period
was also characterized by high literacy, but there was a very
interesting shift. They did study Greek and Latin,
but what do you think they read? They read the pagan classics. Now the shift was away from the
Bible to the Iliad and the Odyssey and the Romans and the Greeks,
and while all of that was very good and all of that was quite enlightening Certainly our religious
faith began to our knowledge of the Bible began to suffer
But it's also interesting that during all of these periods you
will find religious revivals taking place within the country
You have Jonathan Edwards during the middle of during the 1840s I know there was a during the
Hegelian period there was a particularly strong religious revival And
then, of course, the famous Moody, who was very strong. During what
period was Moody particularly strong? I'm not sure. It was
World War I, around that period, when Dwight Moody created those
great revivalists. Yeah, yeah. During the war, probably,
during that war. So it's kind of a seesaw, but
the intellectuals were rarely involved in those religious revivals.
The religious revivals were for the plebeians. They were for
the... for the, you know, just for the people, but the educators
kept going on their merry way toward damnation. Now, so we have a high literacy
period and a high literacy period during the Hegelian. Also, this
was a period in which they adapted all of the Hegelian techniques
of school discipline. The classrooms, the orderly classrooms
with the seats bolted down, the desks bolted to the floor. It wasn't so bad. I went to such
schools. They were all right, you know.
Very orderly. Punctuality. Because man's... there was a
tremendous... Hegel stressed the importance
of intellectual development since man's intellect was the highest
manifestation of God on earth. Therefore, it had to be developed.
It was a very... important to develop man's intellect. Hegel was a very interesting
man. I suspect that the reason why Hegel developed his philosophy
was because as a German he was very jealous of the notion that
the Jews should be the chosen people. He wanted the Germans
to be the chosen people. And so his entire philosophy,
the bottom line of it is that the Germans are really the superior
and the chosen people. They are the ones If you read
his philosophy, he invents all of this, I believe, in order
to prove to the world that the Germans were basically the master
race of the chosen people. Now, of course, during that period,
the communist movement started. The Communist Manifesto was written
in 1849. The Communist Manifesto. Now, where did they come from? Well, they took some from Owen.
They took all of Robert Owen's ideas about religion and communism. And they also took the dialectic. They liked Hegel's dialectic.
They thought that was wonderful. But they said, look, there is
no big this is not there. This world is not one big spirit.
There is no such thing as spirit. There is only matter in motion.
That's when the materialists took over. So then they created
what was known as dialectical materialism. How many people here have heard
of dialectical materialism? All right, you've heard of it.
Dialectical materialism. All they did was that they took
Hegel's dialectic, which they considered to be the process,
the historical process whereby man progresses, And they simply
said, there is no spiritual matter out there. There's no such thing
as the great spirit out there. There's only matter in motion.
So it's matter that is involved in this dialectic. Man is matter.
Everything is matter. And all of this constant clashing,
this constant battle that's going on between the thesis and the
antithesis, creating a synthesis. This is the constant struggle
going on in all of history. And therefore, progress is the
result of constant struggle and battling. And that's why the
communists believe in perpetual struggle. And that's why the
communists are always having liberation wars and terrorism
and takeovers. They never rest because they
feel that they are in the forefront of this dialectical materialist
process. That's what a communist is. A
communist is someone who says, well, look, if this is a natural
process, why don't we sort of help it along? become the leaders
of it. And because then we can hasten
it. So that they decide that they
are going to create this clash between the thesis and the antithesis.
And this is what they've done all the time. If you read the
works of the communists, they're always talking about the dialectical
process, the process. They're always talking about
the inevitability, the historical inevitability of communism. that
the human race is marching toward communism. That's the way they
put it because this is the process whereby it's all happening and
as they say it's happening without even our, you know, help but
we're going to help it along, we're going to make it happen
faster. And that all occurred in 1849. Now you can see that
what was being done to undermine man's faith in God during this
period, the assault, the tremendous assault being waged against religion
during that period. And of course, as materialism
grew and industrialism grew, and man was beginning to feel
his might and his power, he was quite taken with himself.
And so he was glorifying man during that period. It was wonderful
to glorify man. But yet this nation was still
a pretty religious country, considering if you would consider the morality
of the country. Yes, there was a decline. It
wasn't the morality of the Calvinist period, certainly. But compared
to today, it certainly was a much more moral period. Now it's interesting
that as America grew, as America grew from town to town, you know,
the settlements went westward. All of these towns, because they
brought their Bibles with them and their churches with them,
were able to create civilized communities in the middle of
You know, the prairies all over this country. Because basically
the Constitution kept this country Calvinistic in its political
structure. So we basically have a Calvinistic
structure that has been chipped away very badly. It's almost
unrecognizable today. But nevertheless, there's enough
of it there to have protected our freedoms up to this point.
In other words, why has the United States lasted this long? Why
has the Constitution endured this long? Because, well, Americans enjoy their freedoms
and they realize that without that Constitution, it would all
go down the drain because we've seen what happened in Europe.
We've seen what's happened in other parts of the world. I will discuss the progressive
period in the second period, I'll go into more detail in there.
But now as far as unalienable rights, so here we have to, this
is where we've got to be most concerned with what's happened
to unalienable rights. We move from, now what was happening in Europe
as far as the Hegelian period goes? You had the creation of
these monster states, that then engage in all kinds of horrible
wars. You could not have had the Franco-Prussian War, the
World War I, unless these states all believed that they were supreme
to glorify the state. And all of those nations were
glorifying the state. What was happening to Christianity in
Europe? Christianity had lost out. Germany was no longer Christian. Germany was pantheistic. Germany
was Hegelian. So that when people say that
Well, how could Christians do what they did in Germany? Christians
didn't do what they did. The Christians, there weren't,
the few Christians that were still around certainly didn't
favor Hitler. But Hitler reverted back to pre-Christian
paganism through Hegelianism. Hegelianism opened the way to
pre-Christian paganism. As a matter of fact, during the
Hegelian period, probably the most representative artist in
all of Germany at that time was Wagner. And what are the Wagnerian
themes? They're all the pre-Christian
pagan myths. You see, Germany was so puffed
up in its pride by this new Hegelian religion that put man as God,
that exalted man as God, that it really infected the entire
German nation. Churchgoing practically disappeared
in Germany. Sundays became days for pleasure
and total lack of religion. France went the same way. England
held back a little further because the Calvinist influences in England
and Scotland were still strong. It seems that the Calvinist influences
were strongest in the English-speaking countries. that's where because
John Knox had studied in Geneva and had brought back Presbyterianism
to Scotland and of course there's always been a very strong Calvinist
influence in England after Calvin and so the English-speaking countries
still maintain their Christianity while Germany went the way of
Hegel and France became rather atheistic, Marxist, Socialist
and of course Italy the same. And these were nations, even
though they had strong Catholic churches, the Catholic church,
it was religious fervor was rather lacking. And that's why the communists
were able to make such tremendous inroads in nations like Germany,
France, Italy, etc. All of that was going on during
that period. In our country here, we were so Immigration was pouring
in from all parts of the world. The public schools were doing
a decent job in those days of simply turning out fairly well-educated
individuals who could read and write. Penmanship was good. The McGuffey readers were being
used throughout the country. There was still a strong religious
influence, particularly in the smaller cities, smaller towns.
So the Protestants, while the top men were Hegelians, There
were many ministers involved in local schools. There was a,
I would say, a fairly high spiritual content in public education at
that time, in the Hegelian period. Not as much, you know, there
was a constant fight about how much of the Bible you could use
in the schools. I remember when I was going to school in 1931,
our principal in the assembly read the 23rd Psalm at every
assembly. That was the only Psalm he read.
But at least it was better than no Samana and it was a great
Samana, tremendous influence on me. It takes so little religion,
really. So it was a very mixed picture
during that Hegelian period. But then you had the decline
of private schools, the decline of private schools during the
Hegelian period, the decline of home tutoring, the more reliance
on the state, the more reliance on the government. And as people
began to rely more on the government for education, then the idea
began to arise, well, why don't we rely on the government for
other things? Once people get used to the idea
that government can do such a great job in education, then it's easy
to decide that government can handle other things as well. Well, I guess I can stop now
and then I will continue into the progressive period after
the break.
The History of American Education #1
Series History of American Education
| Sermon ID | 9104212535 |
| Duration | 1:18:24 |
| Date | |
| Category | Special Meeting |
| Language | English |
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