Erase the Bible, lose the West — and that’s the point



The cultural revolution of the 1960s undermined every pillar of American identity, and public religion was no exception. Supreme Court rulings in 1962 and 1963 struck down state-led prayer and mandatory scripture reading in public schools. While these decisions didn’t explicitly ban biblical education as literature or cultural instruction, they effectively removed it from the classroom. Over time, institutional pressure and administrative caution eliminated nearly all engagement with the Bible in the public square.

As large-scale immigration introduced greater religious diversity, demands for a more “neutral” education further pushed cultural Christianity into the realm of the taboo. Christmas and Easter became “winter” and “spring” break. Schools reduced biblical references to passing mentions — if they acknowledged them at all. The result: a rootless, amnesiac society cut off from the spiritual and cultural traditions that once inspired greatness.

By removing the religion that shaped our national character, we’ve lost the ability to understand or transmit our own culture. This is no accident.

Humans remain narrative creatures. Even in an age obsessed with data and reason, we understand ourselves through stories. Every civilization has a set of core narratives that define its identity. These stories echo through its literature, art, science, and daily language. People imitate the archetypes they inherit — knowingly or not—so the stories a culture preserves shape its citizens’ behavior, values, and imagination.

For ancient Greece and Rome, Homer’s “Iliad” served as a civilizational anchor. For Western Christendom, that role belonged to the Bible.

As with all enduring societies, the Western canon both reflected and created its civilization. The canon includes the foundational works every educated citizen was once expected to know, at least in outline: “The Divine Comedy,” “Paradise Lost,” the plays of Shakespeare. But none of these are truly intelligible without biblical knowledge. These literary masterpieces do more than quote scripture — they shape theology itself, popularizing specific interpretations of Christian doctrine.

Art doesn’t just reflect a culture; it defines it.

The stories are everywhere: David and Goliath, Samson and Delilah, Judas the betrayer, the unwelcome prophet, the good Samaritan, the sacrificial Christ. These archetypes saturate Western literature. Even works not explicitly Christian — like Shakespeare’s plays — reference scripture on nearly every page. And for directly inspired texts like Dante’s “Inferno,” biblical illiteracy makes the work incomprehensible.

Yet American legal doctrine now treats biblical ignorance as a virtue. Misreadings of the First Amendment have transformed cultural illiteracy into a legal mandate. Forget the Bible’s spiritual value — removing it from schools broke the chain of cultural transmission.

As a former public school history teacher, I saw this biblical and cultural illiteracy firsthand. I routinely had to explain the story of David and Goliath or the birth of Christ to 16-year-olds — just so they could understand the references in a historical speech or literary text. Students weren’t rejecting scripture. They had simply never heard it before.

Shakespeare and Dante still haunt English literature curricula, but only as lifeless relics. These works already challenge students. Strip out the biblical framework, and they become unreadable. That’s one reason woke activists now demand their removal altogether. Too white. Too Christian. Too patriarchal. But the push to obliterate the canon also masks a deeper failure: Today’s teachers often find these works unteachable — because students lack the cultural foundation to make sense of them.

Mass immigration has intensified the demand for multiculturalism and secularization. As the public square fills with Hindus, Muslims, Buddhists, and atheists, American institutions have stripped out the Christianity that once defined them. But by removing the religion that shaped our national character, we’ve lost the ability to understand or transmit our own culture.

This is no accident. It’s the only outcome multiculturalism has ever produced.

America now suffers from a full-blown identity crisis. If we hope to recover a coherent national identity, we must start with the Bible. Conservatives and Christians who want to revive the American tradition must demand — unapologetically — the return of scripture and prayer to public life.

These practices weren’t controversial for most of our history. The Constitution didn’t suddenly change because the left launched a cultural revolution. Students — even those who are secular or from foreign faiths — still need biblical literacy to understand the civilization they live in and the culture they’re supposedly assimilating into.

A general knowledge of the Bible is indispensable. Without it, American education remains incomplete — and a unified national culture remains impossible.

Hozier’s ‘Inferno’-Inspired EP Goes Through Hell And Back But Still Rejects Redemption

[rebelmouse-proxy-image https://thefederalist.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/Screenshot-2024-04-03-at-8.23.28 PM-1200x675.png crop_info="%7B%22image%22%3A%20%22https%3A//thefederalist.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/Screenshot-2024-04-03-at-8.23.28%5Cu202fPM-1200x675.png%22%7D" expand=1]Even after rising from terrible experiences, Hozier admits he won't reject the sins that led him through hell in the first place.

To Keep Western Civilization Alive, Join In Its Great Conversation

It is important for conservatives to understand the great importance of the humanities to the future of their civilization.

Thief steals watches worth millions after smashing display case in Chicago luxury car showroom: 'If they get arrested, they get let go,' fed up owner says



The rash of organized looting and theft in Chicago — as in other major cities — took an eye-opening turn over the weekend as a thief walked into a luxury car showroom in broad daylight Saturday, smashed a display case with a hammer, and made off with watches reportedly worth millions.

What are the details?

Security video shows the crook and another man walking into the Gold Coast Exotic Motors dealership just off the Magnificent Mile around noon, WLS-TV reported.

The place sells Lamborghinis and Bentleys. But the pair weren't interested in cars.

Image source: WLS-TV video screenshot

As the other man dressed in a grey jacket appeared to stand guard at the door, the thief dressed in a dark jacket smashed the glass of a display case.

The crooks then ran out with what employees told WLS were at least seven luxury watches.

According to WFLD-TV, the man dressed in grey and appearing to stand guard was armed.

"He was smart enough not to raise the gun, because my people had guns," dealership co-owner Joe Perillo added to WFLD. "If he raised that gun, he would have been shot, we’d probably be in court defending ourselves."

Image source: WLS-TV video screenshot

Here's a video purportedly showing the theft from another angle. Content warning: Language:

Didn\u2019t know if I should post this or not. Friend sent me from the smash and grab robbery downtown near Loyola Water Tower yesterday in Chicago. Two guys broke through glass in broad daylight and stole 2 watches worth over a million dollars each.pic.twitter.com/SeHXd3Rx8t
— Dante (@Dante) 1639362150

"We're here to run a legitimate business, not be a western shootout," Perillo told WLS.

He added to the station that the heist took only "30 seconds" and that "the criminals know" just how to pull off such thefts.

While multiple staff members chased the thieves, they weren't able to catch them, WLS said.

"We ran after them on Chestnut, all the way to State Street, and then they split up," Joe Abbas, co-owner of the dealership, told the station.

Image source: WLS-TV video screenshot

Abbas also told WLS how danger of the incident concerns him: "I have little kids. I don't want to get shot here."

In the end, Perillo said he's frustrated by what he sees as "kid gloves" consequences for crooks.

"If they get arrested, they get let go," he added to WLS. "So, how do you intend to ever solve that problem?"

Perillo also told the station: "If they don't do anything about this, they're going to lose a lot of businesses. They lost Macy's. They're losing Neiman Marcus. They may lose this store."

Anything else?

WLFD said 10 customers, including children, were in the showroom at the time of the theft, and now the dealership will be locked during working hours and take customers by appointment only.