What was taught to children in public schools before critical race theory, transgenderism, intersectionality, diversity training, social-emotional learning, behavior adaptations, mental health curriculum, equity, or sharia?
Students in public schools were taught to treat each other equally with respect by learning the Ten Commandments and the Golden Rule.
- Everyone has worth because each person is made in the image of God "In the day that God created man, in the likeness of God made he him; male and female created he them; and blessed them" (Genesis 5:1-2);
- Everyone is equal because God is not a respecter of persons "Ye shall not respect persons in judgment; but ye shall hear the small as well as the great" (Deuteronomy 1:17);
- Everyone is to do unto others as you would have them do unto you "Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself" (Leviticus 19:18).
The New England Primer included lessons such as:
- College of William & Mary, 1693, founded under the direction of Anglican clergyman, Rev. James Blair;
- St. John’s College, 1696, founded by Presbyterians, Episcopalians, and Catholic Charles Carroll of Carrollton;
- Yale University, 1701, founded by ten Congregational ministers, led by Rev. James Pierpont;
- Washington College, 1723, founded under the direction of Anglican minister, Rev. William Smith.
- University of Pennsylvania, 1740, with the help of Ben Franklin following Rev. George Whitefield's revival meetings;
- Moravian College, 1742, founded by Benigna von Zinzendorf, daughter of the famous Christian missionary Ludwig von Zinzendorf;
- University of Delaware, 1743, founded with help of Presbyterian clergy led the Rev. Dr. Francis Alison;
- Princeton University, 1746, founded by Presbyterian clergy led by Rev. William Tennent;
- Washington and Lee University, 1749, founded by Scots-Irish Presbyterian pioneers. It enrolled John Chavis in 1795, believed to be the first black student enrolled in higher education in the United States;
- Columbia University, 1754, founded by Anglican minister, Rev. Dr. Samuel Johnson.
- Brown University, 1764, founded by Baptists and Congregationalists;
- Rutgers University, 1766, founded by Dutch Reformed Church through the efforts of Rev. Theodorus Jacobus Frelinghuysen and Rev. Jacob Rutsen Hardenbergh;
- Dartmouth College, 1769, established by Congregational minister, Rev. Eleazar Wheelock;
- College of Charleston, 1770, founded with the help of its first president, Anglican minister Rev. Robert Smith, who later became the first Episcopal bishop of South Carolina;
- Salem College, 1772, founded as a girls school by Moravian Christians;
- Dickinson College, 1773, its first president was Presbyterian minister Charles Nisbet;
- Hampden-Sydney College, 1775, founded by Presbyterian minister Samuel Stanhope Smith;
- Transylvania University, 1780, founded by Episcopalians and Presbyterians;
- Washington & Jefferson College, 1781, founded by Presbyterian ministers.
- University of Georgia, 1785, founded by Lyman Hall, an ordained Congregational minister, signer of the Declaration of Independence, and Governor of Georgia;
- University of Pittsburgh, 1787, founded by Hugh Henry Brackenridge, a Justice on the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, who studied divinity at Princeton and was a fiery chaplain in George Washington's army during the Revolution;
- Franklin & Marshall College, 1787, founded by four ministers who were Lutheran and German Reformed;
- Georgetown University, 1789, founded by Rev. John Carroll, the first Catholic Bishop in the United States;
- University of North Carolina, 1789, founded by former members of the Continental Congress, Generals, Judges, and Governors, including Hugh Williamson, a Signer of the U.S. Constitution, whose first career was an ordained Presbyterian preacher.
- Gertrude — a mother from the village of Bonnal who taught her children;
- Glüphi — a school teacher who used Gertrude's methods;
- a parish clergyman who promoted these methods, and finally
- Arner — a politician, who procured state funding for the common schools.
Atheists don’t send their children to an evangelical Christian Sunday School one hour per week, but Christians send their children to the atheist public schools 30 hours per week. I am a retired teacher and unequivocally proclaim that there is no hope for America if Christians and conservatives allow their children to be indoctrinated in the public schools. We must rescue our children!
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