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Religious Correctness gone mad?

20 Jul 06 - 05:01 AM (#1788023)
Subject: RC gone mad?
From: Paul Burke

Well, C of E anyway... but it shows that Religious Correctness can come up with decisions as daft as any melanin- deprived Politically Correct council bureaucrat..

Kids banned from singing 'Imagine'


20 Jul 06 - 05:04 AM (#1788024)
Subject: RE: RC gone mad?
From: manitas_at_work

Could you redo that link?


20 Jul 06 - 05:07 AM (#1788027)
Subject: RE: RC gone mad?
From: Paul Burke

Oops


20 Jul 06 - 05:42 AM (#1788046)
Subject: RE: RC gone mad?
From: GUEST

This is the counter revolution and the return to the dark ages. If those of us opposed to going backwards don't do something we're all doomed! DOOMED!
Remember, these faith schools have been supported and encouraged by a LABOUR govt. My old man would spin in his grave if he knew his beloved Party had come to this.


20 Jul 06 - 05:55 AM (#1788056)
Subject: RE: RC gone mad?
From: Paul Burke

They often aren't faith schools as such- for historical reasons, C of E schools are often the only school in smaller communities, and as such ought to serve the whole community, not just their own religious sect.


20 Jul 06 - 06:50 AM (#1788075)
Subject: RE: RC gone mad?
From: Mooh

Being raised (and still attending) Anglican I'm inclined to be a bit defensive. Can't stand the tune to start with so I wouldn't break my heart to never hear it again...in spite of its peace message...but it IS counter religious and it's not a good match for the school. Big deal, there are lots of other songs, and Imagine shouldn't be elevated above any other. Hell, my parish once didn't like Onward Christian Soldiers because of the military imagery, but now it's back because the metaphor is understood by whoever chooses the hymns.

Tempest in the teapot, or beerkeg, depending on the school.

Peace, Mooh.


20 Jul 06 - 07:24 AM (#1788088)
Subject: RE: RC gone mad?
From: Mr Fox

No loss. The song is sanctimonious, precious, pretentious crap. With a dirge of a tune.

And the thought of somebody as rich as Lennon writing "imagine no possesions, I wonder if YOU can" is enough to induce projectile vomiting and make one cheer for Mark David Chapman.


20 Jul 06 - 08:38 AM (#1788135)
Subject: RE: RC gone mad?
From: folk1e

Anything that causes somone to quetion "why" can't be bad!
If an institution is in favour of censor then it must be prepaired to submit TO censor!.......... unles of course they know better?


20 Jul 06 - 09:11 AM (#1788160)
Subject: RE: RC gone mad?
From: NormanD

Mr Fox's exaggerated comment in support of Lennon's murderer is unnecessary, whatever you think of the song. Lennon may have been financially loaded but, politically, he was part of the "utopian" school - he advocated social changes but didn't necessarily think through the consequences of how they might affect him personally. So, don't knock him for writing a song, or support his murder because you don't like it. That's an inhumane reaction, and uncalled for. Enough songs have been written by people whose personal lives have been the complete opposite of their romantic lyrics.

"Imagine" was adopted by the Tories as one of their party conference theme tunes, I remember (this was Thatcher-era too). Far more damaging, and hypocritical, than kids not being allowed to sing it.

And, in the last year or so, a group of US school students was banned from singing Dylan's "Masters of War" (I'll find the reference if anyone's interested).

Norman


20 Jul 06 - 10:03 AM (#1788196)
Subject: RE: RC gone mad?
From: leeneia

In my view, they thought for themselves and did what they thought was right. They didn't hurt anybody in the process. Good for them.


20 Jul 06 - 10:59 AM (#1788251)
Subject: RE: RC gone mad?
From: Mr Fox

Hmmm. Maybe my comment about Mark Chapman was a little over the top. It's this hot weather - makes me irritable. Apologies to anyone I offended.

But I DO detest being lectured by people who say "don't do as I do, do as I say" - it smacks of the very totalitarianism Lennon was allegedly against.

And I still think the tune is a dirge.


20 Jul 06 - 11:10 AM (#1788261)
Subject: RE: RC gone mad?
From: Big Al Whittle

Reminds me a bit of She's a Latin fron Manhattan!

It's too dirgy for the clergy!


20 Jul 06 - 12:51 PM (#1788349)
Subject: RE: RC gone mad?
From: Scoville

THe high school class in front of mine (1995) tried to vote it for "class song" but it was blocked because it was "Communist". Ha ha.

THen, they tried to vote in "the Joker", which was banned because of its drug references. After that, the administration picked something lame and told them to just deal with it.







I don't really see how this is news, actually. I'm not religious but I think it's up to each denomination and congregation to decide what they think is appropriate for themselves. We probably wouldn't teach our Quaker kids "Onward Christian Soldiers". It's not evil (I reserve comment on its musical and lyrical merits), it just doesn't speak to our condition.


20 Jul 06 - 02:31 PM (#1788442)
Subject: RE: RC gone mad?
From: Les from Hull

I suppose that:

The rich man in his castle,
The poor man at his gate,
He made them, high or lowly,
And ordered their estate.

is still alright though?


20 Jul 06 - 02:33 PM (#1788446)
Subject: RE: RC gone mad?
From: Clinton Hammond

Tempest in a teapot


20 Jul 06 - 02:48 PM (#1788458)
Subject: RE: RC gone mad?
From: Les from Hull

'The school has close links with the nearby St Leonards Church whose rector, the Rev David Harris, is also a school governor. He said: "The song expresses longing for a different world and for eternal happiness but it says you can have this without religion."'

Wow, and religion has such a track record of bringing about a different, happy world!


20 Jul 06 - 03:09 PM (#1788477)
Subject: RE: RC gone mad?
From: Rasener

Well I like Imagine, its one of my favourite Lennon songs.

Can anybody really prove there is a heaven and hell?

I think not.

I am a confirmed C of E who left the church and never went back from the age of 16. I am now 61.

I left because I couldn't stand all the crap that was being pumped into my head without a scrap of evidence. What was even worse was all these do goodie people who made me squirm.

I have always believed in morality, without religion. My daughters were not baptised, but have learnt morality and are the better for it.
Churches are a big big turn off for me.

I object to these do gooders strangling the life out of everybody, just to satisfy there religious opinions.

IMHO there are more crimes of the world caused by religion. Just look at the state of the world today, how much of the problems are caused by religion?


20 Jul 06 - 04:16 PM (#1788532)
Subject: RE: RC gone mad?
From: GUEST,Jon

The decsion seems quite reasonable for a C of E school to take. The song is at odds with Christian teaching.


20 Jul 06 - 05:30 PM (#1788591)
Subject: RE: RC gone mad?
From: Don(Wyziwyg)T

Given that all state schools are now (rightly) required to educate children with reference to the other religions, as well as Christianity, why should the agnostic or the atheist POV be subjected to discrimination?

I'm not sure that this school is operating within government requirements in banning this song for the stated reasons.

Don T.


20 Jul 06 - 05:35 PM (#1788593)
Subject: RE: RC gone mad?
From: Big Al Whittle

The reason that Christian countries by and large have ruled the roost is that the religion has evolved. we don't do all the daft things that you can find a sanction for in the bible, if you're daft enough personally to want to exact an eye for an eye, burn witches, etc.

Anybody who would ban the song Imagine because it doesn't conform to chocolate box version of Christianity, with heaven upstairs and satan waiting to pounce in the cellar, is a fundamentalist in the worst sense of the word.

The really difficult commandments and teachings of the The sermon on the Mount has gone over their heads completely.

And for a moment it has over mine, ('judge not, less you be judged') - so I'd best shut up.

all the best to all

al


20 Jul 06 - 06:29 PM (#1788638)
Subject: RE: RC gone mad?
From: Richard Bridge

Most organised religions are bad things


20 Jul 06 - 06:43 PM (#1788651)
Subject: RE: RC gone mad?
From: GUEST

The cheering thing is that all these bans tell us that songs can be influential, therefore worth writing and singing. Keep right on...


20 Jul 06 - 07:20 PM (#1788687)
Subject: RE: RC gone mad?
From: John O'L

Now, if we can just get 'Jealous Guy' banned as well...


20 Jul 06 - 07:43 PM (#1788704)
Subject: RE: RC gone mad?
From: GUEST,Lanfranc sans cookie

I'm not surprised that "Imagine" was banned, but more surprised that anyone actually bothered to attempt to understand the lyrics. This from a church that happily sings of "jet planes waiting in the sky to be refuelled" ("Autumn Days") without wondering what such planes might be carrying in the way of weaponry.

Gave up on religion in general and CofE in particular for many reasons, mostly to do with the degrading of the language used in services and the politically correct changes made to well-known hymns and carols.

Imagine no religion? Oh, please, don't just imagine, make it so!!!

"In two thousand years he's brought nothing but tears and the crosses to plant on the graves" Harvey Andrews "Requiem".

Alan


21 Jul 06 - 12:04 AM (#1788870)
Subject: RE: RC gone mad?
From: Mooh

Church school bans Lennon classic

The school said it was "not appropriate" to sing the song
A church school in Devon has withdrawn John Lennon's Imagine from an end-of-term show after teachers ruled that its lyrics were anti-religious. Pupils at St Leonards Primary in Exeter, Devon, had spent weeks rehearsing the song. But it was taken out of the running order after the head teacher and governors decided it was anti-Christian and unsuitable for the school.

The lyrics include: "Imagine there's no heaven... and no religion too."

Head teacher Geoff Williams said a teacher approached him because she did not think the song was appropriate. He said: "The teacher came to talk to me about it because she was concerned and I supported her. "As a church school we decided it was not appropriate to sing it."

The school has close links with the nearby St Leonards Church whose rector, the Rev David Harris, is also a school governor. He said: "The song expresses longing for a different world and for eternal happiness but it says you can have this without religion."

The annual song festival at the school was held last week on the theme of Songs for a Green Earth and Imagine was replaced by The Building Song.

Steve Bailey, who manages the Beatles Shop in Liverpool, said: "I am not surprised this song is still controversial. "I do not know if the song is suitable for children from a church school. "It does have an optimistic message which is crucial in its own way."



Well, whatever...I'm not sure the headline reflects what the text describes. It seems to me that they (teachers, and govenors) decided not to use a particular song for legitimate reasons in the context of the event.

Banned, withdrawn, not appropriate, [not] suitable...might have the same effect for the sake of the event, but I bet it's not actually banned and that there will be continuing discussion between and among staff and students about the song. Nothing here truly suggests that the students are to be kept ignorant of the song (really, as if!), just that it didn't suit the event.

Again, big deal, it wouldn't have made the news except that someone thinks it's an issue. If it hadn't been suggested originally, nobody would be suggesting that it should be. Someone who apparently didn't get the meaning of the song to start with, allowed it to be rehearsed for the event by primary students...that's the daft part. There are lots of better songs for such a time, maybe starting with the Iona Community's various song books.

As for the reasoning, all the subsequent good intent of the lyric will be eclipsed by the first line "imagine there's no heaven". Few, if any, Christians would accept this command at a Christian event. Imagine what parents (if they were invited) watching the event might think, especially if they're less open minded than, say, the good folk of County Mudcat. This isn't new, or news, neither is it a scandal.

Peace, (with or without religion, organized or otherwise), Mooh.


21 Jul 06 - 12:36 AM (#1788888)
Subject: RE: RC gone mad?
From: John O'L

I googled 'The Building Song' so I could make a comparison with 'Imagine'. I came up with the following:


Working on a Building
By The Cowboy Junkies
(Ironically from the album "The Trinity Sessions")

Working on a building, a Holy Ghost building
For my Lord, for my Lord
If I was a drunkard I tell you what I'd do
I would quit my drinking and work on that building too

Working on a building, a Holy Ghost building
For my Lord, yeah for my Lord
If I was a liar I tell you what I'd do
I would quit my lying and work on that building too

Working on a building, it's a Holy Ghost building
For my Lord, yeah for my Lord

Working on a building, it's a Holy Ghost building
For my Lord, yeah for my Lord
If I was a singer I tell you what I'd do
I would keep on singing and work on that building too



I doubt if the kiddies will be singing that particular building song come end-of-term.


21 Jul 06 - 03:03 AM (#1788928)
Subject: RE: RC gone mad?
From: GUEST,Hrothgar

I'm just mildly surprised that anybody was obtuse enoygh to select it for the programme in the first place.


21 Jul 06 - 07:09 AM (#1789005)
Subject: RE: RC gone mad?
From: GUEST

The problem is that the STATE school that serves our area is Church of England. Parents of all persuasions have to get their kids in.It should therefore acknowledge all the differences of opinion in the area from Fundamentalist to Unbeliever. Children should then be able to make up their own minds. By censoring, you are indoctrinating, and in a state school serving all, this is the thin end of the wedge.


21 Jul 06 - 09:08 AM (#1789053)
Subject: RE: RC gone mad?
From: BuckMulligan

What wedge, GUEST 7:09? I may well be suffering from Yankee ignorance, but isn't the C of E an established church? Doesn't the UK lack a concept of "separation of church & state?" Therefore there's nothing in the least wrong with a state agency of any kind endorsing the established church. Whether "others" need to be catered to, and to what degree, is certainly something that should be taken into account, but barring disestablishment, I don't see why having the C of E school be the state-offered public education is the least bit problematic. Then again, it isn't my problem to begin with.


21 Jul 06 - 03:20 PM (#1789302)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: Joe Offer

I like "Imagine" and enjoy singing it in some contexts, but I wouldn't do it in a public performance in a religious school. I'd do it in a classroom as a springboard for discussion, but not in a school assembly or in a performance for parents or the public.

I also like "Onward Christian Soldiers" because it's an interesting song - but I wouldn't choose it for a religious service because I think religions need to get away from the imagery of warfare. Religions fight too damn much, even though most of them profess to believe in peace.

-Joe-


21 Jul 06 - 04:27 PM (#1789351)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: Big Phil

Back to the question, "Religious Correctness gone mad"    YES


21 Jul 06 - 05:05 PM (#1789384)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: Stewart

Francis Crick (discoverer of the genetic code) deeply disliked religion, saying once that Christianity was all right between consenting adults but should not be taught to children.

Good advice.

Cheers, S. in Seattle


21 Jul 06 - 05:53 PM (#1789412)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: Amos

Crick was also an adamant materialist with no sense of the human spirit whatsoever.

A


21 Jul 06 - 05:59 PM (#1789415)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: Peace

James Watson, Francis Crick, Maurice Wilkins, and Rosalind Franklin.

They ALL deserve credit for the 'discovery'.


21 Jul 06 - 06:21 PM (#1789431)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: Stewart

Amos: So? I just liked the quote.

Peace: Granted, JW, FC, MW, RF together were responsible for determining the double helix structure of DNA. Francis Crick discovered how the sequence of bases in DNA coded for sequences of amino acids in proteins - i.e. the "genetic code."

Cheers, S. in Seattle


21 Jul 06 - 06:40 PM (#1789452)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: GUEST,Joe Offer, at work

Yeah, but my point is, IS is really "religious correctness," or could it be that we're not hearing the whole story and that the person who withdrew the song from the program is not a total idiot?

Maybe it's worthwhile posting the article, since it's about music and it isn't too long:
    Church school bans Lennon classic
    A church school in Devon has withdrawn John Lennon's Imagine from an end-of-term show after teachers ruled that its lyrics were anti-religious.
    Pupils at St Leonards Primary in Exeter, Devon, had spent weeks rehearsing the song.

    But it was taken out of the running order after the head teacher and governors decided it was anti-Christian and unsuitable for the school.

    The lyrics include: "Imagine there's no heaven... and no religion too."

    Head teacher Geoff Williams said a teacher approached him because she did not think the song was appropriate.
    He said: "The teacher came to talk to me about it because she was concerned and I supported her.

    "As a church school we decided it was not appropriate to sing it."

    The school has close links with the nearby St Leonards Church whose rector, the Rev David Harris, is also a school governor.

    He said: "The song expresses longing for a different world and for eternal happiness but it says you can have this without religion."

    The annual song festival at the school was held last week on the theme of Songs for a Green Earth and Imagine was replaced by The Building Song.

    Steve Bailey, who manages the Beatles Shop in Liverpool, said: "I am not surprised this song is still controversial.

    "I do not know if the song is suitable for children from a church school.

    "It does have an optimistic message which is crucial in its own way."


If I were the headmaster, I think I might choose another song - for NEXT year's show. If the choice has been made and the singers have been practicing for weeks, it's too late to change for THIS year. He sure got himself into a mess this time.

-Joe Offer-


21 Jul 06 - 07:18 PM (#1789497)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: Mo the caller

We seem to be confusing two questions here.
1.Religious Correctness gone mad? to avoid singing an atheist song at a faith school concert?
Of course not.
2. Should faith schools be encouraged, and partly funded by the State?
IMO no. Though I don't think people should be prevented from educating their children in as they believe is right. I think the American idea of not teaching religion in schools is good, but our UK education system was started by the churches, so it is hard to change.


21 Jul 06 - 09:29 PM (#1789560)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: GUEST

If the school is serving the whole community it should respect anti-Christianism too and let its have its voice. Educate the children in all things and let them decide. Isn't that how it should be?


22 Jul 06 - 12:11 AM (#1789640)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: Joe Offer

    If the school is serving the whole community it should respect anti-Christianism too and let it have its voice. Educate the children in all things and let them decide. Isn't that how it should be?
Well, I don't think I'd see the value in educationg kids in "anti-Christianism." How about teaching about alternatives to Christianity, and not be anti-anything?

I got my education at private Catholic schools in the U.S. No, they didn't teach anti-Catholicism, but they did teach us to respect and learn from a broad spectrum of non-Catholic perspectives. In many ways I felt my Catholic education allowed me to explore far more than I could have in a public school. Since we didn't have special interests saying "don't teach this" or "Don't say that," we could follow where our interests led us. We were taught "critical thinking," including how to think critically about what the Catholics have to say.

-Joe Offer-


22 Jul 06 - 03:16 AM (#1789690)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: Slag

The fact that some psychotic little twit off'd Lennon has nothing to do with Lennon's philosophy or the content of his songs. Chapman's motivation doesn't even qualify Lennon as a martyr, just a victim.

I can understand a religious organization banning (if that is the correct word) certain songs due to anti-religious content. Would you tolerate all four verses of "Bringing in the Sheaves" down at the local pub? Probably not. It's kinda like the right to associate.
Why try to make an issue of this? Unless you are anti-relgious?

As for reasonablilty, most any group has a lot of followers who are content to let some one else do their thinking for them. This is the mainstay of most political parties and it can be gauged by the number of slogans used as opposed to real ideas.

Theology and philosophy have long been bedfellows and religious thought has shaped the human mind for millenia. Our very language and thought patterns are steeped in it. You can't escape it.


22 Jul 06 - 06:33 AM (#1789756)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: GUEST

Unfortunately!


22 Jul 06 - 06:52 AM (#1789764)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: GUEST

"The meek shall inherit the earth" . Show me on f**king meek man who inherited anything.


22 Jul 06 - 10:55 AM (#1789831)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: Don(Wyziwyg)T

"Well, I don't think I'd see the value in educationg kids in "anti-Christianism." How about teaching about alternatives to Christianity, and not be anti-anything?"

That's exactly how state (C of E) primary schools in the UK ARE supposed to be operating, Joe.

The current GOVERNMENT ruling is that state schools teach comparative religion, and the school that I have worked in for fifteen years past taught about Judaism, Hinduism, Islam, and Buddhism, as well as Christianity, much to the disgust, I might add, of the less tolerant parents.

I see no reason, therefore, to try to hide from pupils the fact that some people live good, moral lives without subscribing to any of the above.

Discrimination is either wrong, or it is not. It cannot be wrong in one istance, and right in another, according to the prejudices of the person in charge.

For this reason, I think this case IS important, and bear in mind that the school is arguably breaking government rules by its action.

Don T.


22 Jul 06 - 11:11 AM (#1789840)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: Abby Sale

Jon says "The decsion seems quite reasonable for a C of E school to take. The song is at odds with Christian teaching."

And that's the truth. It shows the essential problem with having an Established religion as in all of the UK. It's law. It's the Official Religion. Schools are not expected to be "fair" in this (although as stated above, they've greatly liberalized over the past few decades), they are expected to be parochial schools that happen to be supported by the state. I gather that Scotland has much eased up on this in practice.

We never much held with parochial schools but on entering our child in primary school in Scotland in 1975, we found she would be forced to recite Christian prayer and sing Christian songs and take Christian holidays and would not be excused for Jewish High Holy Days. We would up placing her in a Jewish school. Thue, the state schools (as opposed to the church ones) didn't spend much time teaching religion but they didn't have to - a C of S "atmosphere" was rampant.

I believe that even the most benign Established Religion (and I know that it is pretty benign in the UK)) is patently unfair. What non-subscribing Brit or non-established-but-observant Brit (eg, Free Kirk or Baptist) could be comfortable with suppurting (or not) his own church and also paying for C of E/S through his/her taxes?


22 Jul 06 - 11:41 AM (#1789867)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: Fibula Mattock

I had to sing "All things bright and beautiful" at school, which pissed me off, as I'm not a Creationist. (Actually all the hymns pissed me off, as I'm an atheist. But hey, I was educated in N. Ireland so we got 14 compulsory years of Christianity forced down our throats whether we believed it or not. I'm all for education ABOUT religion, but not IN religion.) Oh, and I totally agree that Imagine is a pretentious pile of crap.

"I'm off to see the Bootleg Beatles/As the bootleg Mark Chapman"
(Half Man, Half Biscuit)

"The meek ain't gonna inherit shit"
(Alabama 3)


22 Jul 06 - 01:12 PM (#1789937)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: fat B****rd

"....those who are not meek but will inherit the earth all the same" Richard Farina.

Just thought I'd join in. Doesn't bother me wether or not the children sing Imagine. I've found it a dirge from the first time I heard it.


22 Jul 06 - 02:35 PM (#1790015)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: Bunnahabhain

It's about now somebody starts moaning all the good hymn tunes are stolen folk melodies.....

Accordsing to the reporting, the kids had spent weeks practicing it before it was pulled, so it's not as if they're not aware of it. I can't see a problem with the school removing it from a concert, if it doesn't feel right for the spirirt the school is trying to convey. It's not as if they're burning the manuscripts....

Also the school is in Exeter, not the middle of nowhere. Parents will have the choice the send their children elsewhere if they object to the decisions being taken at the school.


22 Jul 06 - 04:12 PM (#1790083)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: Nigel Parsons

Teaching comparitive religion to the children is a far different matter to encouraging them to sing a song advocating doing away with religion.

It is good to see a head teacher of a Church School prepared to set a standard, and getting the support of the local clergy.

CHEERS
Nigel


22 Jul 06 - 06:47 PM (#1790192)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: BuckMulligan

Excellent point Nigel


22 Jul 06 - 06:52 PM (#1790199)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: BuckMulligan

Mercifully, "typing" is not part of "language." Or I'd truly be "up shit's creek."


22 Jul 06 - 06:59 PM (#1790210)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: BuckMulligan

Lost a post there somewhere, sorry all. Point was "language" is a natural phenomenon that follows its own rules. It isn't something humankind invented, and it isn't something for which humankind's desires and rules should be expected to apply, any more than our expectations about gravity should be expected to apply. (For example - human "common sense" says that a 4 pound cannonball "should" fall four times faster than a one pound cannonball. Does it? And do we bitch about it? Language works the same way - according to its own rules, not according to what we think it should do.)


22 Jul 06 - 06:59 PM (#1790212)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: BuckMulligan

Hm - wrong thread entirely. 'Night all.


22 Jul 06 - 07:01 PM (#1790216)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: greg stephens

Well, given that this song is the about the most mawkish hypocritical load of bollocks that anyone is likely to hear in a lifetime: and also given that it is anti-religious: I dont really understand why anybody is demanding that kids in a religious school should be forced to sing it. I know what I'd say to anyone who tried to force me to sing it.Sod off. I hope any children, or parents of children, would do likewis.


22 Jul 06 - 08:45 PM (#1790270)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: 282RA

"Imagine" was my class song although I didn't vote for it. The ballot allowed a write-in so I wrote in Iggy's "No Fun" which turned out to have garnered more votes as a write-in than some of the songs on the ballot.

The problem for me is that "Imagine" is not pretentious crap. But it is simply not a song directed at me. To Lennon's credit he wasn't preaching to the converted. "Imagine there's no heaven" is meaningless to me because I don't have to imagine it, it's how I see it. So who is he talking to? Those that believe (and they're the ones who usually proclaim the song pretentious crap and that makes me laugh). He's not preaching to me. He's preaching to you.


23 Jul 06 - 02:52 AM (#1790458)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: Purple Foxx

I remember a theologian being interviewed on TV a year or two back who was putting forward a very convoluted (& obtuse) argument as to why this song epitomised "the Christian message".
On balance I prefer this latest approach.
Which at least shows some comprehension.


23 Jul 06 - 03:50 AM (#1790479)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: treewind

Abby:
It shows the essential problem with having an Established religion as in all of the UK. It's law.

While it's true that many of the UK's schools and the older universities are historically religious foundations, and that there's no explicit law or constitutional clause fordidding state support of any religion, and of course the monarch is the head of the C of E... nevertheless the Christian religion is not particularly forced down people's throats at schools nowadays. Britain is very cosmopolitan (especially the big cities) and there is far more emphasis on, for example, comparative religion. In fact one reason why this story is news is because it's so unusual.

on entering our child in primary school in Scotland in 1975, we found she would... not be excused for Jewish High Holy Days

Scotland is more extreme about these things. In the 1960's I went to an old fashioned English public school (that's what the Americans would call a private school) that certainly taught us Christianity and had prayers in the morning and even its own chapel, but any pupils of other religions were excused from all of that, and certainly some of my friends vanished on Jewish holidays. We even had a Jewish head boy in my year.

Of coure you could argue that as the parents were paying the fees the school should provide whatever concessions were asked for, but even where state shools are called "C of E" I don't think anybody feels that they are "supporting the church" by paying taxes for education.

Anahata


23 Jul 06 - 05:15 AM (#1790511)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: mandotim

I don't like the song much either, but I think it's important to make a distinction here. As I see it, the song is not anti-faith, it's anti-religion. It doesn't say 'Imagine there's no God', does it? Perhaps Lennon was having a pop at organised religion, which given the state of our world, has a lot to answer for. Faith is fine, but religions have killed in their millions on behalf of a human generated idea of 'their' God or Gods. It's still happening all these years later.
Tim


23 Jul 06 - 08:46 AM (#1790611)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: GUEST,sensible

Here we go - knock the christians - too scared to critcise the murdering jewish state. Too scared to criticise the muslims. What you lot forget is the this is a CHRISTIAN country if you dob't like it FUCK OFF to muslim land.


23 Jul 06 - 10:13 AM (#1790659)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: Purple Foxx

Guest sensible,The Christian term for FUCK OFF is Go forth & multiply.


23 Jul 06 - 06:30 PM (#1791053)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: Don(Wyziwyg)T

Waste of breath Foxx. Guest (not very) sensible, obviously has no understanding of the basic meaning, or moral ramifications of "the Christian faith".

Don T.


23 Jul 06 - 07:50 PM (#1791135)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: robomatic

Well, the line does go "...and no religion to" and even if we're just being asked to 'imagine' it's clearly put in the light of "oh wouldn't it be wonderful". So there's a chance some kids would wonder why they can sing that as part of a church singing?

Now I'm not English and I'm not Christian so I clearly could be missing some nuance of life that puts it that the Church should just 'ignore it and go on'.

The types of Christians I'm more familiar with would have simply left out or changed that lyric and gone on with it.


23 Jul 06 - 11:41 PM (#1791290)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: Abby Sale

treewind:

I appreciate that - and that things have much liberalized in the past 30 years. I did allow that the Established Religion is pretty benign in the UK; both in theory and practice. (Incidentally, in practice it's often far more liberal than many parts of the US. We certainly have no Established Religion in theory but a vast number of USians think we do and/or should.)

I firmly believe that even the most benign form is still wildly unfair in practice. I can go into endless examples off list.

The taxes I meant are not those for schools per se, the are the general revenue, a significant amount of which goes (went?) directly to the Church for general use. Thus, the English Baptist must pay income tax to directly support all aspects of the C of E and ALSO contribute whatever is needed to support his/her own church. I guarantee this is noticed and resented.


24 Jul 06 - 12:26 AM (#1791314)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: Joe Richman

The songs most-mentioned in this thread (after John Lennon's "Imagine") are "Onward Christian Soldiers" and "I'm Working on a Building". These are hardly the only alternatives to "Imagine", but still I wanted to check them out.

I found that"OCS" was written by one Sabine Baring-Gould (words) and Arthur S. Sullivan (music). I know of him, but I'm not so familiar with her. (My Mother is one of the world's biggest "Gilbert & Sullivan" fans.) Talk about politically incorrect... try having the C of E kids sing "I've Got a Little List"!

"IWOAB" was certainly NOT written by "Cowboy Junkies". My edition of Tony Russell's discography gives the first recording as that of the Carter family in 1934 on Bluebird and also sold on the Monkey Ward label. I'm sure that they didn't write it even if the label says they did. I've heard it played by bluegrass gospel bands on TV and in jams.

I got a good Methodist upbringing, myself, and I've always felt that the problem with religion and politics is that religion needs protection from politicians, and not the other way around. That's why I can't understand the British state church thing (being a non-conformist and all that...). The one thing I have taken from the organized American United Methodist Church is a wonderful book called "Songs of Zion" published by Abingdon in Nashville in 1981. I can't recommend this book highly enough.   It is full of songs that would be much much better choices than any of the songs mentioned so far (with the possible exception of IWOAB). My daughter's High School Choir sang one of them: "The Storm is Passing Over" by Charles Albert Tindley, and it was to me the highlight of their concert. (This was a public American High School, which is to say a Government run school for all my UK readers who probably already know the American idiom.)

And finally, as to "the meek shall inherit the earth". This is undoubtedly true. It is a sort of corrolary to "the peg that sticks up is soon hammered down". If you were to view the streets of my native Southern California in time lapse photography you would see a large group of the meek gradually inheriting this piece of earth.

Joe


24 Jul 06 - 12:52 AM (#1791320)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: GUEST,Big Ted

It's a little known fact that the boss of the C of E (well, probably more the second in command), the Archbish of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams, is actually a life-long fan of The Incredible String Band and even wrote the preface to a book about them. So, if the school in question had chosen The Hedgehog Song instead of Imagine, everything would be fine...right now.


24 Jul 06 - 01:55 AM (#1791347)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: Manitas_at_home

"I found that"OCS" was written by one Sabine Baring-Gould (words) and Arthur S. Sullivan (music). I know of him, but I'm not so familiar with her."

Obviously. Perhaps you should google the Reverend Sabine Baring-Gould!


24 Jul 06 - 09:32 AM (#1791594)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: Joe Richman

Oops, well I guess Sabine is another one of those names that's a girl's name here and a boy's name there... Like Ashley and Leslie!   (Sexual correctness violated by American Mudcatter!!!) Also, those hyphenated family names... not just for wealthy famous married women!

My google search came up with a short biography of Mr Rev B.-G. I see he was a major figure of English folk music collection in the 19th century, in addition to being a Class A Victorian eccentric. Now why didn't I remember that? I guess it's because he didn't come over to Kentucky to find his material.


24 Jul 06 - 09:49 AM (#1791608)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: Fibula Mattock

Did I say "pretentious crap"? I meant "condescending pretentious crap", sorry.


24 Jul 06 - 07:14 PM (#1792083)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: GUEST

Well, as a fellow non-believer I wish I'd written it. It says what I feel perfectly. Thanks John.


24 Jul 06 - 07:26 PM (#1792093)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: robomatic

Maybe some Gilbert & Sullivan would not go amiss here:

"Sing a Merry Madrigal"

Or one of the lesser known songs from "Utopia, Ltd."


25 Jul 06 - 12:43 AM (#1792347)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: Slag

Maybe the problem here is understanding just what religion is and is not. When you are convinced of the "rightness" of your own point of view THAT is religion. Being thuroughly convinced that there is no god then YOU become god for "that which we esteem the highest is our god." So, now that you Atheists realize that you too are religious how does your ability to be tolerant rank with that of the Jews or say the Christians or any other group you so bravely dercry. Excepting those who, for their own reasons of manipulation, inject religion into the political arena, most religious people try to go about their daily lives attempting to be true on a personal level to whatever beliefs they hold dear. They suffer the put-downs and the derision that is heaped on them by the self-appointed know-it-alls, not to mention the jack-booted thuggies who hate their "different ways of dress, speech, thinking. You know, to be TOLERANT you have to hold some belief, some truth dear. Then you can hear what someone else may have to say and accept the fact that they have made a choice different from yours. How ugly, how fascist to condemn someone who seeks to teach and expound upon their beliefs to their OWN people or those seekers who want to understand more about some particular belief system. How open minded YOU sound by condemning someone who is setting a standard in their own school. You certainly make a strong case for intellectualism (self-defined) to win out over conventional religion(s).


25 Jul 06 - 03:47 AM (#1792415)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: Paul Burke

Well, Slag, I like the straw man, nice try. There should be a competition for it. Youy rather ignore the possibility that there might be other things than the self for atheists- like humanity, the world as an interactive system, society etc. etc. And that the postulated higher thing being of the religious might not actually exist.

Well, no, actually you don't make that latter mistake. Religious folk are perfectly happy for all gods OTHER than their own selection not to exist.

So, no, we are not religious and we are not selfish.

Secondly, as for the right to teach beliefs to their "OWN people"(*)- if you followed the thread you'd see that these are not faith schools in the elective sense. They are state- funded schools that are often (usually) the only one in the district, but which for historical reasons happen to be controlled by a religious organisation, the Church of England.

In terms of the song, yes, is maudlin, sentimental, simplistic, and as such differs little from many other songs that get sung by utopians (religious or not). The point is whether a state- funded school in a pluralist community should feel it has the right to impose a narrow, sectarian, religious point of view.

(*) People haven't "owned" other people in England since 1772, and n the USA since 1865.


25 Jul 06 - 05:42 AM (#1792485)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: Mr Fox

Fibula Mattock wrote: "Did I say "pretentious crap"? I meant "condescending pretentious crap", sorry."


Sanctimonious. You forgot sanctimonious.


25 Jul 06 - 03:06 PM (#1792939)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: Slag

The quote was more of a paraphrase but close enough to convey the idea (Paul Tillich's) that all humans are religious in some manner. It is a defining attribute. Some people feel that by declaring themselves void of a supreme being or any religious trappings, they are free to tear into someone else's belief. I believe that freedom of religious choice and practice and expression here in the US is a good idea that needs to be protected. It helps our diverse population to still be united as a nation. Seems to me we fought some folks a couple of hundred years ago for the right to hold such an idea. Is this a straw man? Thank God we won that battle against the right strawy King George III head of state and head of the Church of England.

PS. You are owned by whomever you owe.


25 Jul 06 - 03:45 PM (#1792971)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: cockney

It does seem to be OK to slag off christanity on this site but not judism or islam.


25 Jul 06 - 04:08 PM (#1792986)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: Fibula Mattock

Agreed Mr Fox!

People can believe in 3-headed orange biscuit barrels as gods if they so choose. I don't mind at all what people believe in, but I don't necessarily want to sing from the same (figuartive and literal) hymn sheet.


25 Jul 06 - 05:19 PM (#1793050)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: frogprince

"Religious folk are perfectly happy for all gods OTHER than their own selection not to exist."

That does generally seems to be how "religious folk" approach the issue, at least so far as the Christians I know are concerned. One ironic thing about that, is: Christians (conservatives, at least) acknowledge the same God presented in the Old Testament. But the Old Testament is by no means consistently monotheistic. It teaches that Yahweh created everything, which perhaps implies that the other gods aren't really worth calling gods. It teaches that you shouldn't worship any of the others, but doesn't really say they don't exist. There are various instances in which "Show-downs" between Yahweh and some other god occur, which serve to prove that "my God can whup your god", but which tend if anything to imply that the other god exists.
There may be claims in places that only Yahweh exists, but the O.T. books aren't consistent about it.


25 Jul 06 - 05:40 PM (#1793074)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: Stewart

On the benefits of a Christian education:
"I speak as one who was intended by my father to be brought up as a Rationalist. He was quite as much of a Rationalist as I am, but he died when I was three years old, and the Court of Chancery decided that I was to have the benefits of a Christian education.
I think perhaps the Court of Chancery might have regretted that since. It does not seem to have done as much good as they hoped. Perhaps you may say that it would be rather a pity if Christian education were to cease, because you would then get no more Rationalists.
They arise chiefly out of reaction to a system of education which considers it quite right that a father should decree that his son should be brought up as a Muggletonian, we will say, or brought up on any other kind of nonsense, but he must on no account be brought up to think rationally. When I was young that was considered to be illegal."
A Plea For Tolerance In The Face Of New Dogmas by Bertrand Russell (1947)

"I was much cheered on my arrival by the warder at the gate, who had to take particulars about me. He asked my religion, and I replied 'agnostic.' He asked how to spell it, and remarked with a sigh: 'Well, there are many religions, but I suppose they all worship the same God.' This remark kept me cheerful for about a week." Bertrand Russell

Cheers, S. in Seattle


25 Jul 06 - 07:20 PM (#1793153)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: Slag

I would not forbid anyone his or her religious beliefs; the limit being the use of force or coercion to spread said belief. I've made a study of most of the great religions of the world and not a few minor ones and while I may not agree with them their adherents have every bit as much right to their beliefs as I have to mine.

Speaking of setting up straw men: To denigrate God as a three-headed orange biscuit barrel, well even I could see where you might find THAT ridiculous. And the contemptuous and summary dismissal of the Torah and its world-changing revelation of the Hebrew's God displays the depth of your Biblical, theological and historical scholarship. Had the world only known of your genius earlier we would have been spared the curse of Western civilization altogether!

If you choose not to be a Christian, well, God bless you. If all is not Atman or Brahmin with you, better luck the next time around. If you cannot find the Tao or your tao, blaise a new trail. No need to be hostile. If your parents tried to inculcate you into their faith they did it because they loved you and wanted what they believed to be best for you. If in your desire to rebel and remove the umbilicus you also rejected their religion or their God, that was your choice. That you hold it as a shrine of anger tells me something about you and where you are on your path. If your identity is established because of reactionery responses to your then immediate cultural environment, look deeper. Again, religion is not for everybody nor is Atheism or Agosticism. Lighten up a little and the world will be a much friendlier place.


26 Jul 06 - 02:35 AM (#1793383)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: Wilfried Schaum

"Imagine there's no country
It isn't hard to do
Nothing to kill or die for
And no religion, too
Imagine all the people
Living life in peace"

should prompt you to think about the role of religions in warfare now and then. When singing "Erhalt uns, Herr, bei deinem Wort und steur des Papsts und Tuerken Mord" (Keep us, o Lord, with thine word and stop the Pope's and Turk's murder) I still hear the pikes of Schmalkalden marching to battle for our faith ... all wrong, since love is the message.

When young I'm sure I'd have liked the song - so optimistic and utopic, and so simple in its words. Now since I'm older and know a lot more about literature and cultural history I'm inclined to join my dear friend Fibula Mattock in her assessment of this song.

So let the kids sing it if they like it - sometimes I still remember how it was being young.


26 Jul 06 - 04:19 AM (#1793425)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: Fibula Mattock

it's a dreary tune too ;)


26 Jul 06 - 08:42 AM (#1793586)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: Snuffy

"If triangles made a god, they would give him three sides." - Montesquieu


26 Jul 06 - 09:38 AM (#1793623)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: John O'L

Snaffy are you saying that the Holy Trinity was thought up by a triangle?


26 Jul 06 - 02:30 PM (#1793834)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: Greg B

A critical point that hasn't been made here is that these
were primary students. They may not be entirely equipped
to rationalize the meaning of Lennon's poetry, which is
really after all about tolerance and peace but on the
surface seems to be about eliminating property and
institutions (rather than changing the way we behave
around same).

A silly choice of performance pieces; even sillier was
that they didn't figure it out before it had been rehearsed.
The banning of it only calls attention to it, and since it
was end-of-term it will probably go without proper discussion
in the classroom setting.

I think I would have referred them to the Taize ecumenical
community songs for something more appropriate. Which would, in
the process, show off the youngsters' abilities in Latin.


26 Jul 06 - 05:05 PM (#1793949)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: Nigel Parsons

Is this why we no longer sing the third verse of the (English) National Anthem?




Just as a reminder for those who forget..


"Lord grant that Marshall Wade
May by thy mighty aid
Victory bring
May He sedition hush
And like a torrent rush
Rebellious Scots to crush
God Save the King. "


CHEERS
Nigel


26 Jul 06 - 05:32 PM (#1793970)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: Slag

No. Lennon is INTOLERANT of religion. He sees the idea of an afterlife as destabilizing a potential utopia in THIS life. His final solution is to get rid of religion and such nasty scary ideas as Heaven and Hell (and patriotism "...it bannishes fear with the speed of a flame..."). The ideas he presented in his song stand in opposition and competition to those of any and all relgions. I would like to say that his vision of peace is about as appealing as being a stock of broccoli but even plants in their own way compete for resources and reproductive rights. Life is what it is. We all strive to better our condition in some way but Utopians as well as some religious zealots who think the abolition of all other points of view is the way to ultimate peace only bring about the kind of peace you find in a graveyard.

Whatever you are willing to die for demonstrates the highest esteem (see above). The American State religion (if you will) says that this is freedom and democracy. Many hundreds of thousands of the best and brightest of America have agreed and paid the ultimate sacrifice for those ideals. In so doing we have secured, imperfect as it may be, a degree of liberty for our citizens and many others around the world. Those ideals have roots in the Judeo-Christian religions as well as in the Hellenic philosophical and political heritage. Your freedom to agree with John Lennon was bought and paid for in blood. Had it not been, such a discussion as this would not even be taking place, let alone it's being in German. I'd be shot and you'd watched VERY closely for daring to have thoughts you believed to be your own!


27 Jul 06 - 08:29 AM (#1794465)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: Wilfried Schaum

John O'L, look at a dollar bill. Isn't God there represented as a beaming triangle with an eye?


27 Jul 06 - 09:16 AM (#1794499)
Subject: RE: Religious Correctness gone mad?
From: Tweed

Imagine brings the hair up on me everytime I hear it, but probably true they shouldn't use it in a church school if they want to keep promoting their message.

This one brings the hair up too.
Reverend Overstreet clip/I'm Working on a Building

Reverend Louis Overstreet goes way beyond Cowboy Junkies' version somewhat,at least it does for me.