Where Religious Literacy Fits
From this perspective, religious literacy is not an add-on to disciplinary literacies; it is essential to understanding difference. Religion functions as a human discipline of interpretation, one through which individuals and communities make sense of suffering, justice, obligation, and hope. Because these interpretations shape how people understand themselves and others, failing to understand them leaves differences unexplained and open to easy misreading. H.G. Wells’s future is striking not simply for its inequality, but for its inability to interpret difference. The Eloi possess no shared narratives that connect them to the past or orient them to the future. The Morlocks act without moral reflection or shared ethics. In both cases, difference is no longer something to be understood. What has been lost is the interpretive ability to recognize the Other as a meaning-making being rather than an abstraction. When taught academically and inclusively, religious literacy helps students learn how to interpret differences rather than react to them. It equips them to analyze belief systems without generalizations and recognize how deeply held meanings shape human behavior across cultures and histories. Without that disciplinary understanding, difference collapses into stereotype, misunderstanding becomes suspicion, and plural democracy becomes fragile.
Teaching as Disciplinary Stewardship
In the closing pages of The Time Machine, the Time Traveller returns with no proof of his journey except for a fragile flower. His colleagues doubt his warning, and his evidence is dismissed. The future he describes feels impossible—until it is not. That ending resonates because educators often occupy a similar position. Teachers see the long arc of policy decisions and instructional shifts. They see what happens when inquiry fades, and disciplines flatten under the weight of standardization. Like the Time Traveller, teachers voice concerns that can sound abstract until their consequences become visible. To teach disciplinary literacy in a system shaped by testing, standardization, and choice is not merely a pedagogical preference. It is an intentional exercise of professional judgment. Teachers are not simply delivering content. They are preserving the ways of knowing that allow societies to renew themselves.
Changing the Timeline
The Time Machine is science fiction. But still, it reminds us that the future is shaped by what we choose to maintain. Every classroom that centers interpretation over recall, inquiry over coverage, and meaning over metrics shifts the timeline. Public education remains our most powerful form of time travel, not because it predicts the future, but because it teaches students how to think their way into the future. Wells shows us what is lost when that work ends. The question facing our education system is whether we will continue that work intentionally, even amid the competing pressures that shape education today. Educators across contexts are navigating this tension between institutional demands and the deeper purposes of teaching for a democracy.