History
Bill of Rights Institute: Removing Obstacles to Teaching About Religion in Schools
Guest Blog: Scott M. Petri, Ed.D. A Ross Douthat editorial in the NY Times entitled Is The World Ready for a Religious Comeback? posits that the decline of religious practice is increasingly seen as a social problem. He then cites a study that investigates the demise of the “Nones” — Americans with no religious affiliation […]
A Thousand Ships: The Unsung Heroes, Victims, and Villains of the Trojan War
Guest Blog: Jane Fitzpatrick, Contributing Writer for Religion Matters Review of A Thousand Ships by Natalie Haynes (Harper, 2021) From the schemes of the Goddess of Discord to the vicious revenge of Hecabe, queen of the fallen city of Troy, Natalie Haynes turns a familiar story into a brand new set of accounts. In the […]
Helping Students Understand the Rise of Christian Nationalism
Guest Post: Anne Selman Raybon “That’s sacrilegious.” I was teaching an adult Bible Study class at First Baptist Church in Asheville, North Carolina. I’d asked the regular teacher if I could teach the class over four Sundays as a trial run for a unit on Christian Nationalism that I’d developed. After a session on the […]
Exploring Religions with EduProtocols
Guest Post: Scott Petri, John F. Kennedy High School (California), and Adam Moler, New Richmond Middle School (Ohio) The Pew Research Center recently released survey results showing that atheists and agnostics tend to participate in civic life at rates matching or exceeding those of religiously affiliated people. This study is important because it counters the […]





