Durandal wrote:Maybe I was laboring under a misconception here. My impression was that they were doing it for their own benefit, and subsequently someone else brought the media into it.
Irrelevant. Christians have this undying need to shove their religion into everyone else's face; they call it evangelism. That's what leads them to whine and complain whenever they're not allowed to procure whatever facilities they wish to evangelize.
Their reasoning for doing it on the front lawn, I was thinking, was that they were refraining from engaging in such an ignorant display within the school walls.
It's on school property. If kids can be busted for smoking outside school walls, restrictions on religious demonstrations should damn well apply outside schools walls, as well.
Actually, the argument could be made that there are myriad "other religious practices" allowed on school grounds. The high school I attended, for example, permitted (i.e. they neglected to put a stop to) covens, Islamic prayer groups, Buddhists and others. But not Christians. They didn't know what to make of the Thor's Hammer pendant I wore.
As I said, we're discussing ignorant little high school kids here, and such are not typically privy to this level of logic.
Then you should see no problem with restricting Christian practices, just like every other religious practice, on school grounds.To answer the question of whether or not I've been "indoctrinated" into believing that Christianity is good; quite the contrary. My parents taught me from a young age that 1) Christianity, as a religion, is right up there with the other Middle Eastern religions on the bloodshed charts, and 2) because it usurped, distorted, lied and massacred its way to prominence in Europe (by way of the Roman Empire) it should be driven back whence it came. That last tenet has always struck me as being ignorant in its own right, but it also seems poetically just.