American Minute with Bill Federer

Who First Pushed for Public Education?... and Why?
The earliest human records appeared about 3,000 or 4,000BC - Sumerian cuneiform on clay tablets in the Mesopotamian Valley and Egyptian hieroglyphics on papyrus and monuments along the Nile.

Only kings and the ruling class could read.



The thousands of cuneiform and hieroglyphic characters were not only difficult to learn, commoners and slaves were not allowed to learn them. 

It was a form of control, similar to some American States before the Civil War that made it a crime to teach slaves to read.

Historically, kings ruled by honoring those who pleased them and by striking fear into those who did not.



Around 1400BC, Israel broke away from Egypt's totalitarian Pharaoh. 



When Moses came down the mountain, he not only had the Law of God, he had the Law in a 22 character alphabet that was so easy to learn the entire nation could read it.

Most countries had kings, and friends of the king were 'more equal'.

 When Israel entered the Promised Land, for several centuries it did not have a king.



Israel was ruled by the Law, which forbade respect of persons in judgment; rich and poor were to be treated the same; male and female made in the image of the Creator; even the stranger living among them was under the same Law as they were.

This was the beginning of the concept of 'equality'.

Not only was Israel free, they could stay free because all could read the Law.



Their experiment in self-government was dependent on one thing - the priests teaching the people to read the Law.



When the priests became negligent, everyone did what was right in their own eyes and the country fell into moral chaos.



In response, they got a totalitarian King Saul, who a short time later killed all but one of the priests.

The pattern was clear - for a country to maintain order without out a king, there needed to be an educated and moral citizenry.



During America's colonial era, education and morals were predominately taught in church schools.

After Independence, large numbers of immigrants arrived in America. The response was to create 'common' schools.



The 'Father of American Scholarship and Education' was Noah Webster, who died MAY 28, 1843.

Noah Webster attended Yale, founded as a Puritan Congregational school, but when the Revolutionary War started, he left for four years to fight. 

After graduation, Noah Webster became a lawyer and taught in New York. 



Dissatisfied with children's spelling books, he wrote the famous Blue-Backed Speller, which sold over one hundred million copies. Early editions had a "Moral Catechism" with rules from the Scriptures. 

For generations, American school children learned letters, morality and patriotism from Webster's spellers, catechisms, history books, and his Webster's Dictionary.



Noah Webster served 9 terms in Connecticut's Legislature and 3 terms in Massachusetts' Legislature where he lobbied for funding of public education, arguing the government should:

"Discipline our youth in early life in sound maxims of moral, political, and religious duties." 

Noah Webster stated:

"Society requires that the education of youth should be watched with the most scrupulous attention.

Education, in a great measure, forms the moral characters of men, and morals are the basis of government.

Education should therefore be the first care of a legislature...for it is much easier to introduce and establish an effectual system for preserving morals, than to correct by penal statutes the ill effects of a bad system..."



Webster continued:

"The goodness of a heart is of infinitely more consequence to society than an elegance of manners; nor will any superficial accomplishments repair the want of principle in the mind...

The education of youth...lays the foundation on which both law and gospel rest for success."



Noah Webster stated:

"To give children a good education in manners, arts and science, is important;

to give them a religious education is indispensable;

and an immense responsibility rests on parents and guardians who neglect these duties."



Noah Webster wrote:

"Practical truths in religion, in morals, and in all civil and social concerns, ought to be among the first and most prominent objects of instruction...

Without religious and moral principles deeply impressed on the mind, and controlling the whole conduct, science and literature will not make men what the laws of God require them to be;

and without both kinds of knowledge, citizens can not enjoy the blessings which they seek."



Noah Webster wrote in 'On the Education of Youth in America', printed in Webster's American Magazine, 1788: 

"In some countries the common people are not permitted to read the Bible at all.

In ours, it is as common as a newspaper and in schools is read with nearly the same degree of respect...

Select passages of Scripture...may be read in schools, to great advantage...

My wish is not to see the Bible excluded from schools but to see it used as a system of religion and morality."



In 'Advice to the Young', included in his History of the United States, 1832, Noah Webster wrote:

"The brief exposition of the Constitution of the United States, will unfold to young persons the principles of republican government...

that the genuine source of correct republican principles is the Bible, particularly the New Testament or the Christian religion...

Republican government loses half of its value, where the moral and social duties are imperfectly understood, or negligently practiced..."

Get the book, The Ten Commandments & their Influence on American Law

Noah Webster added: 

"To exterminate our popular vices is a work of far more importance to the character and happiness of our citizens than any other improvements in our system of education."

Noah Webster wrote in The History of the United States, 1832: 

"All the miseries and evils which men suffer from vice, crime, ambition, injustice, oppression, slavery and war, proceed from their despising or neglecting the precepts contained in the Bible."



Noah Webster wrote:

"Moral evils constitute or produce most of the miseries of mankind and these may be prevented or avoided.

Be it remembered then that disobedience to God's law, or sin is the procuring cause of almost all the sufferings of mankind. 

God has so formed the moral system of this world, that a conformity to His will by men produces peace, prosperity and happiness; and disobedience to His will or laws inevitably produces misery. 

If men are wretched, it is because they reject the government of God, and seek temporary good in that which certainly produces evil."



Noah Webster published his translation of the Holy Bible in 1833, stating:

"The Bible is the chief moral cause of all that is 'good', and the best corrector of all that is 'evil', in human society; the 'best' book for regulating the temporal concerns of men, and the 'only book' that can serve as an infallible guide to future felicity."



In 'Letters to a Young Gentleman Commencing His Education' (New Haven, 1823), Noah Webster wrote:

"It is alleged by men of loose principles...that religion and morality are not necessary or important qualifications for political stations. 

But the Scriptures teach a different doctrine. 

They direct that rulers should be men who rule in the fear of God, able men, such as fear God, men of truth, hating covetousness... 

And it is to the neglect of this rule of conduct in our citizens, that we must ascribe the multiplied frauds, breeches of trust, peculations and embezzlements of public property which astonish even ourselves;

which tarnish the character of our country; which disgrace a republican government; and which will tend to reconcile men to monarchs in other countries and even our own." 



Noah Webster wrote:

"Men may devise and adopt new forms of government; they may amend old forms, repair breaches, and punish violators of the constitution; but there is, there can be, no effectual remedy, but obedience to the divine law."



Get the book, America's God and Counry Encyclopedia of Quotations

In his 1834 work titled, Value of the Bible and Excellence of the Christian Religion, Noah Webster wrote:

"The Bible must be considered as the great source of all the truths by which men are to be guided in government, as well as in all social transactions....

The Bible (is) the instrument of all reformation in morals and religion."



In the preface of his American Dictionary of the English Language, republished 1841, Noah Webster wrote:

"If the language can be improved in regularity, so as to be more easily acquired by our own citizens and by foreigners, and thus be rendered a more useful instrument for the propagation of science, arts, civilization and Christianity."  

Search AMERICAN MINUTE archives
  
Watch past FAITH IN HISTORY episodes for FREE



News from AmericanMinute.com
Invite Bill Federer to speak - email [email protected] or call 314-540-1172

Visit the American Minute archive  

   

 

Daily Reading at:

http://www.biblegateway.com/reading-plans/old-new-testament/today?version=NKJV

Receive American Minute on your Facebook wall, Twitter feed, or RSS reader.   


Click here to make a donation. Thank you!





 
American Minute is a registered trademark. Permission is granted to forward. reprint or duplicate with acknowledgement to vwww.AmericanMinute.com




Invite Bill Federer to speak - email [email protected] or call 314-540-1172
Like us on FacebookFollow us on Twitter