A:
This
is a good question, but I am not sure that I have the qualifications
to answer it. However, I will give you an answer and it may surprise
you.
I think America first turned around in the first half of the 19th century
when first, the Bible ceased to be the primary text for teaching reading
in the schools, and then, the King James text was retreated from because
of Catholic pressure. Some quotes from "An American Bible: A History
of
the Good Book in the United States, 1777-1880" by Paul C. Gutjahr
may
help you understand what I mean.
The "Bible was long used as a primary text in schools in the years
leading up to the American Revolution." (p.118)
"The conviction that all people should be able to read the Bible
was a
commonly held conviction among a large percentage of early Americans.
It
led several states to pass laws as early as 1642 requiring literacy
education. Consequently, the emphasis on personal Bible reading under
girded much of early American education." (p.118)
"By the 1820's, the Bible had almost completely receded from its
role as
pivotal text in teaching reading and had been relegated to a spot of
daily or twice-daily devotional reading." (p.119)
"One of the major turning points in this decision of heavily religious,
doctrinal material in the classroom came in 1827 when Massachusetts
passed a textbook law prohibiting sectarian books in the classroom."
(p.119)
By "the outbreak of the Civil War, there was a pronounced lack of
doctrinal material in American classrooms." (p.119)
"The long-range consequences, however, of the...struggle to keep
classrooms nonsectarian would eventually lead to the Bible being banned
from school curricula." (p.120)
In the 1840's, Roman Catholics began to challenge the use of the King
James Bible in the schools. Though they lost the early battles, legal
rulings eventually succeeded in removing the ability of schools to
require use of the Reformation Bible. (see p.120-140)
"A widespread familiarity with the King James text, partly propagated
by
the nation's schools, gave the United States a shared text from which
to
speak and anchor a common memory...As the Bible receded from the nation's
schools and other public institutions, so did its power as a binding
force for American linguistic practice, narrative convention, and
national self-perception. A text that had provided the nation with a
source of shared cultural memory and language for nearly two centuries
would find itself increasingly 'ghetto-ized' among specific more
Protestant segments of the nation's population." (p.141)
We retreated from the Bible as our major textbook at this time. It has
been downhill ever since. But we must fight on. God bless. Thank you
for
your question.
Till He comes,
Pastor David Reagan