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"path": "/post/212412/texas-republicans-kids-study-bible-schools",
"publishedAt": "2026-06-26T16:34:18.000Z",
"site": "https://newrepublic.com",
"tags": [
"Breaking News",
"Education",
"Texas",
"Republicans",
"Republican Party",
"Students",
"Schools",
"Bible",
"Religion",
"Church and State",
"CNN",
"proposed reading list",
"offered",
"Ten Commandments",
"takes up the guise"
],
"textContent": "Texas is poised to make the Bible required reading for five million public school students.\n\nThe Texas State Board of Education is expected to vote Friday to approve legislation to scrap teaching about “World Cultures” and make Bible stories and verses a permanent part of the K-12 curriculum—a blatant violation of the separation between church and state.\n\nCritics of the measure argue that the changes risk alienating children from other religious or nonreligious backgrounds and infringe on the ability of parents to guide their children’s moral and religious education, CNN reported.\n\nIf the proposed reading list is approved, primary school-aged students would be taught stories like Noah’s Ark, David and Goliath, and Daniel in the Lion’s Den. Middle school students would study the Shepherd Psalm from the Book of Psalms, as well as the religious writings of poets like Langston Hughes and Robert Frost. High schoolers would read from the second chapter of Genesis, detailing the creation of Adam and Eve—a story that exists across multiple religions but in vastly different forms.\n\nStudents would be able to opt out of these lessons, but as the texts would be made a part of the official curriculum, that could potentially affect their grades.\n\nThe proposed curriculum would only allow the use of verses from specific Bible translations, including the King James Bible, which is not embraced by the Roman Catholic Church but is widely used by Protestant and Evangelical churches, according to CNN.\n\nIn 2023, Texas became the first state to allow the hiring of chaplains in schools, and the next year the state offered extra money to public schools willing to provide optional Bible instruction. Last year, Texas became the largest of a slew of red states to require public schools to post the Ten Commandments in classrooms.\n\nThese newest proposed changes come as President Donald Trump’s administration takes up the guise of “Christian nationalism”—while practicing policies that aren’t very Christian or particularly nationalist.",
"title": "Texas Republicans Set to Force Kids to Study Bible in Schools"
}