Ten parts. One semester. Show them the facts and let them think for themselves.
1. What religion does to people
Start with right now, not the past. For years, researchers, including many who are not religious themselves, have found that people who attend religious services regularly tend to live longer, feel less depressed, and stay married longer. Harvard’s Tyler VanderWeele has shown this across large studies. Religious communities also tend to volunteer more and give more to charity. Let students see the facts first. The beliefs can come later.
2. Why the colonists came
They were not all the same. The Puritans came to build a society run by their own strict faith. Quakers and Catholics came to escape exactly that kind of control. Roger Williams was kicked out of Massachusetts for disagreeing with the leaders, so he started Rhode Island, where people could believe what they wanted. Maryland was set up as a safe place for Catholics. Early America was a patchwork of religious groups, some kind to outsiders, many not.
3. Faith and the Revolution
Religion helped fuel the fight for independence. Preachers stood up in church and told people that standing up to the king was the right thing to do. The idea that there is a law higher than any king ran through the speeches and writings of the time. Not every Founder believed the same things about God, and that is worth talking about too. Read the sermons next to the political writing.
4. What the First Amendment actually did
You have heard the phrase “separation of church and state.” Those words are not in the Constitution. Thomas Jefferson wrote them in a personal letter years later. Here is what the First Amendment really says. The government cannot set up an official national religion, and it cannot stop you from worshiping the way you choose. It protects religion from the government and the government from religion.
5. The persecution Americans forget
America’s Protestant majority did not always extend religious freedom to others. In the 1830s, a Protestant mob burned a Catholic convent near Boston. A decade later, Protestant mobs in Philadelphia burned Catholic churches and the books inside, fighting over which Bible belonged in public school. Latter-day Saints had it worse. Their Protestant neighbors drove them from state to state. In 1838, Missouri’s governor ordered them “exterminated or driven from the State.” Mobs murdered them, including children. Women and girls were assaulted, and the survivors carried it for life. In 1857, the army marched toward Utah. In 1887, Congress broke up The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and seized its property.
6. Faith on the other side
This is the other half of the story. Religion drove the fight to end slavery. Quakers and other Christians called it a sin, while slaveholders quoted the same Bible to defend it. After slavery ended, Black churches became the center of their communities and the engine of the civil rights movement. Martin Luther King Jr. was a Baptist minister who made his case in the words of scripture.
7. Then and now
Now compare that history to today. How are religious minorities treated now, including Jews, Muslims, Sikhs, Hindus, and people with no religion at all? Where has America gotten better? Where do the old patterns still show up? Have students follow the thread from the violence against Catholics and Latter-day Saints to the suspicion newer faiths still face today.
8. Christian nationalism
Some people today want to make America an officially Christian country. Look at what they are actually asking for. Then hold it up against the First Amendment and what the Founders wrote. How do its supporters argue it fits the Founders’ vision? How do its critics argue it conflicts with the First Amendment? This is where the “Christian nation” argument belongs, with the facts in front of you.
9. Read the actual texts
Read representative passages from the Hebrew Bible, the New Testament, the Quran, the Book of Mormon, the Bhagavad Gita, and others. What does each one say about fairness, forgiveness, family, and how to treat a stranger? Students learn far more from the actual words than from hearing someone else describe them.
10. The panel
Finish by inviting real people from different faiths to take students’ questions face to face. Put a Latter-day Saint, a Catholic, a Jew, a Muslim, an evangelical, and someone who is not religious in the same room, answering the same questions. Nothing breaks down a stereotype faster than a real person sitting across from you.
A class like this does not tell students what to believe about God. It shows them what religion has actually done in America, the good and the bad, and trusts them to think for themselves.
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