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Amid GOP Calls for Bible in Public Schools, Some Religious Voters are Tuning Out

One recent poll showed that the economy and immigration are top issues for churchgoers 鈥 not education.

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This article is part of 四虎影院鈥檚 EDlection 2024 coverage, which takes a look at candidates鈥 education policies and how they might impact the American education system after the 2024 election.

At a stop this year on his , a traveling revival mixing faith and politics, Dallas-based preacher Lance Wallnau that liberals have 鈥渢aken over education,鈥 leaving preteens confused about their gender and urging them not to talk to their parents. 

He praised a new breed of 鈥減atriot pastors鈥 who are mobilizing the faithful to engage in 鈥渂iblical citizenship鈥 by voting and getting involved on school boards. He鈥檚 among the far right religious who say former President Donald Trump is God鈥檚 choice for president and that Christians should not only participate in government and politics, but .

Dallas evangelist Lance Wallnau preaches the theory that Christians need to dominate 鈥渟even mountains鈥 in society, including education. (Courage Tour, Facebook)

Republican leaders have spent a lot of energy this year putting those words into action. Much of the spotlight has been on Oklahoma state Superintendent Ryan Walters, who mandated that schools stock classrooms with Bibles. Louisiana passed a law requiring schools to post the 10 Commandments in classrooms, the subject of , while the Texas Education Agency has proposed a reading curriculum that includes stories from the Old and New testaments. 

But the question of whether those ideas will resonate with Christian voters on Nov. 5 is harder to answer.

One suggests they might not. On a long list of concerns influencing Christians this election, public schools ranked near the bottom, with less than 30% choosing it as a reason to vote for a presidential candidate. The economy and border security topped the list for at least 60% of voters. 

A lot of churchgoers are 鈥渟till leery of bringing Christianity overtly into public institutions,鈥 said George Barna, who runs the Cultural Research Center at Arizona Christian University, a small conservative college outside Phoenix. 鈥淭hey are more likely to desire the freedom to believe and practice their faith of choice, with their family, as they desire, without government intrusion.鈥

His recent poll suggests that many practicing Christians are so disillusioned by both Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump that they may not even vote. Barna estimated that as many as 104 million 鈥減eople of faith鈥 鈥 and of those, roughly 32 million regular churchgoers 鈥 won鈥檛 show up at the polls. 

Trump tried to shore up his support among the faithful this week during a with conservative pastors, suggesting a failed assassination attempt against him in July was a sign. 鈥淕od saved me for a purpose,鈥 he said. Conservative leaders are counting on Christians to support their preferred candidates 鈥 up and down the ballot. 

Walters co-authored an earlier this year with Steve Deace, a conservative talk show host, and David Barton, whose organization teaches history from a Christian perspective. In grave terms, they urged Christians to vote for Trump if they want schools to embrace their values.

鈥淐hurches and community groups must transform into centers of evangelical activism, educating and equipping members to take a stand in this cultural and spiritual battle,鈥 they wrote. 鈥淭he election ahead is more than a political contest; it is our opportunity to affirm our commitment to our nation鈥檚 Judeo-Christian values.鈥

But that message doesn鈥檛 always grab voters, said Kendal Sachierri, a conservative Republican running for state Senate in Oklahoma and a former Spanish teacher. A Second Amendment advocate, she defeated an incumbent who to increase penalties for having a gun on school property. 

Kendal Sachierri, a former teacher, is running for Oklahoma state Senate. She said she hasn鈥檛 heard voters talk about wanting Bibles in the classroom. (Kendal Sachierri/Facebook)

When she was going door-to-door during the primary, Sachierri said she talked to voters who were unhappy with public schools.

鈥淏ut no one was like, 鈥榃e need Bibles in the classroom,鈥 鈥 she said. When she taught at聽Newcastle High School, south of Oklahoma City, she had both English and Spanish versions of the Bible available for students. 鈥淒id I ever make a kid use it? No.鈥

鈥楤iblical foundation鈥

In local races this year, there have been signs that the public鈥檚 support for candidates who align with fundamentalist Christian groups is waning. School board hopefuls backed by Moms for Liberty haven鈥檛 fared nearly as well in primary races as they did two years ago when they earned school board seats across the country. 

The organization primarily advocates against lessons on gender and sexuality, but their summit last year also featured Tim Barton, David Barton鈥檚 son and Wallbuilders president. He preached that depends on rebuilding its 鈥渂iblical foundation.鈥 

Whether Christian voters have tired of such rhetoric enough to stay home on Election Day is hard to forecast, said Michael Emerson, a religion and public policy researcher at Rice University. 

鈥淎ttempting to estimate who will vote and who will not is unreliable,鈥 he said. 鈥淎s we have seen in the past, especially with Trump, people often say they are not voting, or not voting for him, to pollsters, but then go ahead and vote for him.鈥

Christians, in fact, have an on elections, he said. 

That鈥檚 especially true in Texas, where frequently mix. In conservative communities, it鈥檚 almost expected that a candidate鈥檚 platform will include references to Christianity, said Calvin Jillison, a political scientist at Southern Methodist University in Dallas. 

鈥淚f you’re in a red district, you better be able to speak about these issues in a way that you know voters will respond,鈥 he said. 

The state鈥檚 official calls for schools to require instruction from the Bible, and wealthy conservative donors have thrown their support behind candidates who espouse a 鈥溾 in public schools. 

They include state school board candidate Brandon Hall, a political newcomer who wants to emulate Walters鈥檚 effort in Oklahoma to purchase classroom Bibles.

鈥淭his is amazing. Let鈥檚 do it in Texas!鈥 he wrote on .

For Hall, who identified himself as a pastor in campaign documents but also works for a , promising to promote in schools was a winning strategy. He sailed past a 22-year incumbent in the March primary with over 53% of the vote in a Fort Worth-area district.

Since then, he鈥檚 been busy promoting the Texas Education Agency鈥檚 new K-5 reading curriculum that features Bible stories and emphasizes the evangelism of the nation鈥檚 founding. As 四虎影院 first reported in May, critics say it doesn鈥檛 reflect the religious diversity of Texas students and borders on proselytizing. (Wallnau has on X to ask state board members to vote for it next month.)

鈥淲hy do liberals hate the new curriculum so much? Second graders will learn courage through the story of Queen Esther,鈥 Hall in September after speaking to a community group about the program.

Rayna Glasser, center, with Tarrant County Democrats Emeri Callaway and Bill Wong, attended a candidate forum in Grapevine,Texas. (Courtesy of Rayna Glasser).

Hall didn鈥檛 respond to voicemails or messages on Facebook 鈥 and hasn鈥檛 participated in candidate interviews with .

鈥淢aybe he鈥檚 not concerned,鈥 considering the makeup of the board has shifted more in recent years, said Rayna Glaser, his Democratic opponent. 

But as she attends campaign events and house gatherings to meet voters, she鈥檚 hoping that Christians will consider what could happen if the public school curriculum becomes subsumed by theology. 

鈥淲e’ve got the Quran. We’ve got the Book of Mormon. Do you want Satan in there? Because I know you don’t want Satanism being taught in school,鈥 she said. 鈥淎s a Christian woman who believes in God and believes the Bible, I feel like if you open [schools] to one, you really have to open them to others.鈥

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