fbpx

Connect religious instruction says vampires fake but Bible is fact

Hugh Harris / 27 June 2016

Connect religious instruction outlines the contest for kid’s souls.

Source: Connect religious instruction says vampires fake but Bible is fact

“These books are about vampires”, begins the Connect religious instruction lesson for seven to nine year old children, introducing the well-known Twilight series of vampire novels, well known for their blend of eroticism and horror.

Recommended for ages 13 and over, the series follows the trials of Bella Swan, who falls in love with the pale, but good-looking vampire, Edward Cullen. It tells of his struggle to resist the strong sexual desire aroused by the scent of Bella’s blood, and his choice to protect her from a coven of evil vampires.

“Some of your older brothers and sisters, or even your parents, may have read these books,” the lesson continues.

The Connect religious instruction program is produced by the Sydney Anglican group Youthworks, and is widely used in New South Wales and Queensland.

“Who can tell me what they think a vampire is?” the class is asked.

“In these made-up stories about vampires how do you think someone becomes a scary vampire?

“Accept responses. A vampire bites them and drinks their blood, the person dies and then the person comes to life again but this time they are not a person, they are a vampire”.

The Christian fascination with the vampire myth relates to the inversion of the communion sacrament. The human immortality resulting from drinking the blood of Christ is contrasted with the immortality of drinking human blood and belonging to a fallen, demonic world.

Twilight‘s author Stephanie Meyer uses her Mormon faith to infuse the series with themes of sexual abstinence, evil, and immortality.

“There aren’t any vampires in the Bible because the Bible is not a made-up book – it is a book containing facts”, the Connect lesson continues.

“But there are some true stories in the Bible about people dying and then coming back to life again and we’re going to look at one now.”

Evidently, the point of the lesson is to emphasize the authority of the Bible. A fundamentalist adherence to the literal truth of scripture is a key element of Connect: “To understand that the Bible is God’s word: that it is historically reliable and still relevant today.”

The program emphasises the literal truth of familiar Bible stories such as Adam and Eve, and Noah’s Ark. Connect refers to the story of Jesus turning water into wine as: “a true story … Jesus really did this; it wasn’t a magic trick.”

The authors apparently have no scruples with using violent and age inappropriate material to generate interest in the Bible.

Children are told they “will die” if they’re selfish, and nine-year-olds were to roleplay a beheading in David and Goliath. Parents have been disturbed by lessons denigrating children by comparing them to dirty towels in need of cleansing.

The grisly material is particularly at odds with the protests of conservative religious groups about violent and pornographic material in video games and movies.

But the gravest concern is the contest for children’s souls, which is the clear and explicit focus of the Youthworks Connect RI program.

Any doubt is expunged by Youthworks’ own website, which says that “the discipleship of children, youth and families is at the heart of everything we do.”

Making disciples “is why we exist”, they say.

RI policy prohibits proselytising, defined as “soliciting a student for a decision to change their religious affiliation”.

Windsor State School banned the Connect program for “soliciting children to develop a personal faith in God and Jesus and become a Christian or ‘Kingdom Kid’.”

The Connect program is crammed full of entreaties to join the Christian faith, to become a Christian “Kingdom kid”, to “follow Jesus”, “be friends with Jesus”, and to have “faith in Jesus”. Children are even encouraged to tell their friends about “why they want them to know Jesus”.

Nicky Ross, CEO of Christian Religious Education Sunshine Coast, admits the Connect program proselytises.

“We are very aware statements made in the curriculum DO proselytise, but the Education Act is specific not to do this and to make sure we are only educating children about the Christian faith,” he says.

Tellingly, Youthworks have obtained a legal opinion from Brisbane Barrister Stewart Webster, that the prohibition on proselytising applies only to attempting to change a person’s religious denomination.

Youthworks have forwarded the legal opinion to Education Minister Kate Jones, suggesting that they intend to enforce their perceived legal right to proselytise to non-Christian children.

While reviews are conducted into religious instruction, the respective state governments of Queensland and New South Wales must decide whether to allow the continued use of proselytising and age-inappropriate instruction material.

Vampires seeking to claim the souls of innocents is a scary thought: frightening to parents and children alike.

All the more reason.