Posted on 08/01/2016 2:25:18 PM PDT by Morgana
This fall members of the Satanic Temple will offer a series of clubs in U.S. public schools. The goal of these clubs, which cater to children as young as five, is to expose students to ideas about secularism and Satanism they may not have heard before. According to The Washington Post:
[The Satanists] point out that Christian evangelical groups already have infiltrated the lives of Americas children through after-school religious programming in public schools, and they appear determined to give young students a choice: Jesus or Satan. Its critical that children understand that there are multiple perspectives on all issues, and that they have a choice in how they think, said Doug Mesner, the Satanic Temples co-founder.
Now that you know what is coming, here are three tips to help you either confront a Satanist club in your childs school or talk about it with others who are following this story.
1. Know the facts
Dont go to your school principal or local school board member and say Satanists are trying to recruit school children into their devil-worshipping cult. That type of Satanist believes that Satan is a real being who deserves worship and loyalty. Members of the Satanic Temple are not of that stripe. Theyre basically atheists who use the symbol of Satan to get a rise out of religious people. According to their website:
[W]e do not promote a belief in a personal Satan. To embrace the name Satan is to embrace rational inquiry removed from supernaturalism and archaic tradition-based superstitions. . . . Satan is symbolic of the Eternal Rebel in opposition to arbitrary authority, forever defending personal sovereignty even in the face of insurmountable odds.
The goal of the After School Satan Clubs program is basically to help kids become atheists rather than worshippers of Satan. According to the programs website:
After School Satan Clubs are based upon a uniform syllabus that emphasizes a scientific, rationalist, non-superstitious world view. . . . After School Satan Clubs incorporate games, projects, and thinking exercises that help children understand how we know what we know about our world and our universe.
(If the group is trying to convince parents, youd never guess it from the creepy promotional video.)
2. Use criticism instead of censorship
It may be tempting to try and get this kind of club banned from your childs public school, but Satanists have the same constitutional right to host an after-school club as Baptists, Catholics, Jews, or any other group. So long as they do not engage in criminal activity, there is no legal way to bar them from meeting in public schools (provided the school day has finished and attendance is voluntary). Mat Staver, the founder of the Christian legal organization Liberty Counsel says:
I would definitely oppose after-school Satanic clubs, but they have a First Amendment right to meet. I suspect, in this particular case, I cant imagine theres going to be a lot of students participating in this. Its probably dust theyre kicking up and is likely to fade away in the near future for lack of interest.
Fortunately, the first amendment also protects criticism of this kind of club. You can express to the school board, the local newspaper, and the city council your disappointment in the existence of a club that idolizes Satan, a figure universally associated with depraved acts of evil, as role model for children just learning to read and write. Consider this analogy:
Imagine if a group of adults wanted to start a Hannibal Lecter After-School Program in your childs elementary school. They agree that Hannibal Lecter, the cannibalistic serial killer from Silence of the Lambs, is a fictional character, but they promote him as a symbol of cultured refinement and dissent from authority.
Of course, it would be absurd to appropriate such a vile, evil character in order to ironically promote after-school activities. It is even more outlandish to do so with very young children who may think the evil society associates with these figures (be it Hannibal or Satan) is okay, since their new, nice friends at this club say this figure is not a big deal or is misunderstood.
Christians must be concerned, because the members of the Satanic Temple will mislead children about who the devil is and reduce him to a silly, fictional character that represents superstitious religions. Believers have an obligation to tell people that the devil is real. As St. Peter says:
Be sober, be watchful. Your adversary the devil prowls around like a roaring lion, seeking some one to devour. Resist him, firm in your faith, knowing that the same experience of suffering is required of your brotherhood throughout the world (1 Pet. 5:8-9).
3. Start a Catholic after-school club
After-school programs that idolize evil figures may be legal, but that doesnt make them moral or shield it from legitimate criticism. But the best way to refute error isnt to simply complain about itits to preach the truth!
The After School Satan program began as a response to the Good News Club, a project of Child Evangelism Fellowship that seeks to evangelize boys and girls with the gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ and establish (disciple) them in the Word of God and in a local church for Christian living. If evangelical churches and Satanists can take advantage of public school meeting places in order to reach young children with their messages, then why cant Catholics do the same?
Id recommend visiting the website of Life Teen or another Catholic youth ministry program to get resources and advice for setting up such a club. You should also get a copy of the new graphic novel The Big Picture (or its prequel The Truth is Out There) from Catholic Answers Press and consider giving it to a group of students to read, as it presents the gospel message in a way that teens and other young adults can uniquely appreciate.
What is a public school these days but a satanic temple?
I’ve told my kids years ago. If you really want to be a rebel at school, be a conservative.
True that.
Well, of course the choice whether to follow satan is one that every teen must deal with in or out of the school environment. /s /gag
That is a myth. Despite the mutterings of scotus, there is no right to corrupt young minds.
Yea but what parent in their right mind would allow their kid to join such a club?
The first few weeks weren’t so bad until they decided I was the next sacrifice :)
They were going for pounds instead of innocence.
Demented people.
” Start a Catholic after-school club “
Many evangelicals think the pope is the anti christ
Damn, that was creepy as hell
You are not kidding! I could not even watch it all the way through! Like I said what parent in their right mind would allow a kid to join that club?
[ You are not kidding! I could not even watch it all the way through! Like I said what parent in their right mind would allow a kid to join that club? ]
At this point, no amount of love is gonna keep evil at bay, it is like dealing with spiders these days...
Love’s only use now is in picking up the shattered lives afterwards and mercy for the survivors who repent.
Tagline
Go to their meeting, making the Sign of the Cross and casting out all evil spirits there.
Have they even opened one? These people are a tiny group of publicity seeking freaks. Their website is mostly about hawking new age books. Those who take them seriously only help them.
Better plan: everyone join it then vote to disband.
Read the comments in the comments section under the video. Lots of support for this. Why am I not surprised?
would those evangelicals be members of protestant denominations that abandoned Christ's established church after 1,600 years???? I thought so.
Legally -— like it or not -— there is.<p
Gotta figure out how this fits in with hate speech, though. Isn’t the point of this club the intellectual and moral defamation of believers in God?
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