Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Crushing religious schools with state funding
Crushing religious schools with state funding
Jan 27, 2026 8:03 AM

The UK government has crafted an educational mandate for religious schools that Sohrab Ahmari at Commentary calls “Orwellian.”

Under the proposal, all schools would be required to teach children from age 4 and up “age-appropriate” content that includes information about same-sex marriage and transgenderism. Catholics, evangelicals, Orthodox Jews, Muslims, and others with traditional views on sex and gender would have ply. No exceptions.

He notes that a senior government adviser stated it is “not OK for Catholic [or other religious] schools to be homophobic and anti-gay marriage” – although the latter position has been official Catholic dogma since time immemorial.

The European problem is the Canadian problem, as well. Taxpayer-subsidized parochial schools are being coerced to teach a similar curriculum, because Catholic teachings on contraception and gender identity would “attack or hurt others … deny science, deny evidence, and deny human rights,” according to the premier of Alberta.

As transatlantic governments strive to impose national education standards even on religious schools, a different model is on display in the U.S. Betsy DeVos critiqued federal intrusion on local education, a realm properly controlled by munities – and parents. AEI’s Andy Smarick records:

The Bush and the Obama “approaches had the same Washington ‘experts’ telling educators how to behave.” They operated under the same “false premise: that Washington knows what’s best for educators, parents, and students.” She added that “when es to education — and any other issue in public life — those closest to the problem arealwaysbetter able to solve it.” “The lessons of history,” DeVos concluded, “should force us to admit that federal action has its limits.”

Forcing religious taxpayers to fund the transgression of their consciences should be one such limit. The quality of children’s education, and the authority of parents – which may be said to be “priordial and inalienable” – should not depend on prevailing government ideology.

There are two problems preventing the government from agreeing with such a reasonable statement.

One is the issue of government funding. The UK has 7,000 publicly funded parochial schools, including “48 Jewish, 27 Muslim, 11 Sikh, and five Hindu schools.” Canada’s private schools get 70 percent of their funding from the government. Even as outspoken a proponent of private education as DeVos told Congress, “Schools that receive federal funds must follow federal law. Period.”

There is only one safe road open for religious schools that want to maintain their faith once the government changes hands: Reject all government funding. Taxpayer funding inevitably brings bureaucratic regulation.

The second part of the problem is more fundamental. A recent YouGov poll found that 85 percent of Brits deemed teaching sex and relationship education (SRE) “very important” or “quite important.” The poll ranked sex ed the fifth most important subject in school – behind science but ahead of history, geography, and business studies. Less than half as many said the same of religious education, which ranked fourth from the bottom ahead of drama, classics, and Latin.The disparity may explain why a policy that would crush parental rights is being advanced by members of the Conservative Party.

This poll underscores a stark reality: Only a religious and virtuous people can long maintain a limited government.

This photo has been cropped. CC BY 3.0.)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Pope Francis calls climate change a sin
Pope Francis recently referred to climate change as a sin in a message he gave on the world day of prayer. Research fellow at the Acton Institute, Dylan Pahman, had a lot to say about this in a new article at The Stream. mented on Francis’ message as well as analyzing the effects on the poor of some of the policy prescriptions that Francis has praised. He says: What seems to be lost on these hierarchs is what to do...
The high cost of air pollution: trillions of dollars and millions of premature deaths
Air pollution is now the world’s fourth-leading fatal health risk, causing one in ten deaths in 2013. According to a new study by the World Bank, the premature deaths due to air pollution costs the global economy about $225 billion in lost labor e, or about $5.11 trillion in welfare losses worldwide. That is about the size of the gross domestic product of India, Canada, and bined, notes the report While we tend to think of air pollution as occurring...
The soul of the polis
In this week’s Acton Commentary, “Piety and Politics: The Church’s Social Responsibility,” I take up the Kuyperian distinction between the church conceived as organism and as institute and point out some ways in which such ideas can help us navigate the dangerous waters of social and political engagement. When the Letter to Diognetus describes the diffuse influence of Christians in the world, it uses the living imagery of the soul: What the soul is in the body, that Christians are...
How much economic value does religion provide America?
How much value does religion add to the U.S. economy? According to a new study the effect of religion exceeds the revenue of the ten largest panies—including Apple, Google, Amazon, and bined. The study, recently published in the Interdisciplinary Journal of Research on Religion, provides three estimates of the value of faith to U.S. society. The first and most conservative estimate takes into account only the revenues of faith-based organizations falling into several sectors (education, healthcare, local congregational activities, charities,...
‘He needs us’: The missing ingredient in Western missions
More and more, Western churches are opening their eyesto the risks and temptations inherent in so-called “short-term missions,” whether manifested inour basic vocabulary, paternalistic attitudes, or reactionary service. As films like Poverty, Inc. and the PovertyCure seriesdemonstrate, ourcultural priorities and preferred solutions often distract us from the true identities and creative capacities of our neighbors. Paired with apassion to “do good,” and standing atop an abundance of resources, it’s easy toforget and neglect the importance of real relationship, holistic service,...
Why is Russia restricting religious freedom?
Two months ago Russian president Vladimir Putin signed into law a number of “anti-terrorism” measures that limit missionary and evangelistic efforts and restrict the religious freedoms on non-Orthodox groups. As Christianity Today notes, to share their faith, citizens must now secure a government permit through a registered religious organization, and they cannot evangelize anywhere besides churches and other religious sites. The restrictions even apply to activity in private residences and online. Why is Russian taking implementing such constraints on believers?...
What Christians should know about (basic) economics
Note: This is the first post in a weekly video series on basic microeconomics. For the past two years I’ve been rolling out a series of posts thatattempt to define and explain a range of economic terms from a Christian context. The goalof the series is to provide Christians with a basic level of understanding that will help us thinkmore clearly about how to apply mitments to economics and public policy. But for Christians to understand how faith applies to...
The most surprising fact about American poverty
Every year, the U.S. es out with its report on es and poverty. And every year the same finding repeatedly surprises me. As economist David Henderson says, the report “always shows that there is mobility between e categories, even in the short run, and that poverty is temporary for most people in America who experience it. Virtually all reporters ignore it.” First, the bad news. The report reveals that during the 4-year period from 2009 to 2012, more than one...
7 Figures: Income and poverty in the U.S.
Yesterday the U.S. Census Bureau released itslatest report on e and poverty in the United States. Here are seven figures from the report you should know about: 1. Real median household e increased 5.2 percent between 2014 and 2015—from $53,700 to $56,500. (This is the first annual increase in median household e since 2007.) 2. In 2015 the median e of a married-couple household was $84,626. For a female head of household (no husband present) the median e was $37,797....
Radio Free Acton: Jordan Ballor on Why Abraham Kuyper Matters
On this edition of Radio Free Acton, we speak with Jordan Ballor, a general editor of the Abraham Kuyper Collected Works in Public Theology, a major series of new translations of Abraham Kuyper’s key works. We discuss the genesis and scope of the project, and examine what Kuyper has to say to modern Christians and why his contributions remain relevant a century after their initial publication. You can listen to the podcast via the audio player below. ...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved