SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Neocon who wrote (28122)8/6/2000 1:34:51 PM
From: Lisa  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769667
 
Neocon, Beautiful "{WORDS OF WISDOM";-) Alex

I sent a "mayday" to SI Bob to fix it;-)



To: Neocon who wrote (28122)8/6/2000 1:43:53 PM
From: PROLIFE  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769667
 
Yes Neo, you said,

volunteering in one's community, doing one's job, etc

Look at a clip from an article below::

********************************************************
A Web of Relationship: How Churches Help Public Schools

"I don't think they want to talk about cases
involving Christmas crèches or Halloween parties.
They're trying to keep these kids alive."

That was Steve McFarland, executive director of the
Christian Legal Society, talking to Marc Stern of the
American Jewish Congress. The two men had been
invited to meet with Chicago school officials. The
public schools needed advice on how they could
legally allow churches to help solve school problems.

Among the problems was a horrific murder rate. More
than 60 kids had been killed in the past 18 months,
many of them unintended victims of gang gunfire. That
very day, an eight-year-old girl had been attacked on
her way to school. Tragically, she had tried to hide
in three different churches, only to find the doors
locked.

Symbolically, the locks came off that very day, after
the local churches agreed to get involved. Today, two
years later, some 300 religious congregations are
involved, working with school officials in Chicago to
stop the violence. It's yet another dramatic example
of how faith communities can help solve the nation's
critical social problems.

Here's what they're doing: If gang violence erupts,
parents are encouraged to keep their kids at home. In
some cases, ministers will walk the kids to school.
Others stroll through the hallways, befriending those
kids at risk of becoming gang members. In dangerous
neighborhoods, churches now invite kids to take
sanctuary inside whenever they feel threatened.

One church set up a computer lab to keep kids busy
after school. Forty-eight schools now have programs
to connect teenage mothers to churches. These girls
receive baby clothes and bassinets -- but they also
receive something even more valuable: advice on how
to avoid pregnancy in the future, through abstinence
and self-respect.

The good news is, it's working. Of the 2,000 girls in
the program, not a single one has reported another
pregnancy.

And most exciting, the superintendent of Chicago
schools asked religious leaders for help to put
character education back into the curriculum. Today
kids in Chicago are exposed to at least 300 sessions
of character instruction during the school year.

But the success of faith-based initiatives raises an
important question: Where's the ACLU? Why aren't
those liberal watchdogs all over these schools?

Well, the answer has to do with how the programs are
set up. Student participation is always voluntary,
and all activities must remain "wholly secular."

But as Joe Loconte explains in The American
Enterprise, while teachers don't quote the Bible or
recite prayers, they're "more willing to steer needy
children toward people who do. The state has not
established religion;" Loconte adds, "it just no
longer holds it in contempt."


Loconte is right. Public schools are desperate for
the kind of help the church is well-suited to
provide. And Chicago is proving that churches can
help, if they go about it the right way. The
partnership between Chicago schools and churches is
now held up as a model by the U.S. Department of
Education.
*********************************************************
That is a plan working sounds like to me.