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Creationism Makes Its Mark
religion dispatches ^ | January 6, 2008 | Lauri Lebo

Posted on 01/07/2009 6:00:18 PM PST by Inappropriate Laughter

When their son Zachary came home from science class with a cross burned on his forearm It was not the religion that bothered his parents, but the injury to their child. They sued, and brought science v. creationism back into the courts for another round.

Teacher John Freshwater and the brand on the arm of his student

It was a little over three years ago, on December 20, 2005, that Judge John E. Jones III issued his ruling in Kitzmiller v. Dover that intelligent design was not science, but merely repackaged creationism—and that it had no business in biology class.

The hoopla was immediate and enduring. Jones’ decision launched headlines across the globe, not to mention celebrations by the trial’s plaintiffs, their legal team and science experts (who send “Merry Kitzmas” greetings to each other on the anniversary).

For many, the Dover case became a cautionary tale of what can happen when a public school board believes its attempts to insert religion into the classroom can stand up to national attention and legal scrutiny.

But it would be a mistake to think that public school educators of fundamentalist faiths have made peace with science. Attacks on evolutionary education continue to take place out of the national spotlight, in small towns where people are reluctant to challenge the behavior of those clinging to power, and where teachers use their classrooms to proselytize to students away from the disapproving eyes of church-and-state watchdogs. They continue to preach intelligent design, the concept that life’s complexity demands a divine hand, and out-and-out Young Earth Creationism.

X Marks the Spot

Nowhere right now is this more apparent than in the small town of Gambier, Ohio, a place that bears a striking resemblance to the fictional town of Frank Capra’s Bedford Falls.

Here, in late September, just off a wide-spaced street that leads to the green campus of the liberal arts school of Kenyon College, a small-framed woman in dark sunglasses takes a seat at the local restaurant.

She is trying to pass unnoticed. Nervously, she nods to the owner of the establishment. Because she doesn’t know who is on her side and who’s not, Jenifer Dennis keeps her head down.

Only weeks later, Dennis would be forced to out herself publicly. But for now, she is trying to remain anonymous in order to protect her son Zachary from the inevitable recriminations from some who reside in the Mount Vernon School District in conservative south-central Ohio.

Last December she and her husband Steve accused a popular 8th-grade science teacher, John Freshwater, of using an electrostatic device known as a Tesla coil to brand a cross into Zachary’s arm [see image above]. They say the burn, which in photos show an 8-by-4-inch mark on his forearm, raised blisters, kept their son awake that night, and lasted for several weeks.

At first glance, they saw the mark as a religious emblem. But their first concern was less about religion and more about what they considered to be a case of a teacher injuring their son.

Their accusations and their resulting lawsuit against the district have brought them criticism. A sign posted in a yard near their house read, “The student goes. We Support Mr. Freshwater. The Bible stays!”

For all the unusual elements to this story, this part is the strangest. At first, Jenifer and Steve were timid about pursuing legal action against the school district, fearing that they would be perceived as anti-Christian.

They’re not.

“We are religious people,” they said in a statement after they filed suit in June. “But we were offended when Mr. Freshwater burned a cross onto the arm of our child. This was done in science class in December 2007, where an electric shock machine was used to burn our child.”

Changing Stories: An X or a Cross?

The day after the incident, Jenifer and Steve met with the district Superintendent Stephen Short and showed him a photo of her son’s burn. Jenifer recalls that she was told that Freshwater’s use of the device was unacceptable and the district would investigate.

What took place over the next several months is not exactly clear. As is typical in these types of stories, there is much disagreement over who is on the side of truth. But some details have emerged.

The district hired an independent investigator. After a lengthy investigation in which Freshwater, other teachers, students, and administrators were all interviewed, the consultant concluded in a report that Freshwater had been teaching students that evolution is a lie for at least 11 years.

The report also said that Freshwater had witnessed to students, at one point telling them that there couldn’t possibly be a genetic link to homosexuality because the Bible says it is a sin. The report also said that he handed out Bibles to members of the Fellowship of Christian Athletes and led them in prayers during school hours. Also, Freshwater said he had given a voluntary extra-credit assignment to students who watched Expelled, a documentary that argues teachers who believe in intelligent design are facing discrimination.

According to the report, Freshwater at first denied the incident. Later he admitted to the experiment, admitting he marked Zachary with an X. However, students interviewed for the investigation all described it as a cross.

The link to the full report is here.

In response to the investigation, Freshwater was told to remove all religious items from his room, including a poster of the Ten Commandments hanging on the wall, stickers with scripture on them, extra Bibles he kept in the back of the classroom, and the Bible that he kept on his desk.

In April, Freshwater, fearing disciplinary action, took his side of the story public. He never mentioned the branding incident. Rather he said it was because of the Bible on his desk.

Because he had refused to remove it, citing religious freedom under the First Amendment, he said he was being persecuted. Students organized a rally for him, bringing their Bibles to school in support. A Web site devoted to Freshwater’s cause is called www.bibleonthedesk.com.

But Dennis said the issue was never about the Bible on the desk. And nowhere in the lawsuit’s initial complaint is it even mentioned.

Rather, she says, it’s because her son was branded.

After Freshwater took his side public, Jenifer said she and her husband were worried Freshwater wouldn’t face disciplinary action. In June, they filed a lawsuit against Freshwater and the district for violating the First Amendment’s Establishment Clause by permitting religion to be taught in class, and for failing to protect their son. Federal law allows such civil liberties cases to be filed anonymously. Freshwater has filed a countersuit, citing defamation of character.

In July, the school board suspended Freshwater without pay based on the investigatory report, saying he had misused the electrical device, taught religion in his science class, and failed to follow district curriculum and rules.

Both sides are now awaiting the outcome of administrative hearing to determine whether he should be permanently fired. The hearings took place this fall and have been continued until January 6.

For now, while he waits for the outcome of the hearings, Freshwater is selling Christmas trees. Last week, he said he believes the district is retaliating against him because he advocated for “critical analysis” of evolution in 2003.

“They’ve marked me as a religious—I don’t know if I want to use this phrase about myself—but as a religious fanatic,” Freshwater said.

Freshwater is careful to say he doesn’t object to all elements of evolutionary theory, but would simply like to raise some questions about it. He said that in the 21 years he has been a teacher, he has been using the Tesla coil on students, even though manufacturer instructions warn that it is not to be used on human skin. He said he has never had one complaint until now.

Freshwater said that there is no way to tell whether the photo presented by the Dennis family that shows the mark of a cross on a forearm was doctored, or whether it was even Zachary’s arm.

When asked if he was accusing the family of lying, Freshwater said, “Don’t put words in my mouth.”

While he admits using the device on Zachary, he said he didn’t know if it left a mark.

Not Always a Rural Issue

Despite the gruesome elements, the story is less unusual than at first appears.

According to a poll published this spring in the Public Library of Science Biology, one in eight US high school teachers presents creationism as a valid alternative to evolution.

The poll, conducted by Michael Berkman, a political scientist at Pennsylvania State University in University Park, and his colleagues, also learned that 16 percent of teachers believe in creationism.

While Berkman’s research did not address why so many teachers are creationists, he speculated in an e-mail that biology appeals to even fundamentalist Christians:

In Darwin’s day, most biologists felt that they had a calling to describe God’s works. So people of all faith traditions may be drawn to biology, including those whose faith includes a literal interpretation of Genesis. Clearly, a substantial percentage of them are unwilling to accept the geological, chemical, and genetic evidence for an old earth.

Jason Wiles, a Syracuse University biology professor whose research focuses on teaching issues related to biological evolution, said he frequently runs into creationists training to be educators.

“It’s not only in the South, or in rural areas,” Wiles said.

Wiles recently held a workshop for 30 science teachers in the Syracuse city school system. Three of the teachers were actively interested in promoting intelligent design.

He suspects that the reason that so few cases make it to the public stage is that many parents aren’t always aware of what’s going on in the classroom. Also, children are often unaware that the teacher has crossed a Constitutional line.

“A lot of times students just don’t know what their rights are,” Wiles said.

Resolution Far Off

On that day in September, Jenifer Dennis had come to Gambier to meet one of the plaintiffs in the Dover case. I was giving a speech at Kenyon College that night about Dover’s battle. Cyndi Sneath, one of the parents from Dover, had ridden out with me from Harrisburg.

As they sat down at the table, Sneath and Dennis began to compare notes, sharing common experiences. Dennis plopped a large file on the table that details the case and starts flipping through pages. She asked Sneath if she had initially realized how demanding and time-consuming being a plaintiff in a First Amendment case would be. Sneath told her she honestly had no idea what to expect.

At first, Jenifer Dennis said she couldn’t tell if she was overreacting to her son’s arm. “I was thinking maybe I’m crazy,” she said. “I was thinking maybe it’s something they do? And it’s OK?”

Dennis and her husband are both Catholic. They are NASCAR fans who camp in an RV at races. Yet, they are being labeled as elitist and intolerant of religion. At one school board meeting in July, numerous parents and teachers spoke in defense of Freshwater and criticized the parents. One parent told the board, “As a Christian, I don’t accept the separation of church and state.”

During the district’s administrative hearing process, Freshwater successfully argued that Zachary’s name be released publicly. So the anonymous status in the family’s lawsuit has now become a moot point, and the recriminations that the family feared have begun with calls and letters.

But Dennis said she has also had friends and strangers come up to her and say that they’re glad they came forward. She said Zachary, who turned fifteen on Dec. 17, is handling the pressure.

But unlike in the Kitzmiller case, in which Sneath and 10 other parents sued the Dover school district, Jenifer Dennis still feels alone in her fight.

She is looking forward to a resolution in the case. When she started this battle a year ago, she never envisioned it would still be going on through another Christmas. “I just need some closure,” she said. But her lawsuit will no doubt drag on for much longer. The trial date is not until May 2010.

Tags: creationism, darwin, evolution, intelligent design

Lauri Lebo has been a journalist for twenty years. As part of an investigative reporting team, she helped solve two civil rights-era murders. As the York Daily Record’s education reporter, she covered intelligent design’s First Amendment battle. The winner of numerous state and national awards, she lives in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; US: Ohio
KEYWORDS: creationism; education; evolution
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To: Coyoteman

Well you keep saying the evidence is there, but you dont provide it? Sorry you think I am so close minded. When I did not understand the details required to support Darwin’s theory, I thought it could coexist with a creationist view. I figured God created man in his own time and way through evolution. But Darwin assumed a “simple” process in cell production, a black box that exhibited no complex machinery or processes. That has now been shown to be incorrect, yet those invested in evolution of all life from the primordal goo continue to assume that that complex nature just “formed”. Or that it was deposited here by some other higher being from another world (as long as it was not God).

Good night as well.


301 posted on 01/11/2009 9:10:08 PM PST by Magnum44 (Terrorism is a disease, precise application of superior force is the ONLY cure)
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To: Magnum44; aruanan; Alamo-Girl; shibumi; hosepipe; metmom
...At the nano-level, [DNA/RNA and the mechanisms of cell reproduction] function like computerized machines, decoding the complex DNA and replicating the code bit by bit.

Interesting observation, Magnum44. This may be a good description of activities going on in the "local neighborhood"; but to me it is doubtful that DNA itself could ever be comprehensively understood in terms of its strictly "local" effects.

I'm well aware that, these days, there is a popular school of the philosophy of science that, taking a page from Newton (they think), "reduces" the universe to mechanical laws. WRT Newton, nothing could be further from the truth, in terms of Newton's own thought and convictions. But that's another story for another day....

What we really need to ask is: What is DNA? Everybody it seems just takes DNA for granted, and imbues it with whatever qualities needful to make their theories come out right. Usually it is envisioned as completely specifiable by the physico-chemical laws; and its activity is essentially random, in the limit of "natural selection."

According to this mindset, the reduction to the "machine" is the most efficient, compact, homologous, and thus most fruitful line of inquiry for the biological sciences at the present time.

Personally, I don't believe the "machine model" will get us anywhere, if we're interested in exploring the physical basis of Life. For machines have to be built and progammed before they can do anything for us. And that "anything" has been specified in advance by the builder of "the machine," otherwise he wouldn't build it.

If I'm not mistaken, science does not want to get involved with problems of just this nature. And so evidently "orthodox" science will not brook any idea of "intelligent design" whatsoever — supposedly to keep their "method", "clean."

I really do hope that we folks here at FR who are interested in this problem will continue to collaborate in the future, so to exchange insights – given the opportunity.

Thanks so much for writing Magnum44!

302 posted on 01/11/2009 9:37:33 PM PST by betty boop
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To: BuddhaBrown
[ Are you saying God’s chosen people, His chosen priest tribe (the Levites with the Urim and Thummim) and God Himself were all pagans in the OT? ]

Some were at various times and places..
It was a high priest that crucified Jesus..
God whisled for Darius, Cyrus and Nebuchanezzar to punish the Jews for good reason..
Yes... ALL OF THEM..

303 posted on 01/11/2009 10:22:39 PM PST by hosepipe (This propaganda has been edited to include some fully orbed hyperbole....)
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To: BuddhaBrown
[ Yeah, that starts to happen one whole sentance later and Matthias was “filled” with the Holy Spirit too. Was the Holy Spirit also wrong in your seemingly wiser-than-scripture assessment of things by lighting upon Matthias along with the others? ]

Being filled with the Holy Spirit is a starting point to even BE a christian.. That don't make you an apostle.. Actually if you havent been filled with the holy spirit you are not even a christian.. you are merely a religious person.. like a Buddist..

304 posted on 01/11/2009 10:27:41 PM PST by hosepipe (This propaganda has been edited to include some fully orbed hyperbole....)
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To: betty boop

Thank you for your considerate response.

The origin of the universe, life, and man are clearly subjects of interest to the scientific community and I support the “clean” scientific process. They are also subjects of theology. And I believe that while some evidence may support one theory (Darwin), that does not preclude another theory. Many popular scientific theories of the day have been disproven over time.

As a Christian, I believe that we were created with the desire to understand the physical universe we live in. We will never understand it completely in this life, but we have the built in desire regardless. In the process we discover many things, including the wonders of Gods creation. And many of those discoveries have Gods fingerprints on them, if one is open to see them. Of course if ones eyes are closed to this, one does not see. God gives us the choice to see or not.

I am an aerospace engineer, quite educated, but not a practicing “scientist” in the classical sense, so, on one hand, maybe I am not adhering precisely to an academic scientific method in my thought process. But on the other, as an engineer, the DNA/RNA nano-machinery is just fascinating, and as one who understands a little about machine design, computer design, and software design, these mechanisms have higher intelligence written all over them.

It stands right up there with the Big Bang for signatures of God. (If you dont know, the Big Bang is pretty much undersood...except for how it got started, which requires you to believe it got a “push” of energy by ??? not explained in the mathematics)

Have a good nite.


305 posted on 01/11/2009 10:48:56 PM PST by Magnum44 (Terrorism is a disease, precise application of superior force is the ONLY cure)
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To: hosepipe

Yes, the OT is full of stories about how the Jews fell into idolatry. That does not mean that God’s approved use (via the Levites ) of the Urim and Thummim, for example, was pagan.

“Actually if you havent been filled with the holy spirit you are not even a christian.. you are merely a religious person.. like a Buddist..”

I understand that viewpoint, but it’s not the same thing as what happened on the Pentecost. And, yes, I understand some misguided folk pretend to have the same experience as that written of in Acts 2. But certainly you don’t believe any Christians alive today, including the silly folk who speak gibberish and flail about, are empowered with the spiritual gifts displayed back then.

I’ve not heard of any living human who can speak and have EVERYONE from ANYWHERE understand what is being said in each listener’s native tongue. That is the real version of speaking in tongues.

We can continue to argue about this if you wish since I like that kind of thing. But I seriously doubt that there is anything you can say that will convince me your interpretation of Who chose Matthias is somehow more valid than that of Peter and the other apostles.

Also, I am not a Buddhist. I AM Buddha.


306 posted on 01/11/2009 11:07:55 PM PST by BuddhaBrown (Path to enlightenment: Four right turns, then go straight until you see the Light!)
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To: BuddhaBrown
[ But certainly you don’t believe any Christians alive today, including the silly folk who speak gibberish and flail about, are empowered with the spiritual gifts displayed back then. ]

No thats being possessed with something.. as a ceremonial christian is.. The Jews proved ceremony was worthless..

307 posted on 01/12/2009 6:42:13 AM PST by hosepipe (This propaganda has been edited to include some fully orbed hyperbole....)
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To: hosepipe

“No thats being possessed with something..”

I think we agree that the modern folks who flop on the floor and say things nobody can understand are NOT experiencing anything from the Holy Spirit.

“The Jews proved ceremony was worthless..”

Well, I’d agree that they often misused it. And, obviously to the bible student, Christ’s perfect and final sacrifice put an end to the blood ordinances.

By the way I misused the term “Jews” once or twice above. I should have said “Israelites”.


308 posted on 01/12/2009 7:25:09 AM PST by BuddhaBrown (Path to enlightenment: Four right turns, then go straight until you see the Light!)
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To: BuddhaBrown
[ By the way I misused the term “Jews” once or twice above. I should have said “Israelites”. ]

If you are not "born again" then you are still a primate..
Makes little difference of your origination..

You are born on this planet with the hope(possibility) of being born again..
Failing that.... all other data is meaningless..

309 posted on 01/12/2009 8:37:33 AM PST by hosepipe (This propaganda has been edited to include some fully orbed hyperbole....)
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To: hosepipe

“If you are not “born again” then you are still a primate..”

I am familiar with the so-called “born again” concept, but I’ll have to admit I’ve never heard it stated exactly that way before.

But use of the word “primate” does almost make it seem like our discussion is back on-topic with the ToE stuff.

Good luck and God bless.


310 posted on 01/12/2009 9:56:38 AM PST by BuddhaBrown (Path to enlightenment: Four right turns, then go straight until you see the Light!)
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To: BuddhaBrown
[ I am familiar with the so-called “born again” concept ]

Jesus said, "You MUST be born again"..

311 posted on 01/12/2009 10:04:52 AM PST by hosepipe (This propaganda has been edited to include some fully orbed hyperbole....)
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To: hosepipe

I would enjoy a discussion of the “born again” concept, but it does seem we’ve already strayed far from topic here. I don’t wish to keep this thread floating based solely on that, but you are older (join date) than I so if you think it appropriate I will give my opinion regarding it on this thread.

We could, I suppose, claim the gods of Time and Chance have caused the debate to “evolve” thus slyly persisting the relevance of our topical negligence.

Speaking of your FR seniority (hell, I’d not even heard of FR in ‘98), I forgot to mention that I clicked on your username.

Two of the three branches on your “Reading Material” tree are dead. Apparently they were linked to FR articles that have become virtual victims of some sort of unnatural selection.

Also, of your listed quotations, the H.L. Mencken one is my favorite. While I certainly don’t agree with everything he wrote, that particular quote regarding the politics of fear is quite applicable still nearly a century later as many of today’s headlines would attest.


312 posted on 01/12/2009 10:44:38 AM PST by BuddhaBrown (Path to enlightenment: Four right turns, then go straight until you see the Light!)
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To: betty boop
Thank you so much for your outstanding essay-post, dearest sister in Christ!

Personally, I don't believe the "machine model" will get us anywhere, if we're interested in exploring the physical basis of Life. For machines have to be built and progammed before they can do anything for us. And that "anything" has been specified in advance by the builder of "the machine," otherwise he wouldn't build it.

I agree. The machine model is yet another description of what life looks like - albeit more descriptive on the details. It still doesn't get us any closer to what life "is."

313 posted on 01/12/2009 8:56:20 PM PST by Alamo-Girl
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To: doc30

“Most of the Founding Fathers were Deists, not Christian fundamentalists.”

That’s BULL. You are a liar or a fool.


314 posted on 01/14/2009 9:34:21 AM PST by demshateGod (the GOP is dead to me)
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