If imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, then it’s only a matter of time before Jeff Landry moves to duplicate last week’s action by the Texas Board of Education.
We’ve seen the signs already. Both Louisiana and Texas passed legislation requiring the posting of the Ten Commandments in all public school classrooms. Last October, Oklahoma attempted, then rescinded a 2024 mandate that required teachers to have a Christian Bible in every classroom.
Now Texas has gone Oklahoma one better when last month the state education board approved a REQUIRED READING LIST that includes Bible passages, further blurring the lines separating church and state.
If allowed to stand, the new reading criteria will take effect in 2030 on a staggered basis, beginning with elementary students.
While the mandate appears to be the first of its kind in the nation, it will almost certainly not be the last as other Republican-controlled state legislatures will like follow suit with efforts of their own to force-feed Christian doctrines in U.S. classrooms to the exclusions of all other religions.
On its face, the new directive would appear to fly in the face of the First Amendment which says, “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof…”
Again, if allowed to stand, you can expect that Texas will not stand alone for long. Sure to follow suit will be states like Florida, Mississippi, Alabama, Oklahoma, Arkansas and…Louisiana.
You can also be assured that only certain passages of the Bible will be included in the required reading list—stories like David and Goliath, Daniel in the lions’ den, Noah’s ark but certainly none of the more than two dozen references to killing women, children, non-Hebrews or non-virgin brides.
Also most likely excluded from selective reading lists:
- Lot offering his daughters to the men of Sodom and later being seduced by his daughters (Genesis 19);
- Abraham offering up his wife in a sex-trafficking scheme (Genesis 12);
- David as an adulterer and rapist (2 Samuel 11);
- David possessing homosexual proclivities (1 Samuel 20:17);
- God directs that babies be “dashed in pieces” and pregnant women “shall be ripped up” (Hosea 13:18);
- Ezekiel 23:20;
- Numbers 22:21;
It all follows the dictum by legislators in Louisiana and other states who said schools should teach only the positives about American history. The problem with that, of course, is the courses would no longer be history. Slavery, Native American genocide, taking land by force from Mexico, denying voting rights to women and Blacks, denying basic human rights for marginalized Americans—all these are as much a part of our history, like it or not, as the discovery of the polio vaccine and the Declaration of Independence itself.
To insist these uglier chapters or our history be deleted is not history; it’s censorship.

