Church in School

Discussion in 'Discussion Group' started by VivianS, Sep 28, 2009.

  1. VivianS

    VivianS Well-Known Member

    Clayton Middle had an assembly last week on Wednesday I think it was. From what I get from the kids, it was a person from a church who spoke to them and invited them to an event at the church that night with the promise of 'the best food', and chances to win an Ipod and money. Now I have two problems with this. First, no way were we going to let the kids go since we knew nothing about this assembly or this person from this church. Second, how WRONG was it of the school to let someone from a church come in and speak to our kids without our permission yet we had to give our consent for them to watch the President of the United States? If this was all legit, fine, but the school never sent home anything saying this was going to take place, nothing home that night explaining about what they heard/saw and the invite to the church that night..... Does anyone else see anything wrong with this or know more information about this? I'm really ticked off that the school allowed this without informing the parents.
     
  2. KellBell

    KellBell Well-Known Member

    why haven't you already called the school to see if this is true?
     
  3. I agree with Kell. I'd get the details. It may not be a way to get the kids to go to their church for religious reasons. I used to go to a church that had an auction every year. People from all over came because there were basketball tickets and trips to Myrtle Beach up for bid. They had no intention of going to the church on Sunday not did anyone pressure them.
     
  4. sassymom

    sassymom Well-Known Member

    I know a lot of the schools had the Prayer around the Pole before school but have not heard all that
     
  5. GoWulfpack

    GoWulfpack Guest

    sounds like some details are missing
     
  6. bandmom

    bandmom Well-Known Member

    :iagree: thats what I would do first. Get the facts from the school and then ask them why (if its true).
     
  7. ljk

    ljk Well-Known Member

    My son was there and came home and asked if he could go see this guy at church.

    He said he played the guitar and talked about not taking drugs.
     
  8. VolleyGirl

    VolleyGirl Guest

    I think your concerns are legit. You can find someone to give the "no drugs" talk and play a guitar who has nothing to do with a church.
     
  9. DontCareHowYouDoItInNY

    DontCareHowYouDoItInNY Well-Known Member

    So you are really ticked off that someone either invited them to church or mentioned church at a school assembly without asking you first?
     
  10. KellBell

    KellBell Well-Known Member

    :lol:
     
  11. kdc1970

    kdc1970 Guest

    That's kinda what I was thinking but chose not to voice for fear of getting flamed. Seriously?
     
  12. seabee

    seabee Guest



    :lol::lol: Well hey when has that stopped you before??? :jester::jester:
     
  13. kdc1970

    kdc1970 Guest

    I'm trying to play nice!! Sometimes it works, sometimes it don't!
     
  14. DontCareHowYouDoItInNY

    DontCareHowYouDoItInNY Well-Known Member

    :lol: I disguised it as a question to cover myself.
     
  15. seabee

    seabee Guest



    you wield brashness... :jester::jester:
     
  16. kdc1970

    kdc1970 Guest



    :lol::lol::lol:

    I'm going to leave this thread alone, I think. :mrgreen:
     
  17. seabee

    seabee Guest



    I could probably work that outta you for a small fee... :jester::jester:

    Dr. Bee in the house... LOL
     
  18. Hught

    Hught Well-Known Member

    Were you really ticked off that the President wanted to present a positive message to students but did not receive the permission of the parents first?
     
  19. kdc1970

    kdc1970 Guest

    It's a lost cause.................trust me, DH has tried for about 19 years. :mrgreen:
     
  20. Jester

    Jester Well-Known Member

    With all invitations, parents do have the ability to say, "no". I don't think there should be any problem with a basic invitation at a public school. Maybe parents shouldn't be allowed to hand out birthday party invitiations either since it may be against some family's morals to celebrate a birthday.

    Seriously, sounds as if the message was sort of universal and not directly related to on-site worship. The speaker merely tied the message in with a invitation to a church function. Unless a parent has no authority over their own kids, this shouldn't present a problem.
     

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