Updated 04:40 pm.EST, Sat November 21, 2009

Education|Tue, Apr. 24 2007 10:59 AM EDT

Record Numbers Share 'Truth' at High Schools

By Doug Huntington|Christian Post Reporter

“Day of Truth” chalked up record numbers last week as seven times more high school students participated in this year’s event compared to its initial start two years ago.

  • Day of Truth
    About 7,000 students participated in this year's 'Day of Truth' - a date which encourages Christian students in public schools to speak out against homosexuality.

Reaching its third year, ”Day of Truth” recorded 6,954 high school students from around the nation who wanted to voice their disapproval of homosexuality one day after the pro-homosexual “Day of Silence.”

“Christian students should be allowed to express their viewpoint just like any other student,” said Mike Johnson, senior legal counsel for the Alliance Defense Fund (ADF), in a statement. ADF, which sponsored last Thursday’s event, is a legal organization that aims to defend the right to speak the “Truth.”

“The Day of Truth provides students the opportunity to present a different viewpoint than the one expressed by students participating in Day of Silence,” Johnson added.

The “Day of Truth” was created to counter the “Day of Silence,” an event sponsored by the Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network (GLSEN) and held in response to the harassment shown towards gay students at school. On the “Day of Silence,” students and teachers remain silent for one day to point out the bigotry against homosexuals.

Organizers of “Day of Truth” have argued that the “Day of Silence” does more than stand against prejudice, however. It also normalizes homosexual behavior on campus as well as supports the “homosexual agenda.” In addition, it targets those students who are unclear about their sexuality.

So supporters of the “Day of Truth” want equal rights to share their viewpoint on homosexuality. ADF explained that Christian peers are often stopped for sharing their religious perspective or even ridiculed.

“For quite some time now, students have been hearing only one side of the story on this issue,” added Johnson. “But the truth emerges when both sides of issues are presented. We are thrilled to see that the Day of Truth, in three short years, has taken off this way.”

Students last week participated in the “Day of Truth” through a variety of activities including wearing shirts with the “Day of Truth” logo on them, handing out Christian literature to other students, holding events that support the Biblical perspective of homosexuality, and initiating media coverage to gain exposure for the movement.

Several students also gave away cards that said, “I am speaking the Truth to break the silence. Silence isn’t freedom. It’s a constraint. Truth tolerates open discussion, because the Truth emerges when healthy discourse is allowed. By proclaiming the Truth in love, hurts will be halted, hearts will be healed, and lives will be saved.”

Several schools, including some in Danbury, Conn., and Bel Air, Md., had banned students from participating in the event initially, but allowed students to partake after ADF attorneys intervened.

“Day of Truth supporters work to encourage an open and honest discussion,” stated Johnson. “Allowing the communication of one viewpoint and claiming it’s the only viewpoint is advocating, not educating.”

At some other schools, meanwhile, students not part of “Day of Truth” chose to protest the “Day of Silence” directly.

A group of high school students from Sacramento, Calif., were suspended when they refused to remove their shirts that read “Sodomy is sin” during the “Day of Silence.” The students, who were from Rio Linda High School, also staged an after-school protest. During the protest they held up signs that said, "School bans free speech," "School censors Bible," and "Don't silence Christians."

Many prefer that students support the “Day of Truth” rather than boycotting the “Day of Silence” as it promotes activities that do not disrupt class or school activities.

Last year, around 2,800 Christian students participated in ”Day of Truth,” while about 1,100 were a part of its first year.

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  • Wed Apr 15, 2009 4:24 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    "And why is any discussion that doesn't condemn gays is characterized as a "pro-homosexual" agenda?"

    For the same reason anti-gay folks call themselves "pro-family." It is propaganda. If you shout out a new term or phrase, you get to use it how you want, even if it is contradictory or linguistically meaningless. "Pro-family" sounds good, but people who use that label are defined by their intolerance of families which aren't like theirs. Stopping someone from marrying someone else does nothing to strengthen your family.

    Good post, Cheisa, but these people are being honest about their beliefs. You seem a little confused. I hate to break this to you, but being Christian doesn't stop at "being nice." It does, in fact, involve the Bible, which has a lot of ignorant, hateful things in it. Their war on homosexuals is fully backed by Biblical teaching. That is one reason so many of us have left it behind.

    You seem too kind to be a true Bible supporter. I can promise that you would be just as kind (and possibly happier) without it.

  • Tue Apr 14, 2009 10:59 am Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    When you characterize the Day of Silence as "pro-homosexual" you also have to characterize the Day of Truth as "anti-homosexual." It's only fair.

    And why is any discussion that doesn't condemn gays is characterized as a "pro-homosexual" agenda? Gays are being harrassed, bullied and beaten in our schools in far greater numbers than any other group of students. It's sounds like a human rights issue more than anything and as Christians we should be condemning these abuses, not the abused. The Day of Silence is about standing up for civil rights, not gay rights, though gays, like anyone else should enjoy the same protections in school that we would all expect our sons and daughters to enjoy: freedom from harassment, violence and other abuse. Are we as Christians so preoccupied with their sexual orientation that we are failing to see them as human beings, as God's children? That's what it sounds like and if that's the case, it is as immoral and wrong as we claim the gay lifestyle is. And if we don't take a more Christian stance on issues like this, if don't actively show that we love our neighborand have forgiveneses for sin in our hearts, thenm events like the Day of Truth lose their credibility. You can't teach about the Truth when you don't honor it yourself.

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