I agree, because actually, most of the time it's not a bad thing. Since I'm of Italian/European descent, I'm Catholic and have been since my first day. Now I attended a Christian (Baptist) school, and for the most part, such as grades 1-6, it was completely fine. However, once I moved into grades 7-8 (I quit that school after that as it was just stupid) things got a little different. Now, if you guys know anything about Christianity, you'll know that the baptists (NOT all of them, it's just the handful that do that give baptists this rep), for whatever odd reason, do not like us Catholics. They make up weird things about us, say we worship Mary (which we do NOT - we have a prayer dedicated to her as she's pretty important!) and that we aren't actually Christians. Really though, without the Catholic church, there would be no Protestant (Baptist) Church. :yes:
So, I was bugged, teased, the teachers singled me out, when really I was no different from anyone. I'm totally not introverted either, I'm a fun-loving, happy go lucky type of person. But, it was the most bizzarre, most un-christian behaviour I'd ever seen. Plus, since all of these kids were brought up well, when they hit middle school they start to rebel. There were kids hiding liquor in their locker, smoking weed behind the gym, and stuff that happens at any regular school.
The other thing that was very odd was the insane amount of cliques. WAY more than public school, because of this narrow-mindedness that they got because of their religion. The teachers, for the most part, had this too. So, I think that the principles of teaching Christianity would be good to have in public schools, as they teach valuable lessons, however, sometimes things can go sideways just because kids (or teachers) think that they're different from everyone else. They made it their own sort of cult thing. So I'd say it's not a bad thing if it's just a public school, because true Christianity has some good stuff.