The following is a transcript of the proceedings of the Senate
Committee on Education and Labor, and the House Committee on Education,
February 25, 1926, Congress of the United States, Washington D.C.
The committee met, pursuant to adjournment, at 10 o’clock am,
Senator Lawrence C. Phipps presiding. Name of those present: Senators Phipps
(chairman), Ferris, Copeland, and Brookhart, of the Senate Committee, and
Messrs. Reed of New York, Robison, Holaday Lowrey Black of New York, and
Fletcher, of the House Committee.
SENATOR PHIPPS: The committee will be in order. We will hear first
from Dr. J. Gresham Machen, of Princeton Theological Seminary.
DR. MACHEN: Mr. Chairman and gentlemen of the Committee, there are
two reasons why a man may be opposed to a bill which is introduced in Congress.
One reason is that he thinks it will not accomplish its purpose. The other
reason is that he thinks that the purpose that it is intended to accomplish is
an evil purpose.
It is for the latter reason that I am opposed to the bill which
forms the subject of this hearing. The purpose of the bill is made explicit in
the revised form of it which has been offered by Senator Means, in which it is
expressly said that the department of public education, with the assistance of
the advisory board to be created, shall attempt to develop a more uniform and
efficient system of public common school education. The department of
education, according to that bill, is to promote uniformity in education. That
uniformity in education under central control it seems to me is the worst fate
into which any country can fall. That purpose I think is implicit also in the
other form of the bill, and it is because that is the very purpose of the bill
that I am opposed to it.
This bill, I think, cannot be understood unless it is taken in
connection with certain other measures of similar kind which have been proposed
in the last few years; in the first place, of course, the so-called child-labor
amendment to the Constitution of the United States, which I think was one of
the most cruel and heartless measures that have ever been proposed in the name
of philanthropy, which is saying a good deal. Another similar measure, of
course, is the bill which has now been introduced, I believe, and which has
appeared a number of times during the last few years, establishing in a very
radical way a system of Federal aid to the States, with conditions on which
this aid is to be received. It is perfectly clear of course, that if any such
principle of Federal aid in education is established, the individual liberty of
the States is gone, because I think we can lay it down as a general rule, with
which everyone who has examined the course of education recently will agree,
that money given for education, no matter what people say, always has a string
tied to it. That appears in gifts of money by private foundations, and it
appears far more, of course, when the gift comes from the Federal Government,
which has already been encroaching to such an extent upon the powers of the
States. But this bill establishing a Federal department of education, which has
in it the principle of Federal aid, is a step and a very decisive step in
exactly the same direction, and it is for that reason that we think it is to be
opposed.
It is to be opposed, we think, because it represents a tendency
which is no new thing, but has been in the world for at least 2,300 years,
which seems to be opposed to the whole principle of liberty for which our
country stands. It is the notion that education is an affair essentially of the
State; that the children of the State must be educated for the benefit of the
State; that idiosyncrasies should be avoided, and the State should devise that
method of education which will best promote the welfare of the State.
That principle was put in classic form in ancient Greece in the
Republic of Plato. It was put into operation, with very disastrous results in
some of the Greek States. It has been in the world ever since as the chief
enemy of human liberty. It appears in the world today. There are many apostles
of it, such as Mr. H. G. Wells, for example. I suppose the root of his popular Outline of History is that
with our modem methods of communication we can accomplish what the Roman Empire
could not accomplish, because we can place education under the control of the
State, and, avoiding such nonsense as literary education and the study of the
classics, etc., can produce a strong unified state by having the State take up
the business of education.
The same principle, of course, appears in practice in other
countries in modem times, at its highest development in Germany, in disastrous
form in Soviet Russia. It is the same idea. To that idea our notion has been
diametrically opposed, and if you read the history of our race I think you will
discover that our notion has been that parents have a right to educate children
as they please; that idiosyncrasies should not be avoided; that the State
should prevent one group from tyrannizing over another, and that education is
essentially not a matter of the State at all.
The principle of this bill, and the principle of all the advocates
of it, is that standardization in education is a good thing. I do not think a
person can read the literature of advocates of measures of this sort without
seeing that that is taken almost without argument as a matter of course, that
standardization in education is a good thing. Now, I am perfectly ready to
admit that standardization in some spheres is a good thing. It is a good thing
in the making of Ford cars; but just because it is a good thing in the making
of Ford cars it is a bad thing in the making of human beings, for the reason
that a Ford car is a machine and a human being is a person. But a great many
educators today deny the distinction between the two, and that is the gist of
the whole matter. The persons to whom I refer are those who hold the theory
that the human race has now got behind the scenes, that it has got at the
secrets of human behavior, that it has pulled off the trappings with which
human actors formerly moved upon the scene of life, and has discovered that art
and poetry and beauty and morality are delusions, and that mechanism really
rules all.
I think it is very interesting to observe how widespread that
theory is in the education of the present day.
Sometimes the theory is held consciously. But the theory is much
more operative because it is being put into operation by people who have not
the slightest notion of what the ultimate source of its introduction into the
sphere of education is. In this sphere we find an absolute refutation of the
notion that philosophy has no effect upon life. On the contrary, a false
philosophy, a false view of what life is, is made operative in the world today
in the sphere of education through great hosts of teachers who have not the
slightest notion of what the ultimate meaning is of the methods that they are
putting into effect all the time.
For my part, I cannot bring myself to think, with these persons,
that the lower things in human life are the only things that remain, and that
all the higher things are delusions; and so I do not adhere to this theory. And
for that reason I do not believe that we ought to adopt this principle of
standardization in education, which is writ so large in this bill; because
standardization, it seems to me, destroys the personal character of human life.
The aim in the making of Ford cars is to make every one just as
much like every other one as possible; but the aim in education is to make
human beings just as much unlike one another as possible. I admit that the aim
in the case of Ford cars is not always attained very well. The removal of
idiosyncrasies in Ford cars is not always perfectly carried out. I can say from
my experience with Ford cars before the days of self-starters that sometimes a
Ford car will start and sometimes it will not start, and if it will not start
there is no use giving it any spiritual advice at all. Sometimes, despite
everything that Mr. Ford can do, there is too much individuality in a Ford car;
but the purpose is to make every one just as much like every other one as
possible. That is the purpose of a great many educators when it comes to
education today, and it is the purpose that underlies the tendency in this
bill. It is to remove idiosyncrasies, to interfere with people who have
peculiar ideas in education, and to try to produce a uniformity of education in
this country.
I do not believe that the personal, free, individual character of
education can be preserved when you have a Federal department laying down standards
of education which become more or less mandatory to the whole country. Of
course, there are people who say that a Federal department does not mean
anything. They say that when they talk to men of our way of thinking. A good
many people seem to have the notion that a Federal department, like the House
of Lords during the Napoleonic wars, will “do nothing in particular and do it
very well”; but for my part I do not believe, when you get a department with a
secretary who has a salary of $15,000 and a great many secretaries under him,
and when you get this dignity of a department, that you are going to find that
that department is going to be very modest about the funds for which it asks.
I think it is perfectly plain that we are embarking on a policy
here which cannot be reversed when it is once embarked upon. It is very much
easier to prevent the formation of some agency that may be thought to be
unfortunate than it is to destroy it after it is once formed. Now, I think, is
the decisive time to settle this question whether we want the principle for
which this department will stand.
But at that point, of course, there may be an objection. People
will say: “Why, you have been arguing for individual liberty in education, and
the right of individual parents to educate their children as they please, and
all that; but is not that interfered with already by the States, and is not
this bill the same in principle as the control of education by the individual
States which we already have?” I am perfectly ready to admit that there have
been grievous sins in the sphere of education on the part of individual States.
We need only think of the Oregon school law, which actually attempted to take
children forcibly from their parents and put them under the despotic control of
whatever superintendent of education happened to be in power in the district
where the parents resided. We need think only of the Nebraska language law,
which was similar to laws in other States, which actually prevented, even in
private schools, the study of languages until the children are at an age when
every teacher knows they are too old ever to learn language well. It actually,
therefore, made literary education-which most certainly is not overdone in this
country—a crime. Finally we need only think of the Lusk laws of the State of
New York, one of which actually provided that every teacher in a course of
instruction, public or private, formal or informal, should take out a State
license and be subject to State visitation and control.
I am perfectly ready to admit that no interference with liberty
could possibly be more complete than measures such as those; but the fate of
those measures is very instructive for the question with which we are dealing.
The Lusk laws were repealed. The Oregon school law and the Nebraska language
law fell before that last bulwark of our liberties, the United States Supreme
Court, which may God protect; and Justice McReynolds said, in the Oregon school
case, that the child is not the mere creature of the State. And in that principle
there lies everything for which we are contending today.
Then in the States there is a great safeguard in numbers. There
are 48 States at this time, and they are very different. So although it is
perfectly conceivable that one State may go very bad, it is not, perhaps,
likely that all of them will go utterly bad. There is great safety in numbers;
and therefore I hold that the control of education by the Federal Government is
very different in principle from the control that is already exercised by the
States, because the control by the States can be checked better in a
constitutional way than control by the Federal Government, and also because
there is a great difference in principle between having control by one central
authority and control by a great many different sources of authority.
But it will be said: “Why, do you actually mean that we should
have these 48 States, each with its own separate system of education, and a lot
of crazy private schools and church schools?” Why, people tell us we shall make
a perfect mess of it if we have any such education as that. Well, I say, with
respect to that, that I hope with all my might that we may go on making a mess
of it. I had a great deal rather have confusion in the sphere of education than
intellectual and spiritual death; and out of that “mess,” as they call it—we
call it liberty—there has come every fine thing that we have in our race today.
But then people say: “What is going to become of the matter of
equal opportunity? Here you have some States providing inferior opportunities
to others, and the principle of equal opportunity demands Federal aid.” I may
say, Mr. Chairman, with regard to this matter of equal opportunity, that I am
dead opposed to it—dead opposed to the principle of equal opportunity. What
shall be done with a State that provides opportunity for its children inferior
to that provided by other States? Should the people of that State be told that
it makes absolutely no difference, that Washington will do it if the State does
not do it? I think not. I, think we are encouraging an entirely false attitude
of mind on the part of individual parents and on the part of individual States
if we say that it makes no difference how responsibilities are met.
I believe that in the sphere of the mind we should have absolutely
unlimited competition. There are certain spheres where competition may have to
be checked, but not when it comes to the sphere of the mind; and it seems to me
that we ought to have this state of affairs: That every State should be faced
by the unlimited competition in this sphere of other States; that each one
should try to provide the best for its children that it possibly can; and,
above all, that all public education should be kept healthy at every moment by
the absolutely free competition of private schools and church schools.
A public education that is faced by such competition is a
beneficent result of modem life; but a public education that is not faced by
such competition of private schools is one of the deadliest enemies to liberty
that has ever been devised.
Unlimited competition, I think, should be the rule. We already
have interchange of ideas in this country. We do not need what George
Washington wanted, a national university, because we have both the ends that he
desired to accomplish by a national university. You need only to look at the
list of students in any of our great institutions in order to see that they
come from all over this country. There is that interchange of ideas of which he
spoke. And we have also universities in this country that do not make it
necessary for anyone to go to Europe to get an education, as he said. If we had
no universities, we might want a national agency in education, but we have
universities, and we do not want to spoil the agencies that we already have as
the erection of a Federal department would check and spoil them in very many
ways.
But then people say: “You know that this Federal department of
education is in the interest of efficiency.” They are always flinging that word
“efficiency” at us as though when that word is spoken all argument at once is
checked. Well, of course, “efficiency” just means doing things, and I think the
important thing to know is whether the things that are being done are good or
bad. If the things that are being done by any agency are good, I am in favor of
efficiency; but if the things that are being done by the agency are bad, the
less efficiency it has the better it suits me.
I think probably most of us have heard the story of the tramp who
got up to the third floor of the department store. The floorwalker on the third
floor kicked him down to the second floor, where he fell afoul of the
floorwalker on the second floor, who kicked him down to the floorwalker on the
first floor, and the floorwalker on the first floor kicked him out on the
sidewalk. He landed on his back, and got up and said in a tone of deep
admiration, “My! What a system.” [Laughter.] Now, I am unable to develop the
complete detachment or objectivity which was developed by that tramp. I am
unable to admire efficiency when it is directed to an end which works harm to
me; and the end of the efficiency of a Federal department of education would be
the worst kind of slavery that could possibly be devised—a slavery in the
sphere of the mind.
Of course, too, I might argue that Federal bureaus, when they have
become overgrown, as they are now, are hardly very efficient agencies. In fact,
I am inclined to think that they are the most inefficient agencies that can be
found anywhere on the face of the planet. They are discouraging activities by
other agencies which would perform the work a great deal better, even where
harm is not done, as it is in this sphere, by the existence of the agency
itself.
But even if Federal bureaus were the most efficient agencies that
history has even seen, I should still be opposed all the more to this Federal
department of education, because the result that it is aiming to accomplish is
a thing that I hold to be bad, namely, slavery.
A great many educators, I think, have this notion that it is
important to be doing something, to be going somewhere. They are interested in
progress, and they do not seem to care very much in what direction the progress
is being made. It is like a man who goes into the Union Station here, where all
the trains start out the same way, and he gets through the gate somehow and
sees a train that looks beautiful; it has a lovely observation car on it, and
he gets on. When I do that, my ticket reads to Princeton. I get on this lovely
train, and when it gets out of the station after half an hour the conductor
comes through the train and looks at my ticket, and says: “Your ticket reads to
Princeton, N.J., and we are bound for the West, and our first stop is
Cumberland.” I say: “Well, that makes no difference to me. This is a perfectly
lovely train, and I am so glad to be on it; and which way is the dining
car?”—and I just stay on it, and do not care where I am going.
That is exactly the way, it seems to me, with these people who, in
the sphere of education, feel that if you call a thing a department of
education, and try to spend money for education as you are spending it for
battleships, somehow that is an advantage. It depends on the direction in which
you are moving.
So that I find in this bill a decisive step in a direction where
the progress, if persisted in, will lead to disaster; and what I am hoping for
is not merely that this bill may be defeated, but that this whole tendency,
gentlemen, may be checked. I think that is the important thing.
MR. ROBISON: What do you refer to when you say “the whole
tendency”?
DR. MACHEN: The whole tendency toward uniformity in the sphere of
education, and the whole principle of a central control as over against
individual responsibility.
MR. ROBISON: Do you object, then, to the activities of the Federal
Government in the way of Federal aid to roads and to agriculture and to
commerce and to labor?
DR. MACHEN: I object in general to the principle of Federal aid;
yes, sir.
MR. ROBISON: I mean, to the activities of the Federal Government
in agriculture and roads and commerce and labor?
DR. MACHEN: I do in general. Of course, a line has to be drawn.
The Federal Government has a right to regulate interstate commerce. There are
certain powers that are delegated to it definitely by the Constitution, and I
do not desire to speak about other subjects; but in general I am opposed, sir,
to the principle of Federal aid in the spheres where the States are really in
control.
MR. ROBISON: In agriculture the activities of the Federal Government
may have no relation to interstate commerce, but be directed to other matters.
DR. MACHEN: I am opposed, sir, to the extension of the operation
of the principle of Federal aid. I think that it has clearly gone too far even
in other spheres; that it has clearly gone too far, and that it should be
checked. But I do not desire to speak about other spheres. I am talking
specifically about the sphere of education, and in that sphere the principle of
limitation of competition, etc., as I have tried to explain, does not come in.
In that sphere, I think, we should absolutely avoid the principle of Federal
aid.
SENATOR PHIPPS: Doctor Machen, you are connected with the
Princeton Theological Seminary. That is denominational; is it?
DR. MACHEN: Yes, sir.
SENATOR PHIPPS: Which denomination is it?
DR. MACHEN: It belongs to the Presbyterian church.
SENATOR PHIPPS: Reverting to your illustration of the Ford car,
what has been the result of the plan adopted by the English schools for boys,
such as Eaton and Rugby? Does it turn out boys all of the same type, all of the
same mold, or does the system take away from their individuality?
DR. MACHEN: I am not prepared to speak about the English
public-school system, sir, because I do not know enough about it. I am not
prepared to say how far it is monopolistic. I am prepared to say that I think
that any central activities in Great Britain are no precedent whatever for
central activities in this country. I believe with all my soul in the principle
for this country of the division of power between the States and the Federal
Government; and it is a very different matter, I think, when you deal with a
country such as Great Britain. I do feel, sir, that it is plain that in Great
Britain there is very great danger, because of present economic pressure, of
the destruction of all of those principles of individual liberty which have
made Great Britain great. They have the terrible evils of the present time; and
it seems to me that in this country, where we have not the economic pressure,
it is for us for the moment, where necessity is not upon us, to go straight on
the road of individual freedom; not to be in a panic or turned aside from it.
SENATOR PHIPPS: Are there any further questions to be put to the
witness?
MR. LOWREY: I should like to ask some questions, Mr. Chairman.
Doctor, are you a member of the National Education Association that is meeting
here?
DR. MACHEN: No, sir.
MR. LOWREY: Were you at the meeting when the resolution was passed
in favor of this bill?
DR. MACHEN: No, sir; I was not. I have only read about it in the
newspapers.
MR. LOWREY: The question I intended to ask is about a matter that
has puzzled me somewhat. It seems that the resolution was passed unanimously,
and now I am finding a great many who are saying, “I am opposed to it, but I
did not vote against it.” I think not less than 8 or 10 educators have
expressed definitely to me their opposition to it and yet say, “I did not vote
that way” I do not see why the fight was not made there if there was strength
of opposition. I do not see why some of those men who have said that so
definitely to me did not make the fight.
DR. MACHEN: It is a very strange thing to me that that is not
done. A great many men feel that there is no use in voting against a thing
unless you can defeat it. I do not feel that way. I think it is a very
important thing to vote exactly in accordance with your conscience, quite
irrespective of the immediate success of your vote in your dealing with that
measure.
MR. HOLADAY: Doctor, do you feel that at any time in the past the
present Bureau of Education has directly or indirectly interfered with the
operation of the school with which you are connected?
DR. MACHEN: No, sir; I do not think that there is anything to be
said definitely with respect to the theological school with which I am
connected.
MR. HOLADAY: Do you know whether or not the Bureau of Education
has ever interfered, directly or indirectly, with the operation of any private
or church school?
DR. MACHEN: I have not the evidence before me. I myself am
inclined to think that the classification of colleges which has been proposed
by it is unfortunate, and I believe that the vast enlargement of such
activities by a department of education would be dangerous; but I am not in the
present hearing at all personally interested with respect to my activities in
the institution with which I am connected.
With respect to the future, I do feel, sir, that I am contending
for a principle which is absolutely necessary to the principle of religious liberty.
There are in the sphere of education tendencies which are directly opposed to
religious liberty, such as the effort to produce a system of morality codes,
etc., in the public schools; and the whole notion that the function of the
public school is to be enlarged it seems to me is inimical to the principle of
parental authority, and is very dangerous. The proper tendency, it seems to me,
would be to diminish rather than to increase the function of the public school,
and to place the responsibility for the moral and religious training of
children exactly where it belongs, upon the individual parents. There is a
tendency there which I think is dangerous; and the tendency of those who
advocate this bill, with their desire that there shall be a dignity given to
public education under central control which it does not possess, that its
function shall be enlarged, if continued, I think, will be inimical in the most
thorough-going way to religious liberty.
MR. REED of NEW YORK: Doctor, may I ask you a question? Carrying
out your principle, if it were left to you, would you abolish the present
Bureau of Education entirely?
DR. MACHEN: I could not say that definitely until I examine in
detail, sir, all of the functions of the present Bureau of Education. It is perfectly
obvious that the Federal Government has some functions in the sphere of
education, for instance in the District of Columbia; and I should have to
inform myself more particularly before I could answer that question. But I do
advocate the abolition of certain functions of the present Bureau of Education,
its activities as a general agency in the guidance of the States in their own
individual affairs. I think that there are activities which would far better be
avoided; but I cannot make so sweeping an assertion as that I should advocate
the abolition of the Bureau of Education without examining all of its
functions.
MR. REED of NEW YORK: I know that you are sincere in opposing it
on principle, not only in education, but in other activities. For instance, we
will take the Department of Agriculture. Carrying out your principle, if you
had the right to do it, would you be in favor of eliminating Federal aid in the
Agricultural Department.
DR. MACHEN: I think this is to be said—that when you eliminate an
agency which has long been in operation you are doing something more serious
than the avoidance of an entrance upon those activities; and I should have to
examine the dangers which might result from the sudden elimination of such
activities in the sphere of agriculture. I do feel, however, that there is a
difference between the sphere of education and those other spheres. As I say, I
think that when it comes to the training of human beings, you have to be a
great deal more careful than you do in other spheres about preservation of the
right of individual liberty and the principle of individual responsibility; and
I think we ought to be plain about this—that unless we preserve the principles
of liberty in this department there is no use in trying to preserve them
anywhere else. If you give the bureaucrats the children, you might as well give
them everything else as well. [Applause.]
So that it does seem to me we are dealing with the most important
part of human life when we are dealing with education, and we are dealing with
a sphere where analogies drawn from mechanical spheres are very dangerous; and
yet I am opposed in general to the notion that even in other spheres we should
develop the principle that if someone else does not do it, Washington will
always step in and do it. I think that is opposed to an economical conduct of
life; it is working great moral harm to our people in many other spheres; but
the exact limits of the activities of the Federal Government constitute a
question with which I am not now attempting to deal.
I have tried to observe, in the sphere of education, the results
of the present tendency towardstandardization, and I think those results are
lamentable. I think we are having to- day a very marked intellectual as well as
moral decline through the gradual extension of this principle of
standardization in education. People are ready to admit to some extent that
there is a sort of moral decline, but what is not always observed is that there
is a terrible intellectual decline, and that intellectual decline comes through
the development of this principle of unification and standardization to which I
object; for I think that in the sphere of education uniformity always means not
something uniformly high but something uniformly low.
MR. HOLADAY: Doctor, I understood you to say that in your opinion
the public schools have already gone too far in moral teaching. I should like a
little further information about your ideas on that question.
DR. MACHEN: I am not sufficiently familiar with the actual working
out of these proposals in detail; but I am opposed in general to the morality
codes which have been proposed here in Washington, for example, which represent
morality as the result of human experience, and so seem to me to undermine the
very basis of morality and to be producing moral decline. My position with
regard to moral and religious training in its connection with the State is
rather simple. I think it is a very good thing if the public schools release
children at convenient hours during the week for religious training, but I am
absolutely opposed to any granting of school credit for work done in those
hours, to the slightest scrutiny of attendance or of the standards of
instruction, or anything of the kind; and I hold that the solution of our difficulties
is in the restriction in general of the public schools to their function of
imparting knowledge, and the gradual production in the minds of our people of
the notion that moral and religious training is a responsibility of the parents
and not of the State.
I do not know, sir, whether that answers your question.
MR. HOLADAY: I think so.
MR. ROBISON: Mr. Chairman, I should like to ask the witness a few
questions. What is the nature of your work at Princeton?
DR. MACHEN: I am a professor in Princeton Theological Seminary,
which is an institution for the training of ministers.
MR. ROBISON: I understand that, but what is your particular work
in that institution?
DR. MACHEN: I am a teacher in the New Testament department.
MR. ROBISON: Have you ever had any experience in teaching in the
public schools?
DR. MACHEN: No, sir. I have had an experience of the result of
such activities—a rather wide experience.
MR. ROBISON: Have you ever had any experience in directing the
public-school work of any community or State?
DR. MACHEN: No, sir.
MR. ROBISON: Your fear is that this department of education would
have a tendency to federalize or centralize and enslave the public-school
system of the Nation?
DR. MACHEN: Yes, sir.
MR. ROBISON: And then I take it, as a logical result or sequence,
that you are opposed to the present Bureau of Education in so far as it acts as
a fact-finding organization, or gives leadership and stimulation, or undertakes
to do so, to the public-school work of the Nation?
DR. MACHEN: I am not entirely prepared to answer that question
categorically
MR. ROBISON: I mean, outside the District of Columbia.
DR. MACHEN: There are a good many functions in the sphere of
education which legitimately belong to the Federal Government; but I am opposed
to the extension of an agency which assists the States and assists private
individuals, or a Federal agency even in the spheres about which you are
speaking.
MR. ROBISON: So that we may understand each other and so that we
may understand your testimony, what spheres do you think are properly occupied
by the Federal Government, or could be, so far as its relations to the public
schools in the States, outside of the District of Columbia, are concerned?
DR. MACHEN: I am inclined to think that it would have been better
if it had not entered on that field at all.
MR. ROBISON: No; you said you were in favor of some things. I want
to know what those things are.
DR. MACHEN: I mentioned one—the District of Columbia.
MR. ROBISON: Outside of the District make laws here for the
District of Columbia, and make the laws of the Federal Government.
DR. MACHEN: I hate to speak about a subject where I have not all
of the facts in hand, and I am not speaking in general about detailed
activities of the Federal Bureau of Education. Until I am asked about every one
of those activities separately I should not like to make general statements
about them.
MR. ROBISON: But your statement was, if I understood you, that you
thought there were spheres in which the Federal Government could and should
properly participate in public education outside of the District of Columbia.
My inquiry is, What are those spheres? What should it do properly?
DR. MACHEN: Well, sir, I do not feel that I can undertake the rather
difficult duty of mapping a program for a Federal agency. I am speaking only in
opposition to something. I am not speaking in favor of other things or mapping
out a legitimate program.
MR. ROBISON: But I asked that question because of your statement
that the Federal Government had proper spheres in public education outside of
the District of Columbia. I am merely inquiring what are those spheres in your
mind?
DR. MACHEN: I do not know that I made that assertion, sir—that the
Federal Government has proper spheres for education outside of the District of
Columbia. I am not saying that it has not, and I am not saying that it has,
sir.
MR. ROBISON: Then you have not made sufficient investigation to
know whether these activities of the Bureau of Education have been helpful or
harmful to the public schools of the Nation? Is not that your position?
DR. MACHEN: I think it is quite possible that some of those
activities have been helpful; but I am opposed to the increase of the functions
of this Federal agency because that increase is distinctly in the interest of a
general aid carried on by the Federal Government in the sphere of the
individual States, and I am sorry that such a Federal agency is already in
existence. I am sorry that that part of Federal activities has already begun. I
think it is perfectly proper for the Federal Government to maintain here in
Washington certain museums and certain agencies for education in the National
Capital. I think a good many of those activities may be of benefit to the people
of the whole country, and I am not attempting to draw the line in any clear
way.
MR. ROBISON: Now, if I understand you, if you are sorry that there
is a Bureau of Education here in Washington, then it follows that your mind
tells you that it ought to be abolished; and then, further, if you do not know
the activities of the Bureau of Education here and its relation to the public
schools and public education of the country, how can you say that an
enlargement of this bureau would be harmful or helpful?
DR. MACHEN: I am opposed to it, as I tried to explain, sir, in
principle.
MR. ROBISON: I know you said you are opposed to it.
DR. MACHEN: I am opposed to the principle of Federal aid, and I am
opposed to the activities of the Federal bureau where they involve the laying
down of standards of education—of certain standards for colleges, for example.
I think that is an unfortunate thing. I think it is very much better to have
men who are engaged in education examine methods of education, examine
standards, rather than to have such agencies of research come before the people
with the authority of the Federal Government, with the fear at all times that
we shall have an agitation to compel schools to maintain those standards. We
have very frequently the principle that the States are to be allowed to do this
and that; but if they do not maintain certain standards which have been laid down
by Federal agencies of research, they should then be compelled to do it by some
sort of an amendment to the Constitution or the like.
MR. ROBISON: I want you to point out what section of this bill in
your opinion would give the Federal Government control or direction of any
public school or, for that matter, any private school in any State or
community.
DR. MACHEN: This provision at the beginning of it-that there is
established at the seat of Government an executive department to be known as
the department of education. That I think, establishes an extent of Federal
activity in principle which will be deleterious, which will lead to a great
many activities in the future. If you have a Federal department of education
that has a place in the Cabinet, you have a department which is going to extend
constantly its activities and is going to ask for more and more funds. We have,
of course, an illustration of this in the extremely radical bill which is now
in Congress which would extend this principle of Federal aid to the States and
which lays down the conditions upon which that Federal aid is to be received.
That has always been in connection with this demand for this establishment of a
Federal department of education, and I think it is in organic connection with it.
The very establishment of a Federal department of education, I think, is
dangerous, because it will lead to such measures as those which have been
proposed for a great many years, which provide for Federal aid on a large
scale.
MR. ROBISON: Do you believe that Congress has the power to pass
any law that would give the Federal Government control of the public schools in
any State?
DR. MACHEN: I think the powers of the Federal Government in this
respect under the Constitution may be doubtful; but I think that there are
indirect ways of establishing this unification which are very effective and
which are very disastrous.
Now, of course there is another specific portion of this bill
which provides for the activities to which I object: “The department of education
shall collect such statistics and facts as shall show the condition and
progress of education in the several States and in foreign countries—” And so
forth. And then there is assistance in devising methods of operation. In the
revised form of this bill, Senate bill 2841, we have, as I say, the purpose of
such activity explicitly stated
SENATOR COPELAND: Where is that?
DR. MACHEN: It is section 5 of Senate bill 2841: “The department
of education shall * * * with the consent of the advisory board hereafter
mentioned, attempt developing a more uniform and efficient system of public
common-school education.” I am opposed to a more uniform system of public
common-school education. That is explicit in this revised form of the bill, and
I think it is clearly implicit in the section to which I have referred.
MR. ROBISON: There is nothing compulsory there, is there?
DR. MACHEN: There is nothing compulsory in form, but I think there
is an establishment of uniformity which has already gone to disastrous lengths
in this country, and the encouragement of which I think is a very unfortunate
thing. The proper way in which suggestions as to educational standards should
come before the authorities of schools is without the extraneous authority of
the Federal Government, which, because of the tendency which has been operative
in recent years, is far more than merely advisory; it contains all the time an
implied threat, you see, and for that reason is very unfortunate.
SENATOR FERRIS: I should like to ask one question.
SENATOR PHIPPS: Certainly, Senator.
SENATOR FERRIS: For my own information I wish to ask what you
regard as the basic element or elements in moral conduct. Perhaps that is a
foolish question.
DR. MACHEN: The basic elements in moral conduct?
SENATOR FERRIS: Yes, sir. What is the basis. I judge from your
remarks that experience received minor consideration.
DR. MACHEN: Yes, sir—Well, I am an adherent of a certain religious
group. We have our definite notion as to the basis of morality, and it is in my
belief altogether a religious one. I intend to proclaim that basis of morality
is the will of God as revealed by God, and I am interested in the right of all
others to maintain that as the only basis of morality. I belong to what is
often called a very strict sect, the Presbyterian Church, but it is a sect
which has always been devoted to the principles of liberty; and I am unlike a
great many of my fellow citizens—tolerance to me means not only tolerance for
that with whichI am agreed, but it means also tolerance for that to which I am
most violently opposed.
I was thoroughly opposed, for example, to the Lusk laws in the
State of New York which were intended to bring about the closing of the Rand
School in the city of New York. I cannot imagine anything more harmful than the
Rand School; there is nothing to which I am more opposed, which I think more
subversive of morality; and yet I was absolutely opposed to any such law as
that. I believe in liberty, and, therefore, when I believe I have a right to
proclaim the basis of morality which I think is only in the will of God, I also
claim the right for other persons to proclaim whatever else they may hold with
regard to it. But to proclaim in our public schools that morality is only the
result of human experimentation—”this is the conduct which Uncle Sam has found
in the course of American history to be right”—that, I think, is subversive of
morality; and I do not believe that anyone can encourage moral conduct in
others unless he has first in his own mind the notion of an absolute
distinction and not a merely relative distinction between right and wrong.
I do not know whether that at all answers your question.
SENATOR FERRIS: I am just wondering whether there is any such
thing as moral conduct in the United States Congress or among the citizens of
the United States apart from a distinctively religious basis. I am just
wondering whether the public schools have any function in the way of teaching
morality which is not distinctively religious in its basic idea.
DR. MACHEN: I think that the solution lies not in a theoretic
teaching in the public schools as to the basis of morality, because I do not
think you can keep that free from religious questions; but I do hold that a
teacher who himself or herself is imbued with the absolute distinction between
right and wrong can maintain the moral standing, the moral temper of a public
school.
SENATOR FERRIS: Is the ethical culturist ruled out from the
consideration of morality in his views and conduct?
DR. MACHEN: I am not ruling out anybody at all, sir—the ethical
culturist or anyone else.
SENATOR FERRIS: No; but if religion is the basic element in all
morality, then can we have a morality that is not founded on a religious idea?
DR. MACHEN: I myself do not believe that you can have such a
morality permanently, and that is exactly what I am interested in trying to get
other people to believe; but I am not at all interested in trying to proclaim
that view of mine by any measures that involve compulsion, and I am not
interested in making the public school an agency for the proclamation of such a
view; but I am interested in diminishing rather than increasing the function of
the public school, in order to leave room for the opportunity of a propagation
of the view that I hold in free conflict with all other views which may be
held, in order that in that way the truth finally may prevail.
SENATOR PHIPPS: Thank you, Doctor. [Applause.]