The Great Tennessee Monkey Trial

Written by Murphy
Published June 26, 2003

I remember the first time I heard about the Scopes trial. My dad was talking about Pat Robertson running for President. He said it was good that Christians were getting involved in politics. He was a Christian and loved Political Science.

I was astounded at the idea of Robertson running for President. I thought, "Don't you have have some experience to do the job well?" I was worried he wouldn't know how to do it right.

But Dad was telling me that he didn't think Robertson would win, but that it was good for Christians to stop burying their heads in the sand and join the world of politics again.

"Why did they stop?"

"It was after the Scopes trial. Christians were so humliated that they just retreated from the public eye."

After listening to the dramatic re-enactment of the Scopes trial, I can understand why they were humiliated.

In 1925, the schoolteacher John Scopes volunteered to stand trial for teaching evolution in a public school. It was coming sooner or later, so he stepped up and made it sooner.

Clarence Darrow and William Jennings Bryan came into the courtroom and battled out the sticky issue of church and state separation, and at the same time showcased the problem of fundamentalist thinking when it encounters new ideas.

Let me be clear:
every human being is a fundamentalist in some respect. We all have some belief or other which is untouchable.

That is not to say we are excused from honest ree-examination. But it's good to remember that we are all susceptible to being dogmatic at times.

Bryan, in this case, was the dogmatic. He was the one at the trial who was famous, and supposed to be the big gun.

But when he was cross-examined by Darrow, he ended up looking a fool. Well, in that particular case, he WAS a fool. He was 'standing by the word of the Almighty'. Right or wrong.

And he was wrong. He was wrong because he was not being intellectually honest and examining the fact.

I firmly believe in Truth. I believe that the truth, or true thing, were there before me, and will be there after me. It is not my job to change the truth, it is my job to adapt myself into acceptance and understanding of the truth.

Bryan was not adapting. THAT is what made him look like a fool.

He didn't learn his lesson, either. He was humiliated in the trial, but did not learn humble himself and try to be honest with the world in front of him.

Murphy Horner is a long-time BlogCritic. Murphy’s first book The Parable of Miriam the Camel Driver draws from her experience in corporate America to examine the bigger questions about balancing career and creativity. Murphy Horner has been working as a conferencing technology professional for a decade. Her university alumni association has recognized her as a noted female executive. Currently she is working on a travel memoir and can be found facilitating a writing group in her town of Claremont, Ca.
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The Great Tennessee Monkey Trial
Published: June 26, 2003
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Section: Books
Filed Under: Books: Politics and Affairs
Writer: Murphy
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Comments

#1 — June 26, 2003 @ 15:11PM — BRICKLAYER

This album rips from start to finish! The Scopes have been compared to alot of the other "the" bands, but in my opinion, The Scopes trump such neanderthals as the Strokes, and the Hives, with their ever evolving sense of development. This album starts slowly, moving blindly through the murky depths of musical chaos, but soon crawls to shore, standing upright and walking on its own previously underdeveloped musical feet. I like it even more than the fabulous new release from The Naked Apes!! RIYL: The Monkees, Ted Nugent, Phish

#2 — June 26, 2003 @ 17:13PM — Eric Olsen

Bricklayer, you are very funny, si

#3 — June 26, 2003 @ 17:20PM — Tim Hall [URL]

Bricklayer, there ought to be a beverage warning on that comment! You nearly owed me a new keyboard!

#4 — April 18, 2007 @ 14:47PM — Clark Bartram [URL]

I thought it odd that you mentioned Bryan never learning his lesson from what happened at the trial. Considering that he died 5 days after the trial ended, don't you think it is a tad bit unfair to challenge his legacy in that fashion?

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