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a "Bible as Literature" class. Even the teacher was all over the religious bent and I was hard-pressed to keep my cool as he wouldn't brook any criticism of the more wildly fanatical fundies in the room. It eventually came to a head over a "I believe this is the word of god and it shouldn't be questioned" comment from one of the wild-eyed loons . . . I said, "then why the hell are you taking a 'Bible as LITERATURE' class?" The professor told me to apologise - I told him he should apologise to me because I had enrolled in a Lit class, not Bible study - and did he really want the department to find out how it was being taught? (I won that round, by the way - but he punished me by giving me an A-minus instead of an A for the course. Tosser.)
It doesn't sound like you have that problem - although I'm surprised your instructor didn't challenge the girl's statements. Still, it's worth it for you to do it. Really. Not just as a skeptic, but as a student. I teach college history and I WANT my students to challenge what they hear. You don't have to address her directly - you address the nature of her commentary instead, by presenting your perspective on it. As long as you argument is rational, you've nothing to fear by stating it (particularly since the irrational is apparently accepted without comment . . .) Even if you are the only unbeliever there, the class is discussing secular literature, not religion (and most people realise that, even if they are god-talkers).
Don't be shy - you lose out on the very best part of learning by not speaking up!
Go, you!
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