The Board of Deputies has warned that failures in teaching religious education in English schools is a “dangerous” trend.
An Ofsted report on RE published this week said that many pupils were leaving with “scant” knowledge and understanding.
RE is compulsory in non-religious schools, where pupils are required to learn about Christianity and other principal religions in the UK, including Judaism.
Laura Marks, the Board’s senior vice-president, said it was “trendy in many non-faith schools to dismiss RE as irrelevant. Yet, if the 20th century was shaped by competing political ideologies, then the 21st century looks set to be shaped by differing religious beliefs.