University issues trigger warnings for biblical stories in literature class
The University of Sheffield has stirred up controversy by slapping content warnings on biblical texts studied in English Literature courses.
The content warnings, applied to passages from the Gospels and Genesis, have drawn sharp criticism for suggesting the Bible contains "sexual violence" and "graphic bodily injury"—labels many say distort the meaning of the Scriptures, as CBN reports.
According to documents obtained via a Freedom of Information request and reported by the Daily Mail, these warnings were included in course materials analyzing biblical and classical literature.
Biblical Texts Flagged as Potentially Harmful
The flagged passages include the four Gospels—Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John—along with the Genesis account of Cain and Abel. The university claims its warnings are simply academic aids meant to prepare students for sensitive material.
“A content note is a standard academic tool used to signpost when sensitive or graphic content will be discussed,” the university said in its written defense of the policy.
According to the university, the notes are meant to help students engage in "critical discussion" of challenging content. The irony, of course, is rich—especially given that many students voluntarily sign up to study literature that has shaped the moral foundations of Western civilization.
Critics Say the Policy Misrepresents Scripture
Faith leaders and commentators didn’t hold back. Andrea Williams, head of the Christian Legal Centre, dismissed the move as nothing short of “absurd.”
“Applying trigger warnings to salvation narratives that have shaped our civilization is not only misguided, but absurd. Singling out the Bible in this way is discriminatory and deeply ill-informed,” Williams said.
Critics argue that while modern literature often includes vividly explicit scenes, no such extremes exist in the biblical passages now flagged by Sheffield’s faculty. The murder of Abel is described in a single verse, and the Gospels only mention the crucifixion in spare, solemn terms.
Academic Freedom or Woke Censorship?
Angus Saul of the Christian Institute noted the disconnect, stating the Gospels and Genesis “don’t offer explicit accounts” and questioned the basis for labeling them as containing “sexual violence.”
Saul added, “Such passages are far less explicit than many set texts English Literature students come into contact with.” It’s a fair point—and one critics are using as a yardstick for measuring potential bias in these content warnings.
Mark Lambert, a Catholic podcaster, went further, criticizing this as part of a larger trend to “censor the book that built our civilization.”
Defenders Say It’s Merely a Content Note
The University of Sheffield insists this approach does not censor anyone, instead claiming it promotes student well-being and allows for richer discussion.
But what does it say about academic freedom when an 800-year-old poem can be read without caveat, yet Scripture comes with a warning label?
That concern is amplified by recent actions from the University of Nottingham, where a course on medieval literature included a content warning for “expressions of Christian faith.” Strikingly, that course did not issue alerts for Chaucer’s more graphic or discriminatory themes.
Different Standards for Religious Expression?
Critics questioned why Nottingham flagged Christianity as “alienating and strange” while issuing no warning for sexually explicit or anti-Semitic content from the same period.
A university spokesperson defended the move, saying, “Even those students who are practicing Christians will find aspects of the late-medieval worldview they will encounter... alienating and strange.”
Still, the unequal treatment speaks volumes. When Christian themes require a caution notice while more explosive content is ignored, it signals not balance, but bias.
Whatever the intent, the policy has become a flashpoint in the larger debate over how Western institutions now approach their religious and cultural roots. If a biblical account of sacrifice and redemption is too provocative, one has to wonder what isn’t.





