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Lutheran bishop to talk about state of church

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  • Lutheran bishop to talk about state of church

    The Times Union (Albany, NY)
    October 16, 2004 Saturday THREE STAR EDITION

    Lutheran bishop to talk about state of church

    ALBANY

    The Rev. Mark S. Hanson of Chicago, presiding bishop of the
    Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, will lead a discussion this
    afternoon with area clergy and friends about the shape and nature of
    the church in the United States and throughout the world. The meeting
    with Hanson, who is also president of the Geneva, Switzerland-based
    Lutheran World Federation, will take place from 3 to 5 p.m. at First
    Lutheran Church, 181 Western Ave. At 10 a.m. Sunday, Hanson will
    rededicate the 50-year-old sanctuary of the church. This year marks
    the congregation's 355th year. It is the oldest continuous Lutheran
    congregation in North America. Also participating in the
    rededication service will be the Rev. Marie Jerge of Syracuse, bishop
    of the Ipstate New York Synod, ELCA.Israelis act against Jews who
    spit on Christians

    JERUSALEM -- The Israeli government has vowed to crack down on
    religious Jews who insult and spit at Christians. In a stern
    statement issued this week, Interior Minister Avraham Poraz condemned
    recent incidents in which Jewish seminary students, many of them
    Americans studying in Israel, spat at Christian clergy during
    processions through the Old City of Jerusalem. Poraz expressed
    "revulsion" and called the situation intolerable, vowing to take
    action to prevent future incidents.

    The latest incident occurred Sunday, when an ultra-Orthodox yeshiva
    student studying in the Old City spat at a cross being carried by
    Armenian Archbishop Nourhan Manougian as he led a procession near the
    community's church. Jerusalem police said that a scuffle ensued
    between the student and Manougian, who slapped the student after the
    latter damaged the medallion the archbishop wore around his neck.

    Although the practice of spitting is reportedly encouraged -- or at
    the very least tolerated -- at certain ultra-Orthodox seminaries,
    mainstream religious leaders abhor the practice. Such conduct is "a
    desecration of the Divine Name" and also liable to contribute to
    anti-Semitism in the Diaspora," Rabbi Yisrael Lau, former chief rabbi
    of Israel, said in a statement.
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