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Catholic News 2

Brooklyn, N.Y., Jun 7, 2016 / 04:49 pm (CNA).- A swimming pool in New York City has recently come under fire for its women-only swimming hours.The policy was put in place to allow Hasidic Jewish women in the area, whose religion forbids them to swim with men, a chance to use the pool on Monday, Wednesday and Friday mornings, and Sunday afternoons.Although the Brooklyn pool has kept some women-only hours since the 1990s, the practice only came to the attention of the wider public when someone complained about it to the city's Commission on Human Rights, the Associated Press reports.Critics suggest the policy could be a violation of the establishment clause or of the city's human rights law, which bans sex discrimination in public accommodations.Dr. Daniel I. Mark, an assistant professor in the Department of Political Science at Villanova University, said the women-only hours seem like a reasonable accommodation.“It’s not a violation of the separation of church and...

Brooklyn, N.Y., Jun 7, 2016 / 04:49 pm (CNA).- A swimming pool in New York City has recently come under fire for its women-only swimming hours.

The policy was put in place to allow Hasidic Jewish women in the area, whose religion forbids them to swim with men, a chance to use the pool on Monday, Wednesday and Friday mornings, and Sunday afternoons.

Although the Brooklyn pool has kept some women-only hours since the 1990s, the practice only came to the attention of the wider public when someone complained about it to the city's Commission on Human Rights, the Associated Press reports.

Critics suggest the policy could be a violation of the establishment clause or of the city's human rights law, which bans sex discrimination in public accommodations.

Dr. Daniel I. Mark, an assistant professor in the Department of Political Science at Villanova University, said the women-only hours seem like a reasonable accommodation.

“It’s not a violation of the separation of church and state, it’s not promoting any religion, even in the most expansive definition of that constitutional prohibition,” Mark told CNA.

“The flip side is I don’t think anybody’s freedom of religion entitles them to such an accommodation, but I think it’s probably the right thing for the local government to do that seems perfectly appropriate,” he added.

Swimming pool staffers told the AP they announced that the women-only hours would discontinue in June, but they received so many complaints that they decided to keep the schedule while the policy was under review.

Mark said unless the policy was putting an extreme burden on other municipal resources, the pool is likely not violating the establishment clause in the United States Constitution.

“To make room for people to enjoy, on an equal basis, a state or local amenity is certainly not a promotion of that religion,” he said.

“It’s not that they’re entitled to it, probably, but assuming that it’s not a great burden on the fellow citizens and assuming that the other fellow citizens are people of goodwill, then I think we should all be very glad to (accommodate them).”

Such reasonable accommodations exist in other areas of civic life, Mark noted. For example, many public parks that advertise specific hours for children accompanied by adults, during which adults without children are not allowed to be at the park. Some playgrounds do not allow for adults without children to be there at all, for the safety of children.

“You can say of course that’s a burden on adults who happen to be free during the day and want to enjoy the park recreationally at that time, but it’s something that we as a society think is a good way to accommodate our fellow citizens with different needs,” he said.

“Not everybody has kids, not everybody cares about this, but it’s just reasonable.”

Furthermore, it’s not just Hasidic Jewish women who are allowed swim during the women-only hours. The pool staff told the AP that Muslim women also take advantage of the hours, and it’s likely that women who would just prefer not to swim with men also enjoy the policy, Mark said.

“If it’s overwhelmed the schedule to the point where your average American family can’t get time at the pool because everything is special hours for x, special hours for y, special hours for z, then it would be a problem,” he said.

Mark also noted that the critics cite two different possible complaints - separation of church and state and sex discrimination - making it unclear who exactly was unduly burdened by the policy to the point that they felt it necessary to complain.

“What is your complaint here? Or do you just not like these people because they’re religious and you’re just kind of grasping at straws looking for anything that you can say that will get them out of the pool?” he said.

“We would all be better off living in society looking at how we could make room for each other, instead of looking at how we can crowd each other out by claiming that the behavior that we don’t prefer is a violation of our rights.”

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SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- A California judge is facing demands for his removal after sentencing a former Stanford University swimmer to six months in jail for sexually assaulting an unconscious young woman behind a campus dumpster....

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- A California judge is facing demands for his removal after sentencing a former Stanford University swimmer to six months in jail for sexually assaulting an unconscious young woman behind a campus dumpster....

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NEW YORK (AP) -- Gay, transgender and other groups blocked from participating in a high-level U.N. meeting on AIDS represent the populations most affected by the disease and should take center-stage at the event, advocates said Tuesday....

NEW YORK (AP) -- Gay, transgender and other groups blocked from participating in a high-level U.N. meeting on AIDS represent the populations most affected by the disease and should take center-stage at the event, advocates said Tuesday....

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CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) -- The federal death penalty trial of a white man charged with shooting and killing nine black parishioners during a Bible study at their Charleston church will be held in November, a judge announced Tuesday....

CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) -- The federal death penalty trial of a white man charged with shooting and killing nine black parishioners during a Bible study at their Charleston church will be held in November, a judge announced Tuesday....

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ISTANBUL (AP) -- The Latest on a car bomb attack Tuesday in Istanbul all times local):...

ISTANBUL (AP) -- The Latest on a car bomb attack Tuesday in Istanbul all times local):...

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DETROIT (AP) -- A judge on Tuesday threw out the murder convictions of a young Detroit man who pleaded guilty to killing four people when he was 14, a remarkable turnaround in a case that has been in doubt for years after a professional hit man stepped forward and took responsibility for the slayings at a drug den....

DETROIT (AP) -- A judge on Tuesday threw out the murder convictions of a young Detroit man who pleaded guilty to killing four people when he was 14, a remarkable turnaround in a case that has been in doubt for years after a professional hit man stepped forward and took responsibility for the slayings at a drug den....

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NAYMIYAH, Iraq (AP) -- After securing the southern edge of militant-held Fallujah, seven battalions of Iraqi special forces units have been unable to advance for two days - a delay that commanders say isn't due to counterattacks or difficult terrain, but rather to disagreements about battlefield strategy among the disparate Iraqi forces fighting the Islamic State group....

NAYMIYAH, Iraq (AP) -- After securing the southern edge of militant-held Fallujah, seven battalions of Iraqi special forces units have been unable to advance for two days - a delay that commanders say isn't due to counterattacks or difficult terrain, but rather to disagreements about battlefield strategy among the disparate Iraqi forces fighting the Islamic State group....

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WASHINGTON (AP) -- Leading Republicans united Tuesday in an extraordinary denunciation of Donald Trump's attacks on a federal judge, with House Speaker Paul Ryan calling them the "textbook definition of a racist comment" though he stood by his endorsement of the presumptive presidential nominee....

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Leading Republicans united Tuesday in an extraordinary denunciation of Donald Trump's attacks on a federal judge, with House Speaker Paul Ryan calling them the "textbook definition of a racist comment" though he stood by his endorsement of the presumptive presidential nominee....

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WASHINGTON (AP) -- Spoiler Alert:...

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Spoiler Alert:...

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IMAGE: NS photo/Karen Callaway, Catholic New WorldBy Colleen DulleWASHINGTON (CNS) -- When Deacon JosephJensen entered Our Lady ofGood Counsel Passionist Seminary in Warrenton, Missouri, in the late1950s, he realized he was the only student in his class who had read the Bible.Deacon Jensen, now a lecturer inbiblical studies at Georgetown University in Washington, credited his Seventh-day Adventistgrandfather with exposing him to Scripture. Largely though, he said, "Igrew up with the idea that Catholics didn't read the Bible."Such a common misconception could bechanging.A new State of the Bible Survey by theAmerican Bible Society found that 77 percent of Catholics want to read theBible more often. Although the percentage has fluctuated in recent years, itreflects an 8 percentage point increase since January 2013, just before PopeFrancis' election."There's come, I think, some veryencouraging data on Catholics" thanks to the so-called "Franciseffect," Jason Malec, U.S. mission director...

IMAGE: NS photo/Karen Callaway, Catholic New World

By Colleen Dulle

WASHINGTON (CNS) -- When Deacon Joseph Jensen entered Our Lady of Good Counsel Passionist Seminary in Warrenton, Missouri, in the late 1950s, he realized he was the only student in his class who had read the Bible.

Deacon Jensen, now a lecturer in biblical studies at Georgetown University in Washington, credited his Seventh-day Adventist grandfather with exposing him to Scripture. Largely though, he said, "I grew up with the idea that Catholics didn't read the Bible."

Such a common misconception could be changing.

A new State of the Bible Survey by the American Bible Society found that 77 percent of Catholics want to read the Bible more often. Although the percentage has fluctuated in recent years, it reflects an 8 percentage point increase since January 2013, just before Pope Francis' election.

"There's come, I think, some very encouraging data on Catholics" thanks to the so-called "Francis effect," Jason Malec, U.S. mission director for the society, told Catholic News Service.

The American Bible Society has responded to Catholics' growing interest in Scripture with new resources such as digital "lectio divina," an online version of the traditional Catholic method of praying with Scripture. The society uses the survey results to develop techniques to increase engagement with the Bible.

The society's staffers also developed the Build Your Bible trivia app and a second app so that Catholics can follow along with World Youth Day, set for July 26-31 in Krakow, Poland.

"I think it's both looking forward and reaching back into the past to find new ways and rediscover ancient ways of engaging with the Scripture for an emerging generation," Malec said.

Cackie Upchurch, director of Little Rock Scripture Study in Arkansas, the largest provider of Catholic Bible study materials in the U.S., said that modern technology provides a "smorgasbord" of opportunities for Catholics to engage with Scripture.

Even if Catholics do not join a Bible study group, she said, they can find the daily Mass readings on the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops' website at www.usccb.org, have them sent directly by email from the USCCB or find daily reflections across the internet, including Creighton University's Online Ministries' website at onlineministries.creighton.edu/CollaborativeMinistry/daily.html.

She said that there are many options for Catholic Bible studies. Some individuals and groups adopt an academic approach while others use "popular scholarship," a blend of critical study and prayer. The prayer-focused "lectio divina" style of study also is widely used, she added.

Upchurch pointed out that biblical studies are for learning Scripture, so Catholics should not be embarrassed to join a study group because they feel they know little about the Bible.

Deacon Jensen said that whether Catholics study in groups or individually, "the guided reading of the Bible is essential."

"The Bible is an anthology of the literature of an ancient people that reflects their faith and their time and their culture and their environment, so trying to read it as a modern work without understanding the cultural and historical background easily allows for misinterpretation and confusion," he said.

He recommended the New Jerome Biblical Commentary, written by three Catholic priests and published by Prentice Hall, for historical criticism. Deacon Jensen also recommended the Catholic Prayer Bible, which he helped translate, for "lectio divina."

No matter how Catholics engage with Scripture, though, Deacon Jensen said he is excited about the growing passion for the Bible he sees in the church, especially in the Bible study group at the Shrine of the Most Blessed Sacrament in Chevy Chase, Maryland, at which he occasionally speaks, the weekly Bible study he leads at the Carmelite monastery in Towson, Maryland, and in the courses he teaches at Georgetown.

He described how students often begin his classes simply wanting to satisfy their religion credit requirement but end up "getting wrapped up in how cool this is."

"There is a real hunger for the word of God that I just really relish and enjoy," Deacon Jensen told CNS.

The American Bible Society has worked for more than 200 years to engage people with the best-selling book of all time. Several notable U.S. historical figures, including John Jay and Francis Scott Key, founded the society in 1816. The Philadelphia-based society produced the first Braille Bible, developed the Good News Bible translation in contemporary English and launched the Digital Bible Library to house various digital translations.

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