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"You can't just burn them or throw them in the garbage," he says. "So either they are buried as the Torah would be, or they're put away." The Evangelical Lutheran Church in America doesn't have an official policy for the disposal of Bibles.
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Read More »"In the case of most laypeople, they would bring it to the church and let the parish priest dispose of it," he says. Rabbi Menachem Genack of the Orthodox Union says "the Torah is handled with an enormous amount of respect." Generally, he says, the sacred texts are buried. Genack is the rabbinic administrator and CEO of the OU Kosher Division. He says shaimos — documents containing the name of God in Hebrew — are treated in a similar manner. "You can't just burn them or throw them in the garbage," he says. "So either they are buried as the Torah would be, or they're put away." The Evangelical Lutheran Church in America doesn't have an official policy for the disposal of Bibles. However, "for some it would be burying, which would be a sacred thing to do just as you would bury a loved one," says the Rev. Donald McCoid, an assistant in the office of the presiding bishop. The Rev. Monsignor Kevin Irwin, a professor at the Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C., says the Bible "should never be not seen to be revered, or valued and treasured." Irwin says he also prefers disposal by burial "because it is so sacred, and you don't want it to be perceived to be disgraced even by burning." The sense of the sacred is also paramount at the Baha'i National Center in Evanston, Ill. "We feel that Baha'u'llah was a divine figure," says Thomas Murphy, who works in the office of the secretary at the center. Murphy says the Baha'i faith is centered around a figure equal in stature to Jesus or Muhammad or Krishna, and his words are to be treated with respect. "There are no ceremonies attached to the treatment of books containing the sacred word," he says. Murphy says the disposal of books containing their sacred texts must be done with a sense of dignity and reverence.
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