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Category: Challenges

A Vision of Prayer for All Peoples? Moving Towards Interfaith 2.0

A Vision of Prayer for All Peoples? Moving Towards Interfaith 2.0

Posted on December 21, 2015December 21, 2015 by Ari Saks
The sun began its descent on another beautiful day at the Chautauqua Institution in Chautauqua, New York as a group of twenty or so recently ordained clergy gathered in a circle on the grassy fields o... Read More
Pokeakh Ivrim: Opening Our Minds to New Forms of Inclusion

Pokeakh Ivrim: Opening Our Minds to New Forms of Inclusion

Posted on December 18, 2015December 18, 2015 by Lauren Tuchman
This post originally appeared on Ritualwell. Typically when we think of access in general and in Jewish community specifically, we first default to thinking about physical access—is the bimah acce... Read More
Advent, AAR, and the Diversity in the Academy

Advent, AAR, and the Diversity in the Academy

Posted on December 10, 2015December 9, 2015 by Laura Brekke
Christians around the world are knee-deep in the season of Advent. Advent is about waiting. Advent is about anticipation. Advent is about the in-breaking of God into the world as the baby Jesus –... Read More
Tearing Down Christmas Lights: The Reason for the Season

Tearing Down Christmas Lights: The Reason for the Season

Posted on December 3, 2015December 2, 2015 by Kathryn Ray
Last Wednesday, protesters in downtown Chicago started pulling lights off the city’s newly-lit Christmas tree. Marching to decry the death of Laquan McDonald at the hands of the police, they broke t... Read More
Beautiful Resistance in Palestine

Beautiful Resistance in Palestine

Posted on December 2, 2015December 1, 2015 by Abigail Clauhs
This summer, Abigail received a scholarship to join a two-week-long Unitarian Universalists for Justice in the Middle East (UUJME) human rights delegation to Israel and Palestine. UUJME’s mission is... Read More
Religion in the Academy and in the Public

Religion in the Academy and in the Public

Posted on December 1, 2015November 30, 2015 by Nora Zaki
As naive as it may sound, I thought that I could learn more about Islamic Studies and history at university than at “Saturday” school on the weekends while at the mosque. The mosque lessons about ... Read More
Statues Will Never Be Enough

Statues Will Never Be Enough

Posted on November 30, 2015November 29, 2015 by Abigail Clauhs
It was the summer of 2012. I was nineteen years old, working as an intern in Washington, DC—that swamp of politics, and humidity, and the slow-moving Potomac. The Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial ha... Read More
I'm Thankful For My Refugee Neighbors

I’m Thankful For My Refugee Neighbors

Posted on November 19, 2015November 25, 2015 by David Barickman
Thanksgiving is fast approaching, and like many others, I am considering who and what I am thankful for. For certain, I am thankful for those near to me such as my parents, siblings, a new nephew, and... Read More
Who's Afraid of Secularism?  The Starbucks Red Cup Fiasco, Or On Being Christian In A Pluralist Society

Who’s Afraid of Secularism? The Starbucks Red Cup Fiasco, Or On Being Christian In A Pluralist Society

Posted on November 17, 2015November 15, 2015 by Dorie Goehring
By now, I’ve been seeing more than enough about the “controversy” surrounding the red cups at Starbucks infiltrate my Facebook newsfeed. Whether it is posts supporting the lack of Ch... Read More
Belief vs. Knowledge in Tax Reform

Belief vs. Knowledge in Tax Reform

Posted on November 16, 2015November 15, 2015 by Pamela Ayo Yetunde
Dr. Ben Carson, a candidate for the Republican nomination for U.S. President, spoke to students at Christian-based Liberty University on November 11th, the day after the fourth national Republican pre... Read More
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About State of Formation

State of Formation, founded as an offshoot of the Journal of Interreligious Studies (JIRS), is a program of the Betty Ann Greenbaum Miller Center for Interreligious Learning & Leadership at Hebrew College and Boston University School of Theology.

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