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Category: Featured

Making Sense of Tragedy: Was the Earthquake a “Divine Punishment”?

Making Sense of Tragedy: Was the Earthquake a “Divine Punishment”?

Posted on March 21, 2011March 21, 2011 by Gretchen Koch
Over at Religion Dispatches Levi McLaughlin, a professor of religion who specializes in East Asian traditions, writes about Tokyo’s governor Shintaro Ishihara describing the tsunami that struck... Read More
Celebrating Female Clergy

Celebrating Female Clergy

Posted on March 19, 2011 by Joshua Stanton
A college chaplain once candidly described the process for him, as a Protestant, as one of simultaneous celebration and mourning when he recognized that Protestantism was no longer a universal norm on... Read More
Inter-Religious Diplomacy: Trustworthy Opponents Engaging in Respectful Contestation Yield Peaceful Tension

Inter-Religious Diplomacy: Trustworthy Opponents Engaging in Respectful Contestation Yield Peaceful Tension

Posted on March 16, 2011 by Journal of Inter-Religious Studies
Historically, when people have found themselves in conflicts over the best way to live or the very purpose of life, they have often found a way to separate from—if not fight—each other to protect ... Read More
Harding University and The State of the Gay

Harding University and The State of the Gay

Posted on March 11, 2011March 11, 2011 by Marvin Lance Wiser
Nestled in the heart of Arkansas west of the mighty Mississippi, but east of the Ozarks lies a quaint Southern town with a big college atmosphere. It’s quiet and hot (the humid type!) during the... Read More
Sue Blackmore Decides That Religions Are Not, in Fact, Viruses of the Mind

Sue Blackmore Decides That Religions Are Not, in Fact, Viruses of the Mind

Posted on March 10, 2011March 22, 2011 by Gretchen Koch
Sue Blackmore is one of the go-to voices in the UK on matters of religious thinking and consciousness. She is, believe it or not, an atheist with a PhD in parapsychology.  Originally a firm believer ... Read More
Everything I Need to Know I Learned from a Tibetan Buddhist Mandala

Everything I Need to Know I Learned from a Tibetan Buddhist Mandala

Posted on March 10, 2011March 7, 2011 by Jenn Lindsay
I spent a lot of time at the Gyuto Monks’ mandala at the 2009 Parliament of the World’s Religions in Melbourne, Australia. The mandala is the traditional Tibetan Buddhist form of sandpainting, pra... Read More
25 Leading Rabbis (and two students!) Speak Out Against Islamophobia

25 Leading Rabbis (and two students!) Speak Out Against Islamophobia

Posted on March 10, 2011March 10, 2011 by Joshua Stanton
Rabbi Rachel Kahn-Troster, Executive Director of Rabbis for Human Rights, may have said it best: Ever since the September 11, 2001 attack on the United States, hatred and discrimination against Muslim... Read More
Listen to Lupe, Ellison and Eboo: It’s Time to Hear From More Muslims

Listen to Lupe, Ellison and Eboo: It’s Time to Hear From More Muslims

Posted on March 9, 2011March 9, 2011 by Chris Stedman
As I sit here contemplating Representative Peter King’s (R-NY) upcoming “Muslim radicalization” hearings, trying to discern if my stomach ache is the result of the cookies I’m... Read More
Toward a Dharmic Model of Chaplaincy in Semitic Settings: The Challenges of Translating Religion for Others

Toward a Dharmic Model of Chaplaincy in Semitic Settings: The Challenges of Translating Religion for Others

Posted on March 9, 2011March 9, 2011 by Neil Krishan Aggarwal
We first generation Hindu Chaplains must therefore find a way to translate our traditions for a broad audience without apologetics or sacrificing internal diversity in return. The enduring question: ... Read More
Birth, Old Age, Sickness, and Taxes: Buddhism and Fiscal Policy

Birth, Old Age, Sickness, and Taxes: Buddhism and Fiscal Policy

Posted on March 8, 2011March 8, 2011 by Joshua Eaton
With the recent controversy over a compromise to extend all of the Bush-era tax cuts for two years, with congress threatening to de-fund everything from AmeriCorps to NPR, and with fiscal battles ragi... 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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