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Category: Featured

Getting Beyond the Tent of Abraham, Part 2: Learning from Contemporary Paganisms

Getting Beyond the Tent of Abraham, Part 2: Learning from Contemporary Paganisms

Posted on August 3, 2018July 26, 2018 by Hans Gustafson
Welcoming marginalized traditions, including contemporary Paganisms, to the table of interreligious engagement is happening in pockets around the U.S. However, non-Pagans like myself can still strive ... Read More
How My 8-Track Killed Elvis

How My 8-Track Killed Elvis

Posted on August 2, 2018September 13, 2018 by Daniel F. Flores
Elvis is dead. I didn’t mean to do it. But somehow, I became an unwitting accomplice to a national tragedy. My intentions were sincere. I only wanted to hear the King one more time. It is not as... Read More
"Go Down, Moses...and this time let Aaron do all the talking."

“Go Down, Moses…and this time let Aaron do all the talking.”

Posted on July 30, 2018September 13, 2018 by Daniel F. Flores
  Artwork by Aron de Chaves, Spanish & Portuguese Synagogue, Creechurch Lane, London, England   Of all my high school classes, speech terrified me the most. In my youth, I had a speech i... Read More
Getting Beyond the Tent of Abraham, Part 1: Welcoming Marginalized Religions

Getting Beyond the Tent of Abraham, Part 1: Welcoming Marginalized Religions

Posted on July 27, 2018July 26, 2018 by Hans Gustafson
Despite an ever-widening door to the growing tent of interreligious engagement, there remains work to do. Interreligious studies in the academy as well as the interfaith movement in the wider communit... Read More
A History of Sacrifice, Remembrance, and Courage

A History of Sacrifice, Remembrance, and Courage

Posted on July 19, 2018July 19, 2018 by Harleen Kaur
This Memorial Day weekend, I spent my time in Wisconsin at the youth camp that I organize biannually (which I previously reflected upon here). Each camp, we engage in a discussion with the counselor t... Read More
Messiah Interrupted: Susanna's #MeToo Moment

Messiah Interrupted: Susanna’s #MeToo Moment

Posted on May 29, 2018September 13, 2018 by Daniel F. Flores
For over a decade now, my wife and I have attended the seasonal choral presentation of Handel’s Messiah at a church in the Fort Worth Arts District. I love the amazing musicality of each movement. B... Read More
"They're Not Really Christians": Acknowledging Oppression and Violence in our Traditions for the Sake of Interreligious Understanding

“They’re Not Really Christians”: Acknowledging Oppression and Violence in our Traditions for the Sake of Interreligious Understanding

Posted on May 27, 2018 by Hans Gustafson
Interreligious dialogue often entails an implicit (sometimes explicit) attempt to categorize the religious other for the sake of comparison, conversation, and ease. For instance, in labeling a dialogu... Read More
Farming, Crossing Divides, & the Sacredness of Interfaith Community

Farming, Crossing Divides, & the Sacredness of Interfaith Community

Posted on May 10, 2018 by Emily Ling
Participating this year in the State of Formation fellowship with other up-and-coming religious and ethical thinkers has been an exciting opportunity for me, though not one that I could have anticipat... Read More
Gateways to Engagement with Religious Diversity

Gateways to Engagement with Religious Diversity

Posted on May 7, 2018 by Hans Gustafson
People arrive at the table of interreligious engagement for various reasons. After spending some time in the world of interfaith engagement, I began to notice common narratives emerge in regards to ho... Read More
How Does Faith Travel? Thinking about Sikhi through Guru Nanak’s Travels & My Own

How Does Faith Travel? Thinking about Sikhi through Guru Nanak’s Travels & My Own

Posted on May 2, 2018May 2, 2018 by Harleen Kaur
The origins of Sikhi are very much based in notions of exploration, discovery, and curiosity. Guru Nanak Dev Ji, the founder of the Sikh faith, spent most of his life traveling by foot throughout Asia... 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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