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Category: Featured

Moving Toward Forgiveness and Justice, with Love

Moving Toward Forgiveness and Justice, with Love

Posted on August 15, 2011August 14, 2011 by Yaira Robinson
This year, as I engage more fully in preparing, ultimately, to stand before God on Yom Kippur, how do I approach this task with mercy and justice, and move toward forgiveness?... Read More
Race, Incarceration, and American Values

Race, Incarceration, and American Values

Posted on August 15, 2011August 14, 2011 by Phillipe Copeland
Article first published as Book Review: Race, Incarceration, and American Values by Glenn C. Loury on Blogcritics. “Never before has a supposedly free country denied basic liberty to so many of ... Read More
Zen and the Art of Bicycle Commuting

Zen and the Art of Bicycle Commuting

Posted on August 13, 2011August 29, 2011 by Jenn Lindsay
I started bicycle commuting for my health. I quickly realized that biking around in the city of Boston is a huge threat to my health. I live in the quaint flowery suburb of Jamaica Plain. I bike to my... Read More
Revolution of Consciousness in the Land of Israel of the Year 2011

Revolution of Consciousness in the Land of Israel of the Year 2011

Posted on August 12, 2011August 13, 2011 by Ela Merom
  A Proposal to Build the III Temple with Bricks of Justice  and Senseless Loving  Kindness   It has been almost a month since the beginning of the awakening of the Israeli public. The Israeli a... Read More
When the Walls Crumble

When the Walls Crumble

Posted on August 11, 2011January 3, 2012 by Adina Allen
This layering of historical events onto a single day of mourning invites us to add our own personal losses to the sea of sadness and to have our pain held by our community. Channeling our imaginings o... Read More
Jews and Muslims in America: More in Common than We Think

Jews and Muslims in America: More in Common than We Think

Posted on August 10, 2011August 9, 2011 by Joshua Stanton
Contrary to common assumptions, many Jewish and Muslim Americans enjoy warm relations. Yet we are only beginning to understand how and why this is so. A Gallup report released last week goes a long wa... Read More
Why I Stopped Observing Ramadan: A Unitarian Universalist’s Search for Spiritual Practice

Why I Stopped Observing Ramadan: A Unitarian Universalist’s Search for Spiritual Practice

Posted on August 9, 2011August 8, 2011 by Nicolas Cable
As we enter the second week of Ramadan, hundreds of millions of Muslims around the world continue to fast as a prescribed spiritual practice in the Islamic faith tradition. Last year, as a part of an ... Read More
Dear Religious Americans: How Many Atheists Do You Know?

Dear Religious Americans: How Many Atheists Do You Know?

Posted on August 7, 2011August 7, 2011 by Chris Stedman
For the last several years, my work as an interfaith activist has been largely defined by a single question: “Wait — you do interfaith work, and you’re an atheist?!” That quest... Read More
Who Would Jesus Incarcerate?

Who Would Jesus Incarcerate?

Posted on August 6, 2011August 8, 2011 by Phillipe Copeland
Article first published as Who Would Jesus Incarcerate? on Blogcritics. Evangelical activist and author Jim Wallis recently framed debate about our nation’s debt as a potential “moral defa... Read More
An Atheist and Franz Kafka’s “The Castle”

An Atheist and Franz Kafka’s “The Castle”

Posted on August 5, 2011August 15, 2011 by Kile Jones
This was first presented as “The Power of Kafka’s Castle,” at the Conference on Retaliation, California State University Fullerton, January 28, 2011. It was later revised and presented as “K... 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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