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Category: Interfaith

Inter-religious Dialogue with (Non?)Religious Others

Inter-religious Dialogue with (Non?)Religious Others

Posted on August 21, 2015August 20, 2015 by James Nagle
A few weeks ago I planned and celebrated a wedding ceremony for a young Gen X couple, Neil and Stephanie. The couple and the other Gen Xers, Millenials and few Boomers who attended would certainly sel... Read More
Resilient Space and the Necessity of Discomfort

Resilient Space and the Necessity of Discomfort

Posted on August 20, 2015August 19, 2015 by Esther Boyd
“The idea of safe space is a Utopian ideal.” — Laurie Patton, President of Middlebury College Despite how often we hear and use the phrase “safe space” in interfaith work... Read More
Working T'shuvah - What is Forgiveness?

Working T’shuvah – What is Forgiveness?

Posted on August 19, 2015August 20, 2015 by Mackenzie Reynolds
I grew up in a non-religious family, and then became Christian as a teenager, and then converted again to Judaism as an adult. I learned as a teen that forgiveness is freely and completely given. It i... Read More
What’s “Religious” About Interreligious Dialogue?

What’s “Religious” About Interreligious Dialogue?

Posted on August 18, 2015September 2, 2015 by Jenn Lindsay
Anyone who has embarked upon the study of religion immediately runs into a debate of the meaning of the very word religion. Definitions abound and debates rage about whether a general definition of re... Read More
Call to Action for a New and Just World Order By Junaid S. Ahmad and Abdul Jabbar

Call to Action for a New and Just World Order By Junaid S. Ahmad and Abdul Jabbar

Posted on August 6, 2015August 6, 2015 by Guest Post
Over the past few decades, “politics” became a dirty word globally, to be left for the corrupt and deceitful. A healthy tradition of interventions by various social and political actors to remedy ... Read More
The Difference Between Religious Diversity and Religious Pluralism

The Difference Between Religious Diversity and Religious Pluralism

Posted on August 5, 2015August 4, 2015 by Jenn Lindsay
In a previous article I explored how “choice and safety” are the key ingredients in converting de facto religious diversity into religious pluralism, an environment more conducive to transformativ... Read More
The Supreme Court Case You Missed…

The Supreme Court Case You Missed…

Posted on August 4, 2015August 4, 2015 by David Joslin
While there has been no shortage of discussion surrounding the recent U.S. Supreme Court decisions on such hot button issues ranging from marriage equality to health care, and the environment, one imp... Read More
The Only Terrorist in Israel

The Only Terrorist in Israel

Posted on August 3, 2015August 2, 2015 by Wilfredo Amr Ruiz
The only terrorist in Israel is one of Arab descent. At least, that is how it is portrayed by the media and dominant ideologues to the impressionable public either in a willful or extremely irresponsi... Read More
What Exactly is "Mutual Recognition"?

What Exactly is “Mutual Recognition”?

Posted on July 31, 2015August 5, 2015 by Jenn Lindsay
The construct of “mutual recognition” is circulated frequently in the interfaith society: nearly every organization I approach as an ethnographic researcher names it as a primary goal. But... Read More
Arab Like Me: Rachel Dolezal and My Anxious Jewish Mask

Arab Like Me: Rachel Dolezal and My Anxious Jewish Mask

Posted on July 30, 2015July 29, 2015 by Ilona Gerbakher
Am I the Jewish Rachel Dolezal? I was sitting in my East Jerusalem apartment in a Moroccan djellaba, Abdel Halim Hafez warbling from the stereo, sipping mint tea and reading a New Yorker article about... 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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