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Category: Intra-Faith

The Israel I feared

The Israel I feared

Posted on September 9, 2011January 3, 2012 by Adina Allen
With each person he found to daven (pray), my heart sank a little bit. Each time he passed by my husband and me without asking us to join, I felt a little sad, a little frustrated, and totally invisib... Read More
The Vice of Revenge

The Vice of Revenge

Posted on September 6, 2011February 28, 2012 by Tasi Perkins
Gary Younge’s recent editorial in The Guardian looks back on collective American attitudes and behaviors since September 11, 2001.  Many of the points he makes are strikingly similar to those I mad... Read More
Dangerous Narratives: Lessons from the German Christian Movement for the American Church

Dangerous Narratives: Lessons from the German Christian Movement for the American Church

Posted on September 3, 2011September 3, 2011 by Sara Williams Staley
It was a damp, rainy day when I witnessed the black iron gate that looms ominously over Auschwitz I.  ‘Arbeit macht frei’, it pronounces: “Work will set you free.”  I could not help but noti... Read More
The End of Spirituality: On the Trail to a Sacred Secularity

The End of Spirituality: On the Trail to a Sacred Secularity

Posted on September 2, 2011September 2, 2011 by Guest Post
This is a guest post by Chris Highland a professor at Cherry Hill Seminary. We are all tired of the contemporary cliche, “Spiritual but not Religious.” We might be surprised to hear someon... Read More
On Greed and Giving Up the Boots I Cannot Live Without

On Greed and Giving Up the Boots I Cannot Live Without

Posted on August 16, 2011August 29, 2011 by Jenn Lindsay
I am on the planning committee of the International Political Camp at Agape Centro Ecumenico in the Italian Alps. Because I am always at a loss to describe exactly what Agape is to the uninitiated—a... 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
Your books, your reflections: The frames we use for our learning

Your books, your reflections: The frames we use for our learning

Posted on August 5, 2011 by Journal of Inter-Religious Studies
From Frankenstein to The New Jim Crow and Whose Gospel, you delved into the questions that shape your work as communal leaders. I am left with questions about what frames religious and ethical leaders... Read More
Museum or Memorial, and Why It Matters: Thoughts on Religious Symbolism

Museum or Memorial, and Why It Matters: Thoughts on Religious Symbolism

Posted on August 4, 2011August 4, 2011 by James Croft
Should the 9/11 cross be housed at the National September 11 Memorial and Museum? Ultimately, it's a question of symbolic function...... Read More
Hindu Community Makes Its White House Debut

Hindu Community Makes Its White House Debut

Posted on August 3, 2011August 1, 2011 by Joshua Stanton
Hinduism is hardly new to the United States. Swami Vivekenanda is thought to have first introduced it when he visited as part of the World’s Parliament of Religions at the Chicago World’s ... Read More
Two Ways Through Life: Reflections on The Tree of Life

Two Ways Through Life: Reflections on The Tree of Life

Posted on July 12, 2011July 12, 2011 by Adam Hollowell
Last week an old friend insisted that I see Terrence Malick’s recent film, The Tree of Life. The film instructs us from the beginning that we must choose which way we will follow through life, the w... 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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