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Category: Theology

Teaching Heschel and King by Leslie Hilgeman

Teaching Heschel and King by Leslie Hilgeman

Posted on January 27, 2013May 13, 2015 by State of Formation
“The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice.” – quote used by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. I don’t often write about classes I take at rabbinical school. But every so... Read More
What I Learned About God by Ice Skating with My Boyfriend

What I Learned About God by Ice Skating with My Boyfriend

Posted on January 24, 2013March 9, 2014 by Alex Weissman
My boyfriend and I live 307 miles apart (thank you, Google maps, for your precision). Long distance is not the easiest way to start a relationship, let alone to maintain it. When we manage to sneak a ... Read More
“The Problem of Nation-State in Democratic Politics” by Yi Shen Ma

“The Problem of Nation-State in Democratic Politics” by Yi Shen Ma

Posted on January 22, 2013January 22, 2013 by Claremont Journal of Religion
The meaning of nationhood is a hotly debated issue in Western political theory. Despite its intrinsic ambiguity, however, most scholars agree that the idea of a “nation” is real enough to impact t... Read More
To Work the Earth of My Heart: Memorizing the Sermon on the Mount

To Work the Earth of My Heart: Memorizing the Sermon on the Mount

Posted on January 20, 2013January 20, 2013 by Caitlin Michelle Desjardins
I just returned from my last final of the semester. It was…unconventional, to say the least. Instead of sitting in a wood-paneled classroom for three hours getting intimate with a blue book, I spent... Read More
Uniting the Transcendent and Immanent: A Jewish Way of Saying “Amen” in an Uncomfortable and Challenging Prayer Space

Uniting the Transcendent and Immanent: A Jewish Way of Saying “Amen” in an Uncomfortable and Challenging Prayer Space

Posted on January 19, 2013January 21, 2013 by Ari Saks
A couple of months ago, I was recording a video for my community when I heard a sudden knock on my office window.  Startled, I quickly finished the recording and went to the nearby door to see who ha... Read More
Supporting “Kill the Gays”: Implications for Religious Liberty in the US and Abroad

Supporting “Kill the Gays”: Implications for Religious Liberty in the US and Abroad

Posted on January 19, 2013January 19, 2013 by Jason Hines
Some Adventist related news came from Uganda recently and I find it particularly disturbing. Pastor Balsious Ruguri, church president for East and Central Africa, came out in support of the Anti-Homos... Read More
"Weakening Liberalism: Rawls, Pluralism, and the Fact of Oppression,” by Daniel Ambord

“Weakening Liberalism: Rawls, Pluralism, and the Fact of Oppression,” by Daniel Ambord

Posted on January 12, 2013January 12, 2013 by Claremont Journal of Religion
The next five posts from Claremont Journal of Religion will be on the topic of Political Theology.  Here is a piece from the first of them. “Moving well beyond Schmitt and even Rosenzweig, to T... Read More
Review of Dermot Lane's "Stepping Stones To Other Religions: A Christian Theology of Inter-Religious Dialogue"

Review of Dermot Lane’s “Stepping Stones To Other Religions: A Christian Theology of Inter-Religious Dialogue”

Posted on January 11, 2013January 11, 2013 by Hans Gustafson
In Stepping Stones to Other Religions, Dermot Lane offers an entry into interreligious engagement for Christians (particularly Roman Catholics) in the twenty-first century. It serves as a commendable... Read More
Revisiting the Victim Narrative of the Sikh American Community

Revisiting the Victim Narrative of the Sikh American Community

Posted on January 3, 2013January 3, 2013 by Simran Jeet Singh
Originally published in the Milwaukee-Wisconsin Journal-Sentinel. After a white supremacist opened fire at a Sikh gurdwara in Oak Creek in August, significant media resources have been devoted to desc... Read More
Please Stop Making God an Accomplice to the Newtown Massacre

Please Stop Making God an Accomplice to the Newtown Massacre

Posted on December 21, 2012December 21, 2012 by Paul Joseph Greene
No one knows what to say in moments like this. But we utter many things about God. Do we really mean these things? The divine love is not complicit in their deaths. The divine love does not call the... 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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