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Featured Articles
View Podcast: What do Cats Have to do with Interfaith Work?
Podcast: What do Cats Have to do with Interfaith Work?
View Podcast: Finding Faith in Interfaith Work 
Podcast: Finding Faith in Interfaith Work 
View My Interfaith Travels: A Sikh Perspective
My Interfaith Travels: A Sikh Perspective
View The Art of Dialogue as Dance: Authenticity, Generosity and Spontaneity
The Art of Dialogue as Dance: Authenticity, Generosity and Spontaneity
View Story-telling and Story-listening: my Interfaith Journey
Story-telling and Story-listening: my Interfaith Journey
Reformer, Revolutionary, or Rationalist?  Three Types of Feminism

Reformer, Revolutionary, or Rationalist? Three Types of Feminism

Posted on November 10, 2011November 11, 2011 by Kile Jones
What do Martin Luther and Mary Daly have in common? They both realized that they could not reform the Roman Catholic Church from “the inside-out.”  They came to believe that some institutions, ev... Read More
Orunmila, Muhammad and Jesus: Together Again?

Orunmila, Muhammad and Jesus: Together Again?

Posted on November 9, 2011November 9, 2011 by Funlayo Wood
Two weeks ago, religious leaders from a variety of the world’s faiths met with Pope Benedict XVI at the Vatican to publicly and collectively denounce the spread of religious fanaticism that has, unf... Read More
On Having to Choose: Scholar or Activist

On Having to Choose: Scholar or Activist

Posted on November 7, 2011November 6, 2011 by Mary Ann Kaiser
This past August, Vanderbilt Divinity School and the Human Rights Campaign hosted a series of workshops on the issue of religion and sexuality. Though I was not actually a part of this event, I was ex... Read More
For a Clean Cut Eid

For a Clean Cut Eid

Posted on November 6, 2011November 6, 2011 by Craig Phillips
Today, November 6th, is one of two major feasts celebrated by Muslims around the world. It begins on the 10th day of Dhūl-Ḥijja, and is celebrated in solidarity and connection to the nearly 3 milli... Read More
Truth, Reconciliation, and Occupation

Truth, Reconciliation, and Occupation

Posted on November 6, 2011November 5, 2011 by Phillipe Copeland
Article first published as Truth, Reconciliation, and Occupation on Blogcritics. Image courtesy of Wikimedia A literal chill has recently settled over the Occupy Wall Street protests even as the movem... Read More
Occupy Oakland Strike: Change and The Power of Nonviolence

Occupy Oakland Strike: Change and The Power of Nonviolence

Posted on November 5, 2011November 4, 2011 by Kit Evans
Last night I marched with thousands of people of all ages, ethnicities, and classes to the Port of Oakland. People were chanting, smiling, speaking about nonviolence, talking about change, and playing... Read More
Lines through the Heart of this City

Lines through the Heart of this City

Posted on November 5, 2011November 5, 2011 by Adina Allen
These past two months living in Jerusalem have been an experience of witnessing the struggle—in this city and in my own heart—between forces that seek to dismember us into discrete parts, and forc... Read More
The 99% Occupy Movement: We Need Interclass Dialogue for Mutual Transformation, Liberation

The 99% Occupy Movement: We Need Interclass Dialogue for Mutual Transformation, Liberation

Posted on November 4, 2011November 8, 2011 by Paul Joseph Greene
The Occupy Movement has identified itself using the term 99%.  On the face, this seems to present a permanent dichotomy between the 1% of richest people, and the 99% of the rest of us.   Of course,... Read More
Nationalism: A Different Kind of Identity Crisis

Nationalism: A Different Kind of Identity Crisis

Posted on November 4, 2011November 4, 2011 by Simran Jeet Singh
Sometimes, I’m not totally sure who I am. Not in the crazy, lost my mind kind of way. And not in the spiritual or philosophical kind of way either. What I mean is that I don’t always know how to c... Read More
The Danger of "Us v. Them" Thinking in Our Work for Social Change

The Danger of “Us v. Them” Thinking in Our Work for Social Change

Posted on November 4, 2011November 3, 2011 by Yaira Robinson
I know it’s easier, when there are disagreements, to see the “other side” as completely wrong and “our side” as completely justified. But there is real danger in casting any conflict as a bl... 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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