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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
Atheist Hijacking of Humanism

Atheist Hijacking of Humanism

Posted on May 3, 2011May 2, 2011 by Stephanie Louise Fisher
A hypocrite wears a halo but hides mockery in his heart. Ambrose Bierce defines hypocrisy as “one who, professing virtues that he does not respect, secures the advantage of seeming to be what he des... Read More
Justice, Osama bin Laden, and American Civil Religion

Justice, Osama bin Laden, and American Civil Religion

Posted on May 2, 2011 by Michael J. Altman
As I sat on my couch scanning Twitter and listening to the President describe the killing of Osama bin Laden, I realized that this was a high moment in American civil religion. Thanks to a couple coll... Read More
Bin Laden’s Dead. But, What Are We Celebrating, Exactly?

Bin Laden’s Dead. But, What Are We Celebrating, Exactly?

Posted on May 2, 2011 by Paul Joseph Greene
I am still sorting through the emotions and the facts swirling around the announcement that Osama bin Laden has been killed. What a turn of events! These are just my initial thoughts about terror, lo... Read More
Defamation and Debate: The Conversation Within

Defamation and Debate: The Conversation Within

Posted on April 30, 2011May 3, 2011 by Saumya Arya Haas
The conversation within a faith is painful and challenging because it can feel like a battle for the identity of the faith itself, and by extension, our own identity. It’s easy to think that differe... Read More
How Hoops Can Fix Your Oops (or, A Lighthearted Treatise on the Wisdom of Basketball’s Justice)

How Hoops Can Fix Your Oops (or, A Lighthearted Treatise on the Wisdom of Basketball’s Justice)

Posted on April 28, 2011April 29, 2011 by Danielle Elizabeth Tumminio
Let’s talk about the cost of the clink: With the United States having the highest incarceration rate in the industrialized world, with costs to maintain it soaring, and with high recidivism, most Am... Read More
What Do Americans Really Believe?

What Do Americans Really Believe?

Posted on April 26, 2011April 26, 2011 by Ben DeVan
Are mega-churches more intimate than small congregations? Are atheists more superstitious or likely to believe in the paranormal than conservative Christians? Do many Americans believe some "non-relig... Read More
Chaos, Apparently

Chaos, Apparently

Posted on April 25, 2011April 25, 2011 by Br. Larry Whitney
I thoroughly enjoy reading David Brooks’ columns in The New York Times.  I particularly enjoy his columns parsing social science literature.  How many columnists in the United States, or anywhere ... Read More
Wholly Saturday & The Gaps of Faith, or: Living In/Between the Death and Doubts of Faith

Wholly Saturday & The Gaps of Faith, or: Living In/Between the Death and Doubts of Faith

Posted on April 24, 2011April 25, 2011 by Robyn Henderson-Espinoza
They (the Christians) call today “Holy Saturday.”  In fact, I’m on my way to be with them on this (Holy) Saturday.  I’ve not been in a Saturday Church Service in years, and I... Read More
Now I Lay Me Down To Sleep

Now I Lay Me Down To Sleep

Posted on April 24, 2011April 25, 2011 by Ben Maton
Now I lay me down to sleep; I pray the Lord my soul to keep. If I should die before I wake; I pray the Lord my soul to take. I sometimes pray that prayer before I go to sleep. My parents taught it to ... Read More
Did Religious Extremism Kill Vittorio Arrigoni?

Did Religious Extremism Kill Vittorio Arrigoni?

Posted on April 23, 2011April 22, 2011 by Karen Leslie Hernandez
Last week, human rights activist Vittorio Arrigoni was murdered in Gaza. Found strangled in an abandoned home, Vittorio was an outspoken humanitarian and peacemaker since arriving in Gaza in 2009 on ... 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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