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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
The hardest thing in life

The hardest thing in life

Posted on April 13, 2011April 12, 2011 by John Klawiter
I’ve been thinking about the topic of death a lot more than usual lately. Not from a pastoral care role. Not from presiding over funerals. But very personally. Two weeks ago, we put my son Olive... Read More
Normative Inculturation? A Thirteenth–Century Example of the Middle Ground in Relations between the Latin Church and the Church of the East

Normative Inculturation? A Thirteenth–Century Example of the Middle Ground in Relations between the Latin Church and the Church of the East

Posted on April 8, 2011April 9, 2011 by Journal of Inter-Religious Studies
This paper looks at two thirteenth century accounts, the Itinerarium by the Franciscan William of Rubruck and the Syriac Church of the East text Tashīthā DemārYaballāhā (the History of Mar Yaball... Read More
Psalm 137 and Religious Violence, Part V: Milton’s Allusive Abuse

Psalm 137 and Religious Violence, Part V: Milton’s Allusive Abuse

Posted on April 8, 2011April 8, 2011 by Jason Kerr
For Part I of this series, click here; for Part II, click here; for Part III, click here; for Part IV, click here. If Stephen Marshall’s literalism makes his reading of Psalm 137 easy to interpret a... Read More
Book Review: “The Language of Science and Faith” — Important Answers, but Limited Questions

Book Review: “The Language of Science and Faith” — Important Answers, but Limited Questions

Posted on April 7, 2011 by Joshua Stanton
As a future rabbi whose brother is a chemical biologist, I must write any review of a book on Christianity and Darwinism with care and respect for the authors, even as they approach these issues from ... Read More
Freaking Theology

Freaking Theology

Posted on April 7, 2011April 5, 2011 by Garfield Swaby
If the title of this blog entry led you to believe that its purpose is to criticize theology, you would be correct. As used here, ‘Freaking’ is not an adjective, not a clean version of the ‘F’... Read More
Psalm 137 and Religious Violence, Part IV: No Neuters

Psalm 137 and Religious Violence, Part IV: No Neuters

Posted on April 7, 2011April 8, 2011 by Jason Kerr
As the cases of Digby and Smectymnuus illustrate, the Israel/Edom metaphor does not readily admit of middle ground. Indeed, in a famous sermon given on the occasion of a Parliamentary fast day on 23 F... Read More
Psalm 137 and Religious Violence, Part III: Bishop Hall and the Smectymnuan Hydra

Psalm 137 and Religious Violence, Part III: Bishop Hall and the Smectymnuan Hydra

Posted on April 6, 2011April 8, 2011 by Jason Kerr
The invocations of Psalm 137 got uglier when Hall addressed a new tract to Parliament in the wake of the Root and Branch Petition. This tract drew responses from adversaries in his first category, the... Read More
An Atheist with Atheists United

An Atheist with Atheists United

Posted on April 5, 2011April 3, 2011 by Kile Jones
On February 28, 2011, I attended a meeting of Atheists United at the Center for Inquiry (CFI) in Hollywood, California.  It was a typical day in southern California—sunny, beautiful, without a clou... Read More
Psalm 137 and Religious Violence, Part II: Root and Branch

Psalm 137 and Religious Violence, Part II: Root and Branch

Posted on April 5, 2011April 8, 2011 by Jason Kerr
Like Jacob and Esau after the episode of the pottage, the family relationship of the English Church had gone quite sour by 1640, and this bitterness gave Psalm 137 its potency in the church-government... Read More
On Empowering Women through Art in South Sudan

On Empowering Women through Art in South Sudan

Posted on April 4, 2011April 3, 2011 by H
“With art there is no barrier.” These words concluded a brief interview I had with Milcah Lalam, a woman from South Sudan who provides psychosocial rehabilitation for communities within this newly... 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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