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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
Dynamic Stillness

Dynamic Stillness

Posted on January 24, 2011January 24, 2011 by Bilal Hassam
The State of Formation seeks to provide a platform for emerging religious and ethical leaders in formation. But what does it really mean to be in formation? This personal reflection looks at reconcili... Read More
Atheists, Christians, and Fact Fundamentalism

Atheists, Christians, and Fact Fundamentalism

Posted on January 23, 2011January 24, 2011 by Nate Kratzer
In 1910 Harvard Professor Charles Elliot advocated for a new form of Christianity, a Christianity that would have only one commandment, “love of God expressed in service to others.” At the time, m... Read More
Respecting the Faithful, Respecting Faith – Part 1: Strength in the Face of Despair

Respecting the Faithful, Respecting Faith – Part 1: Strength in the Face of Despair

Posted on January 23, 2011January 23, 2011 by James Croft
In January 1956, Martin Luther King was in despair. His decisions as a civil rights leader in Montgomery, Alabama were being questioned, even by former supporters. He had been receiving anonymous deat... Read More
A Blessing for Tucson (and the rest of us)

A Blessing for Tucson (and the rest of us)

Posted on January 23, 2011January 23, 2011 by Joshua Ratner
Like many of you, I have struggled to figure out how to respond to the travesty in Tucson.  I was shocked at the carnage, sickened by the loss of life, and outraged at both the perpetrator and the sy... Read More
Good News Flash: Jesus Hates Obama (just kidding)

Good News Flash: Jesus Hates Obama (just kidding)

Posted on January 23, 2011 by Paul Joseph Greene
Perhaps you have seen the website, http://www.jesushatesobama.com/. That’s right, the American free market, where business rules, and all is fair because, after all, business is business, has produc... Read More
I Accept the Other, But I Fight with My Brother: why intra-faith relations can be the biggest challenge of all

I Accept the Other, But I Fight with My Brother: why intra-faith relations can be the biggest challenge of all

Posted on January 22, 2011January 22, 2011 by Jenn Lindsay
When I am invited to attend Muslim salaat (one of the five daily prayer sessions) I sit in the back with the other women. I comply with gender customs as a guest. I cover my hair under hijab without h... Read More
Going Home For Christmas (or The “I am From” Post)

Going Home For Christmas (or The “I am From” Post)

Posted on January 22, 2011 by Marvin Lance Wiser
The past several years have been full of change- c’est la vie, no? After returning to the States from Mexico, my wife and I stayed in the San Francisco area before moving to Boston in order to emb... Read More
An Atheist and William Connolly

An Atheist and William Connolly

Posted on January 21, 2011 by Kile Jones
William E. Connolly’s Why I Am Not a Secularist (1999) has been hailed a landmark contribution to the study of secularism and modern society.  In it Connolly argues for a “refashioning” of secu... Read More
Bury the Bloody Hatchet: Secularism, Islam, and Reconciliation in Afghanistan

Bury the Bloody Hatchet: Secularism, Islam, and Reconciliation in Afghanistan

Posted on January 21, 2011January 21, 2011 by Journal of Inter-Religious Studies
When the US negotiated peace with American Indians just a few years after the American Revolution, they used religiously-inspired, culturally relevant symbols to “bury the hatchet.” However, the... Read More
Tea with Hezbollah

Tea with Hezbollah

Posted on January 20, 2011January 28, 2011 by Ben DeVan
Last Thursday, the New York Times reported that the Shi'i military and political movement Hezbollah, which many would classify as terrorist, toppled the Lebanese government just six months after the d... 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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