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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
Justice and Love

Justice and Love

Posted on May 18, 2015May 17, 2015 by Susan Kennel Harrison
“Few realities have determined the course of history more than the choices by which individuals, social groups, and nations have responded to aggression and hatred.”(John Rempel) “Lo... Read More
Taboo Topics

Taboo Topics

Posted on May 18, 2015May 18, 2015 by Saadia Faruqi
We are pleased to be sharing, over the coming weeks, a series of four reflection pieces on the State of Formation visit to the United Stated Holocaust Memorial Museum this spring. I’ve been working ... Read More
St. Mary's Shabbat

St. Mary’s Shabbat

Posted on May 15, 2015May 14, 2015 by David Joslin
Having been raised in an observant Italian Catholic household, I understand the importance of family, food, holidays, and motherly guilt. This week marks the 10th anniversary of my conversion to Judai... Read More
What Can Interfaith Dialogue Really Do? Part 2 of 3

What Can Interfaith Dialogue Really Do? Part 2 of 3

Posted on May 14, 2015May 13, 2015 by Jenn Lindsay
Read Part I here. At lunch after Purim, I heard the rabbi criticize interfaith projects for being “just another religious group.” I reflected on the irony of a religious clergy person dismissing t... Read More
Interfaith Dialogue and Identity Formation

Interfaith Dialogue and Identity Formation

Posted on May 14, 2015May 13, 2015 by Eli Lieberman
Interfaith dialogue is of increasing importance on a daily basis in our current international social, political and economic order. This can be seen in the current interfaith groups that are gathering... Read More
5 Things Having a Muslim Friend Taught Me

5 Things Having a Muslim Friend Taught Me

Posted on May 13, 2015May 12, 2015 by Deborah Ruth Ferber
In 2014, I made a very close non-Christian friend. A beautiful Muslim woman, deeply spiritual, and full of compassion for others; we spent our days together eating snacks, discussing our religions, an... Read More
"But Not in Number": One and Many in Hebrew Grammar

“But Not in Number”: One and Many in Hebrew Grammar

Posted on May 13, 2015May 12, 2015 by Adam Zagoria-Moffet
Hebrew contains a feature which, to my knowledge, is unique among both Semitic and non-Semitic languages. That is, there is a small but significant class of nouns which are plural in form but singular... Read More
What Can Interfaith Dialogue Really Do? Part 1 of 3

What Can Interfaith Dialogue Really Do? Part 1 of 3

Posted on May 12, 2015May 11, 2015 by Jenn Lindsay
After the most recent Purim morning service at my synagogue, I ate lunch with the rabbi. He told me he thinks interreligious dialogue is an in-group hobby, that interfaith groups become cliques. He fe... Read More
Identifying the Spirit of the Poetic

Identifying the Spirit of the Poetic

Posted on May 12, 2015May 11, 2015 by Guest Post
As a student of religion, above all else, I am committed to identifying the spirit of the poetic in my work. I turn to writing as a form of prayer, a languaged response to the unlanguaged Other of the... Read More
The Farm Wagon and the Apple: Thoughts and Reflections on Being Mennonite

The Farm Wagon and the Apple: Thoughts and Reflections on Being Mennonite

Posted on May 11, 2015May 10, 2015 by Deborah Ruth Ferber
Every time I get off the train, drive 45 minutes south of the nearest city, and breathe in the fresh and familiar farm air, I am reminded of a very vital piece of my past. A part that is missing and y... 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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