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Tag: pluralism

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
Landscapes or Sandscapes?  New Atheist Grounds for Morality

Landscapes or Sandscapes? New Atheist Grounds for Morality

Posted on October 18, 2011October 27, 2011 by Ben DeVan
Atheist lauders and pursuers of truth, integrity, and beauty can be none too careful. They might provoke or experience longings for the fountain of all Beauty, Goodness, and Truth. ... Read More
Assert Your Authority

Assert Your Authority

Posted on October 9, 2011January 3, 2012 by Adina Allen
If on Rosh HaShanah we gain a picture of what can happen when we submit blindly to authority, Yom Kippur is our opportunity to choose another path.... Read More
Asking the Right Questions: from the Keystone XL Hearings to an Occupied Wall Street

Asking the Right Questions: from the Keystone XL Hearings to an Occupied Wall Street

Posted on October 4, 2011October 4, 2011 by Yaira Robinson
At the hearing, I sat and listened. Underneath the noise, all I heard was fear, pain and loss. From union workers, I heard a steady litany of suffering: we need jobs; we need homes; we need to feed ou... Read More
Living in Israel, Longing for Peace

Living in Israel, Longing for Peace

Posted on September 27, 2011January 3, 2012 by Adina Allen
Out among the scraggly brush of the desert, the Sulha began at dusk and went late into the evening. We gathered together: Jewish and Arab Israelis, Palestinians, our small contingent of American Jews,... Read More
Mooz-lum

Mooz-lum

Posted on September 12, 2011September 11, 2011 by Phillipe Copeland
Article first published as Mooz-lum on Blogcritics. In the film Mooz-lum (2010) a family shares a moment of grief. Tightly embracing with bowed heads pressed together while their bodies shake with sob... Read More
Contemplating America’s Reaction to 9/11

Contemplating America’s Reaction to 9/11

Posted on September 11, 2011September 12, 2011 by Rose Aslan
Here in the US, much of the rhetoric surrounding 9/11 is centered on never forgetting what happened on that tragic day. Thousands of articles, documentaries and programs have been circulating in the d... Read More
The Consequences of Rhetoric after 9/11

The Consequences of Rhetoric after 9/11

Posted on September 11, 2011December 5, 2013 by Damien Arthur
As our nation approaches the tenth anniversary of September 11th, we have the perfect opportunity to reflect on where we were socially, politically, and religiously prior to the attacks and where we a... Read More
The Israel I feared

The Israel I feared

Posted on September 9, 2011January 3, 2012 by Adina Allen
With each person he found to daven (pray), my heart sank a little bit. Each time he passed by my husband and me without asking us to join, I felt a little sad, a little frustrated, and totally invisib... Read More
Dangerous Narratives: Lessons from the German Christian Movement for the American Church

Dangerous Narratives: Lessons from the German Christian Movement for the American Church

Posted on September 3, 2011September 3, 2011 by Sara Williams Staley
It was a damp, rainy day when I witnessed the black iron gate that looms ominously over Auschwitz I.  ‘Arbeit macht frei’, it pronounces: “Work will set you free.”  I could not help but noti... Read More
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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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