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Tag: Religion

On the Process of Becoming - A Passover Reflection

On the Process of Becoming – A Passover Reflection

Posted on April 19, 2011February 15, 2012 by Adina Allen
In his commentary on Passover the 19th century Hasidic rebbe the Sefat Emet comments on verse from Numbers 15:41 traditionally read as “I took you out of the land of Egypt to be for you a Gd.” Tra... Read More
Afghans Attack U.N. Building, Murder Workers and Each Other After Qur’an Burning

Afghans Attack U.N. Building, Murder Workers and Each Other After Qur’an Burning

Posted on April 4, 2011April 4, 2011 by Gretchen Koch
Remember Terry Jones? Not the guy from Monty Python, but the Florida pastor who threatened to burn copies of the Qur’an last August in response to the building of the Cordoba House Islamic cultu... Read More
Sustaining the Earth, Sustaining People

Sustaining the Earth, Sustaining People

Posted on March 28, 2011January 3, 2012 by Adina Allen
It was an exciting weekend for me as an aspiring rabbi not only because I got to connect with friends and colleagues from across the Jewish environmental world, but because I felt in this diverse comm... Read More
Fill in the Middle Ground: Intertextuality and Inter-Religious Dialogue in 16th-Century Guatemala

Fill in the Middle Ground: Intertextuality and Inter-Religious Dialogue in 16th-Century Guatemala

Posted on March 26, 2011March 26, 2011 by Journal of Inter-Religious Studies
There are, in fact, very few times in human history when two or more sizably significant groups of people encounter each other and neither one has any actual idea who, or even what, the other group is... Read More
When You Just Shouldn’t Say Anything: Sam Harris and the Qur’an

When You Just Shouldn’t Say Anything: Sam Harris and the Qur’an

Posted on March 25, 2011March 25, 2011 by Joshua Oxley
I try to be as generous as possible. I try to listen first, think things through, give others the benefit of the doubt. But when someone says something so ignorant, so poorly thought-out, and so disho... Read More
Give Meaning to What is Positive, Not to What is Negative

Give Meaning to What is Positive, Not to What is Negative

Posted on March 13, 2011March 15, 2011 by Karen Leslie Hernandez
I can say with complete honesty that I am not mean. In fact, I haven’t a mean bone in my body. So, why then, do I sometimes do mean things? Why do I sometimes surround myself with negative thoughts ... Read More
What Are We Saying?

What Are We Saying?

Posted on March 7, 2011March 8, 2011 by Adina Allen
For me, this raises important questions about the power and significance of words. The words of prayer are so important that I don’t want to change them, yet they are often so problematic for me tha... Read More
Violence and Celebration in Revolutionary Times

Violence and Celebration in Revolutionary Times

Posted on February 22, 2011February 22, 2011 by Adam Hollowell
Last week, amid the slowing of protests and the celebratory atmosphere in Egypt following the departure of former President Hosni Mubarak, a debate emerged over the honoring of police officers alleged... Read More
Communion Secrets: Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell

Communion Secrets: Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell

Posted on February 8, 2011March 5, 2011 by Oliver Goodrich
In a 2010 letter to the Armed Forces Chaplains Board, Metropolitan Jonah of the Orthodox Church in America (OCA) wrote, "“Those who engage in such [homosexual] activity are excluded by the Canons fr... Read More
Home is Where the Start Is

Home is Where the Start Is

Posted on February 7, 2011February 18, 2011 by Adina Allen
At a time when many of the ways in which we are being told we can help curb climate change are “don’ts” these practices can be fun, celebratory, and can create community. Are we going to adequat... 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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