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Today we are increasingly exposed to greater religious diversity. In this Christ on Campus Initiative interview (www.christoncampuscci.org), Harold Netland d...
The first in a series of Gifford Lectures by Prof Diana Eck. Recorded April and May 2009 at The University of Edinburgh. In 1893, the World's Parliament of R...
Bobby clarifies the concept of religious pluralism and how it applies to one of the core tenets of Christianity: salvation through the finished work of Jesus...
In this clip from the 8th volume of RZIM's "Foundations of Apologetics," John Lennox defines religious pluralism and defuses its claims.
Best-selling author Marcus Borg, Professor in Religion and Culture, uses a interdisciplinary approach to examine the role and importance of religions and rel...
Religious diversity poses questions that are not only global, national, and civic, but also theological. In 1910, the World Conference on Mission convened in...
Leonard Swidler, Alan Race, and Ingrid Shafer in dialogue with John Hick, January 2-4, Birmingham, UK. Impact of 9-11 on religious attitudes; appropriate res...
Will the Faith Line be the defining factor of the 21st century? Can interfaith youth activism create a new movement for mutual understanding, respect and glo...
Title: "Religious Pluralism in a Democracy" Synopsis: Will the Faith Line be the defining factor of the 21st century? Can interfaith youth activism create a ...
During his visit to Scotland, Sheikh Hamza Sodagar delivered a talk regarding the concept of Religious Pluralism. Sheikh Hamza defined religious pluralism in...
SESSION 2 OF 5 The gospel was born into a world of pluralism. Paul himself was clear in his commitments to the one God of Jewish monotheism and to the life-orienting gospel of Jesus the Messiah. But as we see in passages like Philippians 2:7, the posture Christians are to assume in the face of this radical pluralism is the same posture they are to assume in the face of prevalent evil, that is, pouring themselves out in love for the other.
For more on this event, visit: http://bit.ly/VsjBYC For more on the Berkley Center, visit: http://berkleycenter.georgetown.edu February 5, 2013 | Renowned so...
This is our Creative and Critical Thinking project. A short video like a documentary to explain generally about Religious Pluralism. Your like will help our group to get more marks. Your contribution are highly appreciate :)
Looking more broadly, the religious traditions of the Indic world have distinctive views on religions, on the diversity of religions and the engagements we w...
For more on this event: http://bit.ly/d3hEgq For a full-length video of this event: http://vimeo.com/19399839 For more on the Berkley Center: http://berkleyc...
Copyright 2013 University of Maryland. On Monday, November 25, 2013, the Bahá'í Chair for World Peace held the 2013 Fall Lecture entitled, "China's Religious...
For more on this event, visit: http://bit.ly/15NjzPa For more on the Berkley Center, visit: http://berkleycenter.georgetown.edu October 29, 2008 | The United States, France, Turkey, and India represent four secular democratic states with distinctively different patterns of religion/state separation and distinctively different modes of religious pluralism. This seminar examined comparatively the historical patterns of constitution of the four secular regimes, as well as the contemporary contentious debates on secularism, religion, and democratic politics in all four countries. Charles Taylor is one of the world's leading scholars working at the intersection of religion, secularity, and modernity. Among his most important books are: The Sources of the Self (1992), Multiculturalism: Examining the Politics of Recognition (1994) and, most recently, A Secular Age (2007). Taylor was for many years Professor for Political Sciences and Philosophy at the McGill University in Montreal, Canada, where he now serves as professor emeritus. He was awarded the Templeton Prize in 2007. Rajeev Bhargava is professor of political theory and Indian political thought, head of the Department of Political Science at the University of Delhi and a prominent scholar of multiculturalism and secularism in non-Western societies. He is editor of Civil Society, Public Sphere and Citizenship: Dialogues and Perceptions (2005) and co-editor of Transforming India (2000). He has also edited Secularism and its critics (1998) and co-edited Multiculturalism, Liberalism and Democracy (1999). Nilüfer Göle is professor of sociology at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes in Paris and a leading authority on contemporary Islam as it relates to issues of identity and gender in Europe. She is the author of The Forbidden Modern: Civilization and Veiling (1997) and Interpénétrations: L'Islam et l'Europe. (2005). Her sociological approach also has produced a broader critique of Eurocentrism with regard to emerging Islamic identities at the close of the 20th century. José Casanova is Professor in the Department of Sociology and Senior Fellow at the Berkley Center for Religion, Peace, and World Affairs, where he heads the program on Globalization, Religion and the Secular. A leading scholar of religion and globalization, he has published on topics including migration and religious pluralism, transnational religions, and sociological theory. His Public Religions in the Modern World (1994) has been translated into five languages.
Cities are the focal point of religious pluralism, for in cities the cultures and traditions of the world are concentrated. They are, as Lewis Mumford put it...
For more on this event, visit: http://bit.ly/UB78m5 For a full-length video of this event, visit: http://bit.ly/Yl5pmn For more on the Berkley Center, visit:...
Eboo Patel, founder and president of Interfaith Youth Core in Chicago, delivered this year's Dana McLean Greeley Lecture for Peace and Social Justice. Eboo's...
America's religious diversity: are we pulling together or pulling apart? Three distinguished authorities on American religion discuss how the country can mov...
Harold Netland discusses how Christians can respond to religious pluralism today. Watch the full Christ on Campus Initiative (www.christoncampuscci.org) film interview with Harold Netland at http://youtu.be/T_wBASPy7d4. Dr. Netland has also written a full essay related to this topic, available for free online at www.christoncampuscci.org. These videos and the corresponding essay are provided as a ministry of Christ on Campus Initiative, a nonprofit organization generously supported by the Carl F. H. Henry Center for Theological Understanding (a ministry of Trinity Evangelical Divinity School, Deerfield, IL), the Gospel Coalition, and the MAC Foundation (Fort Collins, CO).
Prof. Menachem Fisch, Shalom Hartman Institute, Jerusalem, Israel, discussed the difference between tolerance and religious pluralism, discusses in this vide...
For more on this event, visit: http://bit.ly/9DmOtf For more on the Berkley Center, visit: http://berkleycenter.georgetown.edu April 15, 2009 | The religious...
For more on this event, visit: http://bit.ly/m6Azjq For more on the Berkley Center, visit: http://berkleycenter.georgetown.edu May 3, 2011 | Churches and rel...
In this episode, Dr. Darrell Bock, Matt Bennett and Tim Adhikari discuss cultural engagement on college campuses, focusing on the ministry of Christian Union...
Multireligious societies have long been a historical reality in some parts of the world. Today, however, there are many recently-multireligious societies, es...
The Rev. Scotty McLennan speaks about the American West and religion in the Hall of Philosophy. This event was sponsored by the Department of Religion and to...
A Fulbright GPA group of 14 educators from different colleges around the U.S. visited Syria in June, 2007 to learn about the country's religious pluralism — ...
Human Rights First Summit 2013 Does Religious Pluralism Have a Future in the Middle East? Sectarian conflict is increasing in a number of countries in the Mi...
Randy Lee, Professor of Law at Widener University Law School, delivers his talk entitled "Thomas More, Dorothy Day, and Janis Joplin, and the Search for Reli...
This series of lectures will deal with the question of how the Christian church can live faithfully in a world of religious pluralism. In the first lecture w...
Rabbi Uri Regev, President and CEO of Hiddush which promotes freedom of observance and equality in Israel, discusses the problems of marital laws in the State of Israel due to the control of the Orthodox establishment. L'Chayim with Mark S. Golub.
December 3, 2014. Peter Berger, Professor Emeritus of Religion,Sociology and Theology, and Director of the Institute on Culture, Religion, and World Affairs at Boston University, participates in the Dean's Forum series. Recorded at the South Hamilton Campus of Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary.
Zurich, March 13, 2014 H. E. Amine Gemayel, Former President of Lebanon: Religious Pluralism in the Middle East: An Option or an Imperative? http://www.amine...
Greg Koukl, Founder and President of Stand to Reason, answers questions related to his talk "The Intolerance of Tolerance" given at the 2014 European Leadership Forum. - See more at: http://www.foclonline.org/talk/intolerance-tolerance
Presented on October 19, 2001 Diana L. Eck, Ph.D., professor of comparative religion and Indian studies, Harvard University & director, The Pluralism Project "The United States is the most religiously diverse nation in the world. How Americans of all faiths and beliefs engage with one another to shape a positive pluralism is one of the essential questions facing our society—and it is even more important in the wake of the September 11th terrorist attacks. In the past thirty years, the religious landscape of the United States has changed radically. There are Islamic centers and mosques, Hindu temples, and Buddhist meditation centers in virtually every major American city. The encounter between people of very different religious traditions takes place in our cities, our small towns, and our neighborhoods. Within this new multi-religious landscape, the United States is changing too. What will this wider range of cultures and religions mean to American life? Who do we mean when we say ""we the people?"" Diana L. Eck of Harvard University developed the Pluralism Project to document and study the growing religious diversity of the United States, with a special focus on its new immigrant religious communities. On October 19th, Professor Eck will share her vision of our religious diversity in all its bright, shifting, colorful, and fragmented brilliance."
H. E. Amine Gemayel, Former President of Lebanon "Religious Pluralism in the Middle East: A Challenge to the International Community" Boston College, March 25, 2015 The Future of Religious Minorities in the Middle East: A Series of Public Discussions in Boston, Oxford, Zurich, Geneva and Bern www.middle-east-minorities.com
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Interview by Simone Wilson - Video and edit by Sari Thayer - Music by Dexter Britain : Summer's Coming from the Free Music Archive Read more about Ruth and the 2015 elections here: http://www.jewishjournal.com/hella_tel_aviv/item/secular_yesh_atid_candidate_ruth_calderon_takes_on_the_rabbinate
Prof. Machasin: "On looking after religious pluralism in Indonesia: Ministry of Religious Affairs of the Republic of Indonesia". UIN Sunan Kalijaga Yogyakarta, Indonesia, March, 10-12, 2015.
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Check out (http://www.whitehead2015.com) -- Seizing an Alternative Conference John B. Cobb, Jr., "Religious Pluralism: A Discussion of John Cobb's Transforming Christianity," New Visions, 2000.
Hindu Pluralism: is Hinduism going the way of more religion or more spirituality?
Ahlulbayt Live 16/09/14
MERCAZ USA is the Zionist membership organization of the Conservative Movement, the voice of Conservative Jewry within the World Zionist Organization, the Jewish Agency for Israel, the American Zionist Movement and the Jewish National Fund to support religious pluralism in Israel and strengthen the connection between Israel and the Diaspora.
MERCAZ USA is the Zionist membership organization of the Conservative Movement, the voice of Conservative Jewry within the World Zionist Organization, the Jewish Agency for Israel, the American Zionist Movement and the Jewish National Fund to support religious pluralism in Israel and strengthen the connection between Israel and the Diaspora.
Agnieszka Pasieka, assistant professor of anthropology, Institute of Slavic Studies, Polish Academy of Sciences. Sponsors: CREES, Copernicus Program in Polish Studies, Weiser Center for Emerging Democracies. Dec 3, 2014.
Peter Berger, Professor Emeritus of Religion, Sociology and Theology, Director, Institute on Culture, Religion, and World Affairs at Boston University - Interviewed by Gregor Thuswaldner, Associate Professor of German and Linguistics and Fellow at the Center for Faith and Inquiry - Gordon College - Tuesday December 02, 2014 www.gordon.edu/fsu
Leandrous Chieves concludes his interview with Rev. Frank Watson.
... such as LGBTQ communities (exemplified in the recently revised Indiana Religious Freedom Act).
Huffington Post 2015-04-08I suggest that those who see things in religious terms (like the Saudi leaders), and fear the ...
CounterPunch 2015-04-08Likewise, it will take time to institute ethnic and religious plurality, and of course a democratic, ...
Huffington Post 2015-04-06... threat to the core values of freedom of expression and religious pluralism that we hold dear.
Huffington Post 2015-04-06Respect for religious plurality was "a critical legitimate path to peace," he said.
The Irish Times 2015-04-05... for religious liberty ... This is just the latest case of Hizzoner’s commitment to religious plurality.
New York Post 2015-04-04The opponents seem to be saying there is no valid tension between religious pluralism and equality.
Times Union 2015-04-01The opponents seem to be saying there is no valid tension between religious pluralism and equality.
U~T San Diego 2015-04-01But, in a clash of values between religious pluralism and equality, that absolutism is neither pragmatic, virtuous nor true.
Lexington Herald-Leader 2015-04-01It was only within this context of "hierarchised encompassment" that religious pluralism was allowed.
DNA India 2015-04-01The opponents seem to be saying there is no valid tension between religious pluralism and equality.
The Charlotte Observer 2015-03-31The opponents seem to be saying there is no valid tension between religious pluralism and equality.
Media Matters 2015-03-31In a clash of values like the one between religious pluralism and equality, that absolutism is ...
my SA 2015-03-31Religious pluralism is an attitude or policy regarding the diversity of religious belief systems co-existing in society. It can indicate one or more of the following:
Religious pluralism, to paraphrase the title of a recent academic work, goes beyond mere toleration. Chris Beneke, in Beyond Toleration: The Religious Origins of American Pluralism, explains the difference between religious tolerance and religious pluralism by pointing to the situation in the late 18th century United States. By the 1730s, in most colonies religious minorities had obtained what contemporaries called religious toleration: "The policy of toleration relieved religious minorities of some physical punishments and some financial burdens, but it did not make them free from the indignities of prejudice and exclusion. Nor did it make them equal. Those 'tolerated' could still be barred from civil offices, military positions, and university posts." In short, religious toleration is only the absence of religious persecution, and does not necessarily preclude religious discrimination. However, in the following decades something extraordinary happened in the Thirteen Colonies, at least if one views the events from "a late eighteenth-century perspective." Gradually the colonial governments expanded the policy of religious toleration, but then, between the 1760s and the 1780s, they replaced it with "something that is usually called religious liberty." Mark Silka, in "Defining Religious Pluralism in America: A Regional Analysis", states that Religious pluralism "enables a country made up of people of different faiths to exist without sectarian warfare or the persecution of religious minorities. Understood differently in different times and places, it is a cultural construct that embodies some shared conception of how a country's various religious communities relate to each other and to the larger nation whole."
Eboo Patel is a member of President Barack Obama's inaugural Advisory Council on Faith-Based Neighborhood Partnerships. He is an American Muslim of Gujarati Indian heritage and founder and president of the Interfaith Youth Core[1], a Chicago-based international nonprofit that aims to promote interfaith cooperation.
Patel grew up in Glen Ellyn, Illinois, where he attended Glenbard South High School. He has a doctorate in the sociology of religion from Oxford University, where he studied on a Rhodes scholarship. Patel attended the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign for his undergraduate studies.