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Criteria of Discernment in Interreligious Dialogue (Paperback)
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Criteria of Discernment in Interreligious Dialogue (Paperback)
Series: Interreligious Dialogue, 1
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Description: CONTRIBUTORS: Mustafa Abu-Sway, Al-Quds University,
Jerusalem Asma Afsaruddin, Indiana University Reinhold Bernhardt,
Basel Univeristy David Burrell, CSC, University of Notre Dame
Catherine Cornille, Boston College Gavin D'Costa, University of
Bristol David M. Elcott, New York University Joseph Lumbard,
Brandeis University Jonathan Magonet, Louis Baeck Institute, London
John Makransky, Boston College Anantanand Rambachan, St. Olaf
College Deepak Sarma, Case Western University Judith Simmer-Brown,
Naropa University Mark Unno, University of Oregon Endorsements:
""Discernment as the evaluation of one religious community by
another is a critical question in contemporary interfaith dialogue
theory and practice. How do the members of different religions
judge the relative worth of other religious traditions? And how
does this judgment connect with the complicated religious lives of
modern people? The question of religious discernment has become
much more pressing in an age of the globalization of religion along
with economic and cultural exchange. What is so refreshing about
these essays is that the authors do not shy away from the fact that
every religious tradition does have ways of judging the relative
merits (and demerits) of the religions of other people . . . As the
Kongzi (Confucius) taught so long ago, we need to find harmony but
not uniformity. These essays help us on this path."" --John
Berthrong Boston University ""This is serious and careful work, a
rich collection yielding honest and provocative lessons by
religious scholars challenged to identify the criteria for critical
judgments they employ when addressing different understandings
within their traditions and, particularly, across religious
boundaries. They contribute significantly to contemporary
reflections on the dynamics of interreligious exchange from a
diversity of perspectives. Here five major traditions are
represented, but not uniformly so. Their insightful, at times
formidable, even counter-intuitive suggestions are instructive to
all who wish to understand more clearly diverse religious
perspectives on dialogue."" Georgetown University"" --John Borelli
Georgetown University About the Contributor(s): Catherine Cornille
is Associate Professor of Comparative Theology at Boston College.
She is the author of The Im-Possibility of Interreligious Dialogue
(2008) and editor of Many Mansions? Multiple Religious Belonging
and Christian Identity (2002) and Song Divine: Christian
Commentaries on the Bhagavad Gita (2006). She is managing editor of
the series Christian Commentaries on Non-Christian Sacred Texts.
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