
ReligionWise Podcast
ReligionWise features educators, researchers, and other professionals discussing topics on religion and their relevance to the public conversation.
ReligionWise features educators, researchers, and other professionals discussing topics on religion and their relevance to the public conversation.
Have you been listening to the podcast and want to share your thoughts about it? Do you have questions about the topics we’ve discussed?
If you look carefully at religious traditions in your own neighborhood or around the globe, you quickly discover that different religious communities think very differently about the way the world works.
To understand our fellow humans, we must examine these worldviews that are rooted in the religious and cultural contexts of diverse communities. Only by carefully considering and analyzing these differences can we understand how others perceive the world and act within it.
The Institute’s mission is to strive to create a community engaged in the pursuit of understanding and analyzing how religion and culture impact our neighborhoods and our world.
Our conversation with Dr. Hasshan Batts explores how encounters with different communities and worldviews shaped his path to both religious faith and social justice work. As the Executive Director of Promise Neighborhoods of the Lehigh Valley, Dr. Batts will discuss the interplay between religious faith and personal development, examining how Islam has informed his understanding of human potential and community relationships.
Listen, read, and watch scholars whose work aligns with the mission of the Institute.
In today’s environment, an understanding of the different religions of the world is not a luxury but a necessity.
This Ancient Near East scholar’s research on two American young-Earth-creationist institutions provided fodder for timely discussions in the classroom.
A new integrative learning partnership between the Department of Religion Studies and the Office of Housing & Residence Life helps resident advisors develop religious literacy.
A course on Tibetan Buddhism gave Monica Arora ’15 a new perspective on humanity in medicine. Religion studies alumni Jeremy Fuchs ’14 discusses its impact on her career.
The COVID-19 pandemic has upended the work of Rabbi Jason Kirschner ’10, who serves as a chaplain at a New York City hospital.