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Interreligious studies is a subdiscipline of religious studies that engages in the scholarly and religiously neutral description, multidisciplinary analysis, and theoretical framing of the interactions of religiously different people and groups, including the intersection of religion and secularity.
Dialogue entails a cordial reception, not a prior condemnation. To dialogue it is necessary to know how to lower the defenses, open the doors of the house, and offer human warmth. [61] Religious leaders in Buenos Aires have mentioned that Pope Francis promoted interfaith ceremonies at the Buenos Aires Metropolitan Cathedral. [62]
Interfaith dialogue, also known as interreligious dialogue, refers to cooperative, constructive, and positive interaction between people of different religious traditions (i.e. "faiths") and/or spiritual or humanistic beliefs, at both the individual and institutional levels.
DIMMID, Dialogue Interreligieux Monastique - Monastic Interreligious Dialogue (DIM·MID), is a movement within the Benedictine and Cistercian order aimed to promote interfaith dialogue between monastic communities of different religions.
to promote mutual understanding, respect and collaboration between Catholics and the followers of other religious traditions; to encourage the study of religions; to promote the formation of persons dedicated to dialogue. While the Dicastery is responsible for the promotion of inter-religious dialogue, it does not cover Christian-Jewish relations.
An interreligious organization or interfaith organization is an organization that encourages dialogue and cooperation between the world's different religions.In 1893, the Parliament of the Worlds Religions held, in conjunction with the World Colombian Exposition, a conference held in Chicago that is believed to be the first interfaith gathering of notable significance.
Interfaith dialogue refers to cooperative and positive interaction between people of different religious traditions at both the individual and institutional level with the aim of deriving a common ground in belief through a concentration on similarities between faiths.
Samartha was acknowledged as a leading authority on inter-religious dialogue. S. Wesley Ariarajah quotes Samartha on dialogue: Dialogue is not a matter of discussion but of relationships. it has more to do with people than with ideas. Dialogue is a spirit, a mood, an attitude towards neighbours of other faiths.