The final in a series of Gifford Lectures by Prof Diana Eck. Recorded 7 May 2009 at The University of Edinburgh.
Religious pluralism is not only a fact of global and local encounter of
religious communities, but it is increasingly part of the lives of people in
many parts of the world who identify with more than one religious tradition.
The
phenomenon of multiple religious belonging is part of families in which parents
affiliate with different religious communities; it is part of the inner
landscape of students and seekers who find significant meaning and direction for
their own lives not only in their tradition of birth, but in other traditions
and spiritualities.
How is this fluid border-crossing transforming the
"religions," so often thought of as separate?
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