Our Mission: To serve as
an agent for enhanced communication, cooperation, and
understanding among interfaith leaders and individuals
committed to doing interfaith work.
Increasingly, various faith communities in the Twin Cities
metropolitan area are reaching out to one another -- seeking
to identify their commonalities and to better understand
their differences. The Interfaith Bridging Initiative
supports that process.
By publicizing events of interest to interfaith communities,
by collecting pertinent resource information, and by
providing the space for thoughtful writers to reflect on
difficult issues, we seek to provide support for those
individuals and groups who are exploring new integrations of
their uniqueness and their collective callings.
The Interfaith Bridging Initiative, IBI, is a three
year pilot project, launched in the summer of 2006 by the
Mall Area Religious Council (MARC) and the Minnesota chapter
of the Parliament of the World's Religions (P.O.W.R.).* A
contribution from the Presbytery of the Twin Cities provided
the seed money needed to plan a Bridging Retreat for the
autumn of 2006. The Human Rights Center at the University of
Minnesota agreed to co-sponsor and co-host the retreat. Soon
thereafter the Otto Bremer Foundation provided a three year,
$10,000 grant. IBI's objective is to create a
self-sustaining infrastructure that will facilitate
communication and cooperation among Twin Cities metropolitan
area organizations committed to fostering interfaith
understanding.
Currently, the following individuals constitute the
executive committee of the Interfaith Bridging Initiative:
Rev. John Chell, Ira L. Gordon, Rev. Paul Jacobs, Ms. Jane
Johnson, and Paul Strickland.
Interfaith Bridging Initiative
IBI is a non-profit organization directed by a five
person executive committee and funded by donations from
readers like you and by a grant from the Otto Bremer
Foundation. The mission statement of the Interfaith Bridging
Initiative is as follows:
To serve as an agent for enhanced communication,
cooperation, and understanding among interfaith leaders and
individuals committed to doing interfaith work.
There are two kinds of interfaith organizations:
Organizations whose members constituents of various
faith communities come together to better understand
one another's religious beliefs and practices.
Organizations whose members constituents of various
faith communities come together to work toward common
public policy, ethical, and artistic goals.
The following are the principal areas to which IBI is
currently devoting time, energy, and monetary resources:
Publication of Interfaithings, an electronic quarterly
newsletter/ journal so as:
To explore issues of pertinence to interfaith understanding.
To publicize interfaith events, projects, and resources.
Maintenance of
www.interfaithings.org a website that contains:
Archives of the newsletter/journal Information regarding
interfaith events, projects, and resources.
Links to other websites of interfaith interest.
A chat room where individuals are invited to post
ruminations, questions, answers, etc.
Support for activities/organizations that foster increased
interfaith understanding and for activities/organizations
that bring faith communities together to pursue public
policy, ethical, and artistic goals.
Support for the Twin Cities Interfaith Network (TCIN), an
organization, initiated with help from IBI, that
brings together leaders of organizations working toward
increased interfaith understanding.
Hosting retreats and colloquia that energize, train, and
empower interfaith leaders and other individuals seeking to
deepen their engagement with various religious world views
and practices.