@book{22329,
	author = {Jesudason, Peniel, Rajkumar, Rufus, & Dayam, Joseph Prabhakar},
	title = {Many Yet One?: Multiple Religious Belonging},
	publisher = {WCC},
	year = {2016},
	address = {Geneva},
	note = {Introduction: Peniel Jesudasaon, Rufus Rajkumar and Joseph Prabhakar Dayam

1. Eucharist Upstairs, Yoga Downstairs: On Multiple Religious Participation: John J. Thatamanil
2. On Doing as Others Do: Theological Perspectives on Multiple Religious Practice: S. Mark Heim
3. Multiple Religious Belonging: Erasing Religious Boundaries, Embracing New Ways of Being: Karen Georgia Thompson
4.Vulnerability and Agency in Multiple Religious Belonging: Or, Why God Matters: Simone Sinn
5. Multiple Religious Belonging as Hospitality: A Korean-Confucian-Christian Perspective: Heup Young Kim
6. Being A Hindu-Christian: A Play of Interpretations- The Experience of Swami Abhishiktananada: Michael Amaladoss
7. Shrines, Ritual Hospitality, and Hybrid Identities in South Asia: James Ponniah
8. The Motif of Hybridity in the Story of the canaanite Woman: Its Relevance for Multifaith Relations: Raj Nadella
9. Religious Hybridity in the Brothels of Mathamma: The sacred Sex Worker and the Dalit Christ: Eve Rebecca Parker
10. Hybridity's Ambiguity (Gift or Threat?): Marginality as Rudder: Sunder John Boopalan
11. (In ) Betweenness and being Analogical: Making Sense of Hospitable Faith: Allan Samuel Palanna 
12.Theorizing the Project of Multiple Religious Belonging: Processing Belonging Through Relief: Amita Santiago
13. Talking Back to Our Parents: What Asian-North American Hybridity Can Suggest Theologically Back to Asia: Julius-Kei Kato}
}
