To love someone across a religious divide — and to build a life together — is to encounter at close range both the depth of difference and the possibility of genuine encounter. Interfaith couples and families navigate questions that abstract theology often avoids: whose holidays, whose prayers at the dinner table, how to raise children who belong fully to neither tradition, how to support each other in practices that cannot be fully shared. These families are not failures of religious identity but laboratories for the kind of meeting that the world desperately needs more of — and the tradition of serious interfaith dialogue has much to learn from how they actually work.
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