Links To Other Sites

The Jewish-Christian relations index has a strong collection of articles and links to interfaith organizations.

The American Visionary Art Museum is a treat !

This site offers general resources for biblical studies, focusing on early Christian writings and their social world.

IOUDAIOS-L is a virtual community of scholars engaged in on-line discussion of Judaism in the Greco-Roman world.

University of Pennsylvania resources for Judaism and Christianity, and the Penn Religious Studies Department. A good collection of Internet links and on-line searchable texts.

These pages help keep the book, High Places In Cyberspace: a guide to Biblical and Religious Studies, Classics, and Archaeological Resources on the Internet, up to date.

The Harvard Divinity School Library, with links to several other important seminary libraries.

Ecunet is an ecumenical network "linking Christians in North America and beyond through computer communication." From Ecunet you can link to most mainline Protestant denominational web sites. One Ecunet project, Sermonshop, helps Christian ministers wrestle with lectionary texts which have significance for Jewish-Christian relations. Ecunet has also sponsored conferences and papers on the relationship of theology to technology.

One of many Catholic web sites, this unofficial one is a good place to begin. From here you can easily link to the Vatican and other official sites.

Shamash has a collection of Frequently Asked Questions about Judaism, a reading list about Judaism, and links to Jewish resources on the Internet.

The Virtual Yeshiva has Jewish articles and opportunities for Torah study. The Jewish Communication Network also has articles, Torah study, plus a frequently updated selection of feature stories and Jewish news, delivered with sharpness and a sense of humor.

Two resources for holocaust study are the US Holocaust Memorial Museum and the Nizkor project .

If you are preparing for a trip to Israel you might enjoy the temple mount site or this exhibition on the Dead Sea scrolls. Hebrew University offers a virtual tour of Jerusalem.

The popular Bill Moyers' series on Genesis has its own web site.

Please e-mail us with your link suggestions!