Roger Corless (1938–2007) made significant contributions to interfaith dialogue, particularly on the subject Buddhist-Christian dual belonging ("co-inherent consciousness").[1]
Buddhist Emptiness and Christian Trinity: Essays and Explorations. ed. with Paul F. Knitter. Paulist Press, 1990. (Contains his article “Can Emptiness Will?”)
Where do we Go from Here? The Many Religions and the Next Step. Draft completed, publisher being sought.
Articles
“An Essay on the Place of the Text in Buddhist and Christian Formation.” Studies in Formative Spirituality XIV:1 (February 1993), 31–40.
“The Coming of the Dialogian: A Transpersonal Approach to Interreligious Dialogue.” Dialogue and Alliance: A Journal of the International Religious Foundation 7:2 (Fall/Winter 1993), 3–17.
“A Form for Buddhist-Christian Co-Inherence Meditation” and “A Reply to the Responses”. Buddhist-Christian Studies 14 (1994), 139–144 and 181–184 (part of the forum on Joint Practice, pages 137–196).
“A Buddhist Understanding of HIV/AIDS.” Religion in the Age of AIDS: Strategy and Theology from the AIDS & Religion in America Convention (San Francisco: Public Media Center; Washington DC: AIDS National Interfaith Network, 1999), pages 59–63.
“Towards a Queer Dharmology of Sex.” Culture and Religion 5:2 (July 2004), 229–243.
Notes
↑See the article below, "On Becoming a Dialogian."