The Center for the Study of Religion and Christian–Muslim Relations (CSR~CMR) is a newly established Center of Excellence initiative at Satya Wacana Christian University (SWCU), one of Indonesia’s oldest and most respected Christian universities. Although officially founded in 2025, interaction and engagement between Christians and Muslims at SWCU have been ongoing for decades. CSR~CMR is designed in response to the growing challenges to religious plurality and to inter/intra-religious encounters, most notably Christian–Muslim engagement, in Indonesia and beyond. It also serves as a site for the academic study of religion and interreligious relations, and as a venue for finding productive ways to build harmonious relationships among religious communities.
With over 17,000 students, SWCU is home not only to Christians but also to adherents of other faiths, including Muslims, from various parts of Indonesia and other countries. Although Christians have been the dominant group in the university, it has a substantial Muslim population (more than 30 percent of students at SWCU are Muslim). The university also has multiple research and academic programs in the study of religion at the undergraduate and graduate levels. Even though SWCU was founded on Christian faith, it has a deep respect for other religions and is committed to engaging pluralities by understanding, establishing, and bridging relations with other faiths. CSR~CMR, hence, reflects SWCU’s Christian heritage and recognition of the vitality of religion in societies and world affairs.
Vision
Mission
CSR~CMR’s main mission is twofold: (1) to enhance and advance knowledge and understanding of religion, both world religions and local beliefs, and (2) to foster, deepen, expand, and build relationships, dialogues, engagements, and bridges of mutual understanding, respect, and cooperation between Christians, Muslims, and followers of other faiths, by supporting academic training and scholarship.
Future Objectives
Achievements and Undertakings
Although newly conceived, the Center has been welcomed by multiple stakeholders in the country. With the generous support of the Ministry of Religious Affairs, the Center oversees a fully-funded graduate scholarship in Sociology of Religion (hosted in the Faculty of Theology) that includes interreligious and Christian-Muslim studies. In 2026, CSR~CMR becomes co-chair of the International Symposium for Peace, Integrity, and Responsiveness to Eco-theology (held and sponsored by the Ministry of Religious Affairs’ Center for Religious Harmony). Together with the National Research and Innovation Agency, CSR~CMR also co-leads several research projects on Indonesian local religions and other religious issues. Moreover, the Center, in collaboration with the Faculty of Theology, offers courses on interreligious and Christian-Muslim relations studies for Indonesian and foreign graduate students.