Center for Interfaith Relations

Louisville, KY

Center for Interfaith Relations

About us

The Center for Interfaith Relations (CIR) is committed to celebrating diversity, expressing gratitude for our interconnectedness, and strengthening communities through action. Based in Louisville, Kentucky, the nonprofit hosts the nationally renowned Festival of Faiths and offers year-round programming that fosters authentic connections, greater understanding and compassion in the world. CIR taps into the insights and inspiration rooted in the wisdom of diverse faith traditions and strives to cultivate communities that are true to its motto: Many Faiths. One Heart. Common Action.

Each year, CIR hosts the Festival of Faiths, an acclaimed interfaith event featuring renowned spiritual practitioners, thought leaders and movement makers. Over the course of several days, a wide range of engaging sessions, workshops and exhibits pave the way for important conversations and spiritual nourishment, all with the goal of sparking positive change. Since its inception, the festival has sought to exemplify community at its best, providing a welcoming space for all to learn from and celebrate our differences as well as our connection as one human family. The 29th annual Festival of Faiths (Nov. 12-15, 2025) will celebrate the theme of Sacred Belonging, exploring ways to cultivate communities of care, foster solidarity through empathy, and resist cultural systems that sow discord.

President

Rev. Dr. Lauren Jones Mayfield

Before returning to her home state of Kentucky in 2012, Lauren served the Riverside Church in New York City as the Director of Worship and held pastoral leadership positions in Baptist, Mennonite and United Church of Christ churches across the country. Ordained in the United Church of Christ, Lauren completed her Doctor of Ministry degree at the Pacific School of Religion, where she focused her research on social justice and transformation. As part of her doctoral project, she created liturgy for the communal work of advocacy, considered the role of faith in the public square, and led an innovative Reparations Task Force as associate pastor of Care and Justice at Highland Baptist Church in Louisville. During her tenure at Highland Baptist, the church voted to darken the image of Jesus in one of the sanctuary’s stained-glass windows and began paying reparations to local Black organizations. Lauren believes that when we embody our interconnectedness to one another and our planet we will discover joy and Presence, and it is interfaith dialogue that connects us through collective curiosity and communal wondering.

Rev. Dr. Lauren Jones Mayfield

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Our mission is to build a resilient, inclusive democracy that honors the freedoms of belief and religious practice for all, not just a select few. Join us in challenging Christian nationalism and religious extremism, and help us forge powerful alliances across diverse faiths and beliefs to protect our democratic values.

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Our mission is to build a resilient, inclusive democracy that honors the freedoms of belief and religious practice for all, not just a select few. Join us in challenging Christian nationalism and religious extremism, and help us forge powerful alliances across diverse faiths and beliefs to protect our democratic values.

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