Interreligious Hermeneutics focuses on the possibilities and limits of interreligious understanding and exchange. Some contributions deal with fundamental questions concerning the means and the end of understanding across religious traditions (Tracy, Jeanrond, Moyaert, Maraldo) while others engage in the interpretation of texts and teachings of another religion (Shah-Kazemi, Eckel). Some experiment with the appropriation of hermeneutical categories of another tradition (O’Leary, Keenan) while others discuss concrete contests in which interreligious hermeneutics is both urgent and possible (Vroom, Patton). This volume thus challenge established notions of religious boundaries and point to the creative potential of engaging other religions in the pursuit of understanding and truth.