Sunday Forums
- Are free and open to the public, no tickets required
- Take place in the nave
at 10 am, prior to the 11:15 am
service
Sunday Forum live webcast from Cathedral homepage (look for link on Sunday morning)
Sunday Forum On-Demand:
- Sunday Forum takes a break for June and July and resumes in September, 2008.
- June 22, 2008
Benedictinism: A Spirituality for the 21st Century Sister Joan Chittister
- June 15, 2008
What Politicians and Religious Leaders Need From Each
Other with Lee H. Hamilton
- No Forum on June 8, 2008
- June 1, 2008
Witnessing in the Postmodern World with Thomas Long
- May 25, 2008
Theology in Action: King, Bonhoeffer, and You with Charles Marsh
- May 18, 2008
Race and Civic Life in America with William Raspberry
- May 4, 2008
The Scandalous Gospel of Jesus with the Rev. Professor Peter J. Gomes
- April 27, 2008
The Art of Listening with Diane Rehm
- April 20, 2008
Identifying Our Common Values with Walter Isaacson
- April 13, 2008
Empower Women, End Poverty with Thoraya Ahmed Obaid
- April 6, 2008
Why Words Matter: Poetry and Faith with Dana Gioia
- March 30, 2008
Faith and Civil Rights with John Lewis
- No Forum on March 16 & 23, 2008:
Palm Sunday & Easter
- March 9, 2008
Exploring the Roots of Religious Intolerance with James Carroll
- March 2, 2008
Singing from Faith with Denyce Graves
- February 24, 2008
Reviving Faith and Politics in a Post-Religious
Right America with Jim Wallis
- February 17, 2008
Everything Must Change: The Radical Meaning of the Kingdom of God for Todays World
with Brian McLaren
- February 10, 2008
Faith and Bio-ethics
with Maria Finitzo and Cynthia B. Cohen
- February 3, 2008
Why Religion Matters and How to Talk about It
with Krista Tippett
- January 27, 2008
A New Century: A New Reformation
with Rick Warren
- January 20, 2008
Hunger and the Thirst for Righteousness
with Tony Hall
- January 13, 2008
Can Conservatism Be Heroic?
with Michael Gerson
- December 16, 2007
A World at Stake: Can Churches Be Peacemakers?
with Samuel Kobia
- December 9, 2007
Leadership for a Changing World
with William H. Willimon
- December 2, 2007
Faith in the White House: Billy Grahams Legacy
with Nancy Gibbs and Michael Duffy
- November 25, 2007
A Divided America: Can Religion Bring Us Together?
with James A. Forbes, Jr.
- November 18, 2007
Faith and Environmentalism: A Natural Partnership
with Richard Cizik
- November 11, 2007
Can We Forgive Our Enemies?
with Archbishop Desmond Tutu
- November 4, 2007
What Makes a Saint?
with Robert Ellsberg
- October 28, 2007
Faith Amid DiversityHow Multiculturalism Is Shaping America
with Michel Martin
- October 21, 2007
Can Faith and Science be Reconciled?
with Francis Collins
- October 14, 2007
Ties That Bind: A Folk-Rocker and a Theologian Make Heavenly Music
with Emily Saliers and Don Saliers
- October 7, 2007
Religious America: What Do We Believe?
with Jon Meacham and Sally Quinn
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Sunday, January 13, 2008, 1010:50 am
Can Conservatism Be Heroic?
A conversation with advisor and speechwriter Michael Gerson
Synopsis
Can conservatism be heroic? Michael Gerson, author of the new book
Heroic Conservatism, meets with Cathedral Dean Samuel T. Lloyd III to
explore answers and underlying reasons.
Gerson worked as a speech writer and policy advisor to President
George W. Bush from 1999 to 2006. Earlier, as a journalist, Gerson met
then-Governor Bush before he declared his candidacy for president.
Around that time, Bush described Jesus as his favorite political
philosopher. The remark created some controversy. I always found that
the president did not cynically use his faith, but it was always very
close to the surface, Gerson summarizes, adding, He was sometimes
derided.
At several points the discussion addresses how Christianity figures
in public life. Gerson asserts that Christianity does not dictate a
certain political ideology. Christianity at its best has stood in
judgment of all political ideologies, he comments.
I think that theres a real danger whenever political figures and
nations identify their own purposes with the purposes of God, Gerson
observes. In the history of American rhetoric, he says, Scriptural
references have a resonance and richness, although a lesser meaning than
in the Bible. Gerson cites Scriptural references in memorable speeches
made by Abraham Lincoln, Theodore Roosevelt, the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther
King, Jr., and Ronald Reagan. I think that American rhetoric would be
really impoverished without such references, Gerson adds.
American has both a moral mandate and a national interest to be even
more engaged in a soft power approach to the world, Gerson asserts.
He describes President Bushs efforts against AIDS, and strong support
of the Presidents Malaria Initiative, which Gerson personally
championed. (Washington National Cathedrals own efforts against malaria
are associated with the presidents initiative.)
Gerson calls for Americans to respond more generously to the great
needs of the world, both from compassion and because of national
interests. He has witnessed bipartisan interest in addressing the
tragedy in Darfur and other troubled areas of the world; this experience
gives him hope that the nation can unite to address seemingly
intractable problems.
Dean Lloyd points to the complex implications of the phrase heroic
conservatism. Gerson responds in part with a story about a worker in a
rural clinic in Zambia that distributes anti-retroviral drugs to HIV
patients under a grant from the Presidents Emergency Plan for AIDS
Relief (PEPFAR). The worker met a woman who had walked two days to reach
the clinic, and asked why she had made the long journey. Because we
heard the Americans were coming, the woman replied. This anecdote
suggests a genuinely heroic role that Americans can play in the world.
Americans need to be proud of what were doing, and committed to do
more, Gerson says.
About the Guest
Michael J. Gerson is the
Roger Hertog senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, where
his work focuses on global health and development, religion and foreign
policy, and democracy issues. He is the author of the recently published
Heroic Conservatism: Why Republicans Need to Embrace Americas Ideals
(And Why They Deserve to Fail If They Dont). Gerson is a weekly
editorial columnist with the Washington Post and a contributor to
Newsweek magazine. Before joining the Council on Foreign Relations in
July 2006, he was a top policy aide and speechwriter for President
George W. Bush.
See future programs on the main Sunday Forum page
(also listed in Cathedral worship service leaflets)
For more information, please contact Deryl Davis at (202) 537-6382 or e-mail ddavis@cathedral.org.
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