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 when Sunday Forum resumes in September)
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, February 17, 2008, 1010:50 am
Everything Must Change: The Radical Meaning of the Kingdom of God for
Todays World
with author and emergent church leader Brian McLaren
Synopsis
Cathedral Dean Samuel T. Lloyd talks about the emergent church with
Brian McLaren, on the topic Everything Must Change: The Radical Meaning
of the Kingdom of God for Todays World.
McLaren believes that Christianity undergoes a major shift every 500
years of so. The previous shift occurred between the medieval world and
the modern world, and the current shift is an adjustment to the
postmodern world. The story of the last 500 years in many ways for
Christianity was the story of colonialism, he posits. When you have
faith and economic and military power put together, you develop ways of
arguing, ways of promoting your beliefs, that were very effective.
This general trend began to break down in the United States after
World War II, a rethinking of colonialism and industrialization, and
critique from within of Western civilization. Christianity, wedded to
modernity and analysis, faced a challenge. In the 1950s the mainline
churches were known for supporting the status quo. When ministers from
these denominations began to speak out against the Vietnam War, a break
occurred between them and the people in the pews.
Now, in the postmodern world, ways of thinking about religion have
utterly changed. If modernity was the era of systematic theologies,
people are now rediscovering Christianity as a story. McLaren also
detects a strong interest in reuniting two separate aspects of
Christianity that should never have been separated: privatized,
personal faith and
a social, institutional faith.
McLaren talks about the difference between orthodoxyright
beliefsand orthopraxyright actions. He believes that the mainline
churches have shown a general willingness to change their theology with
the times. The evangelical churches, on the other hand, have changed
their practices while holding fast to traditional teachings. This trend
has favored evangelical churches in recent decades. According to
McLaren, the rigidity of both mainline and evangelical traditions is now
being challenged.
Faith is far more than a private matter of improving our personal
relationships. The church owes a higher allegiance to God than to the
status quo, and it needs to rediscover the meaning of the Kingdom of
God. The challenges are huge and urgent. McLaren names them as crises of
planet, poverty, war, and religion. Christians, especially the young,
want to address these crises and expect the church to speak and act.
About the Guest
Brian McLaren is an internationally known
author, speaker, pastor, and leader in the emergent church movement. He
is founding pastor of the nondenominational Cedar Ridge Community Church
outside Washington, D.C. and author, most recently, of Everything Must
Change: Jesus, Global Crises, and a Revolution of Hope.
More about Brian McLaren:
Brian D. McLaren is an author, speaker, pastor, and networker among
innovative Christian leaders, thinkers, and activists.
He is a frequent guest on television, radio, and news media programs.
He has appeared on many broadcasts including Larry King Live, Religion
and Ethics Newsweekly, and Nightline. His work has also been covered in
Time (where he was listed as one of Americans 25 most influential
evangelicals), Christianity Today, Christian Century, the Washington
Post, and many other print media.
Born in 1956, he graduated from University of Maryland with degrees
in English (BA, summa cum laude, 1978, and MA, in 1981). His academic
interests included Medieval drama, Romantic poets, modern philosophical
literature, and the novels of Dr. Walker Percy. In 2004, he was awarded
a Doctor of Divinity Degree (honoris causa) from Carey Theological
Seminary in Vancouver, BC, Canada.
From 1978 to 1986, McLaren taught college English, and in 1982, he
helped form Cedar Ridge Community Church, an innovative,
nondenominational church in the Baltimore-Washington region (crcc.org).
He left higher education in 1986 to serve as the churchs founding
pastor and served in that capacity until 2006. During that time, Cedar
Ridge earned a reputation as a leader among emerging missional
congregations.
Brian has been active in networking and mentoring church planters and
pastors since the mid 1980s, and has assisted in the development of
several new churches. He is a popular conference speaker and a frequent
guest lecturer at seminaries and denominational gatherings, nationally
and internationally. His public speaking covers a broad range of topics
including postmodern thought and culture, Biblical studies, evangelism,
leadership, global mission, spiritual formation, worship, pastoral
survival and burnout, inter-religious dialogue, ecology, and social
justice.
McLarens first book, The Church on the Other Side: Doing Ministry in
the Postmodern Matrix, (Zondervan, 1998, rev. ed. 2000) has been
recognized as a primary portal into the current conversation about
postmodern ministry. His second book, Finding Faith (Zondervan, 1999),
is a contemporary apologetic, written for thoughtful seekers and
skeptics. His third book, A New Kind of Christian
(Jossey-Bass/Leadership Network, 2001) further explores issues of
Christian faith and postmodernity, and won Christianity Todays Award
of Merit in 2002. His fourth, More Ready Than You Realize: Evangelism
as Dance in the Postmodern Matrix (2002) presents a refreshing approach
to spiritual friendship. A is for Abductive (coauthored with Dr. Leonard
Sweet, Zondervan, 2002) and Adventures in Missing the Point (coauthored
with Dr. Anthony Campolo, Emergent/YS, 2003) explore theological reform
in a postmodern context, and a sequel to A New Kind of Christian,
entitled The Story We Find Ourselves In (Jossey-Bass, 2003), seeks to
tell the Biblical story in a new context. He is one of five co-authors
of Church in the Emerging Culture (Emergent/YS, 2003).
His 2004 release, A Generous Orthodoxy (Emergent/YS/Zondervan), is
a personal confession and has been called a manifesto of the emerging
church conversation. The conclusion to the A New Kind of Christian
trilogy was released in 2005, entitled The Last Word and the Word After
That (Jossey-Bass).
The Secret Message of Jesus (W, April 2006), explores the theme of
the kingdom of God in the teachings of Jesus. This book was written for
a broad audience, he explains, from the spiritual-but-not-religious to
Christian pastors and leaders. Everything Ive written to this point has
been a preparation for this book.
His books have been or are being translated into many languages,
including Korean, Chinese, French, Swedish, Norwegian, and Spanish. He
has written for or contributed interviews to many periodicals, including
Leadership, Sojourners, Worship Leader, and Conversations.
Many of his articles are available at www.brianmclaren.net. He is
also a musician and songwriter.
He is on the international steering team and board of directors for
emergent, a growing generative friendship among missional Christian
leaders (www.emergentvillage.com). He is also active
in global networking among emerging leaders (www.amahoro.info).
He serves as a board chair for Sojourners/Call to Renewal (sojo.net),
and is a founding member of Red Letter Christians, a group of
communicators seeking to broaden and deepen the dialogue about faith and
public life. He is also a board member for Orientacion Cristiana, and
formerly served on the boards of International Teams (www.iteams.org) in
Chicago, Mars Hill Graduate School in Seattle (www.mhgs.edu), and Off The
Map (www.offthemap.com). He has taught or lectured at several seminaries
in the U.S. and abroad.
Brian is married to Grace, and they have four young adult children.
He has traveled extensively in Europe, Latin America, and Africa, and
his personal interests include ecology, fishing, hiking, music, art, and
literature.
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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