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Cathedral Centennial 1907-2007
 
 
 
The Sunday Forum, April 20, 2008
Identifying Our Common Values

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 Today’s 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 Graham’s 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 Diversity—How 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
Sunday, April 20, 2008, 10–10:50 am
Identifying Our Common Values
with author and Aspen Institute president Walter Isaacson



Synopsis

Walter IsaacsonWalter Isaacson, president and CEO of the Aspen Institute, converses with Dean Lloyd about “Identifying our Common Values.”

After serving as chairman of CNN and editor of Time, Isaacson joined the Aspen Institute to seek opportunities “to be engaged in issues, but in a non-polarizing way.” He states simply that “if you bring reasonable people together, you can find solutions.”

Walter IsaacsonIsaacson has studied and sought to address seemingly disparate problems, including the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina and the conflict in the Middle East. “I see far too many similarities between New Orleans and the Palestinian territories,” he says. The similarities are found not only in the problems but in potential solutions. His experience in the Middle East causes Isaacson to observe, “It’s so important for us to back the good guys, who are moderates, who want to have a relationship with Israel.”

The Aspen Institute is trying to bring economic opportunity to the Middle East; in that region the institute avoids politics. Isaacson expresses the view that educational and economic opportunity, democracy, and an established middle class will reliably stabilize societies and reduce the likelihood that violence and radicalism will emerge or prevail.

Walter IsaacsonSpeaking of the rebirth of New Orleans, Isaacson comments, “To me the lesson is good leadership, people with character, courage, and an ability to put aside their own personal ambitions and try to do good for their society. That’s the most crucial thing you’ll find in any situation.”

Isaacson has published books about Benjamin Franklin and, more recently, Albert Einstein. As a non-scientist, Isaacson wanted to learn more about science. He believes that Franklin was not a doddering old guy flying a kite in the rain, but was the foremost scientist of his day, conducting the most important scientific experiments of the era. Isaacson has researched Einstein’s religious views and concludes that, contrary to widespread opinion, Einstein had a deep faith, in “a God whose spirit is manifest in the harmonies of the universe.”

About the Guest

Walter Isaacson is the President and CEO of the Aspen Institute, based in Washington, D.C., and former Chairman of CNN and editor of Time magazine. He is the author of books about Albert Einstein, Benjamin Franklin, and Henry Kissinger and former vice-chairman of the Louisiana Recovery Authority, a government relief organization created in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. In December 2007, President George W. Bush appointed Isaacson to chair the U.S.-Palestinian Partnership, a government and private sector effort to provide economic and educational opportunities for the Palestinian people.
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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