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Tuesday, May 20, 2008

 

Hozan Alan Senauke - New Progressive Religious Voices Podcast

Hozan Alan SenaukeHozan Alan Senauke talks about socially engaged Buddhism, weapons of mass redemption, and "just sitting down" as a radical act.

In this fourth episode of Progressive Religious Voices, Hozan Alan Senauke, Soto Zen priest at the Berkeley Zen Center and program director of the Buddhist Peace Fellowship talks about the place of socially engaged Buddhism in the emerging progressive religious movement.

Senauke talks about the resources engaged Buddhism brings to the fundamental task of trying not to live life "at the expense of others" :
To me the Buddhist precepts, they boil down to not living your life at the expense of other beings, ...and this is very difficult to sustain in America. Good people - anyone can be a good person, but do you want to live at the expense of the person in Bangladesh or Pakistan who’s making your shirt or the oil rig worker in Nigeria, the agricultural worker in the Central Valley who is being hounded by the INS? Do you want to live that way? Until we address those questions, I don’t think we’ll have a truly progressive religious movement or truly progressive movement.
Senauke also discusses how Buddhism complements and challenges the prophetic, monotheistic religions and how Buddhism contributes a sense of "dynamic stillness" to the emerging progressive religious movement.

Click here to listen to the podcast.

About Hozan Alan Senauke

Hozan Alan Senauke is a Soto Zen priest and teacher in the tradition of Shunryu Suzuki Roshi. Alan is presently serving as tanto or head of practice at Berkeley Zen Center in California. From 1991 to 2001, Alan was Executive Director of the Buddhist Peace Fellowship, and currently serves as its program director.

Alan is one of the founders of Think Sangha, a group of Buddhist-activist intellectuals and writers. He continues to work as a social activist supporting the development of a Socially Engaged Buddhism. In another realm, Alan has been a student and performer of American traditional music for nearly 40 years.

About the Podcasts
Progressive Religious Voices is a bi-monthly podcast of interviews gleaned from nearly 100 interviews with progressive religious leaders. You can subscribe to the podcast feed directly or on iTunes to get all 24 exciting interviews that we will feature throughout 2008.

You can also read more about the growing progressive religious movement in my forthcoming book, Progressive & Religious: How Christian, Jewish, Muslim, and Buddhist Leaders are Moving Beyond the Culture Wars and Transforming American Public Life. The book is available for pre-order from Amazon.com and will be in bookstores nationwide in August 2008.

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Tuesday, April 22, 2008

 

Dr. Eboo Patel - New Progressive Religious Voices Podcast

Dr. Eboo Patel talks about Islam, pluralism, and building the interfaith youth movement.

In this third episode of Progressive Religious Voices, Dr. Eboo Patel talks about how his Muslim faith grounds his deep commitment to pluralism and his work with youth around the world at Interfaith Youth Core.

Eboo compellingly describes what he calls the significance of the emerging “Faith Line.” The Faith Line, as Eboo describes it, does not separate people of different religions but separates religious pluralists on the one hand and religious totalitarians on the other. Eboo’s work is focused on broadening the space for religious pluralism. Drawing on his Islamic faith, he summarizes it as follows: “My hope is to articulate what I love about your tradition, and to teach you what you might love about mine, and to point to a space where we might work together to serve others. And in my mind, that’s the example of the Prophet Muhammad.”

Eboo is an important emerging progressive religious leader, and articulates eloquently the way his Muslim faith interfaces with the best of the American ideals of democracy and pluralism:
In my mind, I’m part of the story of America, I’m part of the story of India, and I’m part of the story of Islam. It was in the Holy Qur’an, which is the book that animated my ancestors, that I found the fullest description of that and that I found language that I considered home…. I love America because it gives me, the child of immigrant Muslim parents from India, the chance to participate in its progress and to carve a place in its promise. And I believe that this country was founded in large part on the idea of religious freedom and its relationship with religious pluralism…. We have managed to have a relatively thick religious pluralism in this country that has respect for identity, that nurtures community, that focuses people on the common good. What I think we need to do in America is realize that this in the early twenty-first century, in the century of the faith line, is in fact, our most precious internal resource and our most important gift to the rest of the world.
Click here to listen to the podcast.

About Eboo Patel

Eboo Patel is founder and executive director of the Interfaith Youth Core, a Chicago-based international nonprofit that is building the interfaith movement through service and dialogue. His blog, The Faith Divide, explores what drives faiths apart and what brings them together. Eboo is the author of Acts of Faith: The Story of an American Muslim, the Struggle for the soul of a Generation.


About the Podcasts

This podcast is the third episode of Progressive Religious Voices, a bi-monthly podcast of interviews gleaned from nearly 100 interviews with progressive religious leaders. You can subscribe to the podcast feed directly or on iTunes to get all 24 exciting interviews that we will feature throughout 2008.

You can also read more about the growing progressive religious movement in my forthcoming book, Progressive & Religious: How Christian, Jewish, Muslim, and Buddhist Leaders are Moving Beyond the Culture Wars and Transforming American Public Life. The book is available for pre-order from Amazon.com and will be in bookstores nationwide in August 2008.

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Tuesday, March 25, 2008

 

Rev. Dr. James A. Forbes, Jr. - New Progressive Religious Voices Podcast

I've just posted a podcast of an exceptional interview with Rev. Dr. James A. Forbes, Jr., former senior minister at The Riverside Church in New York and founder of the Healing of the Nations Foundation.

Amidst the swirl of controversy over Rev. Dr. Jeremiah Wright's comments and Barack Obama's disavowal of them, Easter services went forward at Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago this past weekend. Rev. Dr. Forbes brought a message of healing at the evening Easter service at Trinity. According to the New York Times, Dr. Forbes preached about:
how the nation is in a "night season," a dark, destabilizing time, given the war, the economy and the vitriol over race and gender in the political primary. "It is nighttime in America," Dr. Forbes said, “and I want to bring a word of encouragement.”
Last winter, Dr. Forbes sat down with me to talk about healing the nation, a progressive view of truth, and the role of the Holy Spirit in the emerging progressive religious movement. I invite you to listen to the interview and be a part of this conversation by leaving a comment below about the interview.
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About the Podcasts
This podcast is the second episode of Progressive Religious Voices, a bi-monthly podcast of interviews gleaned from nearly 100 interviews with progressive religious leaders. You can subscribe to the podcast feed directly or on iTunes to get all 24 exciting interviews that we will feature throughout 2008.

You can also read more about the growing progressive religious movement in my forthcoming book, Progressive & Religious: How Christian, Jewish, Muslim, and Buddhist Leaders are Moving Beyond the Culture Wars and Transforming American Public Life. The book is available for pre-order from Amazon.com and will be in bookstores nationwide in August 2008.

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Thursday, December 13, 2007

 

New Progressive Religious Voices Podcast

Featured Interview: Rabbi Sharon Brous

Welcome to Progressive Religious Voices, a podcast featuring progressive religious leaders who are moving beyond the culture wars and transforming American public life.

In this podcast, I talk with Rabbi Sharon Brous, founder of the vibrant IKAR Congregation in Los Angeles.

[Click here for Podcast Transcript - PDF]


About Rabbi Sharon Brous
Rabbi Sharon Brous is founder of the IKAR congregation in Los Angeles, a vibrant and innovative new spiritual community in Los Angeles. While completing her rabbinical training at Jewish Theological Seminary, Rabbi Brous also completed a Master's Degree in Religion and Human Rights at Columbia University. For the last three years (2005-2007), IKAR has been included in "Slingshot, A Resource Guide to Jewish Innovation," an annual compilation of the 50 most inspiring and innovative organizations, projects, and programs in the North American Jewish community today. From 2004-2006, Rabbi Brous was included the Jewish Forward’s “Forward 50,” a list of most influential voices embody “the spirit of Jewish action as it is emerging in America.” Since 2005, she has been a member of the Synagogue 3000 Leadership Network, a select national group of rabbis, cantors, and artists working to transform and revitalize American Jewish spiritual communities.

To hear more....
To hear more interviews with progressive religious leaders, you can visit our website at www.progressiveandreligious.org/interviews.html. You can listen online, or subscribe to this podcast (Check back soon--subscriptions available beginning January 2008) to hear the entire series of these hopeful interviews that we will feature throughout 2008. You can also read more about the growing progressive religious movement in my forthcoming book, Progressive & Religious: How Christian, Jewish, Muslim, and Buddhist Leaders are Moving Beyond the Culture Wars and Transforming American Public Life, which will be available summer 2008 from Rowman & Littlefield Publishers and in bookstores nationwide.

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