DLGP

Doctor of Leadership in Global Perspectives: Crafting Ministry in an Interconnected World

Category: DLGP02

Fig Leaves Then. Performance Now.

By: on March 15, 2023

A few weeks ago, I attended a community luncheon that revolved around mental health awareness. The goal was to break stigmas around psychological and emotional health issues and provide more resources for churches in our area. During the event, some pastors and members in the community shared their experiences of rejection and shame for experiencing…

14 responses

Words are very unnecessary

By: on March 15, 2023

Lately I have been working on saying nothing. I am chatty, I know that. I like to have conversations, I enjoy asking questions and engaging people in dialogue. I also enjoy being asked questions and sharing my responses to ideas or suppositions; the chance to insert my opinion is insatiable. This is my front stage…

20 responses

A Prison Blanket Perfectly Folded…9855 Times

By: on March 15, 2023

  My one-minute gaze into Nelson Mandela’s prison cell had a profound impact on me. That neatly folded prison blanket represented the dailyness of Mandela’s life for 27 years.  The consequence of not folding a blanket to perfection in the prisons he was kept in would produce a severe beating. A leader who had already…

14 responses

Who I am on the Inside Matters!

By: on March 15, 2023

My missionary career began as a 23-year-old new wife and mother with a fresh university degree in hand. My dream to minister overseas came sooner than imagined. While excited to be heading to Jakarta, Indonesia, I lacked confidence that I was prepared for the work ahead. Nothing magically changed on the 36-hour journey between Seattle…

4 responses

One Leader’s Landscape

By: on March 14, 2023

Using Food stamps, gathering government commodities and collecting pop cans for extra funds were just a few of the regular survival strategies in my family.  I grew up in a low income family.  However, I had two parents who loved God, were devoted to one another and loved their children.  My dad, a highly intelligent…

14 responses

Trust and Leadership

By: on March 14, 2023

At the beginning of my second semester at Berkeley, my friend and I were invited to attend a leadership training. We were newly selected leaders of a campus student organization that worked with high school students of color to assist with applying for admission into UC Berkeley and providing retention services after admissions. The training…

9 responses

Cognitive Dissonance Inherent in the Gospel

By: on March 14, 2023

“A leader leads people from where they currently are to another place, which at first is unknown to them and can only be imagined.”[1] Moses. Hudson Taylor. Abraham Lincoln. Martin Luther King Jr. Every single one of you as you dream about graduation day in May 2025. What do all these leaders have in common? They…

7 responses

Wake Up, Mr. Frodo!

By: on March 13, 2023

Our family is a “Lord of the Rings” family. Some families are more “Harry Potter.” No judgement from me, except that you are wrong, and we are right. There, I said it. Cancel me. When all the kids, and by “kids” I mean grown young adults, are home, and by “home” I mean the place…

8 responses

Impostor? Hopefully Not Anymore!

By: on March 9, 2023

Read deeply. Stay open. Continue to wonder. ­-Austin Kleon-   Impostor syndrome is a familiar experience for me. I’ve noticed that it tends to surface whenever I embark on something significant and meaningful. I vividly recall feeling extremely anxious about homiletics, a subject during my undergraduate studies twenty-three years ago. As part of the curriculum,…

14 responses

Thou Shalt Not Steal…Unless You’re An Artist

By: on March 9, 2023

I don’t watch a lot of movies these days, but several months ago I had some time and felt the urge to watch the new Elvis movie with Austin Butler. Austin ended up winning the Golden Globes Award for Best Actor in his portrayal as the “King of Rock”. I had a new appreciation for…

13 responses

Marrying my Board of Directors

By: on March 9, 2023

Born in Circleville, Ohio, in 1983, Austin Kleon’s work focuses and rambles around non-fiction and “motivational” niche. Being a millennial himself, Austin realizes the cursory attention span of the internet generation and therefore, he keeps it short and hurls doodles and illustrations frequently just to make sure that the focus stays intact. [1]. This millennial…

8 responses

Why travel is good for this homebody

By: on March 8, 2023

Several years ago I was at a conference and came across a book by Ken Wytsma titled Create Vs. Copy[1]. It explored the value of copying others as a learning tool but warned against relying on it as you progressed – especially if you were seeking to copy something purely for personal gain. I picked up a…

14 responses

Creative Kleptomania

By: on March 7, 2023

Okay. . . confession time everyone. When you read the title, Steal Like an Artist, did the word “steal” entice you to read more?  Or for a quick minute did you wonder if you were being led on a path to breaking a commandment? Confession, I wanted to read more. The book convinced me that…

4 responses

Thank you, Austin Kleon!

By: on March 7, 2023

While studying music education in my undergrad, I had become quite fascinated with the jazz genre.  In my quest to learn more about complex jazz chord structures, I signed up for jazz lessons with a well-known jazz instructor in the Philadelphia area on one of my summer breaks. I thought there would be a wealth…

14 responses

Stealing All The Good Stuff!

By: on March 7, 2023

Oh, so much good stuff in one small book. Steal Like An Artist was the perfect feel-good read for me. I am convinced that Austin Kleon and I would be best friends if we met, and please be advised that from this point on I will refer to him as my best friend in my…

9 responses

Be the architect of your own experience

By: on March 7, 2023

I’ll start today with a confession. I love art in all its forms, but I didn’t know this about myself until recently. Growing up in a rural community with parents in medical and business professions, I’d never visited an art museum. My dad’s hunting trophies were the decor that graced the walls of our home.…

9 responses

Walk Like An Egyptian

By: on March 6, 2023

I have a robust, running list called “My Life Goals.” It has a wide variety of bucket list-like items that I am excited to accomplish at some point in my life. It’s exhilarating to check the box “done.” I can feel the endorphins rushing through me. Some of My Life Goals, in no particular order,…

11 responses

Living and Serving with Templates?

By: on March 3, 2023

The illusion that we understand the past fosters overconfidence  in our ability to predict the future. -Daniel Kahneman-   Becoming a pastor and church leader who is successful and liked by the congregation in the long term is a dream for many ministers. I also hoped for it and fought hard to achieve it. Therefore…

12 responses

All Systems Overloaded!

By: on March 2, 2023

I discovered that my approach to completing the assignments this semester needed to change. The volume of reading, even done inspectionally, can easily become overwhelming. I realized in the first few weeks that I needed to make a shift. Making a shift from getting it done by the deadline to creating a meaningful experience that…

20 responses