DLGP

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

Category: Uncategorized

Shifting Perspectives

By: on October 25, 2018

It’s not always easy to accept that maybe what you have believed to be true, taught to you by your elders in your favorite history classes, only represents one possible scenario. The understanding of world events from a Euro-centric perspective fails to acknowledge the significant influences people in the East have had in regard to…

8 responses

Biblical Teaching and Critical Thinking

By: on October 25, 2018

Open Bible Recently, I taught on the story of David and Bathsheba, from the perspective of a Woman.  Being a woman myself, this was not hard to do. In my preparation for the teaching, I not only prayed, but I also read many scholarly commentaries and journal articles on the interpretation of the story.  Although I came…

10 responses

Creating Critical Societies is a Protracted Process.

By: on October 25, 2018

  Is it possible that I have been making sub-optimal decisions that are egocentric and sociocentric, even the decision to take this doctorate and I should go back to the drawing board again? I’m convinced that I made a wise decision to add to my skills through this doctorate which, confirms that I have some…

8 responses

“New History?” Not So Fast, Buckaroo!

By: on October 25, 2018

  (Map with China “at the center” which was discussed in our Hong Kong advance)   I grimaced when I read the words “New History” in our book’s title this week. Do those two words even go together? I must admit my attitude was immediately skeptical towards The Silk Roads: A New History of the World by…

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Doing History

By: on October 25, 2018

Peter Frankopan’s The Silk Roads is an old-world history book, told under modern contexts, about how East meets West and eventually became globalized. This post will attempt to connect Frankopan’s historical treatise with my dissertation research. I will look for associations that will help strengthen my research question that uses Biblical solutions to help prepare,…

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When we believe we are always right, we are very wrong

By: on October 25, 2018

Geopolitics: a study of the influence of such factors as geography, economics, and demography on the politics and especially the foreign policy of a state[1] Peter Frankopan admittedly was inspired to write his text based on the current state of geopolitics.[2]  He aims to challenge the paradigm of “our” western view of history, specifically to challenge assumptions about…

9 responses

Globalism and the Tower of Babel

By: on October 25, 2018

First off, I loved this book. Not only was it written by a historian (my undergrad major), he was taking a contrarian view that brings a fresh and much-needed counterpoint to the traditional “accepted and lazy history of civilization … where Ancient Greece begat Rome, Rome begat Christian Europe, Christian Europe begat the Renaissance, the…

7 responses

Progressive dinners…more than just dessert

By: on October 25, 2018

When I was growing up, members of my church hosted a “progressive dinner” every Christmas. Those who had the most elaborately decorated homes would host portions of the dinner. Appetizers would be at the first home, soup and salad at the next, entrée at the third, ending with a dessert buffet at the fourth home.…

9 responses

Father, Forgive Us

By: on October 25, 2018

Bayard’s How to Talk About a Book You Haven’t Read and Adler’s How to Read a Book became irrelevant when approaching the potent twenty-four-page work of Richard Paul and Linda Elder, Critical Thinking Concepts & Tools. The words were few but packed with truly societal changing possibilities that took this reader on a journey of…

8 responses

The Pen is Mightier than the Sword

By: on October 25, 2018

Diversity is not simply a subset of culture, but a dialect of nuance, perspective and narrative. It is the pen by which men and women express their story and expose their truth. The English playwright, Edward Bulwer-Lytton captured this beautifully when he stated, “The pen is mightier than the sword.”[1] Peter Frankopan, historian and director…

7 responses

No More IDK

By: on October 25, 2018

I had a counselor and coach who I started meeting with in 2002. He would ask me such difficult questions in our sessions together, usually along the lines of ‘why do you think that is?’ or ‘what do you think about that?’. My default answer was more often than not ‘I don’t know.’ One session…

12 responses

An Awakening

By: on October 25, 2018

I grew up in a town on the coast of Maine. The majority of the people in my community were Quebecois, immigrants or children of immigrants from the Canadian province of Quebec. This fact made it so that our city was very white and not just because of the mounds of snow that would fall…

12 responses

Global Shift

By: on October 25, 2018

As I leafed through the pages of Peter Frankopan’s, The Silk Roads: A New History of the World, my mind was elsewhere. This weekend, for the first time since our arrival in France eight and a half years ago, we will be hosting a short-term team from our home church in Spokane, WA. I’ve instructed…

9 responses

I Wonder

By: on October 24, 2018

“I wonder…” Those words shared by Dr. Jason Clark was meant to convey a particular posture in how we study and learn. I forget exactly the context in which it was shared, but it was one of his talks meant to encourage our cohort to hold our ideas, thoughts and learnings loosely. The memory still…

7 responses

Where Did the History of the World Begin?

By: on October 24, 2018

As I painfully trudged through Peter Frankopan’s The Silk Roads: A New History of the World, it was interesting to learn about his new take on the history of the world. He claims…“From the beginning of time, the centre of Asia was where empires were made. The alluvial lowlands of Mesopotamia, fed by the Tigris…

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Analysis: ‘not’ according to my socio-egocentric self

By: on October 24, 2018

Wahoo. After learning how to read (Adler), and then not read (Bayard), and then to synthesise what we have or haven’t read in some useful way (Rowntree), we now get to think about what we have or haven’t read, in a critical way (Elder). So, after zipping through Paul and Linda Elder’s Critical Thinking: Concepts…

4 responses

Our Interconnected World

By: on October 24, 2018

Some months ago, I was visiting a woman from my congregation in the hospital.  She had undergone an emergency procedure and she was recovering in the ICU.  By the time I visited her, she was feeling much better, sitting up in her bed and looking ahead to a full recovery.  She was told she would…

7 responses

Egocentric Thinking and Halloween 2018

By: on October 24, 2018

Egocentric thinking results from the unfortunate fact that humans do not naturally consider the rights and needs of others…We do not naturally recognize our egocentric assumptions, the egocentric way we use information, the egocentric way we interpret data, the source of our egocentric concepts and ideas, the implications of our egocentric thought.  We do not…

one response

Art first, or Theology first?

By: on October 20, 2018

William A. Dyrness’ book Visual Faith: Art, Theology, and Worship in Dialoguge is in a unique category. Not many people can engage with theology and art in current culture as thoroughly as Dyrness did. Many theologians might do art, or some artist might implement some theology but Dyrness approaches the topic with authority and with…

7 responses