DLGP

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

Category: Uncategorized

Reflexive Ethnography and Ethics in Theological Practice

By: on October 26, 2017

Doing Visual Ethnography by Sarah Pink is at once fascinating and complex for the non-professional anthropologist. The concept of using images to scientifically describe the customs of people and their culture suggests engagement by a broad community. However, once the reader begins to examine the text more closely they will realize Pink is not interested…

12 responses

“Produce knowledge by producing knowledge”

By: on October 26, 2017

  Visual Ethnography is “capturing and expressing perceptions and social realities of people”.[1] When we gathered for this group photo on our last evening together in Cape Town, it captured the end – and beginning – of a journey which included new friendships (joy), challenging discussions (stress), rich learning (travel), fun adventures (adrenaline), and an…

12 responses

Hirschman meets Martin: Exit, Voice, and Luther

By: on October 26, 2017

I’ve been reflecting this week on the layers of complexity and messiness within institutions, specifically during experiences of dissatisfaction. How do we respond within the church when we’re frustrated? As I’ve pondered this, I’ve also procrastinated on writing my sermon reflection for this week, which will eventually focus on the 500th anniversary of the Protestant…

7 responses

Loyaltist Behavior: when conscious becomes unconscious

By: on October 26, 2017

On A&E there is a tv series entitled “Leah Remini: Scientology and the Aftermath”. The premise of the show is that Leah was a former member of the Church of Scientology (a religious organization founded in 1954 by L.Ron Hubbard). She spent majority of her life supporting this religious movement. She was introduced to the…

5 responses

Voice and Exit in (and out of) the local Church

By: on October 26, 2017

There is a lot of technical economic language in Exit, Voice, and Loyalty: Responses to Decline in Firms, Organizations, and States by Albert Hirschman, in spite of the struggle I had following some of the language – not to mention much of Hirschman’s prose –  I found this relatively small book to be both interesting and insightful.…

6 responses

Visual WHAT?

By: on October 26, 2017

Ethnography? I am embarrassed to say I never heard that word before this Doctoral program, not even once… It’s kinda sad to have to look up your key word for the week to see what it means. But, look it up I did. Sorry to say, I still don’t fully understand what it really is.…

9 responses

Pastor as Visual Ethnographer

By: on October 26, 2017

In the era of “fake news”, there are questions about what we hear, see and consume as “trustworthy” or “true” information. What does an event mean, how do we understand the words that a person uses, and how “objective” can reporters really be?   In her book, “Doing Visual Ethnography”, Sarah Pink writes that “the…

10 responses

Power, and the surrender of power

By: on October 26, 2017

In the development of our DMin research, we must not neglect the significant potential of image and video to record, track, explain, and illustrate concepts.  Sarah Pink’s book, Doing Visual Ethnography (2nd Edition), advances the power of image to convey meaning; as we apply these principles, we can also communicate our ideas in a more…

10 responses

“Images + Words > Words alone”

By: on October 26, 2017

“Images + Words > Words alone” Every pastor who gets ordained in the Presbyterian Church (USA) is required to take at least one unit of Clinical Pastoral Education (CPE). For me, this involved 120 hours in a hospital setting, with a small group of other students doing chaplaincy training together. CPE is a painful journey…

6 responses

Optimistic Economics – Optimistic Life

By: on October 26, 2017

“A niche thus exists for this book, which affirms that the choice is often between articulation and ‘desertion’ – voice and exit, in our neutral terminology.”[1]   All through his book, Exit, Voice, and Loyalty: Responses to Decline in Firms, Organizations, and States, Albert O. Hirschman has an underlying assumption that things can get better.…

6 responses

A Trip to See Buddha

By: on October 26, 2017

“If a picture paints a thousand words”, says Nicholas Boyd Crutchley, “then let a picture inspire a thousand words.” [1] This is such a cliché and overly used phrase, but true. Pictures and media can speak to us in ways that simple words would not let us hear. I have seen this while preaching on…

10 responses

Hirschman on Voice and the Church Split

By: on October 26, 2017

In 1970 I was 12 years old. That was the year when more than fifty percent of the members of our church decided to exit our church community. My family was not one of them. I remember the pain it caused in our church and our family. People who were friends for years no longer…

6 responses

Toilet Paper

By: on October 25, 2017

From my current vantage point writing a dissertation, even with terrific mentorship, seems like sheer nonsense and fantasy.  How on earth will I ever be able to adequately discern a meaningful question, conduct beneficial and focused research, and then formulate the acquired knowledge and information into something that contributes in some small way to a…

11 responses

YOU CAN’T HANDLE THE TRUTH!!

By: on October 25, 2017

  As a 9th grader, I was involved in a confrontation, and at that moment I was about the lead with a right hook, a teacher came around the corner. Now, I was a student at the school where my father taught, so I chose to exit. Forward three years, I was a model for…

7 responses

Should I Stay or Should I Go?

By: on October 25, 2017

My experience as an American has given me the impression that loyalty is expected, except when it’s not, that choosing to leave is disloyal, except when it’s not, and those who protest should shut up or leave, except when it has worked out nicely for Americans to stay and complain. For many of us, our…

6 responses

P=1000Ws

By: on October 24, 2017

Sarah Pink’s, Doing Visual Ethnography, was an interesting read. Although I did not like her writing style, I was interested to learn more about this word/term, ethnography, that I was introduced to for the very first time. As I did some research on this book and this new term, I learned a few things that…

14 responses

Do I Walk, Talk or Stay?

By: on October 24, 2017

When there is a decline of an organization, the participants or customers wrestle with how to respond: do they exit by walking away from the organization, talk by voicing their opposition and concerns to the leadership, or remain loyal to the organization in hopes of improvements? Although Hirschman gives a thorough, intellectual explanation of each…

8 responses

Economics and the Art of Church Shopping

By: on October 24, 2017

    The handwriting is on the wall. Actually, it’s not handwriting that adorns the walls of many churches, but a wooden plaque with removable numbers that indicate the church’s attendance and offering receipts. For many churches, that information has migrated from the plaque on the wall to a spot in the church bulletin. Either…

5 responses

Standing Firm

By: on October 21, 2017

Sarah Pink’s, Doing Visual Ethnography is a breakthrough in the use of visual media to inspire, create, and express new dimensions of knowledge. Ethnography is an approach for researchers to connect and relate to social cultures with new disciplines, agendas, and theoretical principles.[1] Pink’s work confirms the successful transition of visual anthropology into the 21st…

10 responses