DLGP

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

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Definitions, Globalization, & Assumptions

By: on January 19, 2017

Global Evangelicalism is a textbook, complete with a glossary, written for the university or seminary student. Divided into three sections, the book tackles theoretical issues (chapters 1-3), five regional studies (chapters 4-8), and a couple of current cultural issues (chapters 9-10). This collection of essays will find a home in my library as it will…

10 responses

For Such A Time As This: Why here and why now?

By: on January 19, 2017

This week’s epiphany is WHY we have been reading the books that we have been reading for the last eighteen months. The third chapter of Global Evangelicalism: Theology, History and Culture in Regional Perspective, is entitled “Globalization, Religion and Evangelicalism.” Here Donald M. Lewis declares, “The scholarly discussion of globalization is particularly difficult because it…

13 responses

I’m Not Protestant, I’m Pentecostal!

By: on January 19, 2017

Evangelicalism in Modern Britain: A History from the 1730s to the 1980s Summary Since its beginning in the 1730’s Evangelicalism has been a force in Britain and in the world.  According to Bebbington’s thesis, one of the reasons Evangelicalism has had such far-reaching impact is because it has been able to change with the times…

18 responses

Growing Up Baptist

By: on January 19, 2017

Growing up as a Southern Baptist in the United States, church history was virtually absent from my Christian experience.  Unlike Catholics, Anglicans, and even Methodists, Baptist churches concentrate their education almost exclusively on Bible Study—with the application being focused on evangelism and the Christian life.   The only “heroes of the faith” (outside of the Bible) that…

10 responses

Global Evangelicalism

By: on January 19, 2017

Donald Lewis and Richard Pierard, Editors – Global Evangelicalism: Theology, History, and Culture in Regional Perspective Introduction This volume edited by Donald Lewis and Richard Pierard took years of collaboration with international scholars to come into fruition. All of the contributors of the essays have been acclaimed as experts in the study of evangelicalism.  The…

9 responses

The Whole World in His Hands

By: on January 19, 2017

Summary: Global Evangelicalism: Theology, History and Culture in Regional Perspective by Donald M. Lewis and Richard V. Pierard is a relatively comprehensive look at the formation, history, and effect of Evangelicalism throughout the world. In it’s basic form it is a collection of essays. However, Lewis and Pierard do masterful job of weaving this collection…

5 responses

A Global Expression

By: on January 19, 2017

In Donald E. Lewis’ and Richard Pierard’s work, Global Evangelicalism: Theology, History, and Culture in Regional Perspective, the authors attempt to define the vast ocean that is evangelicalism.  While many may hear the term evangelical and immediately conjure up an American voting arm, Lewis and Pierard discuss how evangelicalism is growing movement around the world.…

7 responses

Evangelicalism in Modern Britain – a review

By: on January 19, 2017

I took the opportunity to read this book over Christmas and the New Year. I was taking some time off after the busy Christmas period and went away for a few days with family and friends. On New Year’s Day, we visited a small Anglican church in a Dartmoor village in the middle of Devon.…

7 responses

The Culture and Church Dance

By: on January 18, 2017

Culture and church appear to have a delicate dance, they move together and help define the characteristics and qualities of each. Their symbiotic relationship requires both to evolve so as to accommodate the development of the other. In reading about the evolution of the British evangelical church and the relationship it has with culture, the…

5 responses

The Gift and The Problem

By: on January 18, 2017

                Introduction Surprisingly, evangelicalism is a global phenomenon: It is not confined to North America or Europe. Global Evangelicalism Theology, History & Culture in Regional Perspective, by Donald M. Lewis and Richard V. Pierard, explores the growth and explosion of evangelicalism through the theological, historical, and regional perspectives.[1]…

9 responses

Evangelicalism in Modern Britain

By: on January 18, 2017

“The process of change can best be seen as a pattern of diffusion.”[1] Summary In this book, Evangelicalism in Modern Britain: A history from the 1730s to the 1980s, historian D. W. Bebbington gives the history of evangelicalism in Britain from its beginnings in the early 18th century through the more ecumenical movement in the…

7 responses

The Half-Brother

By: on January 18, 2017

We often teach religion in public, but we teach doctrine privately. In Oxford, we learn that the culture is always 5 minutes later than advertised. Brooks believes that the American government lacks an understanding of human nature, which contributes to why strategies often fail.  As the American culture continues to teach how to crave success,…

one response

Pre-choice Choices

By: on January 12, 2017

Teenagers…. Have you ever dealt with teenagers? There are more changes in a teenager in just a few minutes than any other human being that I know.   It is incredible how mature one of these strange creatures can appear and then in just a few moments and a few breathes, they can be a huge…

16 responses

Who Are We?

By: on January 12, 2017

SUMMARY In the book “The Social Animal, The Hidden Sources of Love, Character, and Achievement,” New York Times columnist David Brooks introduces us to the world of brain research and behavioral science through a literary style that is a marriage between fiction and reporting (anyone who enjoyed this book must watch Brain Games in Netflix).…

14 responses

Of Peoples and Nations

By: on January 12, 2017

  Growing up as a person of European descent in the United States of America, I was raised from birth to be a patriot. In elementary school, my classmates and I learned stories of Christopher Columbus, the Pilgrims, and how George Washington and the armies of the thirteen colonies turned away the evil British redcoats.…

11 responses

Bursting the “Bubble”

By: on January 12, 2017

Introduction It was good to step out of the “bubble” of my professional, protected, pompous life and read, The Social Animal by David Brooks.  Brooks said, “People gravitate toward people like themselves.  When we meet new people, we instantly start matching our behavior to theirs.”[1]  Jumping into the two fictitious characters of the book, Erica…

11 responses