DLGP

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

Category: Uncategorized

Managed or Solve?

By: on June 9, 2017

  Summary: Christian Theology and African Traditions by Matthew Michael is an insight read into the convergence of Christian history and the cultural and traditional effects of and upon African culture. Michael demonstrates how Western Christianity in particular has imposed its’ culture and tradition upon the African Church and has used theology as a vehicle…

8 responses

Leadership means having to say you’re sorry

By: on June 9, 2017

You probably familiar with the saying, ‘love means never having to say you’re sorry’.  That phrase has never made any sense to me, and more than that, as I have grown up and learned more and experienced more of both loving and being loved, it has occurred to me that the exact opposite is closer…

6 responses

Omelettes, Oligarchies, and Our Future

By: on June 9, 2017

I have been watching The Handmaid’s Tale, a television series with a modern take on the 1985 dystopian novel of the same name by Margaret Atwood. I read the original book some time ago, and this current series is equally as chilling if not more so. The bottom line question is this: How far will…

16 responses

Mom what is an Apartheid?

By: on June 8, 2017

“For to be free is not merely to cast off one’s chains, but to live in a way that respects and enhances the freedom of others.”[1] – Nelson Mandela In 1988, I remember sitting with my parents as we watched a concert with celebrities and singers such as Whoopi Goldberg, Whitney Houston, Tracy Chapman, Stevie…

13 responses

United We Stand, Divided We Fall

By: on June 8, 2017

Unity makes or breaks a country… In summary of the recent read, “The Rise and Fall of Apartheid”, it appears that unity was the secret ingredient for the rise and fall of the South Africa apartheid. The lack of unity of Africans set a stage for an apartheid to take hold, in the same way,…

9 responses

Tradition Versus Theology

By: on June 8, 2017

Introduction Why does this people group, denomination, socio-economic quota, or ethnicity get a pass?  Can being from a certain continent give you a “green card”, “Get Out of Jail Free-card”, or “I can do what I want because I am __________ – card (You fill in the blank)”.   After my rant, I reflected on my own…

9 responses

[American] inserted in “Africa”

By: on June 8, 2017

The small size of Matthew Michael’s, Christian Theology & African Traditions is deceiving because it really is an immense theological textbook that deserves to be in every pastor’s library. This book will serve as a great reference for me. I appreciate and value this work. Maybe it’s because I’ve taught World History for over 20…

6 responses

Engaging Christian Theology in the African Context

By: on June 8, 2017

The renown evangelical theologian and academic, Matthew Michael, has produced a quasi-systematic theology work which seeks to understand Christian theology through close dialogue with the Bible, especially in the context of African worldviews and traditions.  He sees the necessity of Christian theology engaging the worldviews of the African people in terms of their beliefs, values,…

9 responses

Time for A Dialogue between African people and Christian Theology!

By: on June 8, 2017

  Introduction The African evangelicals recently began to disagree on their intention to develop a Christian theology in an African context. In connection to that, they have taken a plan to develop and African Bible commentary. Drawing illustrations from Matthew Michael’s Christian Theology and African Traditions, this paper notes some of the reality of the…

8 responses

The Heart of The Matter

By: on June 8, 2017

What is the view from our heart? The heart’s view is what we perceive to be reality. In Christian Theology and African Traditions Matthew Michael encourages us that theology must engage at this level: at the level of worldview. Michael’s book is a good companion volume to How Africa Shaped the Christian Mind by Thomas…

41 responses

Apartheid: Warning & Hope

By: on June 8, 2017

David Welsh’s extensive treatise on South Africa’s experiment with social engineering (aka ‘apartheid’) is an excellent introduction for those who are not South African. For those of us visiting South Africa later this year as part of our doctoral research, it is essential reading to understand the South African context. Even for me, as a…

9 responses

APARTHEID – UNEQUALLY YOKED

By: on June 7, 2017

You hypocrite, first take the plank out of your own eye, and then you will see clearly to remove the speck from your brother’s eye.  Matthew 7:5 (NIV) THE RISE AND FALL OF APARTHEID BY WELSH In 1948, Apartheid was for the people with black skins, white Afrikaans, Coloured, and Indians. It, for the most…

5 responses

The Rise and Fall of Apartheid

By: on June 7, 2017

Those of us of a certain age have lived through some amazing historical events in recent decades. I was living in Germany when the wall came down and East and West Germany were reunited in what was a relatively peaceful process. I was living back in the UK when the Northern Ireland Peace Agreement came…

6 responses

The Power of Power!

By: on June 7, 2017

Summary: It seems like a simple enough word, apartheid: apartness; but the story of Apartheid is one of unbelievable pain and one of unbridled abuse of power. It is a story of a people who became the target of an insidious and legal effort to pretend that they did not exist by enacting draconian segregation…

8 responses

The Rise and Fall? of Apartheid

By: on June 7, 2017

  “A miracle? A negotiated revolution? A ‘refolution’? All of the above can be, and have been, used to describe South Africa’s transition from being the world’s last surviving racial oligarchy to a democratic order. The theme of this book has been that the transition occurred because the principal antagonists, the ANC and the NP,…

9 responses

The Need for Cultural Contextualization

By: on June 7, 2017

Growing in cultural awareness has been a progressive experience in my life journey. I can say with certainty today that cultural context is more complex and intricate than I had ever anticipated. It shapes us more than what we realize. Let me share a few experiences as I reflect on this week’s reading. LANGUAGE:  Even…

7 responses

Why do we act like Origen and Augustine spoke German?

By: on June 2, 2017

It may not have been his intent, but Thomas C. Oden’s How Africa Shaped the Christian Mind left me wondering why non-Western cultures are generally viewed as less intellectual and intuitive than those from the West. I’ve noticed this bias in myself when reading works by Origen and Augustine (and other early Christian scholars), in…

16 responses

The epic story that must be told

By: on June 1, 2017

Thomas C. Oden author of How Africa Shaped the Christian Mind challenges the Western Christian narrative of Christianity and its origins in Africa.  Oden states his purpose for his book in the beginning when he writes ” The thesis of this book can be stated simply: Africa played a decisive role in the formation of…

5 responses

Africa: The Deep Roots of a Revival

By: on June 1, 2017

“Africa” For many, that word brings up a wide variety of thoughts. Jungles Exotic wildlife Bongo drums Grass huts Abject poverty War masks and spears Tribal Dances Oral storytelling Pagan religions   The reality is that Africa could just as well be characterized by… The childhood home of Jesus. The home of Joseph, Moses, Simon…

8 responses

What our History Books Forgot to Tell Us

By: on June 1, 2017

Once, to break up the 10-hour drive from Eldoret back home to Turkana, our family turned off the tarmac to follow signs to the Treasures of Africa Museum in Kitale. This odd little private museum was founded by an eccentric Scotsman who wildly claimed that the Karamajong language—a kissing-cousin to Turkana, in the vein of…

13 responses