DLGP

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

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Talking With God

By: on April 25, 2015

The book, When God Talks Back: Understanding the American Evangelical Relationship With God, focuses on communication between between people and God. The author, Luhrmann, gives varies accounts of how God speaks to His people. The author explains God speaks to a person through the personal relationship that they have with God. Luhrmann explains, “you develop…

4 responses

Leadership art in the church

By: on April 25, 2015

Leadership is an Art,[1] by Max Depree, pulls together leadership theories, while weaving in insights surrounding the more abstract idea that leadership is an art form. Depree, himself, has demonstrated his own ability to be a strong and effective leader within both national and global settings. Throughout my career as a consultant, I’ve worked with many…

6 responses

Oh my! What’s not to like?

By: on April 24, 2015

This book is intriguing even before you open it. Right there on the cover hands are raised, which might make some people think back to a time in Sunday School when a Bible quiz was being battled. “I know the answer! I know it!” This is most certainly because the cover photo only reveals one…

6 responses

When God Talks Back

By: on April 24, 2015

Reading When God Talks Back: Understanding The American Evangelical Relationship With God, by T, M, Luhrmann is very inspiring. The author writes about The Vineyard Christian Fellowship, a new denomination, a few decades old, and which the author believes it represents the shift in the American imagination of God (Loc. 219). According to the author,…

one response

IF GOD IS FOR US, WHO CAN BE AGAINST US?

By: on April 24, 2015

I was intrigued with the distinctive definition for faith by T.M. Luhrmann in the opening preface to When God Talks Back: Understanding the American Evangelical Relationship with God. “Faith,” she states, “asks people to consider that the evidence of their senses is wrong.”[1] Faith in a transcendent God asks people to believe some really unbelievable…

7 responses

How Will I Know?

By: on April 23, 2015

“How will I know if he really loves me? I say a prayer with every heart beat. I fall in love whenever we meet, I’m asking you ’cause you know about these things.” I kept hearing this song in my head as I read this week’s book, When God Talks Back. [1] 1985. Whitney Houston.…

9 responses

Simplicity

By: on April 23, 2015

To understand that your role as a leader is to advance other people in life is the highest possible level of leadership maturity.  For DePree, the corporate mission is a secondary gain, it just happens naturally when  care for people is expressed in measurable ways.  I am going to keep this blog simple, I just…

7 responses

Living in Different Worlds

By: on April 23, 2015

Our previous book we read this semester Global Evangelicalism edited by Lewis and Pierard, provided a large overview of this culturally diverse and polycentric movement known as Evangelicalism. Yet there are other books such as Colonel Doner’s book The Late Great Evangelical Church that challenges and debunks many of the so called evangelical teachings that…

5 responses

Leadership is an Art

By: on April 23, 2015

  In his book Leadership is an Art, Max De Pree sandwiches leadership between two essential bookends while defining the core that lies between; “The first responsibility of a leader is to define reality. The last is to say thank you. In between the two, the leader must become a servant and a debtor. That…

7 responses

The God Who Speaks

By: on April 23, 2015

In my devotions this morning I was reading the opening chapters of Genesis – where it records how God made man in His likeness. I read how God walked in the garden at the cool of the day, and spoke to Adam and Eve like a friend. At the very beginning, it appears that God…

7 responses

Creating Owners

By: on April 23, 2015

It’s refreshing to read a leadership book where the author doesn’t claim to know it all. I appreciated DePree starting off with, “Leadership is an art, something to be learned over time, not simply by reading books. Leadership is more tribal than scientific, more a weaving of relationships than an amassing of information, and, in…

10 responses

Looking for New Mercies

By: on April 23, 2015

It shouldn’t surprise yet somehow it always does.  As familiar as our trips to El Salvador should be the Lord always has something new for us to discover.  This time it was a conversation with the person beside me on the airplane. I had just put the book I was reading in the magazine rack…

9 responses

When God Doesn’t Talk Back

By: on April 23, 2015

  Does God talk to us? If so, how? And what does he say? Is prayer a one-way conversation or a two-way one? These are some of the questions our week’s reading tries to address. So how does it do? I think it depends on whom you ask. When God Talks Back: Understanding the American Evangelical…

9 responses

What Would Jason Clark Say? WWJCS

By: on April 22, 2015

Tanya M. Luhrmann writes about the nature of American evangelical spirituality in her book “WHEN GOD TALKS BACK Understanding the American Evangelical Relationship with God” with the nondenominational Vineyard evangelical church as the study sample space. Luhrmann an anthropologist, approaches are study from a scientific place which means she will be rational in her presentation…

12 responses

Elegant Kenosis

By: on April 22, 2015

With silver hair and a voice that wavered, Sister Margaret seemed really old to me as a young college graduate.  It’s only been all these years later, many since she passed away, that I now recognize how her age didn’t take away from the value of her faithful presence as a leader in the community.…

6 responses

Hey God, are you there?

By: on April 21, 2015

Tanya Luhrmann explores two significant questions in her book When God Talks Back: Understanding the American Evangelical Relationship with God: (1) How does God become and remain real for modern evangelicals?; and (2) How are rational, practical people of faith able to experience the presence of a powerful yet invisible being and sustain that belief…

6 responses

Believing the Unbelievable….or Hearing Voices

By: on April 21, 2015

“The vengeance with which religious issues have again entered the public arena illustrates what pollsters long have known: the United States contains more citizens who value religion than other western industrial societies. This odd combination of modernity and religion defies conventional wisdom, which suggests that secularity and socioeconomic development are positively related. Such manifest religiosity…

8 responses

Obligation to Others is an Art of Leadership

By: on April 21, 2015

Obligation to others is an Art of Leadership April 21, 15 Max De Pree has done a masterful job in defining leadership qualities in Leadership is an Art. He comes off more like a preacher who is dedicated to people and not things. I admired his passion for those who worked in his company. He…

10 responses

Other-centered leadership

By: on April 21, 2015

As I read through Leadership is an Art I became engaged with the undertone of the book—the author’s “voice,” their passion. Max De Pree is presenting the theme of what I’d call other-centered leadership. The employees are his passion: their involvement, gifting, participation, and success. In such a practical, helpful book there are dozens of…

5 responses