DLGP

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

Category: Uncategorized

People and Imaginaries

By: on February 26, 2015

  Humanity continues to be impacted by ideas from religion and culture. It is difficult to distinguish religious practice from the culture in which it emerges.  Why pinpoint at the two categorizes and not others like banking, the modern biomedical enterprise and so forth? I believe that they are all inseparably intertwined but while studying…

5 responses

Christian and/or Capitalist Values?

By: on February 26, 2015

I came across an interesting article this week in the massive amount of reading I am doing these days.  I forget the name of the article (not a good research practice) but it took me to a link where a recent speech by U.S. Senator Marco Rubio was given.  The nature of the article was…

10 responses

The Great Transformer

By: on February 26, 2015

Over the last few months, it has been a privilege for me (on an interim basis) to be part of the youth ministry of our church family. One of the goals for my involvement has been to challenge our youth to develop critical and biblical thinking within the world they live. It’s been an exciting…

16 responses

Our Work Is Never Done

By: on February 26, 2015

Max Weber’s classic book The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism was a book I heard referred to often but had never gotten my hands on. I kind of understood the premise going in but it wasn’t until actually holding my book (actually two books because it’s not just the older cohort members that…

11 responses

Work Ethic

By: on February 25, 2015

What? Did Webner really say “Protestants… have shown a special tendency to develop economic rationalism which cannot be observed to the same extent among Catholics”.[i] Isn’t he saying – Protestants work better then Catholics? After my initial double take, I was intrigued. How will this German sociologist make the case that Protestantism is a contributing…

7 responses

The Dialogue

By: on February 24, 2015

I see a play in Seattle that creates quite a conversation between the four of us who attend. Later, someone asks me, “A good play?” While I didn’t particularly enjoy it musically, I say “yes,” with the idea that the play causes great dialogue over the thematic issues. The greatness of a book, a play,…

9 responses

Have We All Become Cartographers?

By: on February 22, 2015

Several years ago I attended a conference in Seattle, Washington that focused on Christian conversations with “the lost.” One segment of the conference included interviewing people who Christians consider “lost.” When it was time to interview one of the “lost” guests the organizer asked her, “How do you feel when you are referred to as…

15 responses

Secular Hope: Finding a Way to Disciple in a Secular Age

By: on February 22, 2015

It is a well know statistic that a large majority of the congregations in North America are plateaued and many are in decline. Plateau is defined as “little or no change … relatively stable level or position … a level of attainment or achievement.”[1] I am in my second year as a staff pastor in…

12 responses

a secular age

By: on February 21, 2015

Ethiopia, a nation where diversity of religions and cultures was seen as a national threat, has now ensured the equal rights of all religions before the law. As a result, Protestant Christian churches in the urban settings received acceptance, whereas in regional settings Protestant minorities are usually excluded from social and economic life. In spite…

11 responses

The Journey To Unbelief

By: on February 20, 2015

Charles Taylor is a god! Well, perhaps I’m being a bit extreme. However upon reading his Magnus Opus entitled A Secular Age, I was once again reminded why I like his writing so much. Like a skilled wordsmith he’s able to take volumes of information and produce a literary treatise that delineates the historical record…

6 responses

A Better Social Imaginary?

By: on February 20, 2015

Family. The word itself can bring different emotions to different people, depending of their own experience. Why is it that many times children raised in Christian homes end up choosing to leave the sacred and enter a more secular existence? I wonder that myself, especially since I have two grown children who have experienced this…

9 responses

Religion and Science

By: on February 20, 2015

“Science can purify religion from error and superstition; 
religion can purify science from idolatry and false absolutes. 
Each can draw the other into a wider world, a world in which both can flourish…. 
We need each other to be what we must be, what we are called to be.” (Pope John Paul II) The argument…

7 responses

How Did We Get Here? From Enchantment to Secular

By: on February 20, 2015

January 3, 1825, Robert Dale Owen bought the entire town of New Harmony, Indiana. His goal was to set up his perfect society based on “the principles of the sciences by which a superior character can be formed…and by which a superfluity of wealth can be created and secured for all without injury of any.”[1](59)…

9 responses

“In a Way This Sounds Weird”

By: on February 20, 2015

We seem to be in an “age” where people give up something for a year or they do something for a year. In our recent past this has included a year of living biblically, a year of living like Jesus, and a year of biblical womanhood.[1] A recent incarnation of this “one-year” application was implemented…

7 responses

Bebbington has a Quad too!

By: on February 20, 2015

Bebbington has a quad too!   February 19, 15   It was very interesting to read about the history of the Evangelical movement in Britain in the midst of some of the prevailing leaders of Protestantism, Methodism, Lutherism, and other movements. In the middle of this our (I will make it personal) Evangelical heritage was…

16 responses

Evangelicalism Today

By: on February 20, 2015

Evangelicalism David Bebbington’s book, Evangelicalism in Modern Britain, reviews the history of the evangelical movement in Britain from the 1700’s through the 1980s. Prominent evangelicals that have influenced the movement throughout history include John Welsey, William Wilberforce, and Lord Shaftesbury. I’ve collided with these historic figures as I’ve been educated in my faith throughout my…

15 responses

Why so Many?

By: on February 19, 2015

I recently spoke in a small Northern-Michigan city. While driving out of town, I passed an interesting sight; both sides of the road were lined with Evangelical churches. They were across the road from each other and next door to each other. It was almost a comical site. It reminded me of the way fast…

12 responses

Fulfilment in a secular age

By: on February 19, 2015

“…the salient feature of the modern cosmic imaginary is not that it has fostered materialism, or enabled people to recover a spiritual outlook beyond materialism, to return as it were to religion, though it has done both these things. But the most important fact about it which is relevant to our enquiry here is that…

7 responses

Continuing To Be A Vital Force

By: on February 19, 2015

I always knew evangelicals were a strange group. DW Bebbington’s Evangelicalism in Modern Britain: A History from the 1730s to the 1980s just affirmed it. I enjoy history and Bebbington does a great job explaining core beliefs Evangelicals can unite around. Bebbington also does a good job explaining how we are different and have morphed throughout…

7 responses