DLGP

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

Category: Uncategorized

Imagine This!

By: on January 16, 2015

Anderson’s Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism investigates a concept of nationalism that most people, while living out the reality, rarely consciously think about. I have traveled to many different countries and have found that there is an almost universal pride in one’s nationality. Even people who disagree with their government’s…

8 responses

Digging Deeper

By: on January 16, 2015

The Social Animal: The Hidden Sources of Love, Character, and Achievement is about the modern life of humans. It explores attachment, parenting, education, love, family, culture, achievement, marriage, politics, morality, aging, and death by exploring a wide range of disciplines, including evolutionary psychology, neurobiology, cognitive science, behavioral economics, and education theory. Given the table of contents,…

10 responses

What’s it all for?

By: on January 15, 2015

“Modern society has created a giant apparatus for the cultivation of hard skills, while failing to develop the moral and emotional faculties down below. Children are coached on how to jump through a thousand hoops. Yet by far the most important decisions they will make are about whom to marry and whom to befriend, what…

10 responses

Ka-Pow!

By: on January 15, 2015

Ka-Pow … that was the sound of my brain as I read “Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism” by Benedict Anderson. Each time I caught myself in the reading zone, biting off another chunk of Anderson’s thinking to try to digest, I felt as if I had to leave the current…

9 responses

Knowing or Being Known

By: on January 15, 2015

Spending a great deal of time each week listening to people: their fears, hopes, failures and aspirations, is a continual education. It teaches me much about the importance of genuine relationships and the meaning derived from those relationships. For some, just having someone to actively listen can provide an assurance about the strength of their…

15 responses

Permeable Minds and Invisible Networks

By: on January 15, 2015

“Minds are intensely permeable…Invisible Networks Filling the Space Between Them”[1] David Brooks writes a book titled The Social Animal. In the United States, the book has also been subtitled in different editions, The Hidden Sources of Love, Character and Achievement and A Story of How Success Happens. Personally, I like the first title better for…

8 responses

the unconscious mind

By: on January 15, 2015

In his book, The Social Animal: A Story of How Success Happens, David Brooks, explores the unconscious mind. Brooks relates his theory in a more accessible way using the fictional characters of two people who led wonderfully fulfilling lives (p.5). The reason for their success is, Brook explains, “They possessed what economists call noncognitive skills,…

8 responses

How God Created Us

By: on January 15, 2015

First written in 1983, Imagined Communities illustrates the trajectory of the world’s understanding of how it functions politically as the author, Benedict Anderson, reasserts his premise in the revision of 2006, and with even more relevance today in 2015.   Acknowledging that many of his comrades with a Marxist bent predicted an end to nationalism, Anderson…

16 responses

Laying Down Your Life

By: on January 15, 2015

Laying Down Your Life Imagined Communities by Benedict Anderson is such a great title to a book. I was excited to see this book on the reading list because the very title embraces two words I love. I wasn’t really sure what to expect diving into Anderson’s book but I went in with my imagination…

8 responses

Nationalism a pathology?

By: on January 14, 2015

In Ford’s “Theology: A very short introduction”[1] an insightful concept was offered that should be considered here. In his discussion on salvation, Ford used the word ‘intensification’. After setting a pattern of discussing theology from an academic, broad-minded, critical and historical perspective, he indicates that with some topics there is an intensification of thought, passion,…

9 responses

Discipline!

By: on December 17, 2014

Discipline! Discipline! Discipline! This is what I walk away with after reading Jim Collins’ book Good to Great as well as Good to Great and the Social Sectors. Without discipline we can probably do some good things, but it is discipline that will give us that boost from just an average person, or average worker…

no responses

South Africa- VE

By: on December 10, 2014

Here it is Friends!! Happy Christmas! Please let me know if you have trouble seeing it. https://drive.google.com/a/georgefox.edu/file/d/0B9Y8D5m12GBITE1LQmQyX3gxRFU/view?usp=sharing

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In The Shadow of the Mountian

By: on December 9, 2014

Attached you will find my VE presentation.  It is more or less a read along with pictures.  Just click into this title and then click the link below when it turns blue. Blessings to each of you! In The Shadow of The Mountain by J. Mitch Arbelaez Cape Town Review 2014       

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Dawnel’s Cape Town VE

By: on December 9, 2014

Romans 12:2 (ESV) says, “do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewal of your mind, that by testing you may discern what is the will of God, what is good and acceptable and perfect.” I’ve come to see that sometimes one needs to venture out of their comfort zone into…

3 responses

Cape Town VE–Just say “Penguins”

By: on December 9, 2014

Two days of travel with cramped airline seats and long layovers brought me to Cape Town excited, but exhausted. I was ready for a good meal, a long hot shower, and a comfortable bed…   Click here to keep reading–Yost_dmin171_VEsynthesis

one response