DLGP

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

Category: Uncategorized

The people who walk in darkness will see a great light.

By: on March 22, 2024

As I write this, the last call to prayer of the day is sounding all around me. It is the eleventh day of Ramadan. The majority around me are fasting. They are not drinking, eating, swallowing their sputum, or smoking during sunlight hours (approximately 5:30 am until 7:30 pm). Thankfully, today was not very hot…

8 responses

Exploring “Why We’re Wrong About Nearly Everything”

By: on March 22, 2024

I once heard it said that the greatest lie of all time is that we think we’re thinking, but in reality, most of the time, we’re simply operating off social conditioning and habit. Upon initially hearing this statement, I couldn’t help but pause and see its truth. I then began wondering how much of what…

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Meaning of suffering, meaning of life.

By: on March 21, 2024

Here I come, you ready for it, I’m going to stretch myself here and go off my topic…Okay, no I am not, I’m going to talk about the meaning of suffering.  Why not? I work right in the middle of it and it’s the human condition.  Jordan B. Peterson is a psychologist who wrote a…

8 responses

Lead or be led…

By: on March 21, 2024

Lead or be led If there is anything that I have learned in life, it is that we will forever be a world of different opinions. As a leader, there is a push your values on others. The question is: Is what you believe best for all? As a religious leader, it is best that…

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To Move Forward, We Will Have To Choose A Road

By: on March 21, 2024

Intro This week, I’m just going to be me on this post. A pastors perspective, rather than an academic look. I enjoyed Matthew R. Petrusek In Evangelization and Ideology: How to Understand and Respond to the Political Culture. Petrusek tackles a difficult subject that is tearing many countries apart, especially in America. Where I live and…

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Wrong Again

By: on March 21, 2024

From Being Wrong by Kathryn Schulz and What’s Your Problem by Thomas Wedell-Wedellsborg to Kahneman’s Thinking Fast and Slow, I have been fully convinced that I, and everyone else is wrong. Already believing I was wrong made it seem pointless to read another book about being wrong.  Wrong, again. According to Bobby Duffy, understanding ‘why’…

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I was Wrong about this one

By: on March 21, 2024

I bristled when I started reading Why We’re Wrong About Nearly Everything by Bobby Duffy this week. After reading the first several chapters, my reaction was that it was just another book confirming what we already read, things aren’t always what they seem. I thought his reference to Kahneman’s book, Thinking, Fast and Slow was…

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Staying Positive through the Muck

By: on March 21, 2024

This text message was from two weeks ago. Doug was my old cellmate (hence his calling me “bunk,” (short for “bunkie”). He just entered rehab (an expensive one at that – $1000.00 a day!!) for the fourth or fifth time. Doug and I shared life together for about two years as bunkmates, or “cellies,” which…

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The Power of a Common Enemy vs Common Good

By: on March 21, 2024

Life seems hard, fear is rampant, there are lots of bad things and bad people, and I’m in danger… or am I? Listening to author and professor Matthew Petrusek I swayed between “Oh that makes sense.” to “Oh that’s not how I view things.” He is offering an alternative to Identity Politics with the argument…

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We live in a system that breeds delusion.

By: on March 21, 2024

I recently had an amazing holiday! Or was it simply ‘average’? Or was that other holiday better? Bobby Duffy of King’s College London, in a talk about his book, “Why We’re Wrong About Nearly Everything”, quoted a 1994 study by Professors Terrence Mitchell and Leigh Thompson to unpack what they dubbed “rosy retrospective”. [1] In…

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Media Biases (Berat-Sebelah Media)

By: on March 20, 2024

Bobby Duffy is the author of the book, Why We’re Wrong About Nearly Everything: A Theory of Human Misunderstanding. Duffy draws on numerous public-opinion studies conducted by himself and colleagues across various countries, focusing on social and political questions. In his book, Duffy offers several valuable lessons about human cognition, biases and understanding such as:…

12 responses

Dealing With My Delusions About Leadership

By: on March 20, 2024

In 2018 a Canadian woman rented a black Nissan Sentra sedan. She drove to a nearby Walmart. When she came out of the store she hopped in her car and drove home. However, she jumped in the wrong car, a black Infiniti hatchback, and drove off. It turns out that the owner had gone into…

13 responses

Biases exposed

By: on March 20, 2024

I hate that we have implicit biases and I find it so uncomfortable when they are exposed (although I’m also grateful).  Growing up in a conservative state and family, I had biases towards LGBTQ+ population. In recent years some of these were exposed, and thankfully changed.  Someone very dear in my life identified as transgender…

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An Angry Pink Cow

By: on March 20, 2024

Name a food with a hole in it… Did you say donuts, cheese, onion rings, bagels? Do you think your answer would match with everyone else’s? If so, you are in the herd; if not, you are the odd one out. Welcome to the game Herd Mentality. It’s a group game my family has enjoyed…

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There is a Map but Does it Hold Meaning Anymore?

By: on March 20, 2024

My twenty-one-year-old son is agnostic. Or atheist. Or something else. He is not a Christian. Of that he is sure, but, if I understand him correctly, he doesn’t find religion relevant enough to his life to be defined by a specific belief or religious system. This young adult was baptized, raised and confirmed in the…

13 responses

Systemic Worry

By: on March 20, 2024

One of my favorite movies is “Waking Life,” first watched almost 25 years ago while teaching in the Black Studies Department at Califoria State University, Long Beach (CSULB).  I shared clips from the film with my students and we used them as prompts to critically think and write about our understanding of life.  Why We’re…

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Fifty Shades of Freud

By: on March 19, 2024

Matt Petrusek, in a lecture on Wokeism- The Frankenstein of Political Ideologies (Lecture 1) shared a story from 2006 when a Duke Lacrosse Team was accused of raping a young woman. [1] I was curious about the details of this story, so I found a You tube: Presumed Guilty: Due Process Lessons of the Duke…

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I’ll Just Keep Telling Their Stories

By: on March 19, 2024

I get the opportunity regularly to speak to different churches in my area about refugees and immigrants. Sometimes, it is a separate class or a small group that invites me to speak and they are eager to hear more information. Then, other times, it is a brief overview to the whole congregation and then I…

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Wisdom is the Redemptive Knowledge

By: on March 19, 2024

The first time I heard the name Jordan Peterson was in 2018.  Sitting in the back two rows of my Fall 2018 communication courses was a group of young men between the ages of 22-30 who found themselves enrolled in college after time serving in the military.  Several weeks into listening to their responses to…

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