DLGP

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

Visioneering: Competent Inversion

By: on November 6, 2019

Can a desire for self-improvement, as well as, a desire to deal with the pressures of a stressful job lead to impacting some of the most influential leaders in America? It can if your name is Shane Parrish a former cybersecurity expert for a Canadian intelligent agency. His desire to learn how to improve his…

14 responses

50% Korean, 100% Me

By: on November 6, 2019

“I need to listen well so that I hear what is not said. Thuli Madonsela”[1] After having my first discovery session, I realized that I needed to pay attention to what was not being said. “It demands that we ask if there is another reasonable explanation for the events that have occurred.”[2] My mixed Korean…

17 responses

Is “Surface-Level” Where the Truth Resides?

By: on November 4, 2019

There is a four-stage framework that my team has uncovered that sets the template for how many white, evangelical church, academic, and non-profit leaders approach local and global missions.  It goes like this: Notice, Diagnose, Solve, and Walk Away. Notice: Because of the geographic and relational distance between white evangelical institutions and impacted communities, we’ve…

31 responses

Sometimes a Rosebush is Just a Rosebush

By: on November 4, 2019

Thinking is a complex process.  How we get from A to B says a lot about the ways our minds work.  As was mentioned in Stuart Sim and Borin Van Loon’s book, Introducing Critical Theory, “How we arrive at value judgments, and, indeed, whether we can arrive at value judgments, are now at least as…

16 responses

Airbnb’s “Party Houses” and the Need to Move to Kingdom-Order Thinking 

By: on November 4, 2019

Shane Parrish has created a thoughtful community at Farnum Street delivering content about content, thinking about thinking, learning about learning, and wisdom about wisdom. He hails the mission statement “Upgrade Your Thinking.” From a simple blog to now active online community with over 250,000 participants, Parrish curates and engages his community about epistemology and decision…

16 responses

“Maps Don’t Lead to Holy Ground”

By: on November 3, 2019

Carved into a cemetery headstone, directly under a person’s name, are the dates of their birth and death. These dates are separated by a dash. Many have waxed on poetically about the importance of that dash, for it represents the entirety of the persons life. It’s the space where they lived and breathed, rested and…

16 responses

Viva el Sombrero Azul

By: on November 3, 2019

Introduction: Margaret Wheatley Over the last few years I have been intrigued by the thought-provoking attitude of Margaret Wheatley, best-selling author and world-renowned leader of leaders. I have read a few of her books and listened closely to her ‘unshakeable conviction that leaders (for the way forward and on behalf of the human spirit) must…

4 responses

Discovering the styles and genres as used in any writing

By: on November 2, 2019

DISCOVERING THE STYLES AND GENRES AS USED IN ANY WRITING Writing of books involves so many kinds of styles and with different genres. Most writers have an idea of what they want to communicate to the audience, and where possible the concepts may be applied either in the life of reader or the people the…

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Whose Ox is Gored

By: on October 31, 2019

Some are ecstatic about the news and some… not so much: Whose Ox is Gored? Professor Stuart Sim and Van Loon write a critical, historical, and philosophical construct of social science and the tensions between to help the reader try to better understand how and why we live the way we do. They use brief…

8 responses

Parish, The Great Mental Models

By: on October 31, 2019

Proverbs 1:7 New Living Translation (NLT) 7 Fear of the Lord is the foundation of true knowledge,     but fools despise wisdom and discipline. I have always been intrigued by the concept of wisdom. What is wisdom, and how is enquirer? Is there such a thing as evil and good wisdom? What are the differences…

9 responses

Blue Light Special

By: on October 30, 2019

My mind is torn and spinning in many directions when it comes to this blog. I would like to say that Sim and Van Loon in their book Introducing Critical Theory a Graphic Guide brought great clarity and inspiration to me and my understanding of Critical Theory. That isn’t the case.  But I did find…

8 responses

Pyeonghwa (평화) = peace

By: on October 30, 2019

I would like to tell you that I was raised by feminist parents, but you decide. My father was raised by brilliantly strong women who took a stand in the Suffrage Movement. My mother, raised in a patriarchal society, succumbed to an order of survival. Daughters were meant to be married and bear sons. As…

11 responses

Am I Blind? I think I Might Be Blind! Yeah…I’m Blind.

By: on October 29, 2019

Critical theory is a body of scholarship that examines how societies and cultures work.  Differing from a descriptive approach, Stuart Sim and Borin Van Loon, in Introducing Critical Theory: A Graphic Guide, explain how critical theory gets beneath the surface of culture and literature to unmask the largely invisible and unquestioned ideologies that shape them…

15 responses

Smash! to the Graphic Guide

By: on October 28, 2019

I remember for the first four years my son was in school, I would enter the parent teacher conferences with one question for the teacher: How will you get my son to read books other than graphic novels?  Comic books, manga, and other forms of graphic text were his favorites. It was near impossible for…

16 responses

“Capitalism Made your iPhone” and Other Innovative Hidden Gems from Critical Theory

By: on October 28, 2019

Stuart Sim and Borin Van Loon’s graphic book, Critical Theory, gave me an incredible opportunity this week to practice some of the most important innovative principles: postponing judgment and embracing being a beginner. Critical Theory and Decrustivism are blaring weak spots in my educational background, so this provided perfect grounds for training in these two…

14 responses

Recognizing Our Lens

By: on October 28, 2019

Each of us views the world in a unique way.  There are no two people who view every single aspect of life in the exact same way (unless of course, they’ve been brainwashed or programmed by some other form of intelligent life or magic, thus stripping them of their individuality).  Unfortunately, oftentimes we don’t recognize…

14 responses

Even Caesar

By: on October 27, 2019

There are things that I love to learn about. As a kid, it was nature. Like looking out across a field in the early morning at the sparkles of glistening dew on the glow of yellow, burnt grass-in-the-sun or stepping into the cool ocean, carefully over a rocky-barnacled bottom on a clear night and watching…

2 responses

Sim, Introducing Critical Theory

By: on October 26, 2019

Remember Sokal scandal? The particularity of Sokal is that it focuses its attacks on scientific impositions produced by humanities specialists and not on communities of natural scientists; it does not announce any news about the ethical behavior of scientific production. However, it has the merit of triggering the update of the debate on the scientific…

6 responses

Don’t Lose Heart

By: on October 24, 2019

Thinking about leadership and what kind of a leader I have been and am currently today, and what has been modeled to me is causing me to take pause. There seems to be a theme for the awareness of globalization and how it affects leadership – good and bad. This is true for our business.…

14 responses

By the Book

By: on October 23, 2019

I am a connoisseur of leadership materials and have been for almost 30 years. It started in my late 20’s when I went to a pastors conference to listen to John Maxwell who at the time was the lead pastor of a large Methodist Church in San Diego, California. During that period, he was one…

12 responses