DLGP

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

Radio Flyers, Bike Rides, and Garbage

By: on January 24, 2013

For almost four years the family and I lived in the city of Lancaster.  Like most city living, we tried to get outside in the fresh air as much as possible.  During that season of life one of my weekly traditions was taking Grace and Eli on a Sunday afternoon bike ride for a daddy…

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Free to …….?

By: on January 24, 2013

This week’s reading was, Being Consumed: Economics and Christian Desire by William Cavanaugh.  This might be my favorite book I’ve read in my D.Min. program. There are so many things I like about this book it’s hard to narrow a blog post down to just one or two thoughts. So if I ramble a bit,…

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India and Capitalism

By: on January 21, 2013

With the liberalization of trade policies in 1991, new doors of opportunity opened and a new India was born.  Private and free enterprise was a welcome relief from the previously assumed socialist ‘regime’. With all of the growth and progress, India, many would say can now be listed as a capitalist nation.  While this maybe…

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The Christian Calling of Leadership

By: on January 21, 2013

The calling of Christians has been written about for centuries. Max Weber in The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism believes that the calling of protestant asceticism is a significant factor that has grown into modern capitalism as we know it today. Weber lists Calvinism, Pietism, Methodism and various Baptist sects or denominations as…

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Capitalism – God’s gift to Mankind

By: on January 19, 2013

I have just returned to my hotel room in a city in Central India after several hours of driving and an arduous trek up a hill and back.  The purpose was to visit a group of new Believers and see the progress of the ministry in a primitive and remote tribal village called Chuli.    This…

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Taking Care of Business

By: on January 17, 2013

Taking Care of Business Question: How are we preparing our youth for the world of work? Do they have the theological grounding as they encounter counterfeit values to stay true to Christian convictions? A sense of calling motivated early western Christian’s values of work. That vocational framework has deteriorated to merely getting a job to…

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Max Weber’s “called ascetics”

By: on January 17, 2013

Max Weber in his essay “The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism,” discusses aspects of Protestantantism that helped spur the spirit of capitalism. Specifically, he analyzes the Calvinist belief in predestination and the elite, the idea of a work ethic and material gain, and the concept of a “calling” which involves individuals to become…

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Max and Dorothy

By: on January 17, 2013

 „The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism“ by Max Weber is a collection of essays from 1904 and 1905, which were revised and published 1920. It is one of the most inspiring and ground-breaking works in sociology and especially in religion-sociology I’ve ever read. Weber presents his idea of a link between protestant ethic…

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Show Me The Money

By: on January 17, 2013

I love Christmas break.  Time off from work, sleeping in past 10 a.m., hanging out with family and most of all playing Monopoly with my 10 year old daughter Grace.  Now, don’t assume because Grace is 10 she isn’t a worthy opponent.  In fact, the last two games she has beat me fair and square. …

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Life in the Cage.

By: on January 17, 2013

This semester my cohort is focusing on capitalism, consumerism and leadership. Our first assigned reading was Max Weber’s, The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism. Weber penned it in German in 1904 and 1905, but it’s a book that speaks to the heart of today’s American society.  There are lots of ideas from this…

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Why Should the Devil have all the Good Music?

By: on January 16, 2013

Why Should the Devil have all the Good Music? These were familiar lyrics when I was a youth.  Larry Norman had begun a revolution in Christian music.  Loosely translated, it meant that we, as Christians, could still have fun! But in “The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism” by Max Weber, we’re shown that…

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“Capitalizing on Convergence”

By: on November 19, 2012

Today we take for granted many uses of technology that were nonexistent just a decade ago. Furthermore, much of the technology that we can’t imagine living without today results from the convergence of media technology. In their chapter on convergence, Briggs and Burke provide a good working definition for the term convergence. They say, “The…

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IPhone Leadership: Leading with Impact and Integrity

By: on November 18, 2012

Technology and communication have come a long way in the past couple of centuries. Can you believe it? The first stamp was produced in 1840 when letters were transported by ships and trains. Letters took weeks, sometimes months to be delivered around the world (Briggs and Burk 2010). Another communication invention in 1837 the telegraph…

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Media and Gender

By: on November 17, 2012

I flew into Jakarta early this week for a gender training of trainers workshop.  While engaging in the workshop during the day, I read the second half of Briggs and Burke’s Social History of the Media at night.   I couldn’t help but filter much of the information through the gender lens that I had donned.…

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culture pessimism and media critique

By: on November 16, 2012

In the past two weeks I read the book „A social history of the media. From Gutenberg to the internet“ by Asa Briggs and Peter Burke. Last week I concentrated more in the impact different early inventions like the printing press had on communication, media and our absorbing social behavior. This week now, we are…

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“My Mother is Your Mother”

By: on November 16, 2012

Centuries ago, Gutenberg took center stage with the printing press which allowed the masses access to books and articles that only the wealthy and affluent could afford. With such tools, now that the common people had an opportunity to be persuasive and use their knowledge as a powerful resource in their daily business transactions, social…

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The Media Conspiracy

By: on November 15, 2012

We get all of our information through some form of media. Most people feel there is a bias and have a degree of skepticism. Reactions to media we do not agree with can be intense. Some think there is a subversive conspiracy. We may think a few powerful people seek to control society. The long…

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Knowing & Controlling One’s Bias

By: on November 15, 2012

A Social History of The Media is a history book.  It’s stated aim is “to show the relevance of the past to the present by bringing history into media studies and the media into history.” Overall, I enjoyed reading the book.  Both Asa Briggs and Peter Burke wrote in a clear, understandable, and enjoyable style,…

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Back to the Basics

By: on November 15, 2012

It is a day of great celebration in India and I hear the sounds of random fireworks. Millions of Indians all over India and the world are celebrating one of the most popular annual festivals of Hindus. It is Deepavali or ‘Diwali’ in short, the “festival of lights”. India knows how to celebrate a festival. …

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Jesustainment

By: on November 15, 2012

In the second half of A Social History of the Media, Briggs and Burke shift to an analysis of the more recent methods of communication. In the late 1800’s there was a move towards the blending of information and entertainment creatively called infotainment.             Informing the public was (and is) a worthy goal for the…

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