DLGP

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

Beauty out of Ashes

By: on October 12, 2022

What time is it? Paul and others would argue that these are the last days, characterized by great change as seen in the decline in Christian convictions and practice, globalization, commodification, pandemics, bias, hybrid work and education, technological innovations. One popular word used to describe these days is disruptive! Yet it is not all bleak.…

11 responses

To Suffer Patiently

By: on October 12, 2022

Endurance. To suffer patiently. While it is a theme throughout this weeks’ reading, it also happens to be the word I chose for this year towards the end of 2021. Being just over halfway through a doctoral program, having a 1.5-year-old that weeks’ prior was in the PICU for respiratory failure, being pregnant with a…

5 responses

Forged in Resistance

By: on October 12, 2022

Tod Bolsinger is a professor of Theology at Fuller Theological Seminary with a focus on congregational and leadership formation. Relying heavily on the teachings of Friedman and Heifetz, Tempered Resilience is a leadership book that primarily targets Christian leaders undergoing organizational change. He writes,  They had become so focused on the aches and pains in…

8 responses

Leading with Forgiveness

By: on October 12, 2022

Currently in the United States it can appear that empathy and even forgiveness is in short supply. So often the news is full of stories about who’s fault it is that something happened or we are constantly looking for who is to blame so that we can make sense of it all. IF we only…

no responses

Tempered Theology: Hanging Our Laws on Love

By: on October 11, 2022

I love the openness of Bolsinger’s leadership definition: “[…] the transformation and growth of a people — starting with the leader — is to develop the resilience and adaptive capacity to wisely cut through resistance and accomplish the mission of the group.”[1] Though mission is a laden term, I do find transformation and growth to…

9 responses

Present!

By: on October 10, 2022

In Friedman’s book A Failure of Nerve, I just can’t get over the fact of being present.[1] In all the anxiety, confusion, problems we face as leaders and just being human, I cannot seem to get passed the idea of being present. Even growing up in school during roll call, the teacher would call out…

3 responses

Threshold from the highest

By: on October 9, 2022

I have been watching HGTV for some years and even obtained contractors license during the pandemic. During the time when we were all stuck inside, I was remodeling and playing “Fixer Upper” with my dad. So when hearing the word threshold, that little piece of something in the doorway comes to mind. The thing that…

2 responses

Our Quickly Changing World

By: on October 9, 2022

Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn’s prophetic voice from May 1983 both depicts the very vivid situation of the USSR of the day and bluntly challenges today’s Christian to evaluate their role in society.[1] His clear and honest description of where humankind has lost sight of personal morality and the effect on the overall decay of society. I am…

no responses

Crossing The Threshold

By: on October 8, 2022

The ancient phrase crossing the threshold originates from a tradition in Roman mythology when grooms carried their bride across the threshold of a room after their wedding ceremony.  Now we use this phrase to describe many kinds of transitions that occur in life.  In 2003, J. Meyer and R. Land published an article called “Overcoming…

11 responses

Threshold of Faith

By: on October 7, 2022

“You have to embrace your authority as a pastor.” That was a common theme in my conversations as I prepared for ordination. I would meet with my mentor pastor and she would consistently tell me to embrace my authority, or more accurately, the identity of being a pastor. It was a threshold that I needed…

6 responses

An American in a South African Tree

By: on October 7, 2022

Jason challenged us at the beginning of the Advance, to be open to the strange and stranger; to lean into that which is out of our control or comfort zone. I do not know about anyone else, but my mind is still grappling with the experience in Cape Town.  So much to unpack, but I…

10 responses

A Different Look at the Lady in the Louvre

By: on October 7, 2022

The Mona Lisa has been credited as the most famous piece of art.  How can this be accepted carte blanche?  One must stop and consider this assertion.  How has this one portrait been given this kind of notoriety?  If a piece of art has been set apart by so many over a span of 519…

6 responses

Encouraging News, Sobering News

By: on October 6, 2022

According to the research and concluding theories of Jan Meyer and Ray Land, students can experience quite a range of success or lack of success, based on their ability to grasp and digest certain key concepts in the curriculum. Some students progress through the learning process easily and successfully, while others struggle to grasp these crucial…

16 responses

Threshold Concepts in Life and Faith

By: on October 6, 2022

The carpenter in me sees the word “threshold” and immediately a transition strip or door trim of some kind comes to mind. The Kinesiologist in me sees “threshold” as a maximum output or delineation of a new system in the body activating.  The student in me sees something completely unique in regard to learning and…

10 responses

Words for the moment

By: on October 6, 2022

Giving words to the moment is the thought that comes to mind when I consider this week’s readings from Jan H. F. Meyer and Ray Land’s works Overcoming Barriers to Student Understanding: Threshold concepts and troublesome knowledge: Linkages to ways of thinking and practicing within the disciplines, and Threshold concepts in practice. For the past…

5 responses

Integration of voices

By: on October 6, 2022

Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn was a Russian novelist who received the Templeton prize in 1983. He is known for his criticism of communism and for raising global awareness of political repression in the Soviet Union. When he received the Templeton prize and gave his speech in 1983, I was five years old. Although I heard about the…

11 responses

The “Aha” Moments

By: on October 6, 2022

This week’s readings and video on threshold concepts were enlightening for me. As I read, it brought to my remembrance many instances of situations in my own learning where I have irreversibly crossed the threshold, never to unlearn or un-see a thing again. I thought particularly of learning to read and write using the Korean…

13 responses

The Burden of Threshold Concepts in Preaching

By: on October 6, 2022

Jan H.F. Meyer and Ray Land’s “Overcoming Barriers to Student Understanding” introduce the ideas of “threshold concepts”. Threshold concepts, according to Meyer and Land, are “akin to a portal, opening up a new and previously inaccessible way of thinking about something. It represents a transformed way of understanding, or interpreting, or viewing something without which…

7 responses

Deep and Wide: Cultivating a Global Consciousness

By: on October 6, 2022

When I share the story of how I’ve experienced God at work in the Middle East with local congregations or other interested groups in the USA, I often receive this question: “What unbiased source can we read in order to better understand what is happening in the Middle East?” What I have learned from my…

13 responses

Go Where No Man/Woman Has Gone Before

By: on October 6, 2022

As I went through the threshold concepts, I kept thinking about the original Star Trek series – going into uncharted territory in space. As an educator, I can see a lot of relevance in the threshold concepts. However, moving ‘stuck’ students beyond the bottleneck in their thinking to a place of discovery is easier said…

12 responses