DLGP

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

Front to Back

By: on November 15, 2019

I really enjoyed reading this week. In fact, The Undefended Leader may be my favorite book of the semester. I wish I had more than one week to devote to reading it, and I hope to return to it after my DMin projects have been turned in. Admittedly, I read too slowly and did not…

17 responses

The Undefended Leader

By: on November 15, 2019

It is impressive how Simon Walter brings out the trilogy of the Undefended leader. His definition of these types of leadership brings out the right kind of leadership we experience in our lives. Leading out of who you are, with nothing to lose and with everything to give, is a Christian concept of self-denial for…

7 responses

The Experience is not the End

By: on November 15, 2019

When I was sixteen my parents went to a conference with John Wimber. During the course of the conference my dad went forward to get prayed over by Wimber. By all accounts it was an amazing experience for him. My dad was a mistake, or at least that is what his mother repeatedly told him…

14 responses

A Whole New World

By: on November 14, 2019

Christianity in Canadian context finds itself somewhere in between secularised Europe and the dominance Christian culture still holds in the United States of America. Canada is decidedly post-Christian in its secularised public life, but almost a third of the country is still committed to organised religious practice while another third is practising private spirituality.[1] The…

6 responses

Undefended Knope

By: on November 14, 2019

There’s an episode in the television hit, Parks and Rec, where Leslie Knope is trying to create the best dinner party for a guy she’s dating. This guy is a big wig lawyer and has stories of traveling around the world and doing awesome things. Leslie, in an effort to win him over, invites him…

9 responses

I Need a Drink

By: on November 14, 2019

Simon P. Walker’s work and writing is changing my life. There are an incredible number of ways into this book trilogy for me this week. How could there not be when it comes to the leadership journey as the letting go of all the normal defenses we surround ourselves with? I am reading it too…

9 responses

Too Free To Fail

By: on November 14, 2019

The biggest fault to Simon Walker’s character that I can find is that he didn’t make time to hang out with us while we were all visiting Oxford.  Walker, an ordained Anglican cleric and leading scholar in the world of culture and cognition is perhaps most widely known for his writing in the field of…

5 responses

And….Action

By: on November 14, 2019

Simon Walker is the CEO of STEER, a UK based company in which he leads the research team in projects that describe and apply to how steering cognition influences human society. If you are like me, you might be wondering what the heck is steering cognition. Well, thanks to one of the four, google says,…

5 responses

Goal of Leadership

By: on November 14, 2019

This week’s reading was brutal. Our cohort had to read, not one, not two, but three books in a matter of days. They weren’t easy ones either. Absorbing the material from Simon Walker’s The Undefended Leader trilogy was like drinking from a leadership fire hydrant. This is not to say that the arduous reading was…

9 responses

The Daily Bruin

By: on November 11, 2019

Scott Galloway teaches advanced courses to MBA students at NYU’s Stern School of Business. He is a widely recognized economics professor and has founded over nine firms.  In the book The Four: The Hidden DNA of Amazon, Apple, Facebook and Google,  Galloway “provides a perceptive analysis of the four-horse race to become the first trillion-dollar…

one response

The Four that has Transformed the World Economy and Spirituality

By: on November 11, 2019

We have  the term “the world is a global market” from wherever we are. When it comes to economies of the world, spirituality, and other social concerns, the Africa countries have always found themselves victims of the situations. I am reminded during the time of the early missionaries in Kenya. They arrived in style from…

3 responses

The 11th Hour of the 11th Day of the 11th Month

By: on November 10, 2019

“Blind Certainty – a close-mindedness that amounts to an imprisonment so total that the prisoner doesn’t even know he’s locked up.” David Foster Wallace, 2005 Kenyon College Commencement Speech. I have tried ‘so hard’ to figure out how to think through some things in my life that I know I have not had the mental…

one response

QUICK TO LISTEN AND SLOW TO SPEAK

By: on November 10, 2019

QUICK TO LISTEN AND SLOW TO SPEAK  (JAMES 1:19) We are living in a world that is full of struggles and misunderstandings, which has led to conflicts in the community and families. Families are being broken, institutions are unstable due to poor communication, and governments have collapsed in most of its sectors or ministries due…

3 responses

QUICK TO LISTEN AND SLOW TO SPEAK JAMES 1:19

By: on November 10, 2019

QUICK TO LISTEN AND SLOW TO SPEAK  (JAMES 1:19) We are living in a world that is full of struggles and misunderstandings, which has led to conflicts in the community and families. Families are being broken, institutions are unstable due to poor communication, and governments have collapsed in most of its sectors or ministries due…

no responses

But, What of Tomorrowland?

By: on November 10, 2019

In the 1980s, the dream of a futuristic world was seen through the lens of innocent childhood with a Disney whimsical twist. The days where technology and humankind operate inseparably was an intriguing quest set out by man. The days where innovators and dreamers need(ed) to stick together.[1] As the years continued in the late 1990s…

11 responses

Lying, Thieving, Socially Disinterested Blaggards

By: on November 9, 2019

Disclaimer. I use all the following products wth a sense of deep guilt. However, that guilt is not quite deep enough to eradicate these products from my life. Please accept my (almost)apology in advance. I must say, for a man who spends his life in economics, teaching business, attending prestigious company boards and making vast…

10 responses

Google, God, and Millennials

By: on November 9, 2019

When my daughter was young and she wanted something that I told her we could not afford, she would simply reply, “just go to the ATM, Mom”.  To my young daughter, born in the early 1980s, money was something that came out of the machine with the press of a few numbers, not something you…

8 responses

The Need for Stuff Is Real…But At What Cost?

By: on November 9, 2019

The Four is a raw book about the four tech giants that play a major role in today’s society. I found it interesting that the author related these four companies to the Four Horseman in the Bible. I also thought it fascinating that the author noted that these giants exist because of consumer demand. The…

10 responses