DLGP

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

Asado in Argentina

By: on September 18, 2019

Opening to the world, the beauty and artistry and history in all of its cultural diversity, continues to be a process for me. Unfathomable to recall that there was a time that I believed everyone thinks the same way and sees the world just like me, despite going to an international school growing up and…

11 responses

Becoming Less Muzungu

By: on September 17, 2019

Muzungu. This is one of the first words I heard come out of the mouths of children running down dusty, bumpy roads as I traveled to home visits for my sponsored children when visiting Rwanda the first time. Extracting exactly what it meant depended on whom I spoke with. Some mentioned it meant a person…

8 responses

Achieving without trust leaves for an empty net

By: on September 16, 2019

I am an advocate for not going alone. Entrepreneurs that I have met, typically, hold their paths to success close to the vest. It’s a shame because the output from two kindred entrepreneurial spirits working together can be incredible. That goes for entrepreneurial-minded congregational leaders. Trust is an experience that creates powerful momentum compounding other…

8 responses

Design Thinking Across Cultures – Receiving Egalitarian Thought in a Hierarchical Culture

By: on September 16, 2019

With my working title defining me as “Team Leader for International Missions Innovation,” Erin Meyer’s The Culture Map provides applicable insight. My R&D team exists “to innovate and expand opportunities to further God’s Kingdom around the world.” Working with people from differing cultures along Meyer’s eight continuums of cultural differences is a large part of…

6 responses

Side by Side

By: on September 15, 2019

  “I will be dead before I see the Ring in the hands of an Elf!” – Gimli, son of Gloin, The Fellowship of the Ring (movie adaptation)   In 2012, I made my first trip to Hong Kong to serve with a Christian organization that sends Christian teachers to closed nations in Asia to…

11 responses

Leadership in the context of business and social sector

By: on September 15, 2019

A culture of discipline is not a principle of business; it is a principle of greatness. This reminds me of King Solomon’s words of wisdom, “A good name is more desirable than great riches; to be esteemed is better than silver or gold.” (Proverbs 22:1) I come from a culture that was raised on a…

one response

Working in multicultural teams is messy

By: on September 15, 2019

Meyer, The Culture Map   The Culture Map is a very precise book that I have ever read on culture. Even though it’s base on an anthropological approach to the business world, the book has many applicable insides that are very helpful for those working on a multicultural environment. First of all, when I was…

14 responses

Flywheels should never become Millstones.

By: on September 14, 2019

I had never read Good to Great and have always felt a bit like I missed out on digesting the principles of this oft-cited alleged inspirational leadership cult classic. Probably I should have covered this work within my MBA studies except that I completed my degree in 1982, and this source came out in 2001.…

9 responses

Dominus Illuminatio Mea

By: on September 14, 2019

School pride, Oxford has it. Perhaps school pride does not affect every school the way it does just a little for Oxford, the second oldest university in the world. The school can be a way in which students identify themselves. School colors are worn with pride; stories of founding and history are shared with reverence.…

2 responses

God vs Collins

By: on September 14, 2019

Allow me to apologise. What follows is hastily put together. It lacks references, bibliography and may be slightly incoherent. I am leaving the country in a matter of hours and I am so excited I’m currently performing La Macarena while typing. It is not a visual symphony. I, however, do not care. In the beginning.…

15 responses

Humility Has Value In Every And Any Place.

By: on September 14, 2019

“Humble yourselves before God and you’ll be exalted[1]” is a cardinal rule for the success of the godly, coupled with diligence and could not have been a clearer advice to a wise and discerning leader than it is in Jim Collins (2017) book[2]. The title Good to great at the onset might suggest otherwise, especially…

4 responses

Good to Great Children’s Ministry

By: on September 13, 2019

painted stones with Scripture Children’s ministry is sometimes the stepchild of the church. Observations from a Facebook group on resources for children’s ministry show complaints of low budgets, scarce resources of all kinds, including lack of volunteers, and lack of dedicated spaces in buildings. Of course, this is not true for all churches. Many of the large churches make…

5 responses

Rinse and Pay Attention

By: on September 13, 2019

There are many helpful lessons in Jim Collins’ research and writing. Good to Great offers practical help to those who are looking for ways to distinguish their organizations as thriving rather than simply surviving. However, more insight is gained when this book is paired with Collins’ companion work, How the Mighty Fall. These two books…

15 responses

Leader: Expert At Everything…NOT!

By: on September 13, 2019

I recently read a short story about leadership that intrigued me. It was thought-provoking and powerful in many ways because it helps put our role as ‘leaders’ into perspective.                 Judas Iscariot had…                                 The best pastor                                 The best leader                                 The best advisor                                 The best counselor            …

7 responses

Hospitality Then Greatness

By: on September 13, 2019

When I was in college my friends and I used to say, “why strive for excellence when mediocrity will do?” For the most part it was a joke deployed at something that was clearly the result of not trying hard enough. The focus, effort, and sacrifice necessary to reach excellence are things most people are…

9 responses

On Oxford, Exhaustion, and Discernment

By: on September 13, 2019

In 2 weeks, I’ll be embarking on a learning adventure for my Leadership of Global Perspectives Doctorate of Ministry program. This adventure will require full sensory attentiveness to the fast-paced cosmopolitan city of London, as well as the historically nostalgic streets Oxford. While I’m giddy to visit both, Oxford has captivated my imagination ever since…

7 responses

This Bus Isn’t Going Anywhere Until You Can Get Along!

By: on September 13, 2019

Just over a week ago I was catching up with longtime friends who are also in ministry. They are in the midst of transitioning into a new church and we were reflecting on our various congregations over the last few years. At one point I shared this comparison. (Now I want to qualify this with…

4 responses

Tchotchkes and Greatness

By: on September 12, 2019

Last year, the president of our University retired. He was at the university for a total of 43 years and had worked his way up from our facilities team through student life, to the VP of Student Life and then to the Presidency. While it was a long journey, it was one full of legacy…

10 responses

Measuring Greatness

By: on September 12, 2019

There is an overwhelming amount of things to reflect on from Jim Collins for our leadership and ministry assimilation. It feels as if his research and concepts have been a part of all of my ministry leadership years. And it basically has been. I could start with just the title of Good to Great and dive…

6 responses