DLGP

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

Thank You Pastor Fuller.

By: on September 16, 2024

Right out of the gate…I have two honest confessions. Firstly, I did NOT incorporate Jim Wallis’ God Politics into this post (although I read it entirely and enjoyed it thoroughly…so much so that I just finished reading his latest book The False White Gospel!). My apologies to Mr. Wallis. I am deeply grateful for his…

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Brett Fuller and Jim Wallis: Two Prophetic Voices for America today

By: on September 16, 2024

Brett Fuller’s Dreaming in Black and White[1] In his book Bishop Brett Fuller shares how racism impacted his own family and how their response helped them to rise above the feelings of anger associated with it.  Fuller shares how racism is systemically built into our nations systems.  Fuller makes a call for reconciliation and how…

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We Are the Ones We Are Waiting For

By: on September 16, 2024

This past Thursday evening, Brad and I sat in Hoover auditorium with a small group of professors, students and community members listening to Michael Wear give a lecture on his newest book, The Spirit of our Politics[1].  Michael wrote his profound and hope-filled book for those who are discouraged and exhausted by bitterness and rage in…

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Putting Faith into Action

By: on September 16, 2024

This post will discuss two authors whose works challenge readers to think and act in ways that seem contrary to conventional politics. Brett E. Fuller is a Christian pastor, author, who also serves as chaplain for the Washington Football Team. High Ceilings: Women In Leadership, offers a different perspective regarding  where and how women are…

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DC Bound

By: on September 16, 2024

It’s hard to believe we’re preparing for our final advance. It seems like only yesterday when I arrived in Cape Town with NO IDEA what to expect. I remember thinking the 3rd year students were so… advanced. And that this was going to be an exceptionally long process. However, this program has sped by, and…

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Three Books, Three inspectional summaries + questions

By: on September 16, 2024

Dreaming in Black and White In Dreaming in Black and White, pastor, NFL football chaplain, and author Brett Fuller wants his black and white readers to build bridges to one another. He wants his white readers to understand the history of African Americans in the U.S. with empathy and compassion. He wants to help them…

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Questions for the Authors

By: on September 16, 2024

I loved the inspectional readings for this week. I found myself agreeing with both authors time and time again and look forward to our advance to hear their lectures in person. I will certainly be diving back into these books to read them completely. This blog will overview this week’s readings and posit some questions…

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Three Tough Topics

By: on September 16, 2024

As I read through the assigned readings, I found it difficult to simply do an inspectional reading. All three texts gave much to ponder regarding racial injustice, women in leadership, and the great polarizing effect of church and politics. I will start with the books written by Brett E. Fuller. I must admit, I come…

9 responses

Life-changing. Not for me. So much yes.

By: on September 16, 2024

  Brett Fuller is Senior Pastor at Grace Covenant Church in Chantilly, VA. He serves as Chaplain to the NFL’s Washington Football Team now known as the Commanders, and has served on President Bush’s Advisory Board for Historically Black Colleges and Universities. He is known for his efforts in and emphasis on Christian peacemaking and…

8 responses

Planning to Win.

By: on September 15, 2024

Basically, How to Win For this particular reading or blogpost assignment, I have picked the book by Sun Tsu, “The Art of War.” It is claimed to have been written around the 5th Century BCE by a Chinese military strategist by the name Sun Tsu, and it said that the original text was written on…

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I Will Know How Much You Love Me by How You Treat Them

By: on September 15, 2024

This week’s assignment brings continued thoughts about power and dominance over those who are disenfranchised following my recent blog on John Wesley’s book, Thoughts Upon Slavery. Authors Jim Wallis and Brett Fuller bring meaningful and unique viewpoints that combine Biblical and historical reflections with contemporary ideas on leadership and justice. Jim Wallis, who wrote God’s…

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Leadership as Practice of Abiding in Christ

By: on September 13, 2024

When asked to choose a book about leadership that has been in print for at least 300 years, it was interesting to search and not find anything that was explicitly stated as a leadership book. It got me thinking about how, in the Christian tradition that I’m familiar with, there was much more emphasis placed…

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The delicate balance of Leadership and Humility

By: on September 13, 2024

  As I enter my final year of Doctoral work on Leadership, I am left with more questions than answers.  We began our studies with a profound quote from our professor that I have found myself repeating to others; “As the island of our knowledge grows, so does the shore of our ignorance.”[1] Studying leaders…

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Leadership That Imitates Christ: Reflections on The Theological Insights of Thomas A. Kempis

By: on September 12, 2024

The book I selected for this week’s assignment is The Imitation of Christ by Thomas Kempis. This is a Christian devotional book first composed in Medieval Latin as De Imitatione Christi (c. 1418–1427). The devotional text is divided into four books of detailed spiritual instructions: (i) “Helpful Counsels of the Spiritual Life”, (ii) “Directives for the Interior Life”, (iii) “On Interior Consolation”, and…

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Exploring Leadership Through Plato’s Republic

By: on September 12, 2024

In his introduction to Athanasius’ On the Incarnation, C.S. Lewis recommended reading old books. He contended, “ Every age has its own outlook. It is specially good at seeing certain truths and specially liable to make certain mistakes. We all, therefore, need the books that will correct the characteristic mistakes of our own period. And…

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The Prince and Tupac!

By: on September 12, 2024

A Playbook for Power and Position! Introduction The Prince was written over five hundred years ago by Niccolo Machiavelli after his political career was brought to an abrupt end and he was imprisoned. He authored the book hoping it would help restore him to power. It is a book that can still be considered relevant…

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A Call to Deviation

By: on September 12, 2024

  It has been said, history has a way of repeating itself. Who would ever imagine that a book published three hundred years ago could still find relevance today? Oh, I forgot-we are in Seminary….. Let me clear this up, what book other than the Bible??….. An argument can be made that books having long…

13 responses

Simplicity

By: on September 12, 2024

I recall seeing Brother Lawrence’s The Practice of the Presence of God mentioned by Ruth Haley Barton, Richard Foster, Henri Nouwen and others. If leadership really is influence, then Brother Lawrence was a great leader, having influenced so many of these important authors on the topic of spiritual formation. I admit to struggling in the…

18 responses

Create the Monastery Where You Would Live

By: on September 12, 2024

When I saw that Jason was requiring us to read a book over 300 years old, I was automatically taken back to Oxford when Dr. Martyn Percy asked our DLGP cohorts to name a significant work over 300 years old that is still in print. Several works were named by us before he revealed one…

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Agricola: Leadership Lessons From History?

By: on September 12, 2024

History has long provided innumerable examples of leaders, some virtuous and others despotic. Whether upright or cruel, the recorded life stories of history’s leaders offer insight into the past, wisdom for the present, and a cautionary voice for the future (as history often repeats itself). The biography Agricola was written in AD 98 by the Roman…

12 responses