DLGP

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

I’m Not Ready To Commit, But…

By: on November 30, 2017

…I think I’d like to try dating Progressive Pentecostalism. It’s not like I’m simply church “shopping.” It’s more that I am looking for a community that I can spend my life with, that makes my heart race with the presence of the Spirit, and makes me want to put in the work of building community.…

14 responses

Doing Good Theology

By: on November 30, 2017

Stanley Grenz and Roger Olson’s Who Needs Theology is a clear and accessible book for anyone who wants to deconstruct their worldview of modern religiosity, church jargon, and legalism and find out how they can understand and participate in good theology that fits God’s plan for their lives.  To accomplish this goal, the authors use…

9 responses

Something we should not be afraid of…

By: on November 30, 2017

A little background is probably necessary.  I did not find faith in Christ until I was 30 years old.  I bought my first bible soon after, joined a bible study for men, made friends who were unlike most people I had hung around with most of my life.  One of these men became a very…

11 responses

The Big “T”

By: on November 30, 2017

        In this ever changing world, it seems that nothing is stable anymore, including the very nature of theology itself. After all, how do you define something in a world that works so diligently to redefine everything? However, this is exactly what Stanley J. Grenz, a minister and co-author of  25 different theological books, and…

6 responses

Everyone is a Theologian? Probably, but not very deeply.

By: on November 30, 2017

Experience has taught me most Montana people want to know your theology, but could care little if you are a Theologian. I don’t get the feeling they are much opposed to the title, but the word Theologian is old school for most, and smacks of someone who is a little too smart for us regular…

13 responses

Eye of a needle

By: on November 30, 2017

“Who Needs Theology?” question Stanley Grenz and Roger Olson in their book by the same title. It’s a rhetorical question. They want you to answer, “We all do!” And it’s true, we do. The book, an IVP Academic publication, seems written for the mass market with Peanuts cartoon illustrations beginning almost every chapter. It was…

15 responses

Contextualizing Theology

By: on November 30, 2017

In Stanley Grenz and Roger Olson’s book “Who Needs Theology?”, the question that is asked, is not rhetorical, or unanswerable. The authors set out to show that “everybody” needs theology. They orient themselves in this helpful, beginner’s guide, by suggesting that “everyone is a theologian”. They write that, “every person must at some point in…

9 responses

“Theology For Everyone”

By: on November 30, 2017

At John Knox Church, I have the privilege of leading a staff of 7 ministry directors and another pastor, and we meet once a week for a couple hours, for prayer, formation, and work. A couple years ago we read and discussed this book together as a staff. Some of the staff members have formal…

10 responses

Is It Just the Pentecostals? Global movement

By: on November 30, 2017

Pentecostals were referred to during my times as ‘holiness’ people. They played loud guitars and drums while jumping and dancing around. They had to be able to speak in tongues and stayed in the church for hours. At least that is what we were told. My first experience with the holiness church was at the…

11 responses

Does This Mean I’m a Pentecostal?

By: on November 30, 2017

Have I shared this story before? If so, it bears repeating because it is one of my favorites from our time in Turkana. It goes something like this: While chatting with Turkana church leaders about New Testament miracles, Kip mentioned Jesus and his early followers raising people from the dead. But that doesn’t seem to…

8 responses

What do I believe? Consequences of the Enlightenment for the Church

By: on November 30, 2017

It would be foolish to deny the need for a well-established theology lest the faithful prove themselves to be nothing more than “….children, tossed to and fro and blown about by every wind of doctrine, by people’s trickery, by their craftiness in deceitful scheming.” (Ephesians 4:14 NRSV)  While few may claim the title of ‘Theologian’ for themselves,…

11 responses

I am a theologian!

By: on November 30, 2017

I am a theologian!  Or at least that’s what Grenz and Olson will try to convince the reader of in Who Needs Theology.  “Anyone who reflects on life’s ultimate questions – including questions about God and our relationship with God – is a theologian.”[1]  Most reviewers found the text to be a worthwhile, albeit a…

4 responses

Search for Meaning

By: on November 30, 2017

I would be so happy if I was never born so I would not have to face all the suffering, disappointment and trials that come with this life. Anti-natalist[1] philosopher David Benatar argues life would be better if we were not born and it is our duty to not bring any children into this world.…

10 responses

Constructing a Theology of Missions

By: on November 30, 2017

In their book Who Needs Theology?: An Invitation to the Study of God, Stanley J. Grenz and Roger E. Olson explain that contextual theology is constructed by “bringing our understanding of Scripture, our cognizance of our heritage, and our reading of our cultural context into a creative trialogue.”[1] All three have a voice, though not…

10 responses

Our Personal Study of God

By: on November 29, 2017

Grenz and Olson’s book, Who Needs Theology?: An Invitation to the Study of God, was an interesting read. I like the fact that they are attempting to demystify this concept of theology and help the average Christian realize that they are more of a theologian than they realize. The authors say they “want to close…

11 responses

Not Simply a Set of Beliefs; It’s an Experience!

By: on November 28, 2017

At the very beginning of Global Pentecostalism: The New Face of Christian Social Engagement authors Miller and Yamamori state: “Pentecostalism is not simply a set of beliefs; it’s an experience.”[1] In this one sentence they sum up the whole of the book and in many ways, the reason for the growth of the Pentecostal movement,…

8 responses

Progressive Pentecostals and Social Change

By: on November 28, 2017

“For Pentecostals, worship provides the opportunity to experience an alternative reality. It is a moment when mind and body can potentially connect; it is a space in which worshippers imagine impossible possibilities; it is a time when they are filled with new hope and desire for a better world.”[1] I have spent much of my…

9 responses

Writing History, Not Studying It

By: on November 28, 2017

Pentecostals have begun to model their behavior after a Jesus who both preached about the coming kingdom and healed people and ministered to their social needs.[1]   Donald Miller and Tetsunao Yamamori were having dinner at a restaurant in the Philippines when a ‘marriage made in Heaven occurred’. Miller who had written on fast-growing, non-mainline…

6 responses

Pondering Questions on Pentecostalism

By: on November 27, 2017

To be truthful, I cringed just reading the title of this book: Global Pentecostalism. It is my humble opinion, we need to stop compartmentalizing Christians with labels like “Pentecostal” and “conservative” and start seeing each Christian as a valuable member of the body. As Christians, we are all in need of the transforming power of…

9 responses

The Case for Holistic Missions

By: on November 26, 2017

As someone who regularly interacts with missionaries, studies missiology, and leads outreach ministries in my own city, I have witnessed the development of a new type of strategy for both overseas missions and local church work. Before discussing this new strategy, let me first address some of the strategies that evangelical Protestants have employed:  …

8 responses