DLGP

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

Do You Remember These Children Games? Follow the Leader, Simon Says …

By: on March 23, 2017

ART is based on one’s opinion. It is the imagination and philosophy of the designer. It is defined by the Merriam-Webster dictionary as: skill acquired by experience, study, or observation, a branch of learning, an occupation requiring knowledge or skill, the conscious use of skill and creative imagination, or  decorative or illustrative elements in printed…

7 responses

Can You Change Your Biblical Doctrine?

By: on March 23, 2017

  As we ended our Zoom session last Monday, Dr. Mary Pandiani challenged us with this haunting question, “Can you change your biblical doctrine?” Of course, I also heard in my head the implied follow-up question, “If yes, what would it take for you to change it?”  I couldn’t help but notice that her provocation…

8 responses

There Is Now No Condemnation . . .

By: on March 23, 2017

Andrew Marin—Love Is An Orientation: Elevating the Conversation With the Gay Community Introduction “Andrew Marin founded the Marin Foundation for the purpose of systematically building a bridge between the broader gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender (GLBT) and conservative Christian communities through scientific research and biblical and social education.” [1] The net result being peaceful, productive, and sustainable…

6 responses

The Art of Church Leadership

By: on March 23, 2017

I just finished Leadership is an Art by Max DePree. DePree is the former CEO of Herman Miller, a very successful furniture maker and retailer that was founded by DePree’s father. Even though DePree served in the Army during WW2, his management style has no resemblance to a militaristic, heavy-handed hierarchy. In Leadership is an…

9 responses

Build Leaders, Not Knuckleheads

By: on March 22, 2017

Jam packed with leadership tips, truths, and morsels, “The Art of Leadership” is an obvious choice for classic books on leadership. It’s timeless principles are applicable for leaders as it touches on the heart and spirit of a leader, as well as the head and logic of leadership. Leadership tidbits…  There were many useful take-aways…

10 responses

No Longer Closed-ended

By: on March 22, 2017

In my last semester of full academic work and the last blog posting for the semester, it seems appropriate for another controversial interpretation of sexuality. Frankly, it’s ingenious of Dr. Jason Clark to have the cohort read about the secular age and then back to back readings on how the church interprets human sexuality. Homosexuality…

8 responses

“Leadership is an Art” by Max De Pree

By: on March 22, 2017

Max De Pree says that the art of leadership is “liberating people to do what is required of them in the most effective and humane way possible.” The leader is the “‘servant’ of his followers in that he removes the obstacles that prevent them for doing their jobs. In short, the true leader enables his…

6 responses

Stop the Fight, Understanding the Differences!

By: on March 22, 2017

Introduction The book Love Is an Orientation: Elevating the Conversation with the Gay Community by Andrew Marin exhibits the meaning of the Gospel’s real teaching. The book quotes Billy Graham, “It is the Holy Spirit’s job to convict, God’s job to judge, and my job to love,” to highlight its controlling idea that being loving…

8 responses

A Leader with a Heart: What a Novel Idea!

By: on March 22, 2017

De Pree, Max. Leadership Is an Art. New York: Currency, 2004. Summary Though leadership is not a new topic, leadership is a more recent research topic within academic circles. One outcome of research on leadership, and in fact one that has often held up leadership research as an academic discipline, is the inability to produce a…

8 responses

Informative but not Compelling

By: on March 17, 2017

Agender, androgynous, cisgender, genderqueer, intersex, transgender, bi-gender, male, female. These are the gender identities included in a recent issue from National Geographic entitled The Gender Revolution. In 2015, Frontline produced a documentary entitled Growing up Trans, which explored the lives of five families with transgender children, revealing the hormonal treatments available for children who desire…

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True Love Waits

By: on March 17, 2017

In 2011, Adrian Thatcher, now an Honorary Professor in the Department of Theology and Religion at the University of Exeter, UK, and Honorary Fellow in Medical Humanities in the Plymouth University Peninsula Schools of Medicine and Dentistry, UK., wrote his book God, Sex and Gender: An Introduction.[1]  He explored a subject that has always been a…

3 responses

Bad religion

By: on March 17, 2017

In this very interesting book, Douthat traces Christianity in America from its post-war golden years through its gradual decline over the following decades to the present day. He starts by highlighting four key figures that embodied this golden age: the intellectual Reinhold Niebuhr, the evangelical Billy Graham, the Catholic Bishop Fulton Sheen, and the African-America…

10 responses

To Douthat or Not to Douthat, That Is the Question

By: on March 17, 2017

My normal practice, when posting about the books we read for our DMin program, is to first read the reviews and articles about the book and the author. This week that may have been a bad choice. Before ever opening Bad Religion: How we became a nation of heretics, I was…well…I guess I’ll just say…

16 responses

A Cult of Sexuality

By: on March 16, 2017

Adrian Thatcher’s very thorough work, God, Sex and Gender: An Introduction dives into the 21st century world to offer a look at the sexual ethics we have and tries to bring a theological and historical understanding to the world of sexuality.  The author tackles this difficult subject with three main ideas: – To introduce students…

12 responses

Once Upon A Time- Faith in America

By: on March 16, 2017

“This is the real story of religion in America. For all its piety and fervor, today’s United States needs to be recognized for what it really is: not a Christian country, but a nation of heretics...”[1] Growing up as a young girl, I have seen a lot of fairy tales. Each fairy tale had strife,…

5 responses

Bad Religion, Heresy and my own, personal Jesus

By: on March 16, 2017

In his book Bad Religion New York Times Columnist Ross Douthat describes how, America has always inhabited a strange paradox of being formally secular, but also relying on religion – more heavily than almost any other Western world – to provide a moral framework for its citizens (Douthat, Kindle location 118), something has changed, however in our…

10 responses

ABC…..1,2,3….or is it SAVE?

By: on March 16, 2017

Introduction The Jackson 5 (of Michael Jackson fame) had a song in the 1970’s that said: “ABC, it’s as easy as 1-2-3, As simple as do re mi, ABC, 1-2-3, Baby you and me”.  Oh, how times have changed.  Now, it is not as simple as ABC or 1-2-3 or who gets to be “baby”…

12 responses

The Age of Cultural Christianity

By: on March 16, 2017

Two years into my doctoral program and the inescapable relational conversation is staring me in the face. Thatcher’s book God, Sex, and Gender dives into the sensitive sex talk, much similar to the one you will be engaging shortly. Yes, my cohort finally gets a chance to share our conviction on sexuality with clear, theological…

6 responses

Subject To Interpretation

By: on March 16, 2017

Summary: God, Sex, and Gender An Introduction by Adrian Thatcher is just that that on the subject, an introduction. The author introduces the issues, the ideas, and the connection between the three. Thatcher does a good job in clearly and in plain vernacular express the secular and the sacred positions as well as the historical…

11 responses