DLGP

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

What Image Has Shaped Your Faith?

By: on September 13, 2014

Growing up I could remember having this painting hanging on the wall across from my bed. And every night, my mother reminded me that Jesus will always protect me. I can remember gazing at this picture until I fell asleep. I was comforted knowing that if at any time during the night I was afraid,…

6 responses

In Jesus’ Name

By: on September 13, 2014

We live in a 21st century world inundated with images. Billboards, magazines, television, the Internet, and the large screens in large churches blast out image-laden messages that call us to change, to think, to buy their products. We are used to these images, so much so that we take them for granted. And who hasn’t…

9 responses

It is All in the Gaze

By: on September 12, 2014

I have enjoyed a new experience in our reading the last two weeks. In Visual Faith: Art, Theology and Worship in Dialogue, William Dyrness awakened a sense of the richness of the visual in worship. Dyrness presented a two-fold stimulus for engaging the visual arts: on the one hand, art enhances the worship experience providing…

12 responses

Vanilla Jesus

By: on September 12, 2014

There are many things in life that I don’t understand. I don’t understand the purpose of the church (I know! I’m a pastor, but I struggle with church). I don’t understand why Jesus is almost always portrayed as a beautiful white man… even by non- whites. Finally, I don’t understand why Christians are driven and…

8 responses

Seeing is Believing: Much Ado about Something

By: on September 12, 2014

(“Home – Morning Coffee While Reading Ionesco’s Rhinoceros:  A Study in Brown & ‘Texturality.'”) The above is an image and its title that I posted earlier this week on my Instagram and Facebook accounts.  I really liked all of the varied shades of brown, textures, and lines involved.  But, what I really want you to…

5 responses

Learning to meditate

By: on September 12, 2014

  Growing up in a church context where religious visuals are not part of the tradition, both our last week’s reading on visual faith by William Dyrness and this week’s reading by David Morgan, The Sacred Gaze: Religious Visual Culture in Theory and Practice have stretched my perception about visuals in the Christians worship. After…

10 responses

Blank

By: on September 12, 2014

Art is a reflection of culture. Art is demonstrated in many mediums: narrative (story), music, poetry, visual, and performance. And what is culture? “Culture refers to the cumulative deposit of knowledge, experience, beliefs, values, attitudes, meanings, hierarchies, religion, notions of time, roles, spatial relations, concepts of the universe, and material objects and possessions acquired by…

14 responses

A Snapshot in Time

By: on September 12, 2014

Stevens said, “Humans do not live in a place but in the description of one.”[1] This quote has caused me to stop and reflect on my own worldview. At one time it seemed that my surroundings were defined by some preset order of things, but this is not the case. The environment does not define…

5 responses

Visual Ethnography

By: on September 12, 2014

Before reading Pink’s book, Doing Visual Ethnography, it helped me to understand first what ethnography is about. Knowing that it is the systematic study of people and cultures helped to provide me with a better context in order to understand the concepts that Pink covered. There are entire fields of study given towards understanding social…

10 responses

Visual Ethno-what?

By: on September 12, 2014

When I ordered the book Doing Visual Ethnography by Sarah Pink, I was not sure what to expect. I had never heard the term “visual ethnography”, so I began to search for a good working definition. I discovered that there are schools, like Leiden University that offer specialties in Visual Ethnography. Apparently it is something…

11 responses

They Are Just Images, Aren’t They?

By: on September 11, 2014

“Visual images are powerful creations indeed. For into the depths of one soul does the image fall, impacting the very essence of the man.” From those images that offer “the poignant evocation”[1] of an experience to those that train us in transcendences-ness, all images are powerful causing emotions that lead us to passion, love, and…

10 responses

Channeling Quaker Roots

By: on September 11, 2014

As I told you last week, I grew up as a part of the Quaker faith at Springfield Friends Meeting in High Point, North Carolina. My mom was a member there. So was her mother and father. So were their mothers and fathers. So were their mothers and fathers. And so were their mothers and…

9 responses

Looking for God

By: on September 11, 2014

The Sacred Gaze: Religious Visual Culture in Theory and Practice This past year, my father asked me to give him “a picture of God.” As someone who hasn’t shadowed the door of a church for around three decades, I was pleasantly surprised to hear his request. However, I was more surprised that he assumed I…

7 responses

The Great Optometrist

By: on September 11, 2014

I ordered new glasses. It’s not really news worthy, as the lens prescription hasn’t changed and the new frames will likely have little difference from the old ones. By my calculations, this is the fifteenth time that I’ve ordered a new pair of glasses. I’ve averaged a new pair every two years for the last…

15 responses

Uncomfortable Gazes

By: on September 11, 2014

Last spring, I traveled to Porcupine, South Dakota on the Pine Ridge Reservation to work with my Lakota friends. On this trip, I had the opportunity to visit a Catholic school where I wandered the halls till I came across a display case that held several icons of Jesus and Mary. Enjoying sacred art, I…

7 responses

Honest about my Lens

By: on September 10, 2014

Two thoughts come to mind in reading Pink’s book, Doing Visual Ethnography: First, her work parallels the movement of the modern world to the post-modern world by articulating the argument that anthropologists have had over the years of how to make the best observation of culture: scientific-realist vs. reflexive. In an exploratory manner, she gently opens…

19 responses

I think I did visual ethnography, maybe?

By: on September 10, 2014

I think I did visual ethnography—or at least a homespun version of it—but I just didn’t know it.  When I was a teenager I spent four summers with a group called Teen Missions International (TMI). TMI sends teams of teenagers around the world on mission projects; some of those projects are primarily construction while others are…

12 responses

Painfully Reading about Visual Ethnography

By: on September 10, 2014

Painfully Reading about Visual Ethnography Before reading Sarah Pink’s book, Doing Visual Ethnography, I would have to admit, I had never heard specifically of ethnography.  Anthropology, yes.  Cultural studies, yes.  Sociology, yes.  But ethnography, not so much.  So first, I found this book to be helpful in opening my eyes to a new field, or…

5 responses

GIDDY

By: on September 10, 2014

I’m reflecting on the arrival of my first batch of books for this semester.  That happy little brown box with the smiley symbol emblazoned across the front always brings me joy when it arrives and in this case, the joy was a little more pronounced than usual.  It was also accompanied by another sensation I…

8 responses