DLGP

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

Confessions of A Confused Believer

By: on March 6, 2015

Honestly, it seemed so much simpler forty years ago. Sexual topics were little discussed in the church and there was wide spread consensus on many of the issues back then. With the coming of the sixties, issues concerning gender, sex and family were thrust into the forefront of the church’s attention and today have become…

11 responses

Standing on the Mercies of God

By: on March 6, 2015

What I love about all of the books we are reading, is that we are exposed to and learning about the other sides of conversations that too often homogeneous Christians have only had with themselves, either choosing to ignore or simply being ignorant that there even is another side. It seems that we continue to…

7 responses

Brown Bag Reading

By: on March 6, 2015

All of our readings have been important in this LGP program. Some have been easier than others and some have been more helpful than others. I will re-read some of these texts, and I will sell others. However, this week’s readings have a unique place all their own. Even as I am writing this early-morning…

11 responses

Reflective Thinking and Deliberative Theolog

By: on March 6, 2015

I struggled to work my way through Adrian Thatcher’s book, God, Sex, and Gender: An Introduction. I am sure the cover of the book is some magnificent piece of artwork, although I could not find any credits in my copy; it was not a book I wanted to leave visible either on the computer screen…

9 responses

For Me Or For The Masses?

By: on March 6, 2015

For me or for the masses? Sometimes we do things for the greater good, in support of a cause that reaches farther than our own little “first place” environments.  Other times, we do things simply because it’s what we want to do, because it makes us better or, at least, to feel better.  So, while…

10 responses

Counter Culture to the Cave

By: on March 6, 2015

Counter culture to the Cave March 5, 15 I am in love with the “Rebel Sell” it reaches the reality of what some people think about the normalcy of how things are done. It is amazing how it is so easy to accept the way things are done and how things are handed to you.…

27 responses

Hoping for Wholeness

By: on March 6, 2015

Gender. Sex. Sexuality. Sexual identity. Gender identity. I taught this class last week. Really. I did. Every time I do, it prompts deep debates. How are men and women different biologically? Is my biological identity the same as my gender identity? Is gender a social construct? Why does the topic of sex freak us out?…

15 responses

Is Freedom Real?

By: on March 6, 2015

Potter and Heath’s book, The Rebel Sell: Why the Culture Can’t Be Jammed, takes an interesting look at North American culture. The authors argue, “Decades of countercultural rebellion have failed to change anything because the theory of society on which the countercultural idea rests is false.” [1] In other words, they assert that there is…

18 responses

Listening, Offering, Conversions

By: on March 6, 2015

Scripture, the word of God has a way of reading us, perhaps even more than we read it. Scripture is not reserved within the content of a book, it is expressed; it is sharper than a two-edged sword. I have yearned to live a life in accordance with God’s word. It seems that God has…

8 responses

Stock-Up!

By: on March 5, 2015

In their book The Rebel Sell: Why the Culture Can’t Be Jammed, Joseph Heath and Andrew Potter address some of the myths surrounding the countercultural movement. They state, “traditional political activism is useless”[1], giving numerous example of how the very attempt to force the system or cultural to change actually became part of the system…

11 responses

And They’ll Know We are Christians By Our Love

By: on March 5, 2015

We are one in the Spirit, we are one in the Lord, We are one in the Spirit, we are one in the Lord, And we pray that all unity may one day be restored.   Refrain And they’ll know we are Christians by our love, by our love, Yes, they’ll know we are Christians…

7 responses

Rebel, Radical, or Real

By: on March 5, 2015

I imagine Heath and Potter may have lost some of their left-leaning friends as they attempted to expose how the anti-consumerism, counter-cultural movement since WW2 didn’t live up to its billing and in fact likely added to the furtherance of consumer capitalism. It’s important to understand their thesis: “. . . that counter cultural movements…

11 responses

Labels

By: on March 5, 2015

Labels are interesting things. We don’t necessarily like them for ourselves, but we would lost during the course of a day, if everything else didn’t have them. Labels do primarily two things. One in large print, where they identify the object and secondly, in smaller print, it will likely tell you about their contents, that…

8 responses

Orientating one’s way with love

By: on March 5, 2015

“All God needs are willing hearts to extend his unconditional love for all of his children – gay and straight. This is our blessing. This is our bold calling. This is our orientation.” [i] I have to admit, when I picked up Marin’s book, Love Is An Orientation, I did not have high expectations. What…

8 responses

God, Sex, and Gender

By: on March 5, 2015

“Some people think same sex marriage is wrong,” said my one of the student in Peace and Justice class at GFEF a couple of years ago. This person spoke confidently and passionately as someone who cares for all kinds of social justice issues. I was shocked, not simply because I disagree with the students claim…

8 responses

Disentangling Culture

By: on March 5, 2015

Today, starting with the first of three field research interviews this month, I start with an introduction in order to ask a question, “When I was young, I wanted to look older. Now that I’m older, I want to look young. Why does it feel so good to have someone tell me, ‘Oh my, you…

16 responses

Countercultural

By: on March 5, 2015

While in South Africa I was determined to bring home some good gifts for my family. With the Waterfront Shopping Center just a couple minutes walk away I knew I would have plenty of options. During my first walk through the Waterfront I was amazed to see all the similar stores that I’d find back…

5 responses

Armchair Quarterbacks?

By: on March 5, 2015

While Joseph Heath and Andrew Potter tell an entertaining tale of the emergence and ultimate reverse-effect of the Counterculture and anti-mass society movements of the 1960’s thru today, it seems many a cheap shot was taken at those who have actually been on the playing field, addressing and attempting great social change, by a couple…

9 responses

Mapping the Sacred in a Secular Age

By: on March 3, 2015

Charles Taylor’s gift as a cartographer takes the reader on a journey to track the move from some elite unbelief in the eighteenth century to mass secularization in the twenty-first century. He does this by introducing religious forms at different stages.  He begins with the “ancient regime” form. This is where there is an inextricable…

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