DLGP

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

Behind the Door

By: on January 22, 2015

It’s been over eight years since one of the most significant conversations that I’ve ever had. I had driven two hours from my home to visit with one of my mentors. We went for lunch and then took a walk around the campus at the Bible College where he teaches. Our conversation that day had…

9 responses

Attentive Awareness

By: on January 22, 2015

In an effort to build relationships between a particular local non-profit and the church in which I worked, I asked the Executive Director and her Senior Project Manager to meet the Senior Pastor and Executive Pastor. When Karen and Marsha, both women, walked into the room with me, we encountered the two pastors, both men,…

7 responses

Leaders Helping others in the Sandbox

By: on January 22, 2015

Leaders Helping others in the Sandbox   January 21, 15   MaryKate really hit on some major issues that I have faced years ago and even now. I can’t even begin to speak about how many areas that are so relevant to my life now and even in the work I am doing here at…

10 responses

A Guidebook to Prayer

By: on January 22, 2015

Reading A Guidebook to Prayer by MaryKate made me reflect on my prayer experience. Prayer has been an important part of my journey with God. I first learned how to pray from my grandmother who prayed aloud every morning and evening. She never asked me to pray with her, but I remember kneeling next to…

13 responses

Don’t Judge a Book by it’s “Topic”

By: on January 21, 2015

My initial thought when seeing the “title” for our next read in class was to think this would be a leadership book for the soul. Without reading it, I would have labeled it as probably a good book to go on a “soul journey” that would have some type of “restorative” affect on your personhood.  …

12 responses

Power Drain

By: on January 21, 2015

The infamous “they” need to start teaching entire seminary courses on power.   It seems to me that Jesus—who had all power and authority, used it for others, and did not abuse it—could have zapped all those religious hypocrites with a single command. The image that comes to my mind is a Tolkien-created Elven princess who was tempted…

8 responses

Nationalism by Vernacularization

By: on January 21, 2015

Nationalism by Vernacularization   After finding that this book was a little hard to read at times it had some important concepts to think about. I realized that nationalism is connected to languages that are more popular than others. And this is really something to think about in more areas of life than one. Unity…

2 responses

Decision Making

By: on January 18, 2015

David Brooks, in his book The Social Animal: The Hidden Sources of Love, states, “We are primarily the products of thinking that happens below the level of awareness.”[1] Who we are comes from our subconscious rather than the conscious part of our minds. According to Brooks, the subconscious mind is where we make most of…

8 responses

We Are All Crazy Emotional People!

By: on January 17, 2015

“There are two ways of seeing: with the body and with the soul. The body’s sight can sometimes forget, but the soul remembers forever.” ― Alexandre Dumas, The Count of Monte Cristo             I am a romantic. I love love stories. I love movies that are based on true stories. Historical epics, life documentaries, tear…

12 responses

Who We Are

By: on January 17, 2015

Julia and Rob, Harold and Erica, Harrison, Raymond and Richard Grace, cultures and ambition, generations and maturing, descriptions of the flow and ebb of life are integrated within the pages of The Social Animal by David Brooks. I am thankful that Brooks has taken the time to interweave the nuts and bolts of information and…

14 responses

Where I’m From

By: on January 16, 2015

In his well-written book, The Social Animal[1], David Brooks does a terrific job of explaining the human condition as it really is in all its humanity and bases his input on lots of rich research. I enjoyed the book and Brook’s style. I especially enjoyed his characters and how he develops their lives. So does…

8 responses

You Reap What You Sow…

By: on January 16, 2015

Community: the thing that shapes us into the people we are and become. Community: the one thing that most of us want, but aren’t willing to fight for. Community: a romantic notion of doing life with people, but in reality it’s hard, messy and often difficult to attain. We like the idea of community, but…

10 responses

Why We Do What We Do!

By: on January 16, 2015

A few years ago, I sat in my campus ministry office talking with a young man who was having relationship problems. Over the next couple hours he poured out his heart, confessing to many sordid activities that he had been involved in. Now, I didn’t grow up in a protected environment, but what I was…

7 responses

Unconscious Connections

By: on January 16, 2015

I must confess that when the first sentence in the introduction of a book begins with “this is the happiest story you’ve ever read,”[1] I can’t help but  be a bit skeptical. David Brooks, author of The Social Animal: The Hidden Source of Love, Character and Achievement begins his book with such a sentence. Now,…

8 responses

Exploration

By: on January 16, 2015

Last night while I was speaking in front of my class, one of my students did something that caught my eye. Tonight I can’t tell you what it was that my student did. It wasn’t anything significant or distracting. I just noticed it. It’s what followed that stuck with me. Without even directly looking at…

10 responses

Blame the Capitalists!

By: on January 16, 2015

Blame the Capitalists! There’s only so much room on this planet.  If a nation is to expand, or a new one emerge, some existing borders have to be shifted around a bit.  It’s just the nature of things.  It’s interesting to me to watch as (even as we speak) a new nation (Islamic State) is…

12 responses

Who do you identify with?

By: on January 16, 2015

Nationalism is a sentiment upon which common cultural characteristics bind a population and produces a national independence. It is also used to describe loyalty or devotion to one’s country.[1] Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism[2] by Benedict Anderson asserts that modern nations are the creation of communication networks and people’s imagination. The underlying…

10 responses

A life of conscious and unconscious relating

By: on January 16, 2015

I was born in a culture where thinking about your neighbor, sharing one’s life and possessions with others was part and parcel of the air we breathed in the village. I am using the term village to mean my family, relative and friends who helped raise, nurture and prepare me for life, thus the proverbial…

12 responses

Imagine This!

By: on January 16, 2015

Anderson’s Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism investigates a concept of nationalism that most people, while living out the reality, rarely consciously think about. I have traveled to many different countries and have found that there is an almost universal pride in one’s nationality. Even people who disagree with their government’s…

8 responses