DLGP

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

Turn or burn

By: on February 25, 2013

Imagine a conversation I have with a non-christian friend from Germany, talking about my dissertation and my studies at george-fox EVANGELICAL seminary, Portand, USA… If I was asked by him about the EVANGELICAL in the name of the university I study at; if I was asked to define this „EVANGELICAL, what would I say? What…

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Consuming Missions

By: on February 24, 2013

With the advent and advancement of communication technology, the globe is networked and informed of every happening in real time.  The terror of 9/11, the Asian tsunami, the war in Iraq, famines in Africa or the recent incident of violence in Delhi that claimed the life of a young girl, are streamed into our living…

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Church Shopping

By: on February 22, 2013

Two days ago I was in a village in Central India.  We dedicated a small Life Center for the use of the Believers there. Village church buildings are called ‘Life Centers’ since it becomes a resource in the hands of the congregation to reach out to the community to meet various needs during the week.  New Believers…

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Lurking Dangers

By: on February 22, 2013

Value is in the heart of the beholder. Just about everything is marked with meaning and carries some level of value. Often times, value is ascribed to something that is sentimental. The value of something can have a major impact on culture or society at large. In some cases, it may not go any further…

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Man or Machine?

By: on February 22, 2013

Wayne Muller in his book Sabbath tells a story about Harvard President Neil Rudenstine oversleeping one morning in November of 1994.  For this zealous perfectionist, in the midst of a million-dollar-a-day fund raising campaign, it was cause for alarm.  After years of intensive, nonstop toil and struggle in an atmosphere that rewarded frantic busyness and…

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The Impact of Commodification of Discipleship

By: on February 21, 2013

Since the life of Christ, believers and churches have pursued the ministry of discipleship in obedience to the great commission text of Matthew 28:19-20 and out of the desire to bring back the King, Matthew 24:14.  Two dynamics have thwarted the ministry of discipleship.  The first was the clergy and laity division.  The idea that…

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Front Porches & Consuming Religion

By: on February 21, 2013

A few years ago, I had the privilege of participating in a golf tournament near Celebration, Florida.  This entirely planned community was built by and located near the fantasy land of Disney World.  After the tournament, the organizers shared the benefits of living in a community dedicated to relationships and then took us on tour…

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Consumer Spirituality

By: on February 21, 2013

Catholic theologian Vincent J. Miller unpacks the intersection of religion and consumerism in Consuming Religion: Christian Faith and Practice in a Consumer Culture.  The strong point to Miller’s sketch is the depth and breadth of how he draws late modern capitalism, globalization, postmodernism, and Western Christianity together to show how culture has become fully commoditized. …

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Christian Leaders Reinventing Community in a Consumer culture

By: on February 21, 2013

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Mosaic

By: on February 21, 2013

Last weekend I was able to join Nadia Bolz-Weber at the conference „Kirchehochzwei“ in Hannover, Germany and translate her keynote from english into german. She was invited as one of the main speakers to share her experience of her ministry at House for all Sinners and Saints, a ELCA-church she founded in Denver, Colorado. The…

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“Desiring to Desire”

By: on February 21, 2013

(Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs) In this writing I have decided to choose and explore a few concepts discussed by Vincent Jude Miller in his book Consuming Religion: Christian Faith and Practice in a Consumer Culture; those of need, desire, scarcity, and lack; and analyze how these might interact and manifest.  I will also briefly discuss…

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“Stunned”

By: on February 21, 2013

Today I was stunned. The first “stun” may seem small and stunned may be on overstatement. It was about choosing lights for a remodel in our church. We had to chose lights for a new foyer area. I was hoping to have very distinct lights, the design and color of which I first thought would…

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Baptist Doctrine to the Rescue!

By: on February 21, 2013

In “Consuming Religion,” Vincent J. Miller argues that the problem with a consumer culture and structure isn’t with belief but in its praxis. Nobody would argue that child exploitation for cheap products is good. A majority of folks active within Christianity can tell you what correct belief is, but that belief hasn’t trickled down to…

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Globalizing “Bad Religion”

By: on February 16, 2013

After reading Douthat’s book: Bad Religion: How We Became a Nation of Heretics, I am compelled to ask if the ‘bad religion’ of American Christianity is bad only for America? Has it left just America in a crisis?  In the wake of globalization, I believe this same version of Christianity has reached the urban shores…

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Pray and Grow Rich

By: on February 15, 2013

  The openness of Ross Douthat explains how America became a nation of heretics gives me a good understanding of the decline of Christianity. Although is difficult to relate to the American experience of Christianity through the years there are segments that many African Christians can relate. For many years, the evangelical main line churches…

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A Misinterpreted Agenda

By: on February 15, 2013

Maybe it is just me, but there seems to be a pungent sense amongst ministers today, and indeed in times past, with those preparing for the professional ministry and those who are already well seasoned, that we mostly focus on those things that divide instead of what unites us. In pursuing our various customized agendas,…

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“Douthat & Oprahdoxy”

By: on February 15, 2013

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rr_5wDmX3kY Oprahdoxy…is it as bad as Douthat imagines?  Has it turned U.S. Christians into throngs of heretics? In the book Bad Religion: How we Became a Nation of Heretics, Ross Douthat, a conservative Catholic journalist, writes a synopsis of the history of Christianity in its various forms and denominations from the 1950’s to the present.…

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Christianity Found Wanting

By: on February 15, 2013

Douthat’s Bad Religion: How We Became a Nation of Heretics is aserious review of the present condition  of Christianity in America.  Christianity which once had significant influence on American life and history has fallen from those heights.  It has now come face to face with its enemy.  Douthat points out that the enemy is not any external…

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Bad Religion Kills Churches Dead

By: on February 14, 2013

Ross Douthat in his book Bad Religion: How We Became a Nation of Heretics does an excellent job of explaining the scope of American Christianity over the last century.  He delves into the complex reasons of the ebb and flow of various branches of American Christianity (Mainline Protestantism, Catholicism, and Evangelicalism) and their intersections.  He…

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