By: Jennifer Vernam on February 5, 2024
What is so distinctive about this point in time that earns it the designation of being a “Cancel Culture?” Surely, there have been other times when society has been strongly rewarded for complying with a norm and penalized for going against the grain. These thoughts and more were in my mind as I sat to…
By: John Fehlen on February 5, 2024
I have a bad case of jet lag. Really bad. I experienced it going TO Europe a few weeks ago, and I got it again coming BACK to Oregon a few days ago. I didn’t think it would affect my return trip, because I was drinking lots of water, holding off bedtime, and doing all…
By: Ryan Thorson on February 5, 2024
Hartford’s book is helping me make my world add up. I have the great joy and privilege of being a pastor of a local church in the Northwest. I’ve been pastoring here for nearly 12 years and have pastored people through the highs and lows of their lives, my life, a global pandemic and presidential…
By: Travis Vaughn on February 5, 2024
As I write this, I’m pondering Bobby Duffy’s Why We’re Wrong About Nearly Everything, reminding myself that “the world…is frequently not anywhere near as bad as we think.”[1] But even if we ARE wrong about a lot of things, the effects of Cancel Culture are real, particularly on college campuses, especially over the past several…
By: Jeff Styer on February 5, 2024
I read Tim Harford’s book How to Make the World Add Up and listened to two lectures that he gave in Oxford[1]. As I read and listened, I asked myself two questions, how do these relate to the other books we have read, and how do they relate to leadership. I am going to process…
By: Pam Lau on February 5, 2024
For my post, I wrote a hypothetical letter to leaders in Christian higher education believing that things can and will improve–based on the solutions our readings suggest. A Letter Written on the Walls of Higher Education Dear Christian Higher Education Administration, Whenever I read books like The Canceling of the American Mind: Cancel Culture Undermines…
By: Kally Elliott on February 5, 2024
In The Canceling of the American Mind: How Cancel Culture Undermines Trust, Destroys Institutions, and Threatens Us All, Greg Lukianoff and Rikki Schlott focus on what has become known as “cancel culture,”: how it began, its destructive effects, and how to push back against it. How did Cancel Culture come about and what is…
By: Jennifer Eckert on February 3, 2024
In her 1985 hit song, We Don’t Need Another Hero, musician Tina Turner sang, “All we want is life beyond the Thunderdome.”[1] This anti-love song is about a woman who desperately yearned for “freedom beyond the ragged dystopia”[2] of her oppressed and loveless marriage. She finally sought and found independence and encouraged others to stand…
By: Jana Dluehosh on February 2, 2024
“What does the Lord Require of Me? But to do Justice, and to Love Mercy and to Walk Humbly with our God.” Micah 6:8 Kryptonite I have a weakness…an Achilles heel, and I’m willing to admit it today: I suck at arguing! I found myself on edge as I read Evangelization and Ideology: How to…
By: Noel Liemam on February 2, 2024
This book, “The Hero’s Journey: Joseph Campbell on His Life and Work,” has a very long ‘working-out’, or way of showing, or detailing of the stated point. I tried here and there within the chapters to pick up the points, but it takes me longer time therefore, I went to look for the summary and…
By: Elysse Burns on February 2, 2024
This week I had the privilege of visiting Chiang Mai, Thailand for a company retreat. Personally, I feel like I took my own Hero’s Journey just to get here from Mauritania. While in Thailand, I have participated in many sessions meant to encourage those of us working overseas. The teaching that most sparked my interest…
By: Dinka Utomo on February 1, 2024
Avoiding living in a false world may sound academic and detached from everyday concerns. But that assessment rapidly changes the moment someone or some group comes along and tries to conscript you into their ideological fantasy … You can run, you can submit, you can bloody your knuckles. Or you can craft a better argument…
By: Chad Warren on February 1, 2024
Are you a “Treky?” In the 1960s, the U.S. was deep into the space race, which created the perfect environment for the television series Star Trek to gain popularity and capture the imagination of a nation. I visited the Museum of Pop Culture several years ago in Seattle, WA. Most memorable for me was the Star…
By: Adam Harris on February 1, 2024
If vertical learning requires reading widely and hearing ideas that conflict with my own then Matthew Petrusek’s book, Evangelization and Ideology, helped me grow like a weed this week. Maybe that’s an over-exaggeration. There were times I thought, “Great point, I could see that”, then other times I thought: “Hmm, that seems condescending and a…
By: Todd E Henley on February 1, 2024
January 30, 2024, began the trial of a West Caln Police Officer. It’s a trial many of us who live in West Caln have been nervously waiting for. November 10, 2021, a black lady, Takeisha Landry made a left turn while stopped at a red light. Sergeant Tony Sparano approached her car after she stopped,…
By: Julie O'Hara on February 1, 2024
Facing the struggles of my doctoral journey thus far has led me to question why I even started and I felt shamed by my initial response. Had I really convinced my husband to accompany me on a three-year investment of time and money out of a twisted ego need to earn the title of ‘Doctor?’…
By: Mathieu Yuill on February 1, 2024
I was on a sales call today with a company that sells email automation and social advertising. I like meeting new people so I always make sure to learn a little bit about the sales person I’m speaking with and today was no different. This salesperson was in Louisiana and when he learned I was…
By: Kari on February 1, 2024
The last thing I wanted to read for our assignments this week was concerning the imaginative world of mythology. I have always been one to choose more realistic literature. My childhood imagination would take me into made-up worlds, but my reading choices did not. I preferred Laura Ingalls Wilder’s Little House on the Prairie over…
By: Daren Jaime on February 1, 2024
He was my hero, and I was always unashamed in celebrating his victories, letting anyone who would hear me talk about an ordinary guy who could do extraordinary things. I remember my heart beating and blood pressure rising as Clark Kent would leave his job at the Daily Planet to fend off Lex Luthor…
By: Akwese on February 1, 2024
As I delved into this week’s readings, I couldn’t help but think about the patterns I’d seen among leaders that brought me to this doctoral program. No matter what initial goal or challenge they wanted to work on, at its core was a need to be seen, heard, and accepted. Despite the diversity of individuals…