More Slow Change: We Muddle Through »
By jharlow on Feb 26, 2010 in Church Leadership, General Applied Theology, Organizational Effectiveness, Transformational Leadership | 0 Comments
A self-indulgent conversation about incarnation, grace, and transformational leadership
By jharlow on Feb 26, 2010 in Church Leadership, General Applied Theology, Organizational Effectiveness, Transformational Leadership | 0 Comments
By jharlow on Dec 16, 2009 in Church Leadership, General Applied Theology, Organizational Effectiveness, Transformational Leadership | 7 Comments
As a regular kinda’ guy in a local community — maybe I’m a volunteer for a local non-profit, a teacher in a school, a volunteer in the local church — I need to trust that the leadership team I follow is absolutely, unequivocally dedicated to the mission of our organization. Without that level of trust in my leadership team my willingness to follow them wavers. My commitment to our organization depends greatly on my perception that our leadership team cares singularly about the mission of our organization. To the extent our leadership team becomes distracted by other priorities, my commitment weakens.
By jharlow on Nov 20, 2009 in Conversation, General Applied Theology, Orphan Care, Transformational Leadership, Vulnerable Children | 3 Comments
On the Pine Ridge Reservation (and other Native American reservations) things are different. Let’s look at one example: Shannon County, SD, located entirely on the Pine Ridge Reservation. Over 85 percent of its residents are Native American (highest density in the U.S.). Based on per-capita income Shannon County is the second poorest count in the U.S. The child poverty rate in Shannon County is 52 percent. Over half of the families in this county are living below the federal poverty level with children in their home. So, tell me, how are their children?
By jharlow on Nov 12, 2009 in Church Leadership, General Applied Theology, Nobel Laureates, The Murky Middle, Transformational Leadership, Vulnerable Children | 0 Comments
By jharlow on Oct 23, 2009 in General Applied Theology, Orphan Care, Transformational Leadership | 0 Comments
If you would like to hear more about our upcoming trip or last year’s trip click over to the “Orphan Care Project” above. If you would like to consider joining us on the trip to Ivanovo next June — great! Send me an e-mail at jeff@unpackingideas.org to let me know. You don’t need any prior travel or ministry experience to qualify, only a desire to go (far) to help the orphans (and a few extra bucks). Maybe you are not able to travel next June but you still want to help in some way — very cool. Let me know what you have in mind. Periodically I’ll post an update here about our planning and what we need for the orphan graduates
By jharlow on Oct 19, 2009 in Church Leadership, General Applied Theology, Organizational Effectiveness, Transformational Leadership | 0 Comments
Here’s the central idea, or the “one thing”. Surely you recall Curly’s “one thing” in the movie City Slickers. Yes, transfer of learning is important. Yes, a balanced approach to effectiveness is important. Yes, shared leadership is important. But the central idea I most care about is that our mission must become flesh. I am not satisfied with the words of our mission. The idea of our mission is not enough. I want mission incarnate. Mission must become flesh.
By jharlow on Oct 17, 2009 in Church Leadership, General Applied Theology, Nobel Laureates, Organizational Effectiveness, Transformational Leadership | 0 Comments
The idea of economics is not new. The word is taken from the Greek oikonomia, which in the first Century roughly meant “household management”. Today, while we are managing more than a household, the question is the same: How do we manage the limited resources available to us? I.e., How do we run our economy?
By jharlow on Sep 30, 2009 in Church Leadership, Conversation, Doubt, General Applied Theology, The Murky Middle, Transformational Leadership | 0 Comments
In my world fundamentalism — religious and political — lurks all around me, so I readily grabbed at doubt as a convenient handle for my reaction against the extreme that I tend to notice daily. I read the entire book but came away with what I needed — a fresh approach to help me counter the purveyors of hollow certitude around me. Also, it seemed to me, regardless of which perpective we carry, when we enter the dance of a conversation in hopes of a healthy “turn about” of ideas, it is the overabundance of certitude that more often smothers the music for one or both dancers.