In the typical business school, this question would be
interpreted, or “refurbished.” Can students be trained to become ethical
leaders? While often conflated contemporaneously, these two questions are
indeed distinct. Instructors, professors and school administrators should first
decide which question is more relevant to their purposes. The question chosen
should fit with the education, pedagogical method, and philosophy of education
of not only the instructor or professor, but also the school itself. In
this essay, I distinguish the two questions in order to unpack them with their
full significance.
Thursday, September 18, 2014
Tuesday, September 16, 2014
Son of God: Comparative Religion in Film
The 2014 film, Son of
God, follows a familiar trajectory well-known to viewers who had seen films
such as George Stevens’ The Greatest
Story Ever Told (1965). Watching the Passion story yet again, I could not
help but take note of the repetitiveness from sheer likeness. Yet one scene
sticks out among the usual denouement—that scene in which Jesus in the
wilderness, the high priest in the Temple, and the Roman Pontius Pilate with
his wife in their chambers pray in their own ways and with differing assumptions
about divine intent toward a petitioner. The interplay of petitions plays like
a tutorial for the ears and eyes on comparative religion, found here even within a religion.
The entire essay is at “Son of
God.”
Shepherd Leadership: Protective Caring Beyond Profit
Unlike the word servant, which has been so much applied to
business leadership, shepherd is used in the New Testament exclusively in
reference to leaders.[1]
Jesus is described as both “the great
shepherd” and “the good shepherd.”[2]
This is not to say that the analogy applied only to Jesus himself. After his
resurrection, for example, Jesus tells Peter to do the work of a shepherd.[3]
Peter in turn urges church elders to be shepherds of God’s flock.[4]
So too does Paul at Ephesus.[5]
Can a Christian CEO apply the attributes of being a shepherd to leading a
business organization? I contend that such a fit can indeed be made.
The complete essay is at “Christianized Ethical Leadership.”
[1] Richard
Higginson, Transforming Leadership: A
Christian Approach to Management (SPEK: London, 1996), p. 48.
[2] Hebrews
13:20; John 10:11.
[3]
John 21:15-19.
[4] 1
Peter 5:2.
[5]
Acts 20:28; See Higginson, Transforming
Leadership, p. 48.
Monday, September 15, 2014
The Scottish Referendum: A Political Analysis
Any political analysis of the Scottish referendum on
secession from Britain should include not only the Scottish National Party
(SNP) and Westminster, but also other large E.U. states and even the E.U.
powers at the federal level. Such an analysis may leave the cynic wondering
whether the question could even conceivably be decided by the Scots
themselves—so much being on the line for state and federal officials and their
respective institutions.
The full essay is at "Essays on the E.U. Political Economy," available at Amazon.