| Source: Christian Futures Network http://www.christianfutures.com/patterns_change.shtml Blog
I've been teaching forward-thinking leadership at Regent University for
nearly four years now. I am indebted to those I've worked with from mid-career
backgrounds. Since Regent draws a variety of people from various faith
backgrounds, I've observed a wide variety of styles that people take toward
becoming more forward-looking and proactive. Recently one of my students from the School of Global Leadership &
Entrepreneurship asked me what role religions play in the future, if the
future is not pre-determined. To me, faith or tradition and memory are
conserving, preserving and nuturing factors, rather than experimental,
innovative, and disturbing factors in society. This has been the norm, but
religion has also served to undergird the conscience and mobilize collective
dissent, as we saw Catholicism positively undergird Poland in the late 1980s,
or as we see radical Islam negatively doing now in Iraq. Whether conserving
or disturbing, a religious worldview often leans more toward idealism than
materialism in thinking about the nature of society. In other words, behind our commerce and economy are culture, values and
intangibles, and ultimately, the Divine. This multi-layered view of reality
serves to "frame" the issues, sometimes "restrain" the issues, and finally
"resolve" the issues. Like technology, politics, economy, environment, or
culture, religion then is also a player in society, on the front end and back
end. This Fall I will host Foresight
2007--the 5th annual futures conference for Christians leaders at Regent
University. Mr. Graham Molitor will be our featured speaker. Molitor is the
president of Public Policy Forecasting. For over 40 years Molitor has been at
the forefront of helping business, government and military understand how to
track and monitor change.
Faith can play a vital role as salt and light in public life. We need to ask, "What is happening?", "What will likely happen"? and "What do we want to see happen?" The earlier we engage in this issue monitoring process, the greater the influence we have on the issues, rather than taking just reactionary postures. If you would like to learn more about issues management, emerging technologies, and social forecasting, consider enrolling in one of our online foresight programs at Regent, whether MBA, Masters, Doctorate or PhD. We also offer a Strategic Foresight certificate program for those only needing professional development. Graham Molitor's lectures will make available to all our students for their professional use in forecasting patterns of change in their own professions and industry sectors. © 1998-2009 Christian Futures. All rights reserved. Top of Page |
