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| Frank Spencer, pastor, community activist, and futurist |
My name is Frank Spencer, and I wanted to take this opportunity
to introduce myself and tell you a little about my experience as a mid-career
professional in the Master of Strategic Foresight (MSF) program at Regent
University.
I live in Savannah, Georgia, I'll be 42 this coming January, and have been
married to Sherry - my wonderful wife - 20 years this coming March. My wife and
I have 2 boys (15 and 12) and 2 girls (9 and 7). I have served as a
worship leader, student minister, and pastor of a non-denominational church for
approximately 12 years. This has been an experience that had both incredible
highs as well as its share of lows!
In late 1999, I began to be drawn to "futures thinking," primarily in regards
to my ministerial lifestyle. This quickly evolved into a broader view of
foresight possibilities beyond the confines of church settings. It was then that
I realized how closed I had actually been to God's larger call to action in
every quadrant of human activity.
Over the next few years, I studied "futures" independently, and this allowed
me access to the teachings of those who had been practicing in the field of
foresight extensively. It was during this time that I developed a futures
foundation, as well as a desire to apply it to both personal and occupational
domains. Wow - what an eye-opener!
I learned of Regent's Masters of Organizational Leadership with a minor in
Strategic Foresight at Regent in early 2005, and was led to apply to the program
(an extended story with some great Divine intervention!). I was accepted to the
program and began my first semester in the Fall of 2005. It was shortly
thereafter that the Masters of Strategic Foresight (MSF) was established, and I
transfered into it this past Fall (2006).
I have since met several other students who are in the distance learning
program as well, and I have presently been able to take about half of the core
courses required for the MSF. I am also meeting new students entering the MSF on
a continual basis, and this influx is bringing about an exciting growth to the
futures community at Regent University.
I am now finishing my fourth semester in the MSF, and I have found the
program to be very challenging and enriching in terms of foresight and futures
thinking, as well as providing in-depth instruction that paves the way toward
practicing professional futures in organizational and societal settings. Many
futurist methods are explored and modeled through "hands-on" projects, and the
program is extremely academic as well.
I have personally seen a greater transition toward complexity and diversity
thinking in my own life as I view personal, organizational, and even
ecclesiastical domains. This has increasingly opened a whole new world to me in
terms of impacting multiple drivers in society rather than simply being locked
into a more linear or "closed-system" view and practice of human systems.
Personally, I have been interested in creating sustainable structures as well
as transitional development globally, and I (along with several others
individuals) created a network in late 2000 that acts as a "launching pad" for
future thinkers, trans-modern faith communities, and social initiative
enterprises that are creating aspirational and preferable futures.
This program has helped me to advance the Banner Community
through access to foresight strategists, their areas of expertice, and the new
foresight theories and methods they promote. I also look forward to practicing
futures in a professional setting while continuing to build the network. I would
even like to teach futures at the collegiate level someday.
For anyone looking to broaden their view of the future, or who may need to
help others find creative and innovative ways to prepare for emerging issues
within their organization or community - I would highly recommend considering
the Master of Strategic Foresight.
Please keep in touch with me. I have just started a FutureScope blog focused
on "Bringing Aspirational Change and Transformational Futures to Individuals,
Organizations, and Society through Strategic Foresight."
Jay Gary, team leader of Christian
Futures, concurrently serves as program director the new M.A. in Strategic
Foresight. Gary has been on the forefront of new century leadership development
efforts of emerging leaders, in both church and society, for over two decades.
Contact him today via Christian Futures about how you might
join Frank and others studying the future of leadership, business and society at
Regent, whether at the M.A., Doctorate or PhD level.