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Today’s Making Lesson: Business and ministry leaders perform at high levels. Character flaws, dysfunction, and age-old wounds can be limitations to Heavenly success. There is a need to be glorified. In today’s lesson, you will receive three strategies for being glorified. Episode Summary Intro - 0.00 – 0.54 The Unfolding of the Glorification Process - 1.27 Becoming Glory - 8.10 Stop Talking to Compromise and Mediocrity: Glory is a Vortex – 11.04 Focus on the Weight – 14.25 Resources Mentioned in the Episode: Learn how to die quickly with this resource: bit.ly/9phasestomakeme This class will take you through the entire making process: bit.ly/RegisterReleasetheGlory
Today's Making Lesson: In this episode, you will learn about how to pick the team members for your business and ministry by getting to the glory. Episode Summary: Intro 0.00 – 0.50 Don’t Pick the Three-Name Man or Woman – 0.52 Watch, Pray, & Delegate to Prove them – 15.42 Resources Mentioned in this Episode: Get clear about God’s choice versus man’s choice for leadership by reading The Making book: http://bit.ly/MakeMeAnAccurateReflection Meet your potential team members and a company of glory people in Houston, TX on 5/17/19 and 5/18/19 by registering here: bit.ly/glorytourTX
Today's Making Lesson In this episode, Karen steps out of the practical to demonstrate the supernatural works of Jesus. Episode Summary Intro – 0.00 – 1.07 It Begins in Jerusalem – 1.15 Go Into All the World -14.00 Resources Mentioned in this Episode Release the Glory Class – bit.ly/RegisterReleasetheGlory Glory Tour – TX – bit.ly/glorytourTX Experiencing Fullness in the Temple – bit.ly/GloryTemple Break the Cycle of Hair Loss – bit.ly/MyHairisMyGlory
Today's Making Lesson In this episode, you will learn about the multi-faceted dimensions of natural and spiritual fitness. Gaining this understanding positions, you to experience the fullness of God in your temple. Episode Summary Intro 0.14 to 1.25 How to Experience the Fullness of the Godhead Bodily – 1.34 Eat and Drink for God versus Self – 3.10 Describing the Fullness of God – 8.17 Fasting for Fullness, Resurrection, and Promotion – 9.38 Don’t be Shortsighted – 13.29 Fitness Graces you to Stand in Certain Dimensions of Glory – 14.42 God has a Prescription for you – 16.13 Your Body Follows the Largest Entity of Your Body – 17.39 Discovering Your P.P.E. – 19.06 Don’t Let Your Cravings Lead you – 20.45 Live in Glory Daily – 22.48 Everyone Needs you to Be FIT – 23.05 Stop Praying and Start Maintaining – 23.51 If you want to learn how to journey into fullness, go to bit.ly/GloryResourceCenter, click on e-books, and pick up Leadership FITness: Experiencing Fullness in the Temple. When you pick up this resource, you will receive a 30-day bonus to jumpstart your fitness journey.
Interviewer: Ben Dorman, co-editor Asian Ethnology Recorded 10 December 2017, Kyoto, Japan This episode's guest is Joy Hendry, emeritus professor of anthropology at Oxford Brookes University. Joy discusses her experiences and research related to early childhood education in Japan in the early 1980s. Episode Summary Intro 0:54 Reasons for doing research on early childhood education in Japan 2:05 Comparing Japanese and UK experiences, “Becoming Japanese” (see Publications listing below) 3:40 What is “Becoming Japanese”?; expectations on young children 11:25 Honne (“true face”) and tatemae (“façade”) 12:40 The role of teachers and differences experienced between Japan and the UK 16:09 “Special needs” 16:40 Outro 16:54 Publications mentioned in this episode Joy Hendry, Becoming Japanese: The World of the Pre-School Child (University of Hawaii Press, 1986) Kuroyanagi Tetsuko, Totto-Chan: The Little Girl at the Window, Kodansha International (March 23, 2012) Music used with kind permission of the performer, shamisen master Koji Yamaguchi. Copyright 2018 by Asian Ethnology Podcast
Interviewer: Ben Dorman, co-editor Asian Ethnology Recorded 9 July 2017, Nagoya, Japan This episode's guest is Clark Chilson, associate professor in the Department of Religious Studies, University of Pittsburgh. Clark discusses his experiences studying anthropology in Japan, his research interests that include secrecy and a form of Buddhist psychology called naikan ("introspection"), and his time working as the associate editor of Asian Folklore Studies, the predecessor of Asian Ethnology. Episode Summary Intro 0:41 Reasons for coming to Japan 2:23 Study in Japan 3:30 Approach to ethnographic fieldwork and the question of memory 4:20 Studying anthropology in Japan 5:49 Meeting and studying with Peter Knecht, professor of anthropology at Nanzan University and editor of Asian Folklore Studies; Peter’s influence 7:33 Move to religious studies at Lancaster University and study of secretive Pure Land Buddhist groups 11:00 Return to Japan to work at Nanzan as copy editor/associate editor of Asian Folklore Studies (and Japanese Journal of Religious Studies); the experience of journal work and the pursuit of the “perfect” issue 15:01 Reflections on journal experience in terms of personal scholarship and research 19:11 Move back to US; discussion on Secrecy’s Power (see Publications below); the consequences of secrecy 24:57 Work on the leadership of Ikeda Daisaku, leader of Sōka Gakkai; research and experience of psychotherapeutic practice of naikan (“introspection”) which grew out of Pure Land Buddhism 29:40 Work on special issue co-edited with Scott Schnell in honor of Peter Knecht; co-editing of Shamans in Asia with Peter Knecht 36:16 Outro 36:47 Publications mentioned in this episode Monograph Chilson, Clark. 2014. Secrecy's Power: Covert Shin Buddhists in Japan and Contradictions of Concealment. University of Hawai'i Press. Edited volumes Chilson, Clark, and Scott Schnell, eds. Special Issue Honoring Professor Peter Knecht, editor of Asian Folklore Studies, 1980–2006. Asian Folklore Studies, vol. 66, 2006. Chilson, Clark, and Peter Knecht, eds. 2003. Shamans in Asia. Routledge. Music used with kind permission of the performer, shamisen master Koji Yamaguchi. Copyright 2018 by Asian Ethnology Podcast
Interviewer: Ben Dorman, co-editor Asian Ethnology Recorded 29 June 2017, Nagoya, Japan This episode's guest is Keller Kimbrough, professor of Japanese at the University of Colorado, Boulder. Keller Kimbrough’s research interests include the literature and art of late-Heian, medieval, and early Edo-period Japan. He discusses, amongst other publications, his work in Asian Folklore Studies and Asian Ethnology. Episode Summary Intro 0:47 Reasons for studying Japanese literature 2:55 Discussion on “Preaching the Animal Realm in Medieval Japan” (see Publications listing below); how images of hells were used for financial gain 6:49 Challenges in obtaining permissions to print images 9:11 Discussion on “Bloody Hell! Reading Boys’ Books in Seventeenth-Century Japan” (see Publications listing below); “extravagant representational violence,” obsession with “media violence” going back centuries 14:46 Personal interest in “graphic” tales with action; the pleasure of “finding stories”; interest in kabuki and setsuwa (“spoken story”: genre of folktales, myths, legends); the story of “Little Yoshitsune Slays a Thousand”; parallels in contemporary literature and media 18:38 Discussion of Wondrous Brutal Fictions (see Publications listing below); late medieval oral tradition (sekkyō) adapted to puppet theatre (bunraku); “textual archeologist” 22:35 Current project – “samurai fiction” (kōwakamai warrior fiction); “pulp fiction” and the heroics of sacrifice 27:18 Future work – Monsters, Animals, and Other Worlds (see Publications listing below) and other projects 29:20 Interest in textual tradition and the culture of publishing 30:18 Outro 30:45 Publications mentioned in this episode Preaching the Animal Realm in Medieval Japan, Asian Folklore Studies 65-2. Bloody Hell! Reading Boys’ Books in Seventeenth-Century Japan, Asian Ethnology 74-1. Monsters, Animals, and Other Worlds: A Collection of Short Medieval Japanese Tales, Edited by Keller Kimbrough and Haruo Shirane, Columbia University Press (February 2018) Music used with kind permission of the performer, shamisen master Koji Yamaguchi. Copyright 2017 by Asian Ethnology Podcast
Interviewer: Ben Dorman, co-editor Asian Ethnology Recorded 15 May 2017, Nagoya, Japan Peter Knecht was the editor of Asian Folklore Studies from 1980 until 2007. The journal changed its name to Asian Ethnology in 2008. Peter discusses the founding of the journal in China in 1942, when it was known as Folklore Studies. He talks about founding editor, Mathias Eder, and the journal's path from China to Japan. Episode Summary Intro :37 Beginnings of journal; Mathias Eder's studies in Japan, Paris, and Berlin; Eder's move to China (Beijing) in 1938 4:46 Funding granted for small museum/editorial office 6:25 Eder’s sense of “mission” in terms of the journal; Wilhelm Schmidt and the founding of Anthropos; Eder’s acknowledgment of Schimdt; Schmidt’s contribution to anthropology 8:54 China under Japanese rule and Eder’s connections with Japanese folklorists; end of working in China for foreign missionaries in 1949; the journal going through a series of “rebirths” 19:10 Eder’s desire to return to China; SVD mission work; interest of Alois Pache (SVD and first president of Nanzan University) in the journal 25:07 1966 – Eder teaches at Indiana University; Richard Dorson proposes name change from Folklore Studies to Asian Folklore Studies 31:07 Funding from Indiana finishes; Eder moves to Nanzan; Peter’s initial connection to the journal 36:54 Peter’s personal justification for viewing journal work as “missionary work” – connection to the people and research interests 40:14 Involvement of Robert Reimer, SVD and former president of Nanzan University 44:07 For more information on Asian Ethnology, visit the site's About page. Music used with kind permission of the performer, shamisen master Koji Yamaguchi. Copyright 2017 by Asian Ethnology Podcast.
This episode's guest is Scott Schnell, associate professor of anthropology at the University of Iowa and the former co-editor of Asian Ethnology. Scott discusses his research interests and perspectives, his work on dissident writer and ethnographer, Ema Shū, and his research on matagi (bear hunters). Episode Summary Intro :43 Initial interest in Japan 1:54 Environmental issues, studies about mountain areas 3:43 Research in Furukawa, discussion about The Rousing Drum, rituals 8:20 Research on Ema Shū, published in Asian Folklore Studies 13:40 Local hunters as guides and intermediaries mountains as conduits female mountain deity (yama no kami) 17:00 Topic of matagi (traditional hunters) and their interest in environment represented through belief in yama no kami 20:07 Daily life of matagi 28:45 Ideas of Japanese people, environment, nature, limits of consumption 34:43 Aspects of current research Animism Attitudes toward matagi Ministry of Environment’s support of matagi Tourism 39:59 Doing fieldwork with bear hunters Skills of matagi used for search and rescue Research into matagi 47:16 Outro 47:40 Music used with kind permission of the performer, shamisen master Koji Yamaguchi. Copyright 2017 by Asian Ethnology Podcast