Friday, July 28, 2006

The Emergent Church and Blogs, 1

For many years now, the annual issue of The Yearbook of American and Canadian Churches has included a section on “Trends & Developments.”

The 2006 edition contains an essay by Eileen W. Lindner on “Postmodern Christianity: Emergent Church and Blogs” (pp. 15-20). The EC and the religious section of the blogosphere are grouped together because, as the author says, they are “two interconnected phenomena of a new century.”

Regarding the Emergent Church, Lindner says that this “many-faceted expression of Christian faith” typically thinks and speaks of itself as a “conversation,” rather than a “movement.” Nevertheless, she thinks that the word “movement” certainly describes what the EC has become.

But what exactly is the conversation or movement about? Fueled by a distinctively postmodern outlook, says Lindner, the EC “centers around deconstructing inherited faith and practice and reconstructing a Christianity” that is apparently focused on four points or ideas (and here I both quote and rephrase a little):

1. Christocentrism -- following closely and emulating the person and ministry of Jesus.

2. Narrative theology – according to which truth is found in story, not in propositional statements or traditional doctrinal standards.

3. Missiological focus -- which challenges existing forms of church life and discipleship, emphasizing service to a broken world.

4. Responsive worship forms – the place of worship is central to the EC drawing from apostolic as well as contemporary sources to forge a diverse worship through experimentation.

So much for what they’re about, who is the emerging church? Prominent people, says the author, tend to come from “evangelical protestant backgrounds with an age cohort largely in their 20s and 30s.” Lindner points to the Wikipedia entry for Emergent Church which provides a list of “Pioneers in the Emerging Church Movement”:
  • Brian McLaren, founder of Cedar Ridge Community Church near Washington, D.C.

  • Doug Pagitt, founding pastor of Solomon’s Porch, Minneapolis

  • Dan Kimball, founder of the Vintage Faith Church in Santa Cruz, CA

  • John O’Keefe, founder of http://www.ginkworld.net/

  • Spencer Burke, former pastor, founder of http://theooze.com/

  • Leonard Sweet, the E. Stanley Jones Professor of Evangelism at Drew University

  • Mark Driscoll, founder of Mars Hill Church in Seattle, WA

  • Mark Pearson, founder of Cityside in Aukland, New Zealand

  • Karen Ward, founder and pastor of Church of the Apostles in Seattle, WA
McLaren is singled out for his books which have “lent the Emerging Church much of its historic self-understanding and its spirit of both vigor and humility.

More about this beginning next week. But to this point, I’m curious to hear what you think of Lindner’s analysis. What might you add or change?

Also, although I’ve gotten a feel (by reading blogs) for how the Churches of Christ are interacting with and participating in the EC, I’d like to hear from people who have lived among and/or studied the conservative heirs of Barton W. Stone and Alexander Campbell. In what ways does the EC movement dovetail with and/or correct our Restorationist tradition?

7 comments:

  1. Anonymous12:49 PM

    Be careful with your workd usage. The "Emergent Church" is not the same as that "Emerging Church." The Emergent Church (lead primarily by McLaren and Pagit) is only Marginally Christian. Whereas the Emerging Church, (supported by Mark Driscoll, Matt Chandler, Ed Stetzer, D.A. Carson, John Piper, and Tim Keller) is truly Reformed in its theology, but liberal in its social application.

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  2. Jon,

    Thanks for the clarification. I'm a new student of these conversations/emphases.

    The names Carson and Piper are not new to me, and I think it would be a plus for any movement to have solid academics within.

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  3. Oh, one more thing regarding Jon's comment: The distinction he notes apparently escaped the notice of the author I'm reporting (E. Lindner).

    Thus, even those professionals who map out the topography of American religion are not exactly clear on who's who and what's what when it comes to the so-called EC. It will be interesting to see what continues to emerge.

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  4. Anonymous6:38 PM

    Frank, a couple more things. Check out this link to Driscoll and McLaren in the Criswell Theological Review.

    Also, in general www.theresurgence.com is a great resource for reformed theology as it pertains to the emerging/emergent church discussion and "missional theology" in general.

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  5. Rob Bell is also a thought leader in the "Emergent" Church movement. N.T. Wright is probably one of the great thinkers leading the way.

    I disagree with Jon's comments about Brian McClaren. D. A. Carson is a modernist and reactionary (in my opinion). McClaren has sought to take the biblical narrative seriously without necessarily fitting into Calvinistic categories.

    McClaren (who owes a lot to N.T. Wright) is a breath of fresh air most of the time.

    Shalom,
    Bobby Valentine
    http://stoned-campbelldisciple.blogspot.com/

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  6. There are a number of concerns from the Emerging Church movement as represented in Wright, McClaren, Bell, etc that resonates with themes in the SCM.

    I call attention especially to the heavy emphasis on the kingdom of God and discipleship. These themes are deep in the Nashville Bible School, David Lipscomb and James A. Harding.

    A connection is also seen in the expression of Kingdom theology which allows for a non-Scientific explanation of God's involvement in the world through Providence and the work of the Holy Spirit.

    The emphasis on biblical social justice is deep in both Lipscomb and Harding. The cultivation of spiritual disciplines (called the four means of Grace in Harding) is also a connection.

    John Mark Hicks (professor at David Lipscomb University) and I recently published a book that explores a number of these themes that seem to be "emergent" before there was an emergent movement. The book is called "KINGDOM COME: Embracing the Spiritual Legacy of David Lipscomb and James Harding" (ACU/Leafwood Press, 2006). The book is available through publisher and Amazon.com.

    I think you would enjoy the book. I also think it gives some spiritual anchors for the CofC.

    Shalom,
    Bobby Valentine

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  7. One of the aspects of the Emergent movement that is a concern for me is that while they ask some vital and pertinent questions the 'conversation' we are invited into is often directed and dominated by their hierarchy of ideas:

    https://thereluctantsamizdatwordpresscom.wordpress.com/2016/01/06/discussion-as-disinformation/

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