Tim Leeson has initiated an interesting discussion about what the emerging church really stands for, which I think merits a stab at a more comprehensive and synthesizing response. The book Emerging Churches by Eddie Gibbs and Ryan Bolger lists nine characteristics of emerging churches: identifying with Jesus, transforming secular space, living as community, welcoming the stranger, serving with generosity, participating as producers, creating as created beings, leading as a body, and merging ancient and contemporary spiritualities. These are mostly practical in their orientation - they have to do with how Christian communities function and express themselves in the world. I imagine that most people who feel that they are part of the emerging church would happily locate themselves within that nexus of practices.
However, they do not attempt to capture - at least, not on the face of it - the serious philosophical and theological displacements that have been largely responsible for the phenomenon of the emerging church; nor do they help us to understand the historical context of its development. For that reason, I’m not sure they really get to the heart of what the emerging church stands for. What I want to outline here, therefore, is a broader set of values, though they may appear rather too condensed, a little idealistic in places, perhaps more prescriptive than descriptive, and may reflect a rather too personal perspective.
One of the questions that was repeatedly asked in the thread was whether the ‘emerging church’ actually stands for anything at all original. At one level, the movement, particularly in its more self-conscious and better organized forms, is a rather limited reaction to what has been perceived as the stifling intellectual and cultural environment of modern evangelicalism. Within that narrative it has proved quite shocking, controversial, and liberating to many. But this in itself does not make the emerging church unique. To others, approaching from different perspectives, much of it will seem depressingly familiar, even trite, a rehash of old debates, and so on.
Taken individually and in isolation from the larger narrative of the modern church, none of the ideals listed here is really exceptional or unique to the movement; certainly none constitutes an absolute departure from what has gone before. But I think it can be argued that we have a distinctive convergence of characteristics, tendencies, preferences, at a critical moment in the history of the church that may prove to have decisive significance for the future of the people of God.
1. The emerging church stands for a renewal of thought and praxis
The emerging church must stand, in the first place, for a far-reaching renewal of Christian faith. It is a response, on the one hand, to cumulative intellectual challenges - the combined impact of both the rational critique of modernism and the irrational critique of postmodernism. It is a response, on the other, to the progressive marginalization of the church, as it loses itself in the social and cultural confusion of postmodernity. In larger historical terms, it can be seen as a response to the long, slow disintegration of Christendom and the mindset that sustained it.
There is undoubtedly an apologetic and missional imperative at work here: How do we effectively communicate the gospel to a postmodern culture? But the real pressure for renewal is coming from inside the church, from people who have become bored with the safe, sterile routines of church life, who are no longer willing to squeeze their minds into the small box of the modern evangelical faith, who struggle to make sense of the moral and intellectual tensions generated by the modern experience of faith, who find in themselves a powerful, seemingly Spirit-driven urge to connect, engage, serve, think, create, question, explore, and frequently transgress the boundaries of their tradition.
2. The emerging church stands for a viable post-Christendom future
The emergent movement is probably not itself the future of the church. Rather, I think, it stands for something that is to come, something beyond itself, other than itself. The real significance of the ‘emerging church’, whatever form it presently takes, however credible, relevant or effective it may appear to be, is prophetic. It highlights the shortcomings of the current dominant modes of being Christian in the world and points forward, by practice and illustration, to a new paradigm. It is necessarily provisional, experimental, subversive, provocative, and very tentative in the way in which it articulates the new. It is not a bad thing, therefore, that the emerging church is slow to reach firm conclusions, that it still defers consensus. All will be revealed in good time. The post-Christendom church, I suspect, will be both more than and less than the emerging church as we know it at the moment.
3. The emerging church stands for a recovery of intellectual and moral integrity
It is part of the emerging church critique of the modern evangelical mindset that it suffers from dogmatic overload. Too many issues are addressed, too many decisions made, too many convictions formulated on the basis of a highly processed, rationalized theological end-product that has lost touch with its biblical, historical, moral, and social-cultural origins. The evangelical mind has become a closed loop. It has evolved into a ‘Second Life’, a vivid, exotic alternative reality, with its own intrinsic plausibility and coherence but only an approximate and in many respects spurious relationship to the real world. The emerging church, therefore, stands for a deconstruction of this alternative virtual reality and a wholesale rethinking of the reasons for asserting a Christian identity in the world.
4. The emerging church stands for a less confident epistemology
The emerging church stands for a less confident - and in that sense postmodern - epistemology, one that recognizes the problematic nature of truth statements, that understands that language is never neutral or innocent, that accommodates diversity of perspective, that appreciates the instabilities of rhetoric, that takes account of the role of context and genre in the construction of meaning, and that is not overly disturbed by contradiction, mystery and doubt. This admission of uncertainty can give the impression of a weakening of faith - and that may sometimes be the case. But in principle, it signals a realignment of faith from mental consent to existential trust.
5. The emerging church stands for a recovery of biblical realism
I hope that the emerging church stands for a renewal of belief and practice that is authentically ‘biblical’ and, indeed, potently ‘evangelical’, that is in legitimate continuity with the agenda of Jesus as it was understood and pursued by the early church. I appreciate danutz’s patient and articulate contributions to this site enormously, but he represents a style of liberalism that has picked some juicy fruit of social justice from the ancient tree of the biblical narrative while at the same time doing its best to chop the tree down. I don’t think that is the way forward for a church that professes to follow Jesus from Nazareth.
Key to the recovery of biblical realism will be the development of a forward-looking rather than backward-looking theology. We think prospectively - and therefore uncertainly - from the narrated humanity of the early community, not retrospectively from our over-developed theological vantage points. The emerging church will give priority to the biblical narrative, recounting it and indwelling it as a formative community epic, with an empathetic imagination, without suppressing its conundra and contradictions. But it will hesitate to translate it into assured, rational, normative categories.
6. The emerging church stands for a recovery of the narrative-historical context of scripture
This means, for example, that the significance of Jesus is drawn primarily from the narrative of ancient Israel, in all its historical, literary and theological complexity, not from the sub-biblical (and arguably gnostic) ‘myth’ of personal salvation that has tended to dominate evangelical preaching and teaching. This is not a matter merely of theological preference. It belongs to a broader recovery of integrity and realism. In this respect, I would hope that the outcome will be not a stripping away of the hard-to-swallow bits of Christianity but a better understanding of how they function contextually and contribute to the continuing effectiveness of the narrative as a whole.
7. The emerging church stands for a contextualized ‘gospel’
The emerging church should profess to be ‘evangelical’, but the word ‘gospel’ cannot be deployed apart from a set of interpretive and grounding contexts: the narrative-historical context of scripture, in which it is the good news of Israel’s redemption and transformation; the corporate context of the church as renewed humanity, an expression of social relations, creativity and ecology; and the eschatological context of a fundamental and persistent hope in the renewal of all creation.
8. The emerging church stands for authentic community
The emerging church is looking for authentic forms of Christian community that are less subject to the formal constraints and structures of modern church life. There is a desire for community to grow and be shaped by the natural dynamics of relationship rather than by superimposed programmes of management and development. This has resulted in a preference for inclusion, a blurring of both sociological and theological boundaries. The preference is, no doubt, in part a reaction against the commercialized pampering of the individual which pervades both modern society and the modern church. But in the background may also be an appreciation of the fact that it is the concrete existence of a community that should be central and determinative for our theology. Biblical theology is, essentially, the story of a people, and our relation to it is primarily one of narrative continuity rather than of doctrinal conformity.
9. The emerging church stands for a renewal of discipleship
The emerging church stands for a renewal of discipleship, an activism in the name of Jesus, a preference for practical and missional expressions of faith over self-absorbed theologizing and the fussy oversight of personal beliefs. Although the lively pragmatism of the movement can easily lead to theological muddle and incoherence and a lack of clarity with regard to moral and spiritual boundaries, the emphasis on discipleship provides an important means of anchoring our more inclusive forms of community in an authentic biblical identity.
10. The emerging church stands for a grassroots theology
The emerging church stands for a way of doing theology, of developing a mindset appropriate to the missional task, that engages the whole community. Open Source Theology represents and supports this sort of approach, as does the recent Wikiklesia publication of the collaborative book Voices of the Virtual World. But more importantly, it is evident in the widespread emergence of localized, commununity based conversations, formal and informal, informed and uninformed.
11. The emerging church stands for a new type of ecumenism
Or in Brian McLaren’s words, a ‘generous orthodoxy’. The emerging church would dearly like to transcend the old dichotomies of conservative and liberal, evangelical and charismatic, reformed and catholic, high and low, public and private, political and pietist, black and white, east and west, north and south, lay and clerical.
12. The emerging church stands for a creational eschatology
The emerging church stands for a theology - and in specific terms an eschatology - that is creational in its scope, that encompasses, both actually and prophetically, social relations, creativity, and the place of humankind in its environment. We look to the final renewal of creation rather than a final departure to heaven. The challenge is to ensure that this more worldly orientation is not construed as a flight from the other narrative that hinges around the redemption and transformation of the community through the faithfulness of Jesus.
13. The emerging church stands for renewal of the imagination
There are two general reasons for the emphasis on imagination and creativity. The first is that the emerging church, dissatisfied with the artistic sterility of much contemporary Christian culture, is seeking to translate a creation-oriented theology into much richer, more vivid, more complex, more playful and adventurous forms of expression, not merely in the arts but across the spectrum of cultural and social activities. The second reason is that the reinvention of church demands the exercise of a radical imagination that will see things differently and conceive new ways of being, doing and expressing.
14. The emerging church stands for blessing
Mission is conceived, in the first place, not as bringing in, as saving the lost, but as mediating, through the communal presence of people of God, the original creational blessing to the nations and cultures of the world. This blessing arises from and is informed by the potential for the renewal of humanity in Christ. It is expressed eschatologically through a vision of a new heaven and a new earth, uncorrupted by wickedness, injustice, suffering and death, with the living God dynamically present in the midst of things.
15. The emerging church stands for public and political relevance
The emerging church stands for public and political relevance, generally under the rubric of the ‘kingdom of God’, though I have some reservations about how this programme connects with the biblical narrative. To my mind, too much of this has been developed on the basis of an outmoded theology, prior to a serious re-examination of the biblical narrative. Nevertheless, there is a general consensus that Christian faith is corporate and has implications for political behaviour. The theological challenge will be to show how the themes of gospel and social justice intersect.


Re: What does the emerging church stand for?
Thanks for this outline Andrew.
Progress toward pt. 5 and 6, I think, are particularly important for the emerging church if it is to effectively challenge (with credibility), the assumptions that have come to define much modern evangelicalism.
Regarding pt. 15, I too have reservations regarding pre/immature activity in the public and political arena (i.e. I would hate to see the emerging church being taken captive to a particular political agenda – as is the case in some forms of modern evangelicalism). Yes, there needs to be a “serious re-examination of the biblical narrative”; however, I don’t think this cannot happen in isolation to praxis. The “mission” described in pt. 14 has implicit political implications, especially if the task of mediating is to be carried out openly and honestly. Furthermore, contextualising the gospel (pt. 7), by its very nature, becomes public as it affects “…community interests as opposed to private affairs.” An outmoded theology may inform current political activity, but I’m not sure that your suggested re-examination is, should, or can be, a prior task (my apologies if I’ve misread you here).
For example, the emerging church is attempting (to borrow your language a bit) to indwell the biblical narrative “as a formative community epic”, while it engages in exegesis that will help to disentangle us from modern assumptions; this happens in tandem. The same, I think, applies to the political activity of the emerging church. It would be naive to think we can remain apolitical while theologians fully rethink the relationship of the biblical narrative to current politics. The emerging church should critically reflect, biblically, as it engages in politics. The re-examination of the biblical narrative cannot remain aloof from what the emerging church is actually doing.
Emerging theologians must be involved in the “doings” of the emerging church, allowing the experience of praxis to inform their theology. A disengaged ivory tower theology is one of the pitfalls modern evangelicalism stumbled into.
Re: What does the emerging church stand for?
I agree that theology should go hand-in-hand. My concern was not so much to give priority to theology (much as I might personally wish that to be the case!) as to slow down praxis a bit, enough to listen to the theologians. My impression has been that the emerging church phenomenon has been driven largely by practitioners of one form or another. Fine. But changes in praxis inevitably raise theological questions and time must be given to answer them. The danger, otherwise, is that the old theology simply gets re-consolidated in a new set of practices.
Re: What does the emerging church stand for?
Andrew,
It seems to me that what you’ve done is define your own personal theology and slapped on the label “emerging church”. Maybe you are somehow the “owner” of the movement and you can do that but it doesn’t seem genuine. That would be convenient but is not much different from drawing a new denominational box to fit your own needs. Protestants have been doing that for a long time now. I agree with many aspects of your theology and find more synergy with you than with many others, but I feel the point of the emerging church is to STOP doing that very thing and begin creating harmony among people with a variety of theological views. The box you’ve drawn may be bigger or a little more inclusive, but you still have the mentality that certain particular views are excluded. That will just lead to another denomination (or several more).
The most potent effect of the emerging church has been to open up conversations between people of contrasting theological views. If the result is to declare a new winner or meld into one new category then it will have failed.
To pick up on your metaphorical language, I would say that the ancient tree of biblical narrative is justice and it grows as it spreads through the development of the kingdom of God on Earth. Its juicy fruits are the many various applications, beliefs, rituals, art, music, and customs of many different faith traditions. Even though each variety of fruit has its own unique flavor, the core substance of the tree is the development of loving, peaceful and just families, communities and nations (i.e. social justice). If you spend all your energy fighting about which fruit tastes the best, then you’ve wasted the opportunity to bear more fruit and deliver that fruit to more people. I think that is what the emerging church stands for.
Re: What does the emerging church stand for?
Danutz, I made an attempt to pre-empt your criticism that this ostensibly objective account of an emerging theology is really only a catalogue of my personal preferences:
I don’t really see how the trap can be avoided. On the one hand, if the phrase ‘emerging theology’ is to be at all meaningful, it must imply some sort of boundary. On the other, we all inevitably view the phenomenon from a particular point of view and interpret it according to our prejudices. I have merely outlined what I would like - ideally and in the current state of my understanding - an emerging theology to be or become.
I disagree that ‘the ancient tree of biblical narrative is justice’ - I would argue that justice is rather a fruit of that tree, and I think that we have a responsibility, not least an intellectual responsiblity, to get these fundamental theological structures more or less right. As long as we accept the Bible as a ‘sacred’ text and in some sense definitive for the descendants of the promise to Abraham, it seems to me that we are bound to keep searching for a better understanding - we can’t help it. I regard this as a matter of hermeneutical integrity.
I would suggest that we both have the ‘mentality that certain particular views are excluded’. The difference has to do rather with what views we exclude and include, where exactly we draw the line. I don’t imagine for one minute that your theology is entirely inclusive.
Perhaps our basic disagreement about interpretation and loyalty to scripture must simply be accepted for now as one of no doubt many faultlines in the emerging conversation. I have no need to declare a winner, and I agree that the openness of conversation that you describe must be protected. But that is not the same as saying that we should not expect some sort of consensus to emerge over time.
Re: What does the emerging church stand for?
Andrew, my thanks for this, joining with the others.
I’m not really that fussed about whether or not your piece exemplifies the emergent position (viz Danutz comment) although he is probably right, because he would be right in different ways about almost any attempt to assume the voices of emergent!
But your piece does exemplify, I believe, a thoroughly interesting and valid statement about church. I used to be confused by the emergent debates, until I realised that I was really looking at American Emergent. And I am far from convinced that American Emergent, in this sense, is representative of all the swells and eddies in the church generally.
Whether you intended point 2 as a sort of analysis of a trend or a prophetic statement also doesn’t matter much to me. It resonates, deeply, and I hope it serves to take some of the steam out of the ‘debate’ about the relationship between emergent and the rest of the community of faith. Much of which, it seems to me, is conducted like the dying emperor trying to fight off the pretender, as if what was at stake was the church’s throne!
But I think you have done more than this in this piece. As a writer I am intrigued at how our voices work. And yours is very different on this sort of topic than it is in the biblical theology sections. That’s probably just my lack of technical ability and scholarship showing through. But in this piece I do think you have gone closer to a description of how you see the implications of your eschatology than ever before.
Now, to read it more carefully, and to think about some implications.
Great stuff!
Re: What does the emerging church stand for?
Andrew,
Thank you for going out on a limb, opening yourself to some criticism, and attempting to answer what is apparently a very difficult question.
I’d like to re-phrase the question in three different ways. I offer them with the explanation that I am someone only just discovering this idea of “emerging church”/”emerging conversation” who is skeptical about the notion due in large part to negative past experience with other attempts to take a new approach (or recover an older approach that was “lost”) to the concept of Christianity.
To all reading this, I may not have the most precise language, I may offer up questions or insights which strike you as naive, or based on poor assumptions, but this is where I am in my process, and I would hope that Christian Charity isn’t too old fashioned of an idea to see it applied to the responses I may get :)
So, rather than asking what the emerging church stands for, I will ask these versions of the question instead in the hopes they provide a new window into what seems to be the underlying concern for both myself and others.
re-phrase version one: If the above outline is correct and the emerging conversation is asking the question “How do we effectively communicate the gospel to a postmodern culture?” does this not beg the question “how do we define the concept of The Gospel if the very notions of the divinity of Jesus and other traditionally core aspects of that Gospel Message is now part of (to again quote) “a less confident - and in that sense postmodern - epistemology, that recognizes the problematic nature of truth statements”? If the traditional Gospel Message is John 3:16 paraphrased, and the emerging conversation has called that construct into question, what is the Message which replaces it which we are looking to effectively communicate to a postmodern culture?
re-phrase version two: Is the concern that a postmodern, deconstructed approach to theology runs the risk of eventually reducing all the traditional tenants of faith to a question mark going to be treated as a fear of the unknown, a fear of change, a fear of losing the past and tradition, or is there some aspect of a genuine fear that we can “take this too far” and eventually end up like, for example, the Democratic National Party which bends over so far backwards to be unoffensive and all inclusive that they are incapable of standing up for anything at all, and so we render our emerging, postmodern church impotent?
re-phrase version three: I see a website called Open Source Theology which appears to have become so embroiled in the emerging conversation, that no actual resultant theology will ever actually materialize. In open source software, there is certainly a great deal of debate and discussion, arguing and compromise, but in the end, if some actual software doesn’t result, you no longer have open source software, you have a software discussion group. Is it likely or even possible in a postmodern context to actually construct “a theology”, open source or otherwise, or does this simply become an inclusive, safe environment in which thinking Christians agree to disagree?
~jhimm — it is smarter to be lucky than it is lucky to be smart.
Re: What does the emerging church stand for?
These are three highly pertinent questions. Thanks for articulating them. The first two certainly have to be faced up to by the emerging church. The third one only really has to do with the objectives of this site.
1. Yes, it does beg the question - and to be honest was meant to. To my mind, though, the problem is less one of how we construct truth statements than of how we read the biblical narrative. What does John 3:16 mean, in the first place, in the narrative-historical context of first-century Judaism as it was framed by the distinctive theological perspective of the tradition associated with the apostle John? Until we understand that properly, I don’t think we will be in a position to affirm it as truth, interpret it for a postmodern culture, or stick it on our bumpers. The way I see it, the ‘message’ will have a lot more to do with explaining the existence of a people that sees itself as an anticipation of a radically remade creation than with the narrowly conceived hope of personal salvation.
2. There is a real concern that the content of faith will be reduced to a set of questions, a blur of disbelief. Personally I think that fear will eventually prove to be unfounded - I see a vigorous, realistic, and compelling retelling of the biblical narrative emerging from the fog that will have the potential to inspire faith, worship and mission. But people can imagine that they see all sorts of curious things in a fog. Perhaps it will take a strong wind to blow the clouds away.
3. When I first started Open Source Theology, I rather naively thought that there might be some sort of ‘product’, that people would deliberately collaborate in at least mapping a coherent new theology. That ambition has faded, but I do still feel that these conversations contribute to the development of an implicit theology, a shared mindset, that is rather fluid and variable but which is beginning to aquire some measure of coherence and identity. Perhaps the point is simply that it is a much slower and more complex process than I originally imagined. Give it another five years and maybe we’ll at least have an alpha version, who knows?
Re: What does the emerging church stand for?
is there a way to do this which will not force us to abandon anyone without significant education because they can’t even parse that sentence, let alone help us actually come to an informed conclusion what John 3:16 "means"?
do we not risk a new kind of gnosticism, with its "secret knowledge" or a new kind of calvinistic, pre-destination informed "chosen few" who are blessed enough to be intelligent enough and educated enough to be a part of this new approach to a gospel message?
maybe this is overly glib, but is there some sense of how to go about taking this highly intellectual conversation and turning it back into the sermon on the mount?
if not, how do we justify the souls we leave behind through no fault of their own beyond an unfortunate birth?
~jhimm
—
it’s smarter to be lucky
than
it’s lucky to be smart.
Re: What does the emerging church stand for?
Again, good questions. They sting a little, but good questions nevertheless.
Theology has always been a multilayered discourse. I find it difficult to imagine that Paul’s Letter to the Romans was ever an easy read. No doubt his intended readers had a much more instinctive grasp of its meaning and relevance than we do, but it must surely have been intellectually demanding. And I doubt that the sermon on the mount was as simple to understand as you suggest. The disciples certainly struggled at times to get the point, and more importantly, it seems to me that there is a biblical density and ‘political’ orientation to Jesus’ teaching that would have been highly challenging for those who listened to him.
Having said that, I would certainly accept that a narrative-historical reading of scripture will have to be interpreted and expressed on different levels, in different contexts, and for different purposes. Much of the complexity arises, I think, because we are having to deal with an intellectual shift in a very self-conscious and critical fashion. At the moment we are still struggling to make sense of the pieces within an old paradigm. As a new paradigm emerges, as new narrative and theological structures recede into the backgrounds of our collective mind, the pieces will become simple again. It would be presumptuous to say that we are pouring new wine into old wineskins - but there is something like that going on, and I think this accounts for much of the difficulty and confusion.
Here is another thought. I am apt to complain that the emerging church is not sufficiently guided by theology. But in light of your questions, it may be of some importance that it appears more often to be driven by behaviour - people worshipping in different ways, bringing issues of justice into focus, acting rather than speaking, telling stories rather than cataloguing beliefs, and so on. Often the theology appears to be running to catch up, but this does suggest at least that your characterization is misleading. Perhaps there is a more constructive interaction going on between the different levels of discourse and praxis than appears from my pontifications.
I know of and hear of communities that are already giving expression to values and practices and convictions that are consistent with this emerging theology - and not necessarily through theological discourse, very often through social action or through the arts. Scripture always comes to us first as a story, and I think that it is as we hear that story afresh, grounded in the historical existence of a community, that we will find less self-conscious ways to live within it, live it out, retell it.
Re: What does the emerging church stand for?
Just to add some ‘dumbed-down’ thoughts to Andrew’s (spot on) eloquence…
I (and Yoder before me) read the Sermon on the Mount politically as requiring of the New Israel that it make nonviolence (viz. pacifism) its mode of operation.
Funny how the ‘plain meaning’ of "love your enemies" is so darn controversial.
The truth of the matter is that our ‘simple’ speech is just a popular retelling of what smart people said a long time ago. If the smart people a long time ago got parts of the story wrong (e.g. Luther on ‘works’, or Augustine on ‘free will’), then maybe parts of the popular story are wrong too. So if popular stories are summaries of smart-people stories (Andrew’s reference to Romans is very a propos), then shouldn’t smart people be critically rethinking their analysis of Scripture in light of the best research? Part of that is what’s going on here.
So fancy talk can be (though it isn’t necessarily, granted) relevant to commonfolk.
At least, that’s my take on the issue.
Cheers,
-Daniel-
Re: What does the emerging church stand for?
Hmmmm. Let’s try to parse a simple concept like “love your enemy” and superimpose a just war theory to suite our cushy imperialist lifestyle. Then, lets take stories about talking snakes and corpses coming to life as plainly “literal”. No wonder people laugh at Christians.
Re: What does the emerging church stand for?
I look at it this way:
Jesus taught in parable for a reason. When he referenced the Scripture of his own day, he didn’t launch into PhD level discourse. He expressed his radical, new interpretations in an idiom that his audience was prepared to hear and capable of absorbing.
I see a lot of rethinking going on here, but I don’t see much in the way of effort to make sure we bring the commonfolk along with us. That makes me concerned that this emerging church has the attitude that:
a) They need to wait until all the rethinking is “done” before trying to share it with the hoi polloi. However, this kind of dialog rarely has an “end”, I don’t see things ever being “done” enough to then begin the phase of re-expressing our findings to the masses.
b) There is a sense (maybe unconsciously) that if people want to be part of “this” they need to boot strap themselves out of their own ignorance. Since this notion lacks charity, it worries me.
But maybe this is the wrong environment to observe that part of the “emerging conversation”, and that’s fine. I am just learning my way around, and trying to figure out of I have a place in all this. I apologize if my questions sting, I don’t intend criticism. I have found myself in the past caught up in a lot of movements that eventually proved quite troubling, and so I am approaching this with a great deal of circumspection.
~jhimm—
it’s smarter to be lucky
than
it’s lucky to be smart.
Re: What does the emerging church stand for?
For me, on a personal level I am doing both of these things all the time.
I am a wanna-be scholar (as I’ve referred to myself before). I was intimidated by the level of education when I first started reading this site. Since then I’ve read more, and while I still don’t know 10 words in Greek, I at least know what "exegetal" means (though I’m not sure I spelled it right.) And I’m somebody who was already pretty educated & knowledgeable- heck I’m a PK -who was intimidated by the level of discourse on this site. I can’t magine how many others must feel.
But as stated, this is the place for the formulations, not the summaries, and this is the level at which the formulations should be made. But I also think that we can’t afford to wait until its finished before we make it accessible. That’s not how life works. If we acknowledge the post-modern nature of this process, we know that we’ll never be finished and we have to act and evangelize from where we are now.
To my original point, I am personally doing both of these things all the time. I read scholarly historical papers on the john at work half the day, and then I read my 3-year-old son stories (bible and otherwise) at night. I am constantly trying to sift the real moral & doctrinal kernels from the extremely intellectual material that I’m reading, down to concepts that my son, who is right in the middle the most crucial time of forming his moral identiy can understand and make his own. A better word might be grok.
And I’m happy to report that it can be done. Not without its snags and mistakes, not without losing him sometimes, and not giving him enough credit at others. But together, even at our vastly different phases of development, we are both emerging as Christians. He is teaching me at least as much as I’m teaching him.
Maybe we should take time to think that way every time we write a treatise, "How would I explain this to my 3-year-old?" Then again, the formulators and the summarizers son’t have to be the same people, right? Not even the same web-site. Many gifts, one spirit, right?
It’s funny, but emergent practice (which Andrew distinguishes from emergent theology) is probably the perfect go between. People join a church and start doing good and beautiful things, and then they say, "Why are we doing this again?" That’s when we need to have some good answers ready.