October 14, 2005

Emergent article in Christianity Today

Chris Armstrong from Bethel Seminary writes an article entitled, Emergents, Meet Saints! The wave of the future needs the wisdom of the past.  Here is an excerpt. 

"Emergents are folks dissatisfied with the way a lot of evangelicals have been doing church, and they are exploring and suggesting alternatives. From the Emergents' perspective, the church today has become culturally stale and bland—speaking an out-of-touch conservative language to a post-Christian generation of young people who have never darkened the door of a church in their lives… The Emergents seem to me to have it right: No single program or rulebook can possibly speak to the hearts of this diversely gifted, diversely perceptive, and diversely wounded young generation who yearn for spiritual fulfillment yet deeply distrust "organized religion." We need to reassess—to find new models of creative ministries. Grace and peace to the Tender Twigs and Budding Tips of the Christian family tree—who draw strength from the Root, and now need also to draw strength from the Branches.”

As a Christian History and Thought graduate student I strongly agree with Chris.

Read whole article here.

October 11, 2005

KC Emergent Cohort Reminder

REMINDER - Emergent Gathering on Wednesday Night, McCoy's in Westport - 9:00 PM.  Alan Roxburgh   Details here.

September 22, 2005

KC Emergent Cohort gathering

On Wednesday, October 12 we will be meeting at McCoy's in Westport

at 9:00 PM. Our distinguished guest will be Alan Roxburgh. Alan, as you can see by clicking the link is involved in innovative projects related to missional leadership development, theological training, and emerging ecclesiological thinking. Alan is connected with some of the leading seminaries in North America and is exploring alternate seminary concepts. Alan is also engaged at the national level with discussions of living missionally around a Rule of Life. This will be an amazing time to be a part of conversations with Alan that are at the forefront of the theological work being done today. This time is being made possible by the Allelon Foundation. Logoorange_140x160

June 28, 2005

A New Imagined Reality

The following quote is from New Zealander Mark Pierson, in response to his observations he made while attending the Worship Arts and Liturgy Conference in Kentucky two months ago.  Posted by the Prodigal Kiwi(s)

“…I remain convinced that the future of the Church in the West doesn’t lie in the Emerging Church movement. The value of this movement is to influence and provoke the inherited church forms into change rather than to replace them. Still a vital role…

Paul Fromont writes, "Good point. I think Mark is right; however I think the other vital role of the so-called 'emerging church movement' is in its permission-giving; permission to dream, to imagine, to innovate, to explore the missional/cultural matrix, permission to challenge notions of what church is and what church is for…the merging church movement agitates, challenges, experiments, and innovates – that’s the emerging church at it’s best; at it’s worst it’ll be a superficial trend that never addresses the ecclesiological and missional heart of church reform."

I have been saying this for more than a year now along with statements like... Emergent, the Emergent movement, however you want to describe it, will probably not be around thirty years from now.  It will have fulfilled its prophetic mission of creating a new imagined reality that will impact much of the broader church ethos.  The Methodist, Presbyterian, Assembly of God, Baptist, Catholic, etc., churches will still be around.  Hopefully, because of Emergent and the Emerging Church movement they will look and be quite different than they are today.  I am reading The 32877 Prophetic Imagination by Walter Brueggemann which is a great book for this conversation.  He writes, "The task of prophetic imagination and ministry is to bring to public expression those very hopes and yearnings that have been denied so long and suppressed so deeply that we no longer know they are there." 

We have heard the testimonies over and over again, "Church is not working for me,"  "Is there a church somewhere that takes the message of Jesus seriously?"  "I love Jesus, it just seems the church has sold out to another agenda, what can I do?".  And then they were swept up by the Emergent conversation which in actuality offered a new imagined reality of what church could and should be.  We have been awakened, we are being delivered from the domination of "official" Christianity and we have caught a vision of the Freedom of God loosed and accessible to all, no longer constrained by the static ecclesiological order of the day.  We have a vision of singing a new song about a church that looks more like Jesus and less like maintainer of Empire ideology.  You know, on second thought, maybe Mark Pierson and I am wrong to say the existing church structures and denominations are here to stay.

June 04, 2005

Response to Emergent Critics

Several of my friends have written a response to the Critics of Emergent.  Here is the PDF file Download response2critics.pdf

May 31, 2005

Clawson on Emergent experience

Mike Clawson from Illinois writes about his experiences at the Emergent Conference in Nashville.  I found his summary very interesting.  I had posted that Phyllis Tickle was my highlight.  Here is an excerpt that I resonate with as very true...

the irony was that while most people would expect the Emergent Convention to have the hip, exciting worship, and the Pastors Convention to be more "traditional", in fact the reality was that while us young, supposedly "hip" emergent types were sitting in a sparsely decorated room listening to a 70-year-old woman tell us bible stories, she was almost being drowned out by the vibrations coming from the drums from the contemporary worship bands playing for all the baby boomer, dockers and plaid shirt Pastors up the hall at the NPC's General Session!

Read the whole post here.

May 20, 2005

Emergent Cohorts and Bloggers

I also serve on the National Leadership Team of Emergent focusing on grassroots cohort development. The number of cohorts that are meeting to dialogue about theology, ecclesiology, mission and other wonderful topics of life have doubled around the country have doubled since we formed this team. I also attended the Bloggers Luncheon sponsored by American Bible Society. It was great to connect faces with the bloggers from around the world who are engaged in important conversations and dialogue online. Will Samson heads this group up. Will and I felt like we knew each other from our blogs although we have never met in person. When we learned (online) that we had Liberty University connections in our pasts we determined to meet and share our spiritual journeys out of fundamentalism. What a great guy and fellow recovering fundamentalist.

April 14, 2005

A Post that I have been thinking about for days...

Read this post by Jason Clark.  It has resulted in much personal reflection during the last three days.  First of all, I really love Sting and have been intrigued for years by his life journey and the artistic telling of his story.  Secondly, I can relate, personally, to Sting's desire to be freed from the dysfunctional psychological trap he found himself in.  Thirdly, I think it is time for many of us in the Emergent dialogue to admit we have the same addiction that Sting is talking about and help each other seek healthier, more grace filled ways to work out our theological, spiritual and life issues/frustrations.  Thanks Jason, thanks Sting.  Copyright WireImage

"The conceit is that to be relevant, you need to be angry or alienated or unhappy. I fell into the same trap and I'd literally manufacture opportunities when I could experience this stuff. It worked for a while, until one day I realised I was destroying myself." Sting

March 05, 2005

Emerging Church Articles in Worship Magazine

Curcvr_1Worship Magazine has a couple of articles on Emergent and/or the Emerging Church.  The Emerging Face of Postmodern Worship by Andrew Jones and What is Emerging by Chuck Smith Jr.  The second article mentions Brian McLaren, Tony Jones, Todd Hunter, Chris Seay and Brad Cecil, among others...

February 21, 2005

Bleep, bleep, bleep...

Click for details on Thursday's KC Emergent Cohort gathering.

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