The Next-Wave Ezine: Issue #85

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Aug05: On Emergent...
 
 
Emergent serves as an example of what it might look like for American churches to live as Christ-followers within postmodern cultures. The transitions they have made in their almost ten year history as a movement are the transitions many churches need to make.

When the organization started as Young Leaders in 1996, they, like everyone else, were talking about generational ministries, connecting to Gen X, looking for techniques to reach out and become relevant. At their conference in 1997, there was a bit of  disquiet, as some of the younger leaders felt that much more than a generational change was at play, and some began to use the postmodern word for the first time. By 1998, the third Young Leaders Netork conference put generational strategies on the back-burner and really began to look at culture and mission. This was the first conference planned by Doug Pagitt, and was the first conference attended by Brian McLaren and Tony Jones. By 1999, their name changed to Terra Nova Theological Project reflecting their change from technique modification to something entirely new. Two years later, Brian McLaren's New Kind of Christian reflected this new understanding of postmodern culture that was developing in the movement.

There was a budding sense that cultural changes required new theologies. The influence of N.T. Wright and Dallas Willard  grew. Not only was there a new "postmodern" culture, but a new understanding of gospel, kingdom, and atonement emerged. It was at that time that it dawned upon the leaders that a whole new theology needed to be developed. A new message as well as a new method was required. Terra Nova Theological Project became Emergent.

For the last few years, Emergent, primarily through books and conferences, has served as an alternative voice to the mainstream perspective that small 'tweaking', i.e. minor changes to church services will do the trick. Instead, Emergent proposes, we are in a new world, a postmodern and increasingly globalized culture, and a gospel-like response must be made within these postmodern cultures.

Yes, providing a space for the conversation is messy and feelings get hurt. But for the many youth pastors who suffer angst over what they are doing -- that it falls short, that there must be more than simply a relevant church service with a large stage, candles, painters going at it, tables, videos, and irreverent banter, Emergent provides hope.

Emergent provides a place for these travelers to tell their stories, to deconstruct, and yes, eventually to reconstruct their faith. For those who listen carefully and long enough, it is not about Christians losing their faith, but finding it once again as well.

I'm thankful for Emergent -- they have taken alot of 'hits' to be out in front. It is, I'm certain,a very painful role, and the temptation to quit or become bitter is ever-present. The Alternative Worship community in the United Kingdom paid a similar price over the years. As a missiologist, I celebrate those movements that seek to live incarnationally in cultures overlooked by mainstream, modern culture.

I know some may read my comments as uncritical. However, I believe we need to give missonaries wide-berth. We desperately need these sorts of movements in Western culture. Many of these leaders are the children of evangelical pastors. Their theological roots go deep. When we take shots at them, we are killing off the future of the church.  They are trying to make sense of two worlds, in one of the greatest missionary challenges the church has known. My hat is off to them and to the all-too-few others like them. May they grow in number.

Ryan Bolger serves as the Academic Director of the Master of Arts in Global Leadership and as Assistant Professor of Church in Contemporary Culture, in the School of Intercultural Studies, Fuller Theological Seminary. He teaches classes on emerging church, postmodern/global culture, apologetics, strategy, Jesus as missionary, and U2. "I am a family man, a professor, and on my best days a follower of Jesus."

 


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Next-Wave Ezine - Issue #85
Editorial
 
Issue Credits
 
 
Cover Story

The State of Emergent 2006
 
 
Featured Article: Spotlight
Control - Alt - Demerge or Rebooting the Emerging Church for 2006
 
Judah, Meet Jesus: Reflections on Childlike Faith
 
 
Church Planting
Along the Yellow Brick Road: What we did right, tips for forming generous soulcare communities
 
Adventures in Church Planting
 
What Every Church Planter Should Know
 
 
Emerging Church
Thoughts on House Church: from a spa of ill repute
 
The church: Stuck in a moment it is trying to get out of
 
When GOOD becomes the enemy of BEST
 
 
Theology
Fighting the System
 
 
Kingdom Living
Field Notes on Community
 
 
From the Archives
Engaging our postmodern culture: An Interview with Stanley Grenz (1950-2005)
 
 
The Best of 2005
Jan05: Churches: The Pamela Anderson Syndrome
 
Feb05: Why YOU Should Plant a Church
 
Mar05: What I am and what I'm not - or a short history and explanation of the wider 'emerging church'
 
Apr05: Just who is emergent, anyway?
 
May05: The Last Word, and the Word After That...an interview with Brian McLaren
 
Jun05: Chef Barna's State of the Church 2005
 
Jul05: Emerge, but for Pete's sake avoid the liturgical kitsch
 
Aug05: On Emergent...
 
Sep05: Becoming Convergent
 
Oct05: Incarnational Practices
 
Nov05: Growing God's Kingdom from the Harvest an interview with Neil Cole
 
Dec05: What is the Gospel?
 
Best Selling books of 2005