The Next-Wave Ezine: Issue #90

current issue index



next-wave |  about |  bookstore |  archived |  advertise |  charlie wear's notes |  links June 2006
An Open Letter from an Emerging Church Leader
 
 

Ahoy,

If you are in denominational or church leadership, I am writing to you.  I am writing you from some of us who are a small part of this thing called the emerging church

Writing to denominational leaders is a hard task. Denominations get bashed a lot by people who love to make over-generalizations and that isn't my intent here. Secondly, if you are like the denominational leaders I know, you probably have enough people telling you what to do already. I don’t intend to do that either. First of all, I am part of a denomination.  My grandfather was a denominational stooge and so are some good friends. Resonate, a community of those discussing the Gospel and culture in Canada also has some denominational leaders who are a part of it and the last I checked, they hadn't been run out of town. You have a tough job and for many of you, a constituency that is quite diverse in practice and worldview. One of those challenges is what to make of the emerging church.  There has been a lot written about the topic by a lot of people smarter than I am. What I do want to do is talk about a part of the emerging church that in all of the controversies, we don’t hear a lot about lately. 

I thought I would start with an interview that Ron Sider did with Christianity Today back in 2005.

The heart of the matter is the scandalous failure to live what we preach. The tragedy is that poll after poll by Gallup and Barna show that evangelicals live just like the world. Contrast that with what the New Testament says about what happens when people come to living faith in Christ. There's supposed to be radical transformation in the power of the Holy Spirit. The disconnect between our biblical beliefs and our practice is just, I think, heart-rending.

I'm a deeply committed evangelical. I've been committed to evangelical beliefs and to renewing the evangelical church all of my life. And the stats just break my heart. They make me weep. And somehow we must face that reality and change it.

As I was reading the article I was thinking about how quickly evangelicals have been to condemn the world and have ignored those in the church. Maybe it is a "not happening here" syndrome. As a Free Methodist I could blame the Baptists for being so immoral while they blame the Nazarenes.  If we aren't blaming each other, we may see the problem itself as so large that it is easy to ignore. A couple of months ago when I posted Ron Sider's summary of his book in Christianity Today to our denominations e-mail discussion list, the only response back came off list and the person just said it is too big for us to tackle so many go back to what they know isn’t working.

The definition of insanity is to keep doing the same things and expecting a different result.  That doesn't seem to be a great use of time, energy, or resources.  A desire to change is what Sider is talking about in The Scandal of the Evangelical Conscience: Why Are Christians Living Just Like The Rest Of The World? is what drives a lot of the emerging church.  While we still love the church, we see the church having failed it's own basic mission.  I wish I could hear a big Amen at this point but the reality is that not everyone sees it that way.  I have colleagues in ministry that point to the Sunday attendance of their churches and their building programs and tell me that everything is going great and they criticize those of us that go in a different direction.  All denominations deny this but the sweet allure of success is just too powerful, successful and big churches drive the agenda’s of many denominations, either formally or informally.  Success is largest impediment of change, which is why most downtown cores of cities across the United States and Canada are full of massive church buildings that were the megachurches of their day.  What made them successful made it very hard to change from that.  Change and new initiatives don’t traditionally thrive in most institutions and need to be nurtured and protected at times.

If we existing movements don’t do that, it will be guilty of being on the different side of situation as it was when it was formed.  Almost all current evangelical movements and traditions came from traditions that fiercely resisted their formation. If you are a denominational leader reading this, you have either experienced or know of people that have gone before you that went through this.  If you don’t, check out your denominations history book, I am sure it is in there.   While you are reading your denominational history books, see if you can find the phrase, "You’re right, we do need to change our ways to be faithful to God."  It is hard to hear that what we have done before isn’t working today.  The question for many denominations is; can new wines be poured into old wineskins?

Why the new wine?  It's something that gets talked about less and less in the emerging church but is what I think started the entire discussion and that is mission.  While the discussion of mission and church was first and foremost when many of us starting talking about this, recently, many don't connect emergent or emerging church to anything missional at all. This isn't a discussion about leadership styles, worship forms, or what kind of candles to have. It isn't about adding onto existing ministries as a program (as seen in the amount of "Pastor to Emerging Generations" job titles I have seen) but rather a desire to reach a generation that doesn’t even have the church on it’s radar.  If you doubt me, take a Sunday off of church and sit in a coffee shop by your local university campus.  Listen for any references to church at all.  I don’t think that people are sleeping in on Sunday morning either agonizing over missing church vs. watching some NFL football.  We are making the same discovery that English missionary Leslie Newbiggin made after returning to England after being a missionary in India.

Lesslie Newbigin lived that story upside down. At the age of 65, he came home to England and found it foreign. Ministry in England, he discovered, "is much harder than anything I met in India. There is a cold contempt for the Gospel which is harder to face than opposition. . . . England is a pagan society and the development of a truly missionary encounter with this very tough form of paganism is the greatest intellectual and practical task facing the Church" (Unfinished Agenda).

From that rude confrontation with pagan England has come an outpouring of books and lectures. Newbigin looked at the West with a missionary's eye and asked a missionary's analytic questions. How can we evangelize this culture, built on Christian foundations yet utterly unwilling to consider (almost unable to understand) the Christian's claim to know the truth that will set us free? It is hard, Newbigin knew, for a Hindu or a Muslim to come to worship Christ. For an Englishman, it would seem, it had become even harder.

Bishop Leslie Newbiggin and later Ron Sider articulated for the western world the condition that we find the church in today. George Barna provided for us the polling data and it just confirmed for us what we already anecdotally knew. The church seems to have failed at our mission of evangelism and discipleship. We find ourselves surrounded by empty churches that we are afraid or embarrassed to bring unchurched friends to because we know they can’t connect to a culture they have no experience in. Perhaps even more sadly, we are apart of a church that is living much differently than what it preaches. Like you, we want to change that and because our contexts are different, so will be the forms that we use to reach them.

These just aren’t issues for the emerging church. They are issues for all of us in the church. Our answers to them will be different, depending on the context but in the end the pursuit is the same. Yes, there are theological questions to be worked out and that will take time and dialogue to happen.  Some traditions will probably oppose them while others will accept them (like with most theological debates).

While the important work of theology is being done, let’s not take our focus off of our mission as well.  My hope is that denominations from all different traditions aren’t threatened by the name emerging church or see its rejection of some more traditional forms and see that we are all in this together.  When you look at the emerging church, I hope you see something that in many ways is just like anything new and will take a while to learn to walk and articulate what it is learning.  Instead of being something that is to be feared, I also hope that the many of the traditions out there will remember their own early years and give some refuge to the emerging movements that God has entrusted your tradition with.

 


Jordon CooperJordon Cooper is a founding member of Resonate, involved in the Worship Freehouse, and blogs here.

 


RECENT COMMENTS


Thanks for this article, Jordan - it's important to remember what common ground we have and that we're all in this thing together...and that it's not about candles or adding "Pastor to Emerging Generations" job titles.


could it be that our fellowship is in christ? self be crucified and the holy spirit be in control....but then: on our terms. on my terms? or maybe after having tried everything on his terms? is the emerging church eventually the forerunner of the vanishing church in the west? is relativism plus the notion of independent neutral autonomous thinking kreeping into my system without me knowing it? do i still live with the silly notion that i live in a christian culture? again the question (also to myself) is my fellowhip in christ or in the revelation i've received after that (ie church denominations etc),or am i serving christ with my consecrated self, which i think must be rags or am i living in full surrender to Jesus, allways available...but then being part of the body of christ makes me feel nowhere at home, at least not in this world, but unfortunately not in churches (clubs); befor my conversion, being an atheist i was alone in a tremendous universe...now i'm his en his alone , tight to him with ropes, captured in his net of love in the same universe meeting christains throughout different churches (not necessarily protestant!) makes me see the preciousness of Jesus' life...my question may be : how am i still hindering him to manifest himself, realising at the same moment that he is my life.self being his biggest enemy God bless you


Thank you! This article puts the whole issue clearly and simply. With all the arguing about the emerging church and the "implosion" of the traditional denominations this point is all too often overlooked: if the denominations are collapsing as a way to organize the church it's because they have failed to do the work we are called to do by Christ. The emerging church isn't trying to ruin what others have built. It's already ruined.


Gordon... Thank you for articulating this important issue that has been in my heart also for a long time. One of the practical implications of being faithful to our calling is to really DO what we, the Emerging Church, have been talking about. Our example, OUR ACTIONS, will speak to the traditional denominations and their leaders. I am hopeful that the church of Jesus Christ, even through in its denominational format, will go and grow beyond the limitations of "church growth" or "mega-church" definitions of success. There's lots of hope, I think! Denominations like Mennonite Church Canada, where I now belong, are responding to be the transforming presence of Jesus wherever they are called to be! Let's keep publishing articles like this. Meanwhile, let's really DO it--that is, taking genuine risks for being Christ's presence in a post-911 world! God is at work! (BTW, what happened to the supposed partnership between RESONATE and our peacebuilding work in Southern Philippines? Be glad to hear from you about this promise.)


Good article Jordan, a challenge to me after leaving as a denominational pastor and trying to grapple with the post-church culture. You don't have to go to a University campus to find out that talk about the church does not exist. Entering into a new career in the trades (welding) has giving me the opportunity to be involved with a very large post-church crowd. Most people in my trade are aged 19-27 and my conversations with them regarding the church have not been at all a positive reflection on it. I left the pastorate because my denomination for the most part was sastified with the status quo, any mention of emerging church generally got noises out of joint and comments like, when it becomes more of concern (post-church generations) in the future we will come talk to you.

I realize there are denominational leaders (such as yourself) that are getting serious about engaging our culture today, its just hard sometimes to see that so many denominations have become complacent and unmoving.

Keep up the the good work Jordan, your voice and action motivates many of us.


Hi Dann, We haven't forgotten about you! Resonate just needs to find a revenue source...


Thanks for the feedback everyone. I appreciate it. I think denominations still have a role to play in the emerging church (I am part of one) but for many, it will take a radical rethinking of who they are. It is also going to take a lot of dialogue and learning for two different worldviews to work together.


Great thoughts, Jordan! I appreciate your heart which you expressed well in your open letter. I'm an FM here in the States, and also, a denom leader. As Director of Mobilization for our worldwide missions efforts, I've just finished attending my 9th Annual Conference ... and am encouraged to have experienced a growing number of times and places where space is made for God to come in fresh and new ways ... where refocusing is taking place to engage the culture. While we've got much to learn and a long way to go, I believe that many are indeed listening to the challenge toward missional life. I believe many are truly responding in this way: "You’re right, we do need to change our ways to be faithful to God." I'm praying that God will help me remain in the presence of Jesus ... I'm praying that I'll understand what it means for me to be missional. May the Lord of the Harvest help us all to be faithful to Him, His church, and His Kingdom! - Eric (ericspangler.typepad.com)


great letter Jordon... I'm just waiting for your next article "why I am committed to a denomination and yet still emerging!" I hope Charles posts that one too.


With all the difficulties we face as Christians on what to do, how to do it, where to be, what to be, etc. Jesus summed it all up for us. Love the Lord with all your heart, mind, soul and strength. And the second command is like it. Love your neighbor as yourself. Jesus summed up everything in these two commands. The more trials I face and I see others facing around me, the more I understand what our Lord was saying. Everything hinges on love and relationship. As long as our motivation in everything is love, love will never fail.


Great article! What do you do when your denomination is stifling, even discouraging an emerging church plant? I'm a long-time pastor, have been in a denomination a long while, and am having thoughts to get out to somewhere our emerging church will be embraced, not just tolerated (or worse) - got suggestions? please respond here or email me at bars4him@aol.com.


Very interesting thoughts and observations. However, I don't think this issue is confined to 21st century USA, but has been the age-old challenge of the church from the 1st century on. However, the Holy Spirit has a way of breaking through over and over to reach eacg new generation, usually through a new movement that itself eventually becomes just what it was founded to change. A key concern/challenge to the "emerging Church" is its reluctance to find a doctrinal or behavioral center other than the vague "we can do it better, because we do it different." I wonder if the lifestyles of those involved in the emerging church movement are truly different/better than those who come from a committed but more traditional church. In fact, I have missed "morality" as being a cornerstone of the emerging church, all the while challenging the denominational church because many believers don't practice what they preach. Is not preaching morality better than preaching it but not living it? Or don't we need to figure out how to do both at the same time? Thanks for the insigtful article. I really enjoyed it.


Copyright © 2010 Next-Wave Ezine.
All rights reserved.


Next-Wave Ezine - Issue #90
Editorial
 
Issue Credits
 
 
Cover Story

An Open Letter from an Emerging Church Leader
 
 
Featured Article: At the Top
Review: The Untold Story of the New Testament Church
 
 
Featured Article: Spotlight
Five Years Traveling Off The Map
 
 
Church Culture
Decoding Christian Code Language
 
 
Missional
Jesus is a Verb
 
 
Emerging Church
I Dream of a Church
 
 
Culture
Sensible?
 
Why Christian Political Activism Often Backfires
 
 
Theology
Paul's Pregnant Text
 
 
Reviews
The NexTestament: A Review of A Heretic's Guide to Eternity by Spencer Burke and Barry Taylor
 
 
Father's Day Tribute
Caleb's Promise: A Father's Day Tribute
 
 
Leadership
Leadership Formation and the Declining Cost of Information
 
 
Kingdom Living
In Christ or Christ in You
 
 
From the Archives
Live Nude God