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The Great Emergence

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How Christianity is Changing and Why * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * 1 ring closer ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Great Emergence


1
How Christianity is Changing and Why
2
It's no secret that change is in the air. The
evidence is found throughout our culture, felt in
our economy and experienced in technology. Some
of us are struggling to keep up with these
changes, as they come so fast and from so many
directions. Nowhere is that more apparent than
within the church.
3
Some thinkers have speculated that there is a
recurrent pattern in which every 500 years
Christianity sheds the rigidity of an overly
established institution and reinvents itself.
4
2500 B.C.
A.D. 500
A.D. 1500
A.D. 2000
500 B.C.
A.D. 0
A.D.1000
1000 B.C.
5
2500 B.C.
A.D. 500
A.D. 1500
A.D. 2000
500 B.C.
A.D. 0
A.D.1000
1000 B.C.
Ancient World
Post-Modern World
Iron Age
Medieval World
Modern World
6
2500 B.C.
A.D. 500
A.D. 1500
A.D. 2000
500 B.C.
A.D. 0
A.D.1000
1000 B.C.
Israel Monarchy
Jesus
Great Schism
Protestant Reformation
Exile
Monastic Movement
7
Give some examples from your own experience on
how church is different from what it was in
your childhood.
8
Sketching the Church
  • 1960s observers noted changes in a diagram a
    quadrilateral

Social Justice Christians
Liturgicals
aka Mainline
aka Charismatic Pentecostal
Aka Fundamental
Renewalists
Conservatives
9
Changing Shapes
  • No longer fit neatly into boxes
  • Now more of a cruciform shape

Social Justice Christians
Liturgicals
Renewalists
Conservatives
10
Changing Shapes (contd)
  • Locate self or community based on importance in
    Christian practice

Social Justice Christians
Liturgicals
Renewalists
Conservatives
Intersections loose and flexible
11
Changing Shapes (contd)
  • Top Intersection between faith works
  • Where will you be at 10 AM on Sunday?

Social Justice Christians
Liturgicals
Renewalists
Conservatives
Places on a spectrum rather than boundaries
12
Changing Shapes (contd)
Top Action more important than belief -
orthopraxy

Social Justice Christians
Liturgicals
Renewalists
Conservatives
Bottom Belief more important than what one does
- orthodoxy
13
The Gathering Center

Social Justice Christians
Liturgicals
Renewalists
Conservatives
14
The Gathering Center (contd)
  • There is a gathering center as an increasing
    number of Christians are mingling and learning
    from and embracing one another's traditions.

15
  • The changes afoot appear to be global. And the
    United States appears to be lagging a few years
    behind. The British (including Australia, S.
    Africa, New Zealand, Canada) experience has seen
    several instances of change in the last decade
    namely fresh expressions churches.

16
  • The Conversation
  • There is a clear uptick in Christians who want to
    connect with and exchange ideas across
    denominational and traditional boundaries. This
    conversation is facilitated by the internet and a
    great deal of publishing.

17
  • The Conversation
  • Technology is a great part of this phenomenon.
    Not only can Christians around the world
    communicate, we can also access information about
    the past, including the writings of our Christian
    forebears. Whats happening is open source.

18
  • Recent developments bearing on faith
  • Computer technology
  • WWII and Holocaust
  • Archeology
  • Deconstruction in Philosophy
  • Exposure to Jewish people (narrative)
  • Changes in Medical Science
  • Alcoholics Anonymous (generic god)
  • Automobile (death of Sunday)
  • And many other factors bearing on Christianity

19
  • The Protestant Reformation
  • Essentially a shift in authority from Church
    structure to biblical authority
  • Much of the Middle Ages cohesion relied upon the
    concept of corpus Christianum, an ideal, unified
    society derived from biblical images of the body
    of Christ.
  • The corpus Christianum relied upon the
    classification of people into three roles
    workers, fighters, and pray-ers.
  • Social shifts such as the rise of universities, a
    merchant class, and more local loyalties could
    not be accommodated within the existing ideas of
    Christianity.
  • Abuses and scandals in the Papacy were another
    factor leading to a seismic shift known as the
    Reformation.

20
  • The Protestant Reformation cont.
  • As Christianity splintered into multiple
    denominations, authorities wrote statements of
    orthodox doctrinal belief as a means of
    clarifying their positions, educating their
    members, and distinguishing themselves from other
    denominations.
  • Many princes, dukes and city councilmen signed
    confessions to define their political
    allegiances.
  • Such statements coincided with the development of
    the modern state in its earliest form.
  • Scholarship provided a means of defending and
    justifying ones particular viewpoint. (What is
    the Methodist view of the Sacraments?)

21
  • The Protestant Reformation cont.
  • The scientific discoveries of Darwin, Faraday and
    others showed a growing fissure between religion
    and science, and, in even broader terms, between
    realms of sacred and secular.
  • Basically, what got set up in the Reformation was
    the modern, denominational, secular vision of
    Christianity.
  • It is now entirely possible that this pattern of
    authority is giving way to something new
    following a path quite a bit like the Protestant
    Reformation.

22
Watercooler Theology
  • Conversation about God in public
  • Diversity in conversationalists about God
  • No longer just reserved for clergy
  • Open opinions on interpretations of current
    events
  • Old divisions begin to melt, especially in four
    corners area
  • Finding empty spot or hunger or question or
    experience to talk about

23
Backlash
  • Major changes between inherited and whatever is
    emerging result in backlash
  • Dramatic change perceived as threat to status quo
  • Fundamentalism (early 20th C.) one example
  • Reaction is not necessarily a bad thing
  • Scholars predicted _at_ 10 of born Christians would
    push back violently against center, new diagram

24
The Questions
  • 1. What is the overarching story line of the
    Bible? 2. How should the Bible be understood?
    3. Is God violent? 4. Who is Jesus and why is
    He important? 5. What is the Gospel? 6. What do
    we do about the Church? 7. Can we find a way to
    address human sexuality without fighting about
    it? 8. Can we find a better way of viewing the
    future? 9. How should followers of Jesus relate
    to people of other religions? 10. What do we do
    now? (How do we translate our quest into action?)

25
(No Transcript)
26
Ubiquitous theology
  • Public, shared, and vital
  • Media age expedited communication and diversity
  • New center not quite Protestant or any other
  • Melange picked from each quadrant
  • Established churches could not accommodate
  • New faithful began meeting among themselves
  • House churches sprang up along with unlikely
    meeting places
  • All share incarnational characteristic Jesus is
    incarnate as is worship of the whole body

27
Centripetal Force
  • Gathers energy by bringing in more of its own
  • Swirling, mixing from quadrant to quadrant
  • Sweeping toward center
  • Expands in waves of influence
  • Results in new way of being Christian church
  • Predicted by scholars
  • Dismissed as generational by established churches

28
Error in Assessment
  • Denominations failed to account for rummage
    sale factor massive cultural shift
  • Culture had become post-everything
  • Modern
  • Denominational
  • Rational
  • Enlightenment
  • Literate
  • ???
  • No means of returning/no desire to do so

29
The Rose

Social Justice Christians
Liturgicals
Conservatives
Renewalists
The Rose was the symbol of the Great Reformation
30
Backlash Examples
  • Congregations, ecclesial units, individuals would
    aggressively dedicate resources to reversing all
    changes
  • Fallout from consecration of Bp. Robinson in
    Episcopal Church
  • Election of conservative Roman pontiff, local
    bishop
  • Splintering of Presbyterian Church
  • Choosing sides unavoidable
  • Each quadrant develops reactionists, purists
  • Ballast against too-hasty changes in stormy sea

31
Surrounding Currents
  • Other sections of quadrants can be assigned by
    rough percentages
  • Exception Unknown emergent
  • Spectrum or sliding scale in widening ring
  • Ultimately 60 may be Emergent by the time the
    movement is mature
  • 30-35 neither Emergent or reactors

32
The Surrounding Currents

Social Justice Christians
Liturgicals
Hyphenates
Progressives
Re-Traditioning
Traditionalists
Conservatives
Renewalists
33
Surrounding Currents
  • Flexible, open boundary lines
  • Outer corners peopled by persuaded quadrant
    dwellers
  • Inherited church of parents, grandparents
  • Lend stability to faith in transition
  • Will accommodate to and assist gradual change
  • Will participate in realignments across sectarian
    lines

34
Re-Traditioning Christians
  • 1 ring closer to center
  • Choose to stay with inherited church but wish to
    make it more fully what it was
  • Fond refurbishers want to fix live in it for
    all time
  • Increase comfort, beauty, welcome to all
  • Their task is the most remarkable, arduous, and
    richest of all

35
Progressive Christians
  • 1 track closer to center
  • Want to maintain position in institutional
    Christianity yet give up controlling doctrine,
    practices
  • Remain within Protestant communions
  • Seek to adapt to realities of postmodernity
  • Remodelers, not refurbishers open place up
  • Def Believes in loving God, neighbor, self
    thinks that 2 out of 3 aint bad Eric Elnes

36
Hyphenateds
  • Nearest to center
  • Names bear literal or implied hyphens
  • Presby-mergents, Anglo-emergents
  • Meth-emergents, Luth-emergents, etc.
  • Now losing the -
  • Most schizophrenic of circles most vibrant,
    colorful,vital
  • Tear down the house on Grandpas land build anew
  • Most difficult to predict future

37
7. The Way AheadMapping Fault Lines and Fusions
  • Different Bases of Authority
  • Left of vertical axis has different base of
    authority than the right
  • Left (all in tension) Right
  • Scripture sola scriptura
  • Spirit scriptura sola
  • Liturgy
  • Apostolic tradition

38
The Bases of Authority (a)
Social Justice Christians
Liturgicals
Orthodoxy Orthopraxy

Renewalists
Conservatives
39
Orthonomy and Theonomy
  • Numbers diminishing for traditionalists
  • Orthopraxy (right practice) remains in upper
    quadrants
  • Orthodoxy (right doctrine) in place for lower
    quadrants
  • Emergence grows occupies no quadrant comes
    from all of them
  • Open space on both sides of vertical axis

40
The Bases of Authority (b)
Social Justice Christians
Liturgicals
Orthodoxy Orthopraxy

Orthonomy
Theonomy
Renewalists
Conservatives
41
Orthonomy
  • New word coined from ancient Greek
  • Ortho correct nomy naming harmony, divine
    beauty
  • correct harmoniousness
  • Employment of purity to discern truth
  • Many emergents confused about arguments over
    exact historicity, doctrine
  • Must be true since it is so beautiful

42
Orthonomy Keatsian Heresy?
  • Beauty is truth and truth beauty /
  • Beauty in the eye of the beholder
  • Action or object not divine or authoritative just
    because of its beauty or harmoniousness
  • Emergents on right side of axis use a word of
    their own theonomy
  • Greek theos God nomy
  • Only God can be the source of perfection
  • How best to understand Gods meaning?

43
Networked Authority
  • New Christianity/emergent church must discover
  • Authority base
  • Delivery system
  • Governing agency
  • Must find something other than Luthers sola
    scriptura
  • Seen as insufficient, outmoded

44
Historical Authority
  • Church has always utilized ideological currents
    of culture in general
  • Early church copied Romes governance
  • Under Gregory churchs authority was administered
    through monasteries and convents in similar
    hierarchical order
  • Roman church defined authority in single
    position system of kings, lords of
    pre-Reformation culture
  • Reformation created democratic theology of
    priesthood of all believers elected leaders

45
Emergent Authority?
  • Scripture-and-community combined network theory
    (math, physics, Web)
  • Church more of a network than an entity
  • Self-organized system of relations between parts
  • Each part of smaller networks in complex levels
  • Each is a working piece as long as connection
    remains intact
  • No one part or network has entire truth
  • Crowd sourcing total egalitarianism

46
New Concept of Church
  • Egalitarianism respect for worth of each
  • Indifference to capitalism, individualism
  • Becoming the church discovering what it means
    that the kingdom of God is within
  • Each person a bit of a much grander network
  • Established leaders, scholars, priests have only
    human understanding
  • Message will flash to, from remote parts of
    network and be tempered by community

47
What Is Emergent/Emerging Church?
  • A conversation bottom-up vs. top-down
  • Global no barriers as to nationality, race,
    class, economic status
  • Radical relational, non-hierarchical,
    post-democratized form of Christianity for the
    future
  • Impetus in the secular emergence
  • Theory and tools found in theology, experience of
    quadrants plus one group

48
A Gift from the Quakers
  • Early support in conservative quadrant
    Evangelicalism
  • Lacked flexibility to shift to new model
  • Quakers belong in no quadrant
  • Proto-network theory in interplay of
    revelation, discernment, Scripture, governance
  • Recent writers described different approach to
    spirituality and orderly being
  • (Richard Foster, Parker Palmer, J. Brent Bill),
    John Wimber of Assn. of Vineyard churches)

49
A Gift from the Quakers (contd)
  • I believewe are witnessing a new reformation
    challenging not doctrine the the medium. These
    new paradigm churches have discarded many of the
    attributes of established religioncreating a new
    genre of worship music, restructuring the
    organization, and radicalizing the principle of
    the priesthood of all believers.-- Donald E.
    Miller, Firestone Professor of Religion, USC,
    1997.

50
Center Set and Bounded Set
  • Dont always fit into established churches or
    quadrants
  • Often dont fit the community from which they
    came
  • Center-set let people sort out by how close they
    want to get to the center
  • Assumes something other than rules holding things
    together
  • Presence of rules assumes some authority,
    consequence
  • Bounded-set defining whos in, out

51
Center Set and Bounded Set (contd)
  • Believe-behave-belong fits bounded-set Roman
    Catholicism, historic Protestantism
  • Requires adherence to beliefs, conduct
  • Belong-behave-believe reverses process
  • Occurs in center-set approach
  • One can belong and can seek more
  • Will begin to behave in a different manner not
    imposed by rules
  • Behavior shapes belief until both are one

52
Narrative
  • Emergence thinking often critiqued as
    anti-intellectualism
  • Postmodern/emergents recognize paradox in life
    and logical thinking
  • Logic suffers from sufficient perspective
  • Meta-narrative also product of human thought
  • Narrative speaks truth to the heart so it may
    inform the mind
  • Markedly different principle of human
    organization and understanding

53
The Problem With Constantine
  • Growing distrust for precepts, teachings of
    post-Constantinian church
  • Doctrine formalized at his direction
  • Theology shifted from Judaic wholistic concepts
    of life and structure
  • Became Hellenized dualism, Greco-Roman cultural
    hierarchy
  • Body evil, suspect soul separate, good
  • Salvation concept went from how to live out Gods
    will to a guaranteed ticket to Paradise
  • Great Emergence about restoring wholeness to
    Christian life

54
Future Possibilities
  • Great Emergence may rewrite Christian Theology
  • Atonement, origin of evil up for question
  • New theology may be more embodied, paradoxical,
    narrative, mystical than before
  • Roman, Protestant communions will need to adjust
    to massive changes
  • Protestantism will have major impact
  • Will need to assume greater collegiality

55
Not Easy To Discern
  • How will the Great Emergence interface with
    results, consequences of realignments?
  • How will Emergents themselves consider resulting
    Christianity?
  • The growing emergent movement must be intentional
    about faith and what it is to become
  • Once-inocuous movement no longer is

56
The Emergent Mission
  • The church became a place to go
  • Let us make it a people to be.

57
Emergence, Emersion
  • The emerging church (sometimes referred to as the
    emergent movement) is a Christian movement of the
    late 20th and early 21st century that crosses a
    number of theological boundaries participants
    can be described as evangelical,
    post-evangelical, liberal, post-liberal,
    charismatic, neocharismatic, and
    post-charismatic. (Wikipedia)
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