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The%20Emerging%20Church:

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The Emerging Church: If the church were to begin today, what would it look like? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The%20Emerging%20Church:


1
The Emerging Church
  • If the church were to begin today, what would it
    look like?

2
  • Characteristics
  • 1. Metaphor of a Conversation.
  • 2. Situational Beings
  • 3. Liberty from the constraints/Values of
    Modernism
  • 4. Sensitivity towards the postmodern
    critique.
  • Proponents.
  • Classroom Critique.

3
B. General Characteristics 1 Metaphor of a
conversation
  • Movement that may expressed in terms of the
    metaphor of a conversation. It is an
    experiential dialogue where people might create,
    discuss, explore, express, reflect, and worship
    without theological dogmatism, legalism,
    authoritarianism, and over- generalizations.
  • It is a free-form conversation that embraces
    the whole individual, recognizing the
    uniqueness of every person and their
    giftedness/contribution to the community
    experience of living worship.

4
2 Situational Beings
  • Experiential Christianity because human are
    situated beings. In terms of metaphysics, it
    is a pragmatism of sorts (transactional
    experience)
  • Sensitivity to cultural context.
  • Criticism towards Archimedean objectivity.
  • Embrace of cultural accommodation in relating
    theological-religious expressions in a
    situational setting.
  • Emphasis on living community
  • Appeciation of theological diversity within
    Christianity.

5
3. Liberty from Modernism (whether secular or
Christian)
  • Liberty from the following
  • 1. Essentialistic, categorical language,
    authority, and meaning (e.g., Seeker-Sensitive
    Movement Covenant Theology Theological
    Systems). Rather, they embrace collective
    narratives of belief. They seek expression
    without definition.
  • 2. Authoritarianism whether it is church
    mores, polity, and theology (e.g., authoritarian
    pastors who claim to have final answers, who
    see things as they really are or the
    authority of traditions We have always done it
    this way and so all other ways are wrong).
  • 3. Ecclesiastical, experiential, theological,
    and worship stagnation (e.g., theology is
    developmental, never catechetical).
  • 4. Individualism (e.g., you are not an isolated
    Christian you need the community).

6
4. Sensitive to the postmodern critique
  • Skepticism towards epistemic certainty. To be
    sure, they are not radical postmodernists (who
    negate meaning). Rather, they redefine
    epistemological methodology , adopting a dualism
    of sorts that combines religious beliefs/values
    with a post-structural reaction in a situational
    context (transactional experience).
  • Emphasis on De-centering.
  • Rejection of Archimedean Authority
  • Rejection of the isolated individual
  • Appreciation of diversity within a community of
    believers.
  • Emphasis on community and plurality of expression.

7
C. Proponents
  • Some of the major proponents (diverse cluster of
    people) include the following (this is list is
    not exhaustive)
  • Brian McClaren, A Generous Orthodoxy Why I am
    a Missional, Evangelical, Post/Protestant,
    Liberal/Conservative, Mystical/Poet, Biblical,
    Charismatic/Contemplative, Fundamentalist/Calvini
    st/ Anabaptist/Anglican, Methodist, Catholic,
    Green, Incarnational, Depressed-yet-Hopeful,
    Emergent, Unfinished Christian.
  • Tony Jones Doug Pagitt, An Emergent Manifesto
    of Hope
  • Donald E. Miller, Searching for God Knows What
  • Leonard Sweet, Post-Modern Pilgrims Ibid.,
    Church in Emerging Culture Five Perspectives.
  • Rob Bell, Velvet Elvis Repainting the
    Christian Faith.

8
C. Classroom Critique
  • In an effort to become culturally relevant, is
    there the danger of biblical truth becoming
    irrelevant?
  • In what ways does the emerging church correlate
    with the liberalism of the 19th-20th centuries?

9
C. Classroom Critique
  • 1.
  • 2.
  • 3.
  • 4.
  • 5.
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