Monday, June 11, 2007

The Emerging Church

The Emerging Church is a movement among 20-35 evangelicals. It's an internal conversation in which they biblically examine each component of their relationship with Christ and compare it to the church they grew up loving or hating.

They then take their deeply personal relationship with Christ and seek to find their own generational expression of living a missional life. They see the weaknesses and failings of the previous generation of believers and move to avoid them. Yet they seek the council and teaching of the previous generation in ways that boomers never did.

In this conversational journey, five areas seem to be in discussion:

  1. The nature and methods of worship
  2. Biblical interpretation and Authority
  3. The roles of women & family
  4. Engaging the culture without engaging sin
  5. Living a missional life furthering God's Kingdom
The secular church world is trying to capture the movement by contemporary issues like gay rights and green living.

Some examples are:
They believe that:

  • Jesus intended his followers to interact with the culture around them, not cloister themselves away.
  • They adhere to the ancient creeds of the church: They are generally doctrinally conservative
  • They emphasize the visual and performing arts
  • When we draw closer to God we draw closer to each other, despite the denominational boundaries.
Honestly, most of what has been written about the movement has been written by 45+ church leaders they watch them take charge of the direction of the church. It's too early in the discussion to know where it will come out, but the following outcomes are likely:

New, powerful, healthy, culturally appropriate connections will be made to lost generations in the western world.
  • The secular and the sacred will no longer be divided in the Body of Christ.
  • This church will connect to each other and the world, crossing barriers with ease that held older generations back
  • They will sacrificially serve the international gospel in ways their great grandparents and grandparent's did.
  • Young religious humanists will try and carve out a place, but will largely fail and their decline will continue.
  • Terms that have been contaminated by an increasingly hostile secular society will fall out of use by these Christ followers, like evangelical, fundamentalist, Religious right, and even biblical literalists.
  • They will eventually establish ways of interacting and worshiping and being in relationship with each other, the world and Christ, and a new orthodoxy of unorthodoxy will continue to emerge.

In the mean time, for those of us 45+ let's pray for them, figure out what it means to become mentors as they figure out what to do as Christ has given them charge. Let's figure out how to serve this generation as they make the choice to turn their eyes outward instead of inward, to looking for moments that are about someone else instead of themselves, to create interlocking families of Kingdom purpose.

Lord, give them freedom to move in new ways, freedom from the traditions of man while maintaining a desperate love for the traditions of Christ. Guide this period of discussion and discovery, and maintain in them a passion for your word. Teach us to serve them as You bring them to full fruit.

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