When I read Emergent writers like Brian McLaren and Rob Bell, I find myself nodding and agreeing with so much of what they say. I find the emergent conversation compelling enough that I actually sought out the church that McLaren founded, and that’s where my wife and I go every Sunday these days.
There’s a lot about the emergent conversation that I really like. But I also have some problems with it that I would like to discuss. These problems are interrelated and difficult to make really distinct, so they don’t really lend themselves to a bullet-point list in order of importance or something like that. Instead, I’ll just pretty much tackle the whole thing at once, starting wherever and typing until I feel like I’ve said all I have to say.
One problem I have is that I see, for the most part, the emergent conversation/emerging church is really a child of evangelical Christianity as opposed to Christianity as a whole. In a way, it seems like a kind of mini-Protestantism, emerging from fundamentalism and evangelicalism the way Protestant Christianity emerged from Catholicism. The thing was, in the fifteenth century, Catholicism is all there was, so the Reformation was a big thing- its adherents were birthed from the entirety of western Christianity.
By contrast, the emerging church is mostly just the product of evangelicalism, which is only a small slice of current Christianity. Thus, I feel like it rests on many evangelical assumptions, despite trying its best to be ecumenical and “generous” in its theology and outlook.
In short, I feel like emergent Christianity (and I knowingly use the terms “emerging” and “emergent” interchangeably, Mark Driscoll’s opinions notwithstanding) begins by making evangelical assumptions, finds problems there, and simply assumes that the answers can’t be found anywhere else in Christianity. Even in McLaren’s Generous Orthodoxy, which is a great book, and you should read it, the hat-tip he gives to the rest of Christianity is largely superficial, and betrays his deel evangelical/fundamentalist roots.
Why do I care about this? Well, for one thing, I have some concerns about evangelical Christianity that the emerging church doesn’t really resolve. Second, recent things I’ve read make me wonder if the emerging church isn’t really just trying to reinvent the wheel, while rejecting the possibility that the wheel has actually already been invented and refined if not perfected.
I just finished reading Rowan Williams’s book Where God Happens. Rowan Williams is the Archbishop of Canterbury, the spiritual leader of the Anglican Communion. I plan on posting something lengthy about Anglicanism in the near future, but suffice to say for the moment that Anglicanism is one of the paths I am seriously considering in my journey towards Jesus Christ, but I also have very serious doubts and reservations.
Where God Happens is a short book about the Desert Fathers and the relevance for people today of their teachings, sayings, and way of life. Interestingly enough, the concepts that Dr. Williams pulls out of the sayings and practices of the Desert Fathers are in many ways extremely similar to the theological ideas and concepts of the emergent church.
This was an extraordinary discovery for me. Until that point, the emergent conversation had been my oasis, the shining example of what it seemed like Christianity should really be about. But here is the Archbishop of Canterbury invoking the fourth-century Desert Fathers (and Mothers; let’s not leave out Amma Syncletica) and the result is basically the same message! In particular, the ideas about community and relationship and Christian discipleship are startlingly similar to the theological ideas of McLaren et al. But more importantly, this same message is in a context that lends it so much more authority- or at least that makes it so much more authoritative– than the hemming and hawing we’re-just-regular-guys McLaren and Bell even come close to. This is completely steeped in the fullness of Christian history and tradition.
The result is that I start to wonder about putting too many of my eggs in the emergent basket. If they’re just reinventing the wheel, they’re doing it in a humble but arrogant way, assuming that the wheel hasn’t already been invented and highly refined just because they don’t find the wheel in their narrow evangelical and fundamentalist backgrounds.
If all of the things that I like about emergent theology are there for the discovering in historic orthodox Christianity, then maybe emergent Christianity isn’t as great asI thought it was, especially considering my other concerns with evangelicalism that are carried over into the emergent conversation.
Another concern I have with the emergent conversation is in terms of the practice of worship. While one stream of the emergent conversation is concerned with reworking and refining theology, there’s another, maybe more major stream that is concerned with new and relevant ways of worship. I am not as excited about this stream, although it is generally seen by the rest of the evangelical world as the more acceptable facet of emergent Christianity.
These new ways of worship often involve pairing religious innovation with recovered ancient Christian traditions. Once again, my problem is that this is completely from an evangelical standpoint. The ancient traditions of worship and spirituality are not lost; they have merely been abandoned by evangelical Protestantism. They are still easy to find and access in many Eastern Orthodox, Roman Catholic, and even traditional Protestant churches and communities. And when the emergent church “recaptures” these traditions, they always seem so much more… superficial than they do when seen in practice in their traditional context, in something like an Eastern Orthodox Liturgy.
Furthermore, I’m not necessarily always excited about innovative worship. To me, it assumes that the traditional ways have been fully mined for meaning and there’s none left, so we need to make up something new. And I challenge that assertion. I think part of the problem is a media-soaked culture that has forgotten how to be still and reflective, how to take time, to be thoughtful, and to let spiritual things penetrate deeply. I think if we could recover contemplation, then the traditional ways of worship, the ones that have proven themselves relevant to human beings for up to twenty centuries, will still be just as relevant as they have always been.
I think there is room for thoughtful innovation in worship, but I think it is a thing that should be done carefully and deliberately, not recklessly.
My final criticism of the emerging church is its concern with being relevant to the postmodern person, and its general marriage to postmodernism. As a postmodern person, it seems great, but at the same time, I long for a faith that stands outside of and independent of philosophical trends and momentary (compared to the continuity of human history) ways of thinking. Christianity existed before modernism, and I think embracing modernism was the worst thing that could have happened to Christianity (I’ll post more about this later, but in my opinion, embracing modernism means either taking the path of theological liberalism or the path of theological fundamentalism, both of which make Christianity look foolish). At the same time, I have no real confidence that people won’t say the same thing about postmodernism in a few hundred years. Postmodernism may be a new way of thinking and a refreshing alternative to modernism, but that doesn’t mean that we’ve “finally gotten it right.” Down the road, postmodernism will be outdated and will be junked with all of the other antiquated philosophical frameworks that humanity has consigned to the collective cognitive dusty attic.
I think Christianity should be able to stand outside of passing waves of philosophy- it should be something that endures apart from and independent of “the way people think.” It should be an alternative to the current philosophical trend, not just one more manifestation of it. It might make Christianity difficult to the individual who is hesitant to set aside his conventional philosophical framework, but I don’t think that’s such a bad thing. I believe that there are ways in which Christianity should be difficult. When Jesus Christ said his yoke was easy and his burden was light, I really don’t think he meant that his way meant not having to change the way we live and think. In fact, I’m fairly convinced that he meant the opposite.
I too have read “Generous Orthodoxy,” and I found it very interesting. Particularly his chapter on Missions…However, I have since left Christianity, although certainly don’t disrespect it. I understand you’re problems with the emergent church, as well as the traditional. It’s so difficult to find the path you want.
I eventually left Christianity, and over the past couple of years, really been through the spiritual ringer. What I found for me was that there is no church or religion for that matter that I can fully embrace. There will always be difficulties in any man-made organization. I decided to go out on my own. I have actually embraced deism, which is not really a faith as much as it is a philosophy.
Perhaps you need to eventually take the good and the bad in a church. You will always have disagreements with certain things, and that’s okay. Just make sure that what you don’t go along with things that are fundamental to your beliefs.
I won’t argue that emergent has its roots in evangelical protestentism, but I would add that the idea, although under different names, is found in other branches and faiths. Take a look at the Practicing Congregations movement, especially reading Diane Butler Bass’ book “Church For The Rest Of Us.” Also, I understand that within the Catholic church and within Judiasm there is a growing “emergent,” for lack of a better term, crowd that is articulating many of the same things found in the emerging church.
Great post. I too have read several emergent authors and have gleaned a lot of insight from them. There is much about the EC that resonates with me, but I stop short of embracing it whole heartedly. I haven’t tried to articulate my reasoning for hesitation, yet it’s there for some reason, maybe a good reason. I’ve also been recently very attracted to Anglicanism, i.e. the Episcopal Church. I plan to visit soon and talk with the rector whom I have an indirect connection to. Keep posting. I’ll be reading. Good luck on the journey!
I know nothing about the emergent church, so this conversation is mostly over my head. But now I’m curious. Do you have any good recommendations for background information?
Well, Wikipedia has an article that is a decent outline and has good links and “further reading” bibliography, from both the pro- and anti-emergent camps.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emergent_church
Barring that, read McLaren’s Generous Orthodoxy, and Rob Bell’s Velvet Elvis, both of which are just plain good books and worth reading. B ut they’re both referenced on the wiki article.
emergentvillage.com has a bunch of resources, and theooze.com is an online emergent community. I have a link section on the side of my blog, too.
I so enjoy your methodical thinking in all of this. You take some very important questions that so many people I know struggle with and list and explore them with clarity. It probably doesn’t help a whole lot to know that you’re not alone in your questions and concerns… but you’re not!
“I think part of the problem is a media-soaked culture that has forgotten how to be still and reflective, how to take time, to be thoughtful, and to let spiritual things penetrate deeply.”
I agree. I find it really, really difficult to sit back and take in what I believe God is trying to tell me. I rush through it. I don’t meditate on it. I quickly pass through it. I have 50 other things on my mind. I’m working on it. I know this is something I need to change in my life.
Anywho…enjoyed reading this post as well.
A great deal of the evangelical church has flatly rejected the Emergent Church Movement. Major evangelical leaders have published condemnations of the movement’s false teachings and false gospel. While the most listened-to leaders of the largest evangelical denominations, ministries, and movements have outright denounced the doctrine and practices of the ECM as error and fallacy, they have stopped short of a critical analysis of where it is really coming from — perhaps because most people at the forefront of the ECM deny their affiliation with the movement and take queues from its other leaders without acknowledging them so as to make their direction appear more divinely and mystically inspired. You won’t find McClaren acknowledged in Nooma videos, but Bell and his wife have admitted in an interview to getting everything they have from McClaren, saying his book was their “lifeboat.”
This article dares to expose the real origins of McClaren’s teaching.
http://www.biblebelievers.com/bennett/bennett_emerging01.html