Ahhh… The delicious irony of postmodern emergents asking me for evidence to support my arguments from last week’s “Why Al Qaeda Supports The Emergent Church”… when their relativistic worldview proclaims the futility of both evidence and argument.
I hate taking up precious column space to do this, but if I must…
Of the disapproving emails, perhaps the most-representative was this one:
“Where O where does your information and experience of the Emergent Church come from? How disturbing your message is! Inciting one corner of Christ's church against another in the name of peace is not only counter productive but is hurtful to Christ's very message. Seems that the Radical Evangelical Church has had their day. A conservative government backed by conservative Christians has only produced scandal and war. How is this a better alternative, a better way? Radical Christians added to Radical Muslims is only a recipe for disaster. With faith in Christ I listen to, eat with and love my Muslim friend. I do all these things without turning from Christ. I am a Christian Denominational Protestant. I vote, preach, and live in this country. You do not speak for me or my family, or my church, or my country. Despite your charges and meanness I remain your brother in Christ.”
Do you think he’s ever preached Jesus’ “name of peace” message of John 14:6 to his Muslim friend? Jesus said to him, “I am the way, and the truth, and the life; no one comes to the Father but through Me.”
As far as my “information and experience,” that comes from the following pro-emergent sources: Brian McLaren (homepage), Doug Pagitt (homepage), Tony Jones of emergentvillage.org, Steve Chalke (Wikipedia), and perhaps the best text in support is Eddie Gibbs and Ryan Bolger’s Emerging Churches: Creating Christian Community in Postmodern Cultures (Baker, 2005) (Amazon).
My critical sources were: D. A. Carson’s Becoming Conversant with the Emerging Church: Understanding a Movement and Its Implications (Zondervan, 2005) (Amazon) – which is the “must have” of the group, R. Scott Smith’s Truth and the New Kind of Christian (Crossway, 2005) (here), and Millard Erickson, Editor of Reclaiming the Center: Confronting Evangelical Accommodation in Postmodern Times (Good News Publishing, 2004) (here).
But if you don’t want to read hundreds of pages, or waste money on books you’ll never read again, just visit these three excellent websites and read these documents – it will take you less than an hour.
• Brett Kunkle, “Essential Concerns Regarding the Emerging Church,” at Stand To Reason (www.str.org), specifically here.
• David Kowalski, “Appropriate Response to the Emerging Church Movement” at apologeticsindex.org, specifically here.
• Justin Taylor, “An Emerging Church Primer” at 9marks.org, specifically here.
All of the above – and then some – is where I got my “information on and experience of” the emerging church. Audio files are available on many of the websites, both for and against, and you can find more information than you can digest, in just a few minutes of looking around – which is why I bothered to give you the links. See for yourself.
“Emergent” is a term in need of a qualifier. It’s roots are in the postmodern rebellion against modernity. It’s use by people not in the postmodern camp is intentionally confusing. When a person says they are “emergent,” I’m immediately suspect because of the origin and common use of the term. You should be too. Perhaps “emergent” should be qualified the same way “evangelical” is. Maybe we should ask, “Are you a conservative emergent or a progressive emergent?”
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