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Opinion: Is the Emerging Church threat or ally for Baptists? Print E-mail
By William Loyd Allen   
Wednesday, October 21, 2009

EDITOR’S NOTE: This is the last in a series of four essays by Baptist historians and thinkers all dealing with the theme, “History Speaks to Hard Questions Baptists Ask,” that have been published by Associated Baptist Press on four successive Wednesdays. The essays are reprinted from a series of 24 articles written for the Baptist History and Heritage Society to commemorate this year’s 400th anniversary of the founding of the Baptist tradition. ABP invited a panel to select the top four in the series. All of the essays in the series are available on the BHHS website. Because the articles were produced by free-thinking Baptists, the BHHS staff and board may or may not agree with their content.

(ABP) -- The tsunami of change that struck the Western world in the 20th century permanently altered the cultural landscape. The Emerging Church (EC) addresses this postmodern context. Most Baptists will have to jettison some modernist baggage to stay afloat in the new era -- but not their core Baptist identity.

The EC relates heavily to postmoderns -- those for whom reality “ain’t what it used to be.” The EC may include postmoderns in mixed-age congregations, may consist primarily of postmoderns, or may be non-postmodern congregations that choose to minister to postmoderns.

Postmoderns are a bridge generation between the receding modernist view and its emerging replacement. Moderns accept reality as a set of interconnected truths that, if logically arranged, reveal a single big picture of reality. For moderns, reality is like a jigsaw puzzle. Each piece has a fixed place in the single image represented on the puzzle’s box top. However, by the end of the 20th century, many found any single “box top” explanation unconvincing: science threatened life as much as it enhanced life; capitalism and Marxism failed to end poverty or satisfy human need; and world religions proclaimed peace but stoked violent global divisions.

Postmoderns are those who have abandoned the concept of a big-picture reality. Either it does not exist or it cannot be proven by a logical system of propositions -- also known as a “meta-narrative.” Postmoderns live out of a reality that is more like a set of Lego building blocks than a jigsaw puzzle. The blocks have meaning -- here a wheel, there a wing -- according to their context in a particular construct. Truth is established through local relationship more than rational, universal application.

EC leader Brian McLaren said, “If you have a new world, you need a new church.” A loose-knit conversation in the 1990s among some young Protestant evangelicals about the church in a postmodern world developed into a movement and has birthed a few institutions, the most prominent of which is the Emergent Village. The Emerging, or Emergent, Church movement is so varied that it defies definition. It is everywhere Christians intentionally engage the future church on postmodern terms.

The movement, like the original Baptist movement, is a marginalized, prophetic attempt to form communities true to the New Testament in an era of radical change. Both movements have resisted generalizations by virtue of their bewildering diversity of theologies, worship styles, regional expressions, and social strategies, but certain shared values point to their compatibility.

The EC movement’s core concern is ecclesiology. It sees modern pyramidal denominations as structures of an outmoded meta-narrative age, much as original Baptists identified the Anglican ecclesiastical hierarchy as part of an obsolete state church. (The EC movement, for instance, questions the Religious Right’s attempts to integrate the church into the nation-state’s hierarchy of powers; Baptists similarly rejected this sort of Christendom in the 1600s.) The EC advocates a local, congregational, self-determining ecclesiology as both biblical and a better fit for pluralistic postmodern culture. Baptists concur.

The EC movement holds the Bible as authoritative, but whereas most modern Protestants sift the texts for fixed truths to be arranged in a logical theology, EC adherents are suspicious of such doctrinal meta-narrative building. It sees more story than system in the scriptures. Its interpreters prefer a narrative approach to reveal truths unavailable to reason alone. Personal engagement is more central than defense of “propositional-based thought patterns,” according to the postmodern New Testament translation, The Voice. A statement on the Emergent Village website says, “We don’t have a problem with faith, but with statements.” Historically, Baptists share this concern that fixed dogma limits personal encounter with God through Scripture.

For the EC movement, the Christian community’s purpose is to incarnate an inclusive way of life, not defend an exclusive doctrinal meta-narrative. According to the Emergent Village, “reconciled friendship trumps traditional orthodoxies” and is a global mission. Baptists similarly insist on individual spiritual freedom and universal religious liberty for all as prerequisites to formation of authentic Christian communities. Christianity is a life of freedom in community.

Some critics see the EC movement as a heretical compromise with a pluralistic, truth-denying culture. Baptist history might offer an alternative explanation -- namely, that ecclesiology is more defined by the practices of a Spirit-led community than by assent to the statements of a modern theological metanarrative. Conversely, the EC movement may provide hope for reformation to Baptists ignorant of the difference between modern truths and Truth incarnate.

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William Loyd Allen is professor of church history and spiritual formation at Mercer University's McAfee School of Theology in Atlanta. The original version of this essay is available here.

EDITORIAL DISCLAIMER: As part of our mission to provide credible and compelling information about matters of faith, Associated Baptist Press actively seeks a diversity of viewpoints in its columns, commentaries and other opinion-based content. Opinions expressed in these articles are not intended to represent ABP editorial policy and do not necessarily reflect the views of ABP’s staff, board of directors or supporters.

 





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Comments (13)Add Comment
EC has some good points but problems as well
written by Xenophon, October 21, 2009
I agree with some of what Professor Allen touches on in his description of the Emerging Church. I agree that we must take general truths and adapt them to a particular time, place, and people. I agree that the Bible does not present a philosophical treatise that explicitly offers a series of logical lemmas proving God's existence, Jesus' divinity, or various philosophical/theological doctrines. I agree that there is a power in narrative that touches people in a way that sequential reasoning does not. I agree that God transcends human understanding. I appreciate the emphasis that Professor Allen seems to be placing on the original context and understanding of the Bible. I appreciate the Emerging Church's suspicion of centralized power in human institutions.

I am interested in hearing more on what seem to be potential problems with what I am understanding Professor Allen is saying in his outline of the distinguishing features of the Emerging Church. From my limited knowledge of the EC and from what I have just read, I am having big problems with the following issues that Professor Allen brings up in his article. First, even though the Bible is a narrative presenting a collection of stories of different people over time, there seems to be a meta-narrative to the entire text and it is this: God created humans in his own image and endowed them with free will; humans represented by Adam and Eve in the Garden chose to join Satan's rebellion against God as they doubted his goodness and desired to become gods themselves; Jesus, the incarnation of God, came through God's chosen people, the Jews, to atone for human sin and offers all humans redemption and restoration with God. If there are questions in the mind of those in the EC about what I have just outlined as the Gospel message available to all humans across cultures and across time, then I have a big problem with EC.

I am also concerned with the degree and scope of pluralism and relativism being taken up by the EC. While I agree that general truths can be and should be instantiated somewhat differently at different times and places, I reject the view that essentially the same Gospel message as well as moral truths are unavailable, incomprehensible, or lack application to all humans across cultures and across time. The underlying Gospel message is essentially the same for all.

This point relates to human knowledge. Human knowledge is imperfect and fragmented due to the Fall. We must constantly struggle to discover relevant knowledge to function effectively in our daily lives. There is also the issue of how capable is the conscious mind of explicitly taking in, processing, and bringing relevant information to consciousness. Many times we feel and act on the basis of limited explicit knowledge. This human limitation can include religious truths. There is an unconscious, implicit dimension to being human. We humans also always perceive from a limited, flawed and particular perspective.

Coming at the same point from a complementary angle, God is beyond full human understanding. God works in ways that seem paradoxical to us. As the Spanish proverb tell us, "God draws straight with crooked lines." Even though we are made in God's image so that we have some fundamental similarity with him, we humans are so finite and so evil that we are unable to grasp God beyond a very rudimentary level on our own. But we do know what God has revealed to us in the Bible. While the Bible has multiple applications to everyone's personal circumstances, the fundamental truths in the Bible have a univocal meaning--the universal moral truths proclaimed in the text and the Gospel. Language is not completely opaque as some post-modernists argue. We are not cut off from each other in understanding merely human meaning much less are we left to drift in understanding divine meaning where God has revealed himself. We Christians also are indwelt by the Holy Spirit who illuminates our minds so that we can grasp and apply the deeper meanings revealed to us in the Bible. We can be mistaken at times, but fallibilism does not entail radical skepticism. The insight that humans are alienated from God, each other, and ourselves has merit, but it can be pushed too far so that we deny what God has revealed to us and fall into a nihilistic view of language and human cognition. That is going too far.

other possible problems
written by Xenophon, October 21, 2009
I am all in favor of decentralized approaches to everything including religion. But I do not see that the Southern Baptist Church is highly centralized and I have no problem with its rightist bent. If the SBC were not rightist, I would not be interested in remaining a Southern Baptist. I wonder if those Professor Allen describes see a problem with Christians being involved in leftist causes and relying on an authoritarian centralized state taking coercive measures to arrange people in desired patterns that leftists call "social justice." The discussion of poverty, peace, and pluralism give me the impression that the EC is authoritarian leftist in its political leanings since many believe that a powerful central government is necessary to achieve these social goals.

I share the interest in living in a community that makes concrete what is abstractly true as well as living with others as an end in itself. But the seeming emphasis on pluralism, peace, and eliminating poverty on the earth before the return of Jesus suggests to me a lack of a proper understanding of what fallen humans are capable of achieving. I observe that given a free choice, most people reject pluralism in race, social class, and religion in an enclosed geographical area. A common people must share a common "clearing" to be able to live together in community. There is no peace and never will be until Jesus returns. Conflict cannot be removed from the human condition in a fallen world. It can only be contained. It sounds as though the EC is searching for a pure Christianity in which we can establish Christ's rule on earth. I am afraid that attempts to establish an earthly Christian "community" are likely to veer toward the authoritarian left and fail to be spontaneous or organic. The EC as described by Professor Allen sounds meliorist, and that is incompatible with the biblical teaching on human depravity.

Historical Mis-Information
written by Mark Osgatharp, October 21, 2009
Mr. Allen: "A statement on the Emergent Village website says, 'We don’t have a problem with faith, but with statements.' Historically, Baptists share this concern that fixed dogma limits personal encounter with God through Scripture."

Actually, historic Baptists have had no problem making specific dogmatic statements of their doctrinal tenets. The only wariness historic Baptists have had of statements is when statements were viewed as infallible and authoritative and used to supplant the Scriptures.

Historically, it was the Quakers who exalted experience above doctrine and the Baptists lost quite a few people to that insidious movement which closely resembles modernism, the charismatic movement and the so-called emergent church. Historic Baptists rightly rejected the Quaker movement and Baptists who remain true to their Biblical and historic roots will reject the emergent church of the 21st century just as they rejected the modernist and charismatic heresies of the 20th century.

Mark Osgatharp
Wynne, Arkansas
agreement
written by Dr. J, October 22, 2009
Agreed. I've been a baptist Christian for many years. It has become obvious to me that denominational structures have become hurdles to the spread of the Gospel. So, maybe it is time to return to the New Testament structure. Thanks for the article.
uggs
written by uggs, October 22, 2009
I opened my eyes last night and saw you in the low light
Walking down by the bay, on the shore,
staring up at the planes that aren't there anymore
I was feeling the night grow old and you were looking so cold
Like an introvert, I drew my over shirt
Around my arms and began to shiver violently before
You happened to look and see the tunnels all around me
Running into the dark underground
...
written by pjerwin, October 22, 2009
Of course, there's no "denominational structure" in the New Testament. As far as "the New Testament structure," of course you mean the biblical model of limited congregationalism with male leadership whom the congregation was urged to obey, overseen by a plurality of elders appointed by and accountable to apostles, served by congregationally selected deacons, right? Or do you mean the EM's "local, congregational, self-determining" model.
...
written by kash, October 23, 2009
"Historic Baptists rightly rejected the Quaker movement and Baptists who remain true to their Biblical and historic roots will reject the emergent church of the 21st century just as they rejected the modernist and charismatic heresies of the 20th century."
On the contrary, I'm afraid charismatic heresies have made inroads into many Baptist churches. And I'm not sure how the EC can be considered heretical since it has no unified creed. Unless you think they deny the Lordship of Christ, which they seem to all affirm.
...
written by GregF, October 24, 2009
I think the SBC or the CBF should set up some sort of web site for reporting on the influence of the EC.

It could be a list of every Baptist church that refers to Jesus, the Christ as Jesus "the Liberating King."
response to pjerwin
written by Dr. J, October 26, 2009
"Of course" I leave the interpretation of New Testament structure to individuals and the Holy Spirit. I prefer no denominational filter.
...
written by pjerwin, October 27, 2009
Dr. J wrote:
...I leave the interpretation of New Testament structure to individuals and the Holy Spirit.
No interpretation necessary, it's actually self-evident in the text; that's the New Testament structure. Now, if you want to move beyond the New Testament -- to be post-New Testament (just as many want to be post-denominational, post-racial, or post-whatever) -- and what you suppose to be cultural or some other artificial constraints, then you can make it whatever you want, including 100% congregational and self-determining.
Lead Pastor
written by shawnbeaty, October 28, 2009
Dr Allen,

Thank you for your well thought artical. It seems to me that many of my brothers are in reaction to what they have read about the emerging church. They freak out about "loose morality" yet cheer Dr Lamb the head of our ethics comitee comparing President Obama to Hitler..... It is far easier to point out the flaws in another persons faith than ask the question "What could be wrong about my own?"

I am proud to find that there are a few of us out there who do not have a right or left political/cultural agenda when it comes to the Gospel.
Age of Politics
written by Xenophon, October 30, 2009
Shawn, I am surprised to hear that you have no political or cultural perspective that reflects your understanding of the Gospel. I suspect that you do, but you might be unaware of your presuppositions as you approach the teachings of Christ. In any case, many people very self-consciously do have such perspectives, and they can usually be categorized as leaning to the left or right.

Those on the left incorporate a humanitarian ethic into a central place in the message of Jesus. Those who take up this mantle also advocate state action to foster what they see as social justice, viz. greater equality of result in economic distribution, political power (with the exception of themselves who they see as needing to retain power to fit everyone else into their desired pattern), and social influence. We can see this leftist influence going back over a century in Protestant Christian thought in such theologians as Walter Rauschenbusch and Washington Gladden. They shifted Christians' focus away from soul winning to social, economic, and political reform believing that such state sponsored improvements in the human condition could usher in God's Kingdom here on earth.

This trend among some Christians followed a general trend among many intellectuals of the past century that substituted faith in God for faith in the state. Conservative historian, Paul Johnson, has dubbed this redirection in personal faith to humanitarian statism as the "Age of Politics." We can see from articles, editorials, and posts on this website that this idealization of government as Savior is still alive and well.

Those of us who oppose such a vision as dangerously delusory would be considered on the right.
...
written by Jesdisciple, October 31, 2009
"However, by the end of the 20th century, many found any single “box top” explanation unconvincing: science threatened life as much as it enhanced life; capitalism and Marxism failed to end poverty or satisfy human need; and world religions proclaimed peace but stoked violent global divisions."

...How does that refute the meta-narrative concept at all? Meta-truth: people are often wrong. Did these post-moderns not have enough salt to take information with?

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