Before Emergent brothers and sisters reject Reformation orthodoxy, they should at least know what it is and what it is not.
Travel
writer Pico Iyer confesses that he likes airports a lot. Part mall,
part border-crossing, they buzz with the ambient noise of postmodern
consciousness, representing an "everywhere" that is really no actual
place at all. Those of us who can't remember when we were not always on
the go, repeatedly uprooted growing up, living in the fast lane with
computers and cell phones, catching planes and channel surfing, know
deep inside ourselves what it means to be a wanderer in these
"everywhere" places.
The Emergent Church movement is as much the
product of this postmodern condition as the megachurch movement from
which it recoils, but whereas the latter has seemed obsessed with the
novel, the ephemeral, the immanent, and the practical, the
next-generation Emergent groups evidence an interest in the ancient, the
authentic, the transcendent, and the mysterious.
While there is
much to appreciate in the Emergent movement's instincts that should be
celebrated and encouraged, is there a characteristically modern
tendency that it shares with its megachurch heritage-a tendency that
may finally threaten the noble aspirations of these bright, energetic,
and hopeful followers of Christ?
First and foremost, Emergent identifies with postmodernism,
although its celebration of postmodernism is often as sweeping as its
critique of modernity. In many respects, Emergent reflects these
most-modern rather than postmodern tendencies. In fact, to gain any
real insight into the Emergent movement (as about any other in our day),
one has to visit its websites. There, one enters a world in which
theology and church practice are decided largely by democratic
conversation: like a 24-hour live streaming Oprah show. Continue at Michael Horton
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