The Errors of the Emergent Church For some time now, I have been tracking something called the "Emergent Church Movement" (also known as the "Emerging Church"). I don't want to assume that everybody here is up to speed on what I'm talking about so first, a few words of definition. At some point in the mid-1990's the moniker "Emerging Church" surfaced out of the Young Leadership Network. It came from the notion that because the culture has changed a new church should emerge in response. Claiming to be the answer to reach the so-called postmodern generation, Emergents claim to have explored all of the avenues of what the Church has historically been only to find that little or none of it satisfied them. The common bond of the Emergents was and still is a general dissatisfaction for Bible believing Christianity - though nearly all of them claim to be "Evangelicals!" Like many in the various isms before them, Emergents set forth to tackle a seemingly noble cause. They appeared to want desperately to reach a lost generation. However, it soon became clear that no matter how zealous Emergents were, the message they offered to their target postmoderns was not the authentic biblical model. Almost before even taking flight, the Emergents veered sideways into the ditch of heretical thinking, doctrine and practice. Their unorthodox view of the Christian faith, including doctrine and solo scriptura aided in drawing many who were seeking a self-styled Christianity rather than the biblical version. Those who came early to this perilous party also brought volunteers and funding to the soon-to-be-famous heretic leaders and in the eyes of some, their very presence added credibility just because the seats were being filled on Sundays. After quickly jettisoning the constraints of biblical hermeneutics and (God forbid) sound doctrine, Emergents picked up steam (and press) as being "hip, "different" and "refreshing." In reality though "hip" transposed into "we'll accept almost anything," "different" means "far out...really far out" and "refreshing" symbolizes "any Wiccan or Buddhist will feel right at home with us." I know many Emergent sympathizers would object that I am generalizing. However, that simply is not the case. Even without much space to elaborate in this newsletter and even as difficult as "Emergent Speak" can be to decipher, once one boils it down just a partial outline of Emergent philosophies indicates glaring flaws. To Emergents,
Christianity is: An examination of just a few quotes from Emergent leaders not only illustrates some of these wacky ideas but also the sobering reality that Emergent leaders and the tens of thousands following them are indeed in very dangerous territory. "The church has been preoccupied with the question, 'What happens to your soul after you die?' As if the reason for Jesus coming can be summed up in, 'Jesus is trying to help get more souls into heaven, as opposed to hell, after they die.' I just think a fair reading of the Gospels blows that out of the water. I don't think that the entire message and life of Jesus can be boiled down to that bottom line." - Brian McLaren, from a July 2005 PBS special on the Emerging Church. "Repentance is not turning from sin. It is a 'celebration' of life in Christ. Anyone who tells you that you need to repent is not talking about Christianity." - Rob Bell, "The 'god's' Aren't Angry Tour," Nov. 16, 2007, Dallas, TX Doug Pagitt, Emerging Leader, author and pastor of Solomon's Porch in Minneapolis was asked "Is homosexuality incompatible with Christian faith?" Pagitt simply replied: "NO. Being Gay and Christian is not a contradiction in any way." - Quoted by Mark Driscoll in "Why I Left the Emerging Church" at Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary, Fall 2007 "The challenge today is not whether you are right but whether you are good." - Brian McLaren, A New Kind of Christian, p.61 "Emergent doesn't have a position on absolute truth, or on anything for that matter." - Tony Jones, at the 2005 National Youth Workers Convention "(This is) part of the problem with continually insisting that one of the absolutes of the Christian faith must be a belief that "Scripture alone" is our guide. It sounds nice, but it is not true...When people say that all we need is the Bible, it is simply not true." - Rob Bell, Velvet Elvis, p.68 It is serious enough that some Emergents like Rob Bell (whose "Nooma" DVD series has sold over a million units) doesn't believe the Bible contains the whole truth. But many teachers, such as Emergent author and activist Brian McLaren, simply twists the Scriptures to say what he wishes they said regardless of context, history or any understanding of the original languages. Christianity Redefined In February of this year (2008) I attended McLaren's "Everything Must Change" conference tour stop in Nampa (Boise), Idaho. Attending the three-day event with me was my friend, Pastor Chris Bayer who also wanted to hear what the godfather of the Emergent movement believed. Though tough to take emotionally and spiritually, we stuck it out for the entire conference. It was at times grueling and at times frightening. Space here only permits me a few comments so I want to focus on the Friday evening session. Pastor Chris has written a stellar account of the entire McLaren conference that is posted at www.ericbarger.com. The session began with original songs that frankly any Wiccan priest could sing. They were dark, gloomy and focused on how mankind has raped and destroyed the planet. The glory or greatness of God was nonexistent during the "worship." Next, we were subjected to a film produced by The Sierra Club, which focused on how mankind was raping Mother Earth through coal mining. When McLaren took the platform he began to unfold the real core of what he means by the book (and tour) title "Everything Must Change." That is "EVERYTHING...MUST...CHANGE" - including what Jesus meant by the very term "Kingdom of God" in the Gospel accounts. According to McLaren "The Kingdom of God" is all about us saving the planet. I'm thinking, "of all the things this guy is, he's a Kingdom Now preterist too!" McLaren also informed us that "salvation" is actually us saving the planet and when Jesus used the phrase "the world" He was referring to the Earth and not the lost souls living on it! I was more stunned with each passing moment. The "service" ended with McLaren's invitation for attendees to come to the front, and among other exercises take some water from a vat and re-baptize themselves into the new enlightenment we'd received. He recommended that while we were there we also stick our hands into the tub of dirt that had been provided to fully sense "what needed to be saved!" No joke folks. I was there. All this from one of Time Magazine's twenty-five most influential "Evangelicals." A most disturbing aspect to Pastor Chris and I was that McLaren's event was held at and partially sponsored by Northwest Nazarene University - a fact that has made at least one former State Elder in the Nazarene church weep in my presence! Thank God for the many Nazarene's who still hold to the Bible but from what I saw in the panel discussions which included several of the professors at NNU, there needs to be a radical house cleaning if Nazarene's expect the next generation of pastors and leaders to resemble true, biblical Christianity. (McLaren even declared during the conference that John Wesley was an Emergent! It was all I could do to contain myself.) Truly Nothing New If the Emergent line of reasoning sounds familiar to you, it should. Nearly 100 years ago maverick-turned-heretic Rudolf Bultmann, set out to "demythologize" the Bible starting with the abandonment of such central and essential doctrines as Virgin Birth and the bodily Resurrection. Liberal Baptist leader, Harry Emerson Fosdick, preached his now famous sermon "Shall the Fundamentalists Win?" and declared, "Of course I do not believe in the virgin birth or in that old-fashioned substitutionary doctrine of the atonement, and I know of no intelligent person who does." Of course, for Satan it wasn't enough that decades ago heretical teaching on par with Bultmann and Fosdick slowly infected the once-sound seminaries, pulpits and finally entire denominations. We shouldn't be at all shocked that the devil's 21st century target would again be some in leadership known as "evangelicals." Consider the rise of the feel-good gospels and scriptural compromising of Bill Hybels, Rick Warren and Joel Osteen that I and others have documented. The predicted apostasy is indeed in full swing - right under our noses. Now, with kudos from Warren and others, Emergents have gone a step further than their questionable and more famous "Evangelical" brethren. Emergents are now openly adopting cultic, "New Age" and Universalistic ideas in place of or along side of the teachings of Jesus and the New Testament. In fact, Warren sure sounds more and more like an Emergent himself! On January 27, 2008 Rick Warren stated, "I think we need a second Reformation in the church about how we behave. The first Reformation was about creeds. I think the second Reformation needs to be about deeds..." That day he even told Dean Samuel Lloyd of Washington's National Cathedral that "the future of the world is not secularism, it's religious pluralism." (http://www.cathedral.org/cathedral/centennial/SF080127.shtml) It is statements like these that have garnered Warren such warm acceptance among Emergents. My questions is, since Warren is easily one of the most influential persons claiming to be a Christian on planet Earth today, why didn't he declare that the future of this world is 100% dependant on Jesus and Jesus alone?!! Further illustrating this dissatisfaction with biblical Christianity as well as a fascination with mysticism is a statement from the wildly popular Emergent pastor from Michigan, Rob Bell, who stated, "This is not just the same old message with new methods. We're rediscovering Christianity as an Eastern religion, as a way of life." (Christianity Today, November, 2004, pp.36-41) Emerging - the New Liberalism The debate over modern liberalism, be it called "Emerging," "Emergent" or whatever, boils down to the absolute authority of Scripture. As ex-Emergent Pastor Mark Driscoll points out the foremost error of the Emerging Movement is that it has reduced Christianity to a CONVERSATION. This is EXACTLY what Lucifer pulled off with Eve in the Garden - i.e. "hath God said?" (Genesis 3) I have contended for years that if the followers of Joseph Smith had been astutely reading their Bible's in 1830 there wouldn't be 13 million Mormons in the world today and millions more would never have perished because of Smith's false teachings. The same is true of those who sat in the pews in the early 20th century as doctrines of devils infiltrated the seminaries and pulpits of previously sound Methodist, Presbyterian, Baptist and Lutheran churches to name a few. It is tragic that millions had to be deceived by the Watchtower's conniving, Smith's tango with Satan and Bultmann's dive from orthodoxy. We need to learn from so many instances of regretful, timid wait-and-see hesitancy that church leaders have engaged in when it comes to swiftly quashing cultic doctrine. Why is it that retrospect seems to be the sad teacher when identifying cultists in our midst? In trying to be civil, gentle and loving with those espousing error what really happens is that less aware souls are trapped, deceived and convinced to go along for what amounts to a demonic joy ride down the path to eternal destruction. I say enough! Where are the pastors and leaders who are not afraid to deal with error and false teaching in our midst? Paul would have opposed heretics and instead of viewing it as somehow unkind we must see it as the MOST loving thing to do. Emergent liberals need to be confronted. These folks are heretics yet they view their ideas as theologically deep and intellectually superior. In reality, no amount of condescending or attempting to spin true Bible believers into archaic Neanderthals can lesson or justify the depth of their error. For their own sakes and for that of their followers we must recognize it as our task to identify Emergents as cultists no matter who thinks we are radical, judgmental or rude. After all, caring enough to warn the lost is the loving and biblical thing to do. http://www.ericbarger.com/emailers/2008/update8-15-2008.htm http://www.crossroad.to/Quotes/spirituality/lighthousetrails/roger-oakland.htm
|