Understanding the Emerging Church
Ed Stetzer
Baptist Press News
Service
It’s been interesting to watch the
emerging church conversation over the last few months. Important issues are
being discussed. Unfortunately, like many conversations, good things are
lumped together with bad and important conversations are lost in more heat
than light.
My own observation as one who speaks at some events classified as “emerging”
is that there are three broad categories of what is often called “the
emerging church.” Oddly enough, I think I can fairly say that most in the
emerging conversation would agree with my assessments about the “types” of
emerging leaders and churches -- and just differ with my conclusions.
In this too brief article, perhaps I can make a few suggestions on how
conservative evangelicals should view these types of emerging churches. I
believe that some are taking the same Gospel in the historic form of church
but seeking to make it understandable to emerging culture; some are taking
the same Gospel but questioning and reconstructing much of the form of
church; some are questioning and revising the Gospel and the church.
Relevants
Yes, I made up the word. Sorry about the grammar. However, it expresses an
important idea. There are a good number of young (and not so young) leaders
who some classify as “emerging” that really are just trying to make their
worship, music and outreach more contextual to emerging culture.
Ironically, while some may consider them liberal, they are often deeply
committed to biblical preaching, male pastoral leadership and other values
common in conservative evangelical churches.
They are simply trying to explain the message of Christ in a way their
generation can understand. The contemporary churches of the 1980s and 90s
did the same thing (and some are still upset at them for doing so). However,
if we find biblical preaching and God-centered worship in a more culturally
relevant setting, I rejoice just as I would for international missionaries
using tribal cultural forms in Africa.
The churches of the “relevants” are not filled with the angry white children
of evangelical mega churches. They are, instead, intentionally reaching into
their communities (which are different than where most Southern Baptists
live) and proclaiming a faithful biblically-centered Gospel there. I know
some of their churches -- they are doctrinally sound, growing and impacting
lostness.
Reconstructionists
The reconstructionists think that the current form of church is frequently
irrelevant and the structure is unhelpful. Yet, they typically hold to a
more orthodox view of the Gospel and Scripture. Therefore, we see an
increase in models of church that reject certain organizational models,
embracing what are often called “incarnational” or “house” models. They are
responding to the fact that after decades of trying fresh ideas in
innovative churches, North America is less churched, and those that are
churched are less committed.
Yet, God’s plan is deeply connected with the church (see Ephesians 3:10).
God’s Word prescribes much about what a church is. So, if emerging leaders
want to think in new ways about the forms (the construct) of church, that’s
fine -- but any form needs to be reset as a biblical form, not just a
rejection of the old form. Don’t want a building, a budget and a program?
OK. Don’t want the Bible, scriptural leadership, covenant community? Not OK.
(For an excellent summary, see NAMB’s document by Stan Norman called
“Ecclesiological Guidelines to Inform Southern Baptist Church Planters.”)
Also, we must not forget, if reconstructionists simply rearrange
dissatisfied Christians and do not impact lostness, it is hardly a better
situation than the current one.
Revisionists
Much of the concern has been addressed at those I call revisionists. Right
now, many of those who are revisionists are being read by younger leaders
and perceived as evangelicals. They are not -- at least according to our
evangelical understanding of Scripture. We significantly differ from them
regarding what the Bible is, what it teaches and how we should live it in
our churches. I don’t hate them, question their motives and I won’t try to
mischaracterize their beliefs. But, I won’t agree with them.
Revisionists are questioning (and in some cases denying) issues like the
nature of the substitutionary atonement, the reality of hell, the
complementarian nature of gender, and the nature of the Gospel itself. This
is not new -- some mainline theologians quietly abandoned these doctrines a
generation ago. The revisionist emerging church leaders should be treated,
appreciated and read as we read mainline theologians -- they often have good
descriptions, but their prescriptions fail to take into account the full
teaching of the Word of God.
Does that mean we cannot learn from them? Certainly not. I read mainline
theologians like Marcus Borg and George Lindbeck like others in the past
read Karl Barth -- good thinkers, but deeply wrong on issues I hold as
important. I read many emerging church writers the same way. They ask good
questions, but I am driven to Scripture for the answers.
So, where do we go from here?
Much of SBC life is absent from the emerging church conversation. Let’s jump
in -- John Hammett at Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary has done a
great job not just in his paper, but in entering the theological
conversation that has flowed from it. His paper can be read here.
To be in this conversation, we need to think biblically and critically. We
should journey and partner with the “relevants,” seeking to make the Gospel
understandable in emerging culture. We can and should enter into dialogue
with reconstructionists -- learning, discussing and applying together what
Scripture teaches about church.
But, we can and must speak prophetically to revisionists that, yes, we know
the current system is not impacting the culture as it should -- but the
change we need is more Bible, more maturity, more discernment and more
missional engagement, not an abandonment of the teachings of scripture about
church, theology and practice. Every group that left these basics has ended
up walking away from the faith and then, in a great twist of irony, is soon
seen as irrelevant to the world they tried to reach.
This is an important moment in the emerging church. Many “emerging”
evangelicals are distancing themselves from the revisionist leaders. Papers
have been presented, publishing relationships have been altered, and many in
the blogosphere are questioning the ecumenical nature of new partnerships.
That’s good. Let’s affirm the good, look to the Scriptures for answers to
the hard questions, and, yes, let’s graciously disagree when others hold
views contrary to our best scriptural understanding of God, Bible and
church.
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