I should probably start holding seminars on "What is the Emerging Church?" I could categorize and compare the various "expressions" of the emerging church. I could describe the major areas of non-orthodox exploration. I could point out the leading practitioners, theologians and gadflies. Do you think I could charge $129 per person for a full day? Would more than one participant sign up?

Is the emerging church a fad? What does it mean? As a pastor, what should I be doing about it? Is D.A. Carson right? What about Chuck Smith, Sr.? Is the emerging church a sign of the end? Is it a forerunner of last days apostacy? Has Slice sliced it correctly? Has Pyro burnt it appropriately? Is Mark Driscoll the poster child for the EC, or is Spencer Burke?

Recently I attended a national pastors gathering of one of the movements that came out of the Jesus Movement revival of the 70s. At this stage the gathering looked a lot like me, a bunch of middle-aged guys in Hawaiian shirts and bermuda shorts and sandals (at least those of us from California). In a panel discussion on the first day, the national director was insistent that he had the "correct" numbers on the number of movement pastors age 35 and under and it was 30 (out of 500, wink, wink), not 20, he would have you know, by Golly. He went on to say that he just didn’t want others to say that we are irrelevant. (He must not be a regular subscriber to Relevant Magazine!).

On the third day of the conference a young (35 yrs. of age) pastor spoke on the emerging church. His definition? The emerging church is "Churches that are trying to reach young people." He then started his categorizing and comparing and I had to get up and leave! You see he was trying to make sense of something that defies categorization and comparison. And he was trying to speak to an audience of pastors who want to know if the EC is a passing fad, or how they should react when a beret-wearing, goatee-sporting, graduate student approaches him and asks him if he is "missional."

Let me address some of these, uh, burning issues: The emerging church is not an "it." It is not Emergent or Allelon, or Forge, Catalyst or ReImagine! It is not neo-monastic, or universalist, for that matter. It is not a bunch of Birkenstock-wearing, granola-crunching, Yoga-practicing midwest urban folks. It is not a "church within a church," gen-x service, candles and worship installations, liturgy practicing, hours prayers. It is not daily blogging with cool names and ipod loaded teaching. It is not a fad, anymore than Methodism, Presbyterianism, Anglicanism, Catholicism, Lutheranism, uh, you get the idea, were passing fads. It is no more a fad than the Calvary Chapels or the Vineyards. It has no more apostacy than the rest of the apostacy that passes for Christianity today. And by the way, it is not Rob Bell, Mark Driscoll, Doug Pagitt, Brian McLaren, Leonard Sweet, Spencer Burke, uh, did I leave anyone out, uh, yes, of course I did!

And yet, it is all of the above and so much more. It is what God is raising up to reach the rising culture and the rising generations.

Pastors, if you think you are prepared to deal with today’s cultural atmosphere, go watch the currently playing film, Juno. Then ask yourself this question: What is my congregation doing to make Jesus real to the Junos in our community?

What Do You Think?

  1. I appreciate this post. I get irritated with the approach that says: “lets’ categorize and boil down the emerging church so that we can reach out to young people while still embracing all of our current assumptions.”

    Juno was a great movie. It was supposedly “set” north of the Twin Cities–some of that came out in the film. Though some of the cultural pieces were exaggerated (most teens aren’t nearly as hip and quippy as Juno), I felt like it captured a lot of the “vibe” of my younger friends.

  2. Hey Mark,
    Every once in a while I am sitting in a fast food restaurant (usually reading some sort of spy-thriller novel!) and I am close enough to a nearby booth to overhear the conversation of a group of three or four teenagers. I only have to tune in to about 30 seconds of conversational interchange to realize that I don’t know a thing about what life is like for these kids. True, I was a teenager once upon a time in a galaxy far, far away. But, holy moly, pastor-man, what have we come to? I am so far out of touch and I am not a “traditional” pastor. Yikes!

  3. >” It is not a fad, anymore than Methodism, Presbyterianism, Anglicanism, Catholicism, Lutheranism,”

    The emerging church, like Methodism, Presbyterianism, Anglicanism, and Lutheranism are currently undergoing, will also lose steam and be reabsorbed into the Catholic Church. Jesus will reunify His Church regardless of events.

    God bless…

  4. Well Tim, that is certainly one view…

  5. The more I think about it and try to find a place for myself in the emerging church, the more I feel comfortable saying it’s a conversation. I know that one gets tossed around quite a bit, but I can’t think of a better way to do it. It certainly isn’t a denomination. It’s too diverse for that. Perhaps one of the defining marks of the EC is its diversity… hence the confusion.

  6. In another ten years, the parts that are a movement will become clearer. Think Acts 29 network, although they may not like being called emerging. Allelon and Emergent Village and Forge in Australia, Resonate in Canada. We will have to wait and see the fruit.

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