I had planned to run with the pack and write a feature on the top 10 faith stories of 2007. Believe me, as a newspaper reporter I’ve filled many an inch of newsprint with these year-end remembrances. Filling the “news hole” while employees enjoy the holidays with family may be the main purpose of the year-in-review genre.
But as I compiled my list for 2007 it hit me we should be looking forward and not back. Two trends I saw in 2007 convinced me of that. The first is the continuing rise of the emerging church; the second is the softening of the evangelical movement. “By God,” I thought, “we could have a convergence be in the works!”
Much has been written about the “emerging” movement, but mainly looking from the outside in. Many Christians I know in mainline churches would fit nicely into the category without ever having heard the words “emerging church.” So here’s my take on the emerging movement derived not from the writings of religious academics or major publications, but from the pews and meeting rooms of local churches:
Emerging Christians are action oriented. We see scripture, and Jesus himself in a historical context as someone affecting change in the here and now. We want to do the same. Scripture therefore is not an ancient document to be studied and revered, but a record of action on God’s behalf that can be used in our current context as a guide for our own actions.
Emerging Christians are spiritual, even mystical. We don’t believe in the separation of heaven and earth. We believe God’s Spirit is a real and present force in the world that can be felt in a tangible way. We know that those who followed Jesus sensed this presence in him, observing that he spoke with authority not seen in other religious leaders. Some reach this spiritual consciousness through deep prayer that is more like meditation than the word prayers familiar to traditional Christians. Others reach spiritual heights through intense action in the way a marathon runner reaches a “runner’s high.” As a pathway to a higher spiritual plane, scripture is seen as metaphorical and not subject to easy intellectual dissection. Notice how Jesus used word pictures we call parables, and not academic statements, to describe the “kingdom of heaven.”
Finally, emerging Christians seek political progress. We believe God meant it when creation was described as “good.” We understand that God intended fairness, compassion and justice for all people of the earth. Emerging Christians recognize that Jesus stood up against abusive elites, including the Romans, in defense of the poor, the disabled and other oppressed people. We believe we must do the same in our own culture. We don’t see life on earth as a “vale of tears” to be endured as we wait for our reward in heaven. We will never restore Eden, but we can make this place more like God intended -- or die trying as Jesus did.
Emerging Christians are evangelical by nature, that is we believe in spreading the good news that Christ brought to earth. The traditional church as we’ve known it over the past two or three hundred years has a fairly formulaic definition of the good news: believe in Jesus Christ as the Son of God and gain the reward of eternal life. But now the more conservative Evangelical church is starting to see beyond this simple recipe. Mission work is no longer focused only on “winning souls” for Christ but on relieving suffering. And when new thinkers in the Evangelical community championed an environmental “green movement,” traditionalists were unable to defeat them.
There’s much work to be done and divisions that defy compromise, but it seems clear to me that emerging Christians and traditional Evangelicals have these two things in common: an intense love for Jesus and an overwhelming dedication to the Christian life. Could 2008 be the year we begin setting aside our differences? If we did, we could really rock this world.
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