Showing posts with label emergent. Show all posts
Showing posts with label emergent. Show all posts

Monday, June 30, 2008

You may or may not know, may or may not have guessed, may have suspected but prayed that it wasn't true, that I'm a youth minister. After church a few weeks ago, I was greeted in the parking lot by the mother of one of my teens. They're a Christian family, but so far, have been unable to find a church that they're welcome. The son is home-schooled and so, does not run in the same social circles as most teens in our town. For this reason, among many others, including income, race, familial situation, and so on, they have been disincluded from many congregations in our town. None of this was on my mind when she pulled me aside. I am given to rather unusual stunts, sometimes and I fully expected to recieve the blunt end of her disapproval. Instead, she was there to ask me if she needed to pull her son out of our youth group. She assured me that it wasn't anything that he had said that brought her to that conclusion, but that he had been in our group for six weeks and, up to that point, had never made it past three before being asked to leave.

That makes me sad.

I assured her that if I had the chance, I would take a dozen kids, just like her son. It was unusual, she said, to find a church that emphasized community, safety, and acceptance. It was equally rare to find a church that thought God's love was as good a motivation for salvation as a fear of Hell. She thought it was odd that we focused on fixing the problem--man's lack of a relationship with God--rather than the symptomatic sins that churches usually attempt to fix.

I say this not to toot my own horn--God knows I've done nothing to be proud of, with the exception of free-climbing the exterior wall of our church. I say it because I think that right now, there are other youth groups like ours that are being labelled as wishy-washy or liberal. We are neither. And we need to encourage one another. You're doing the right thing.

~J

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

After a long week of moderating the snot out of a particular message board, we were finally treated to the sight of a particularly obnoxious member's banning. I won't go into details, most of you who would have any interest probably know the story. But I will say this much: it is nice to be able to use the word "Emergent" again, without it being equated to moral relativism. In addition, it will be very nice to go for two weeks without seeing the word "postmodern" used as a derogatory term.

On a similar note, we were comparing McLaren and MacArthur, and I went through all the trouble of typing up a transcript that I wanted to post it somewhere other than on a messageboard:

McLaren said, "...People ask me, what do I think is the way to Heaven. I have a problem when they ask me this question, because it assumes that the primary purpose of Jesus coming, and the primary message of Jesus was about how to get to Heaven."

MacArthur replied by saying the McLaren was calling everyone that believed Jesus came to save us stupid, and gave an explanation of propitiation, then said, "[Salvation] was the only reason he came. He didn't come to fix life here. He didn't come to eliminate poverty. He didn't come to eliminate slavery. He didn't come to bump people up five notches on the marriage satisfaction scale. [Considering how short life is, you see] how silly it is to think that Jesus came to fix something in somebody's life for the little moment that they live on earth...Look at the life of Christ. He didn't even fix the world that he lived in. He never, ever, basically assaulted, one social institution that was out of whack. Not one. So he never had a social agenda. He cared for people. He fed people, sure, but he fed them once, and he didn't feed them everyday."

He goes on to draw a parallel to welfare, but you can listen to the interview for yourself.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OH1yOmij7Q4

I think that's it for the night,

Friday, March 28, 2008

Another quote that's helping me to narrow my focus comes from the same book I mentioned last week, More Than Forgiveness, by Steve DeNeff. By this point, I'm sure that some of you are wondering whether or not I'm being paid to promote this book, but the truth is that in all my searching, I've never found a book that better expresses what I believe. Because of my slightly atypical views, some people have a hard time grasping what it is that I'm saying, and I'm partly at fault for assuming that they'll understand my definitions. Whatever my motivation for continually mentioning DeNeff, this is the two part quote on which I want to concentrate:

"I am thinking of a Little League basebasll game I attended with my wife while our son, Nicholas, was a child. He came steaming around third base, full speed ahead, while the ball was relayed from the outfield. As the catcher reached for the ball, our son plowed into home plate. There was dirt and equipment flying everywhere, and in the end, the umpire ruled him safe.
The home team cheered. The audience hooted. Then suddenly, my wife jumped to her feet and screamed, "Nicholas-" And then with all the grandstand watching, she ordered, "Help that other boy up.
I could have crawled under the bleachers. This is not the way men watch baseball. But this is the ethic of our day. Whenever two people collide over anything, it is not so important who is safe and who is out, nor how either played the game. The most important thing in life, as in Little League baseball, is whether anyone got hurt and whether or not we helped our rival up once the dust settled. Contrary to popular opinion, this is not holiness. It is only good sportsmanship. It is political correctness. Of course, to be cruel would be wrong. But one has really missed the point if he dabbles with etiquette while bigger issues are at stake."

"There are now serious ideological problems dividing the church. Some denominations are debating the authority of Scripture. Others are fighting over the place of homosexuals in their congregations: should they be listed among the unconverted, the members, or the clergy? Still other denominations are debating the matter of women in the ministry. And when holy people decide these things they are better off to raise thier voices in public than to slit each others' throats, politically speaking, in private. Unfortunately, there are many denominations that seem more interested in dusting each other off than in whether or not they arrive at the right conclusion."

So there it is. My mind is still in flux. I must begin to weigh the value of my conclusions and the power of my words, to make sure that, whatever I say, it doesn't compromise truth.


Saturday, February 9, 2008

Introducing Me:

From the loins of Just This Side of Heresy, a second project has begun. In my most recent newsletter, I explained my intentions. Here's the essay:

***

Go onto YouTube.com and type in Brian McLaren's name, or Doug Pagitt's, or Rob Bell's. Before you ever reach a video featuring one of these three men, you'll find several videos or soundbytes by John MacArthur, denouncing them. McLaren, Pagitt, and Bell are three of the leading teachers in the emergent movement, a mini-reformation within Christianity which, at it's conservative end, believes that the Gospel is good news, rather than just an alternative to damnation. It believes that Christ's ministry to the poor consists of helping them socially, lifting them up from their shame, in addition to helping them in a spiritual manner. And it uses the arts as a medium of truth, placing great value in creativity.

MacArthur goes to great lengths to find and extract random lines that he can excerpt to condemn these men as heretics. Over the past few years or so, Ray Comfort and R.C. Sproul have joined him in his hunt. There's also a rather funny street preacher that stands outdoors and yells at people as they leave Rob Bell's church. Check that out for a laugh.

What I really want to point out is that MacArthur tries so hard to find rope to hang these guys that McLaren actually makes a general note of it in the second edition of his book, A Generous Orthodoxy, stating that he is certain he has included plenty of material that certain preachers will take issue with. He says this without naming names, but sadly, MacArthur has made such a witchhunter of himself that many know exactly who he is talking about.

But MacArthur's poorly titled program, Grace To You, comes on in my area. From time to time, I'll try to listen to it and attempt to not yell at my radio for broadcasting his ignorance. Here's one trend that I've noticed: MacArthur says numerous things on his program that sound heretical if you don't listen to the fifteen minutes of preaching that precede it. He's quite careless with his words, considering how careful he demands others to be. It's a wonder, in fact, that no one has turned the text-proofing sword back on him. McLaren and Pagitt are, admittedly, too meek or humble to do anything of the sort.

I'm not.

I may start a second blog soon, titled Emergent Venom, to pick apart every little detail that comes out of the mouths of MacArthur and his swarm. Think Ann Coulter, but with a sex change and a degree from seminary.

Beyond treating those things that I deem "heresy," I believe I may also spend a great deal of time quoting MacArthur's own contradictory claims. For example: He is very fond of the formulaic phrase, "Any bible believing Christian knows X." Though no one else has ever called attention to it, I've noticed that he uses this phrase most when he has no intention of backing himself up biblically. In one message, he stated that all bible-believing Christians held to the doctrine of Unconditional Election, but followed that up by saying that he is well aware that there are many verses which contradict his interpretation. That, he says, is what bible-believing Christians call a paradox. We shouldn't try to make sense of it, he suggests. The bible is full of paradoxes which will only be solved when we reach Heaven. Oddly enough, those paradoxes only occur when on assumes a Calvinist interpretation of the scriptures, as MacArthur does.

If we are, as the bible says, to do unto others as we would have them do unto us, I can only assume that MacArthur, Sproul, and Comfort want thier errors rubbed in their faces, across the internet, and in print, should anyone ever happen upon them. Point taken, gentlemen. I'll get right on it.

***

So there you have it. I'll be back later.