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'Geoff/The Ashram'
[ Lexington, Kentucky, USA]
Immersed in emerging
[04.05]
I’ve
been thinking a lot about this last year (2004) and wanted to take an
audit of my encounters with the “emerging” brand-name-label-noun-verb.
I’m inspired by Will’s
musings about emerging as an attitude. I would like to think that
of the many directions the EC might head, it must be into the heart of
mission. That is, I believe a missional attitude will save the EC from
some potential pitfalls (eg. Being/becoming – just a fad, a commodity,
another exclusively Evangelical [white male?] sub-culture, a talk-fest
for religious insiders). (There's More)
This
past year Sherry and I have had the great pleasure of attending several
Emergent events (May convention in Nashville, September forum in Atlanta,
October Gathering in New Mexico). We have been given the opportunity to
spend time with some of the people identified as important (leading) voices
in the “emerging church friendship” in the United States. We were also
very pleased to meet with a few Alt. Worship peeps from the UK. As a result,
this Communality blog was born.
Preceding this more deliberate involvement with Emergent-US, I participated
in a Forge intensive in Melbourne, Australia (October ’03). Alongside
these ‘live’ experiences I have been a blog-maniac, spending (too many?)
hours trying to find the balance between information-overload and feeling
like I just can’t read another post. I have read the bulk of the Zondervan/Emergent-YS
catalog and have kept up with the recent press about emerging in CT and
CC.
Finally,
I have the unusual pleasure of serving as a missionary among a beautiful
group of people committed to the missio dei alongside the marginalized
in our city. Suffice to say, there is always plenty of day-to-day action
to accompany the reflection.
“So
what?” I hear you mutter…. Well, I am increasingly excited with the
broad-based interest in re-imagining the church. The conversations in
the books, articles, blogosphere, pubs, coffee shops, conventions, gathering,
and (even) churches are energizing. , and I long for servant leadership
among peers. Power corrupts, which is a danger in the church as anywhere
else… and a heirarchical structure is the breeding-ground for the corruption
of church leaders. Jesus talked about this, about what can happen to church
leaders who start well but end up enamoured with their positions. Practically
speaking, this drives the necessity for decentralization so that the structures
can be interrelated but independently manageable in smaller sizes.
Here are some distilled hopes from this year’s experiences….
- This
is a time for asking questions that require a renewed examination
of ecclesial/theological/missional ideas and practices. The tiresome
(and straw-[wo]man laden) debate over the relative/qualitative difference
of this age over any age past seems to get us nowhere. The church has
not always existed and it is my understanding that it will cease to
exist when we enter into the fullness of the Kingdom, “on earth as it
is in heaven.” It seems to me that the church is by definition a temporal
agency and when it ceases to be born of mission, it ceases to be the
church. It’s always time for an ecclesial revolution/reformation/re-imagining.
-
I hope this friendship/movement will (continue to) be rooted in mission.
I hope we discover that the EC has mission in its DNA. To this end,
I am going to follow the lead of Alan Hirsch (from Forge) and call this
collective of ideas-communities-individuals-attitudes the Emerging Missional
Church. (Alan says all this much better than I just have in this
newsletter). Language is important and perhaps this slight modification
will more deliberately move the conversation in the ‘missional direction’.
“But what is mission?” I hear you ask. If it is everything, then it
is nothing….right? This is the million $ question. In my view, it requires
a collectively-lived-out response to the hope that all of creation is
being reconciled to God. It will be bound by the twin commitments of
community and place. (Wendell Berry beautifully describes community
as "a placed people"…..see his essays on community, sex, and economy).
- I hope the EMC
conversation elevates the value of contextualization. We can’t overstate
the importance of self-theologizing missional communities. Mission (as
service/proclamation) and theology (as poetic, rigorous, biblical imagination)
will be so tightly wound together in the life of a collection of people
we might someday wonder why people ever went away to seminary for ‘training.’
- I hope the EMC
develops an explicit love for the world and for the ‘common good’.
I would like to see the EMC incubate concerned-activism relating to
the environment, politics, and social justice. Such activism would reflect
an urgent awareness about the fact that there is continuity between
“this world” and “the next world.” Enough talk of who’s in and who’s
out of the discussion…a concern for the common good means 'it' is all
for the all of us. The divisions drawn between “the churched” and “the
unchurched” (or “the church” and “the world”) is dualistic in the worst
ways and seems to me a misreading of scripture and culture. In this
spirit we will better participate in the co-creation of the whole world,
not just a “conversation/revolution in the church.”
- I hope this
will lead us (as the people of God) to Reclaim the Margins
(Rodney Stark's The rise of Christianityis a potent lesson in Kingom-marginality).
We need to repopulate the edges of our culture, never assuming we can
engage in the power-plays so often associated with being effective…YET
we need to be ready to make a difference in every layer of our various
contexts, from the street, down to places like the White House (upsidesown
Kingdom!) I would be happy for others to worry about Reclaiming the
Center.
Here ends my rant.
I'm not suggesting these things aren't already happening, I'm just hoping
they take the attention away from the (real or unfair) caricature of the
EMC as just a subculture of Evangelicalism....with fancy-facial-hair.
We are excited about the coming year and hope we will have the grace to
walk in the Jesus-ways of Justice, Love, Mercy, and Humility.
Geoff is "an australian in the USA - a stranger in a strange land.
at best: caught up in the missio dei. at worst: lost. " and one member
of the community posting on the blog
'The Ashram'
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