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Introduction

 

How do we incarnate the body of Christ in this new frontier, this increasing wilderness? What do the roots of Christianity, of the apostles first forays into the world have to say for the church today? These are the questions that drive me. How are we to be the church in a culture that has forgotten the ways of Christ?

The call of the church today is to abandon its fortresses and to become nomads, following the breath of God as he fills the world with life; to pursue the shadow of an unrelenting and unceasing God that is passionately reclaiming what is his. I want to understand how he spoke through his first apostles as he called together and formed the body of believers in the upper room with his holy fire. I want to inhabit the words and minds of the ancient theologians and mystics that sought God above all else. Through all of this though I want to gain an understanding on how to inspire, lead, and bring others along on the narrow path, to one day see the new heavens and the new earth in all their glory, and to see the face of my savior and embrace his feet in awe.

This journey is both intimately personal, and at the same time impossible without being in community with other believers and unbelievers alike. For truly as the gospel states we all have sinned, and fallen short of God’s glory, but praise be the cross is sufficient for all who embrace it’s story.

-David

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Entries in Emergent (21)

Thursday
Apr022009

Authority and Such

There is book floating around called 'The Great Emergence' by Phyllis Tickle.  I haven't read it for myself, but in the world of blogging it is not a prerequisite to actually have read something before making bold and audacious claims about said book.  Infact I believe it is encouraged in the blogging community to, 'shoot from the hip' as it were; perhaps with an image of Clint Eastwood from one of his spaghetti westerns in your mind.

But I digress, the reason this book seems to be getting so much play around the blogosphere, is that asks the question, "where now is our authority?"  Now having watched numerous videos with Ms. Tickle in which she summarizes the content of her book I have to say that I don't really have a problem with the question.  I don't even really have much to disagree with in regards to most of her assesments.  At least in the Nazarene/Methodist/Anglican world we have forgone the idol of Sola Scriptura all together, so that is not really a huge issue for me.  In many ways when we are forced into discovering The Word, i.e. Jesus as the source of all truth, vs. what is written (inspiration or otherwise) about him, it helps us form a better Christological focus from which we then live out the gospel in our contexts.

Here is my caution in all of this.  There will be some that will go the way of the classical progressive/liberal track and try to engender that as being the 'emerging' culture, when in fact it is old school liberal theology with a shiny name.  This is no different than the denominational hijacking of the word 'missional'.  In regards to authority however we must be careful because when we swing the pendulum too far we end up with legalism.  If we set up a 'Sola Scriptura' idol we fall into legalism, we will have indeed as Phyllis exhorts exchanged Christ for an idolotrous reverence for the Bible.  On the other end we have classic liberalism, which for all it's claims of liberty is simply a set of rules set in opposition to the other side.

Either way, when humans start trying to 'decide' where the authority comes from we end up with some form of legalism; either conservative or liberal, but both legalists to the end.  I think asking "Where now is our authority" is a lot like asking why gravity works, or why water is wet.  At the core we know the authority, the only true and lasting authority lies in God Almighty.  We have his authority as it is revealed to us by his Son Jesus Christ and the experiences of the first Christians.  We already know where the authority comes from.  The real question, the underlying question that Phyllis is asking is, who gets to decide who is a Christian and who isn't?  Who get's to decide orthodoxy/praxy, etc.?

That is where grace comes in for us humans.  The New Testament gives us a pretty clear picture of who Christ was and what he was here to do.  It gives us a generally agreed upon source from which to become a people of love, charity, and grace.  There is a lot of our faith that God has chosen to leave to personal discernment of the Scriptures and their meaning for our own moral context.  Because of our free will and fallible intellects we have the ability to mis-interpret and mis-appropriate scripture and misapply it to our lives (and other peoples lives as well.)

I say all of that to say that the way of the Cross transcends the either/or legalism of the conservative and liberal debates.  If you have read anything Brian McLaren has ever written on anything than you would have heard that before.  I would add that what we actually 'do' (our practice and relationships) as a people of Christ says a lot more about where we look for authority than what we 'say' (human ideas about who God is) about Christ, scripture, etc.

It's entirely possible to give the Bible the complete authority of your life and to never know Jesus Christ in the way he intended you to.  It's also possible to be smug and arrogant as you squash the conservative imbicles in the name of Christ.  If you want to find out where God's authority lies, then I suggest you do less theologizing and more watching.  Look for the fruit of the Spirit and that is where you will find the authority you seek.

Wednesday
Dec312008

2008 – Blog in Review

Sanjuro

The top 10 posts by individual post traffic are as follows.

1. Jesus, Walk with Me – 909 views - The Swedes sure loved this post.

2. Ekklesia (kyriakos) – 262 Views

3. The Blue Parakeet – Book Review. – 245 views

4. Jesus + Fish = Money, the Real Miracle – 236 views

5. Sermon – Matthew 19:13-15 – 140 views

6. Emergent Village – Say it Ain’t So – 78 views

7. Was Bonhoeffer Wrong? – 63 views

8. God Told Me.. (Or Why You Shouldn’t Listen to Dumb Christians) – 50 Views

9. Peter Rollins on Refusing to Lead – 46 views

10. Scare the Hell out of ‘Em? – 44 Views

 

Statistics

In 2008 I changed themes 3 times I think.

My largest single day of visitors was September 14th with 137 in a single day.

The blog received 5,914 visits from 76 Countries.  Every state except Wyoming.  I don’t like you either Wyoming, were even now.

20.6% of Traffic came from direct visitors.  48.16% from referring sites. and 31.28% from search engine hits.

Donnie Miller’s blog wins the best support award with 545 referral visits.

Saturday
Nov222008

Judgment and Peacemaking for a Fourth Grader

getting-along “For true justice never comes through violence, nor can it be based on violence.  It can only be based on truth, which has no need to resort to violence to secure its own existence.” – Stanley Hauerwas When I was in fourth grade I got in a fight with a kid named Allen.  We had been part of a group playing tag during recess.  The bell rang to line up to go back in and as I was getting into line he thought it would be fun to sucker-push me from the back when I wasn’t looking.  “You’re It!” he yelled as I fell to the pavement, my hands now scraped and bloody.  I got up, Allen had no idea how mad I was, he was just laughing.  He laughed until I punched him in the mouth and cut his lip.  I remember the surprise and anger in his eyes, and being the inexperienced fighter I was, my rage and judgment now dispensed, I just stood there.  Allen seized the opportunity and punched me in the gut, forcing out my breath.  Unable to catch my breath I stumbled and fell again, catching myself on a guard rail.  It was then that a teachers aid stepped in and stopped the fight. Allen and I were walked to a bench outside of the principle’s office.  Allen and I were no longer mad at each other, we now shared the experience of dread which is the bench outside of the principle’s office.  Soon we began to talk.  I had never really talked with Allen before.  It turned out he loved science fiction, and Conan the Barbarian.  We talked some more, and soon we had made plans to meet up after school one day to hang out.  After what seemed like a good amount of time we thought it strange that no one was descending upon us to summarily chew us out and bring down the wrath of elementary judgment upon our heads.  There was no sign of the principle, our teacher, the teacher’s aid.  With no one around, and what appeared to be no one coming to get us we decided the best course of action would be to go back to class. I am not sure why we weren’t disciplined that day.  The principle might have gotten busy and forgot.  Maybe the teacher’s aid got busy and forgot to report us.  Maybe someone older and wiser realized that the best fix for repairing the rift between two boys is to get them to sit together and talk.  All I know is that me and my new friend Allen were shown grace that day, whether it was intended or not. The reciprocity of violence is a trap that can only be overcome when we sit down and talk one to another as human beings.  There was no justice in a tit-for-tat punch out, only bloodied hands and mouths.  The legalists will tell you that there was no justice, because Allen and I never were punished for our actions.  However what I know the truth to be is that I found myself a new friend in my enemy by being given space to show kindness, to open my ears, shut my mouth, and unclench my fists.  I say that justice did happen that day, it’s just that in God’s upside down kingdom true justice looks a lot more like a grace endowed peace and reconciliation than corporal punishment.
Friday
Sep192008

Friday Roundup

Okay, it's been a while since I have done this.  But it's time I think to link up some great content out on the internets.

 

Emerging Church:

Andrew Jones (aka: Tall Skinny Kiwi) is going to be dropping the term 'Emerging Church' in certain contexts.

An anonymous coward proclaims the death of the emerging church over at Out of Ur.

Peter Rollins get's me thinking like no other current theologians do.

Grace kills, or why fundamentalism is killing itself ala Les Mis. by Donnie Miller.

Scot McKnight asks, should we pronounce the Sacred Name?

NT Wright on the Problem with Jesus.

Josh Broward has posted simply one of the best sermons on conflict resolution I have read.

Some good comments on my cross-post about gay marriage over at Emergent Nazarenes.

 

Faith and Country:

Brian Postalwait has a thoughtful piece on America and God's Blessings.

Jeff is a recovering patriot.

 

Writing:

Ben Witherington scrounges up some tasty analogies.

 

Science:

Here is the first picture taken of a planet that exists outside of our solar system.

Saturday
Sep062008

Emergent Village - Say it Ain't So

I would like to begin by saying that I only discovered this by checking how many people subscribe to my blog's postings in Google Reader (6 by the way.)  However when looking at the number of subscribers for Emergent Village it revealed an interestingly infamous number:

emergent-666

Don't let Hal Lindsay see this...