Friday, January 30, 2009

Why We're Not Emergent - A Review, continued

Why We’re Not Emergent (by Two Guys Who Should Be) – second and final post in a review by an old man who shouldn’t be Emergent.

In a previous post, I highlighted areas where I agreed with DeYoung and Kluck in their critique of the Emergent Movement: The movement struggles with epistemology. It evinces the us/them dichotomy characteristic of young movements (a dichotomy that borders on arrogance even in its protestations of humility). Its commitment to inclusivity and diversity appears more theoretical than experiential. It is ahistorical, seemingly unaware of the rich, untidy tapestry Christian thinking and experience across the centuries. (From here on I'll refer to DeYoung as the author, since he is the principal author.)

Taking these points in reverse order, I’ll describe why an “Old Man Who Shouldn’t Be” might consider himself a “fellow traveler” of the Emergent movement. (For those too young to remember this political/social term, check Wikipedia.)

Social/ethnic homogeneity

In my first post on the Emergent movement, I described its theology as reminiscent of “classic apophatic theology but without the stability and wisdom offered by deep connections with the history and traditions of the Christian Church.” And I wrote it was “a youthful, generational fad . . . populated almost exclusively by young, White people.” In response, Spence of the TheOOZE.com, which sponsored Soularize, pointed out the conference included speakers with roots in historical traditions–e.g. Roman Catholic and Methodist clergy–and speakers from diverse ethnic and religious backgrounds. In addition, his online community includes people from over 100 countries.
I would argue the diversity of speakers at the conference is primarily an expression of the theoretical commitment of the movement to diversity, because the audience–those who paid to listen–was rather homogenous. I suspect the “people from over 100 countries” who form the online community are mostly young, educated White people from “Western” countries. The non-Western members are mostly likely “Westernized” or at the very least, “urbanized” young people.
However, while this observed homogeneity contrasts with the movement’s words about diversity, it is, in fact, inevitable. Ideas always find their first life in socially homogenous groups. Galileans were disproportionately represented among Jesus’ disciples. Post-Pentecost, the church first spread in a narrow demography–Jewish people and friends of Jewish people. The early Adventist Church was largely White young adults from the Northeast. Both the Christian Church as a whole and the Adventist denomination have become global, international, pan-ethnic realities. But they didn’t start there. Why would we expect the Emergent movement to be any different?

Us/Them

As an old liberal, steeped in Christian history, I smile indulgently when I hear young zealots of any variety declaiming the radical newness, effectiveness, and authenticity of their movement. They are going to do church like it has never been done before–and not just different–better. I know what they are doing is not truly different from what has ever been done before. And it is not better–by any objective, rational yardstick.
But without the conviction that they are onto something so valuable and powerful that it is better than everything else, how would they have the fire and zeal needed to take it to the world? So I smile indulgently, then wipe the smirk off my face and cheer them on. Give money. Bless them. And remember my own fiery certainty of three decades ago. Of course, the Emergent Movement is not perfect. Of course, there are elements of Emergent culture that will prove unhealthy and unsustainable over time. But right now it is touching lives and providing hope for many people unmoved and unserved by the rest of us.

Epistemology

How do we know? What is the truth? The simple answer of classic Christianity is the Bible. God spoke the Bible. We hear God by giving attention to what he has said in its pages. This is a simple, devout, classic epistemology. I have known wonderful saints for whom this is enough. They were happy, generous, compassionate and moral. If you question them about what they know and how they know, they answer, “God said it in the Bible.”
It seems to me this is the model DeYoung holds up. Within Adventist circles, Samuel Pippim and Fernando Canale are leading champions of this approach to truth.
The problem is, this “high view” of Scripture actually settles very few of the major theological conflicts that divide Christians (never mind the divisions between Christianity and non-Christian religions).
Did God choose some people for damnation and some for salvation before creation? DeYoung, citing the Bible would answer emphatically, yes. Adventists and other Armenians answer equally emphatically, no! Citing, of course, the same authoritative Bible. When did life first appear on earth? Classic Adventist doctrine, citing Genesis, answers 6000 years ago. Other Adventists–Sabbath-keeping, praying, devout Adventists as well as many non-Adventist Christians–argue the Bible does not answer the question.
What happens when people die? According to the Bible, they depart and go to be with the Lord. According to the Bible, they sleep. And sincere Christians who take the Bible as their infallible authority dispute with one another, sometimes vehemently over just how to interpret these different pictures of death.
What happens to the wicked after death? According to the Bible, their worm never dies, and the smoke of their torment ascends forever and ever. According to the Bible they are burned like wheat straw in a furnace.
The Emergent writers do conservative Protestantism a favor by challenging from inside the church our certainty that if we will all agree to acknowledge the Bible as our ultimate authority in theology that theological wars will cease. So instead of calling us to renewed vigor in prosecuting the classic wars over the nature of the atonement and divine will and precise definitions of soteriology, they call us to join Jesus in his kingdom work. I think they are on to something.

In his introduction, DeYoung gives a page long list to describe the amorphous movement called Emergent. At least half of the identifiers he lists do not apply to me at all. But I found myself saying Amen! to many elements in his list, especially the political and social implications of following Jesus. I do not believe it is more important to be right in one’s soteriological theories than to be faithful in following the Savior, here and now.

If I were engaged in the Emergent conversation, I would ask how can we know when a person’s “openness to the leading of the Spirit” has taken them away from Truth. At what point do we emphatically separate ourselves from the claims of someone like a Jim Jones or David Koresh. On what basis do we publicly declare “That person is wrong, evil, dangerous”? A church that specializes in defining boundaries cannot remain healthy over the long haul. Neither can a church remain healthy that never draws boundaries.

Right now, the Emerging Church is experimenting. It is engaged in the exhilarating exploration of a new and youthful expression of the community of Jesus. It is appropriate that it should be out there, defying tradition, trying new forms of worship and spiritual formation. But within a few years Emergent congregations will face crises that will compel them to draw lines, to define themselves—their beliefs and practices. Emergent congregations will eventually become the establishment which their own children and grandchildren will feel called to reform. And some of that reformation will be a reversion toward the mean. The children of Emergents will discover that some of the “old-fashioned” ways of doing church, actually work pretty well. They may even find that doctrinal definitions, while perhaps not structured according to the pattern of the ancient creeds, are still an important part of a church’s identity and mission.

If you think the Emergent movement is the final solution to the challenge of being authentically Christian, then you should give serious attention to DeYoung’s criticism. As with all human movements, Emergent is flawed. I think DeYoung has offered a thoughtful, careful critique of the movement. If you are headed down the Emergent path, you would be well-advised to ask some of the same questions DeYoung raises. On the other hand, if you are a conservative Adventist looking for support in your opposition to all things new, be careful. While the Emerging Church is DeYoung’s target in this book, it is obvious that were he to give any attention to Adventists he would have at least as many complaints against us. You can’t hold him up as an authority when attacking the Emergents then dismiss him when he holds his same “Bible yardstick” up to us.

Ironically, the primary value of Why We’re not Emergent is precisely its participation in the Emergent conversation. DeYoung’s positive “truth claims” are mostly unhelpful, but he raises good questions. If we respectfully engage the Emergent movement, hearing its own questions and challenging it with the kinds of questions DeYoung asks, we should come to a clearer understanding of our mission as the Church of the Living God.

8 comments:

The Writer said...

But John, you ARE participating in the Emergent conversation. This is the surprising "news flash" for most people. This is it. This is the emergent conversation right here. Nothing more, nothing less.

I find myself being asked to speak on the topic of the emerging church a lot. In fact, on Tuesday I'll be teaching a portion of John Jones and Charles Teal's class. I'm still not sure which approach I'll take. But in spite of all this, I'm not an apologist for the emerging church. It is broad and open ended and represents an ethos, not a delineated doctrinal creed (which is what makes these NOT-emergent guys so apoplectic). So, thanks for being a part of this conversation. I recently wrote in an article for Fuller's theological journal that for Adventists, the church emerged from main line Christianity in the 1830s and 40s and has continued to emerge ever since. In fact, in good Reformed language you could say that "the church is emergent and always emerging." Isn't that the genius of the gospel - it's ability to emerge in any culture or context in which it finds itself?

John McLarty said...

Well said, Ryan. And I am honored that you recognize my blog as part of the conversation.

I would much rather argue with (no, change that--converse with) Emergents than with confident proponents of Reformed theology or confident, conservative Adventists. My own answers to questions about epistemology are strongly influenced by post-modern analysis, putting me closer to Emergents than to conservative Presbyterians, Lutherans and Adventists.

Uncertain said...

Not being conversant with the use and vagaries of application of this term, 'Emergent Church', I find myself exploring parallels and corollaries with my own evolving understanding of how religion operates in my life. I hope that whatever religion I subscribe to, it somehow increases my own humanity -- as a link to my neighbor -- and my spirituality -- as a link to whatever embodiment of goodness may deserve to be thought Ultimate.
Unless you have an epistemology that appears to you to be air-tight, it seems inescapable that you must either cherish your own ignorance, or make allowances for those whose beliefs differ from your own. If 'Emergent' Christians accept (as contrasted perhaps with 'seek') diversity of understanding, it may not be so much a lack of conviction that there is an Ultimate reality, as a recognition that they only see, as through a glass, darkly.
I cannot believe God lies to us in Nature, just to test the steadfastness of our faith in the view our church espouses. And I cannot believe that 'Satan' has been successful in over-writing virtually all of nature, extending to the furthermost reaches of the known cosmos just to make it appear that God lied. Therefore, I cannot accept the 6,000 year old earth, or the episemology of those who insist on their own inerrant-interpretation-and-understanding of Scripture. We MUST find some other, cohesive, perspective from which to view the Holy Word. That is, an Epistemology that deserves our commitment to its approximation of reality.
What I believe I hear you suggesting is, that since Emergents lack a unifying authority, a definitive statement of which avenue of religion one ought to pursue in hopes of Spiritual growth, they have no foundation, no point at all to base their case on.
The history of scientific discovery is written largely by the struggle of those who knew what NOT to believe (about 'natural philosophy'), and whose reasons for disbelief were varied and often fragmentary. But they struggled to find a better definition or description of how the facts as they understood them might have come to be. In this context, 'better' might often be substituted by, 'more cohesive, more encompassing'.
Daniel Dennet's somewhat radical view of evolving religious memes is frighteningly cohesive. It is certainly encompassing.
Has Christianity offered an epistemology that answers to that? Has Adventism?
I don't know if Michael Dowd, author of 'Thank God for Evolution', is an 'Emergent Christian'. He certainly attempts to wrap his utterances in the vocabulary of Christianity. And he acknowledges that life, and death, have been at home on this globe for several billion years. He frames his claims in 'emergent-behavior' constructs that physicists have developed, but seems to me to do so quite loosely, with little understanding of -- or at least, little parallel to -- what emergent behavior of a physical system is.
As non-cohesive as I find his writing, and his representation of Spirituality -- in fairness, perhaps my own failing, rather than his -- it looks today, to me, like there is little more satisfying to subscribe to.

John McLarty said...

Uncertain,
Thank you for a thought-provoking post. I did highlight epistemology as an area where I think the Emergent writers have work to do. I did not mean to imply that their inadequate (in my view) development in this area is grounds for being dismissive of their work.

In my own writing I have done almost nothing on epistemology -- largely because I have found no coherent, satisfying solution to the questions dancing in my head.

Bulworth said...

"I would much rather argue with (no, change that--converse with) Emergents than with confident proponents of Reformed theology or confident, conservative Adventists."

Second that. In the case of the former, not only are they--in my view--doctrinally inflexible, their attempts to create, essentially, a theology whereby they themselves are not subject to God's law or judgment, but everyone else is, is just illogical.

Glenn

Bulworth said...

"The problem is, this “high view” of Scripture actually settles very few of the major theological conflicts that divide Christians (never mind the divisions between Christianity and non-Christian religions). "

Agreed. I wish some of our more doctrinaire friends would address this issue with some openness.

Bulworth said...

"Right now, the Emerging Church is experimenting. It is engaged in the exhilarating exploration of a new and youthful expression of the community of Jesus. It is appropriate that it should be out there, defying tradition, trying new forms of worship and spiritual formation. But within a few years Emergent congregations will face crises that will compel them to draw lines, to define themselves—their beliefs and practices. Emergent congregations will eventually become the establishment which their own children and grandchildren will feel called to reform. And some of that reformation will be a reversion toward the mean. The children of Emergents will discover that some of the “old-fashioned” ways of doing church, actually work pretty well. They may even find that doctrinal definitions, while perhaps not structured according to the pattern of the ancient creeds, are still an important part of a church’s identity and mission."

This is a very important observation. I would suggest that some of the Emergent mindset (I include myself in that camp) will ultimately find a spiritual home in some of the older traditions, which have themselves been engaged, in one way or another, with these same issues and in the same conversations, either with others outside their walls, or with those inside it. And to the extent other traditions take this path, they can provide a spiritual landing place for those of like-minded perspectives. Then we'll grow up, have kids, and our kids will challenge our assumptions, etc, as you so eloquently predict.

The larger point it seems to me is a tension between valuing stability and continuity on the one hand, with the continuing need to be more honest and thus challenging of ourselves and our belief structures.

Bulworth said...

"The Emergent writers do conservative Protestantism a favor by challenging from inside the church our certainty that if we will all agree to acknowledge the Bible as our ultimate authority in theology that theological wars will cease. So instead of calling us to renewed vigor in prosecuting the classic wars over the nature of the atonement and divine will and precise definitions of soteriology, they call us to join Jesus in his kingdom work. I think they are on to something. "

Sorry to be piling on here, but if the Emergent church does little else besides this, it will have accomplished a great deal, in my view.