Understand the Times Update and Urgent Prayer Request |
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As many of you may know, the
Understand the Times
website was recently compromised by unknown hackers and had to be shut
down. We are happy to announce the website is back up and
running and is now on a dedicated and highly secure server.
Thank you for your prayers during this difficult situation.
We ask you also to pray for
Roger Oakland--for his health, his family, his ministry, and also for the
orphanages he oversees in Myanmar. Myanmar was hit with a cyclone
this past weekend that has thus far taken the lives of over 300 people
and left a hundred thousand people homeless. Understand the Times has
lost all communication with their orphanages at this time. Please pray for
the safety of these children.
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The Great
Emergence - A New Reformation Every 500 Years? |
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By Roger
Oakland Phyllis Tickle is the best
friend the emergent movement could ever have.1 In
the fall of 2008, Baker Books (through their partnership with Emergent
Village-Emersion Books) will release Tickle's book called The Great
Emergence. The following description of the book confirms Tickle's
allegiance to emerging spirituality: [I]ntended to provide a
practical, positive vision of the church as it steps into the future.
Tickle says the book will discuss the development of the emerging church,
what she calls the "Great Emergence," placing it among the other great
phenomena in the history of Christianity, including the Great Schism and
the Great Reformation. "Every 500 years," Tickle said, "the empowered
structures of institutionalized Christianity, whatever they may be, become
an intolerable carapace that must be shattered so that renewal and growth
may occur. Now is such a time."2 In
a PBS interview, Tickle referred to this "[e]very 500 years" theory and
said, "the church has a giant rummage sale." She said, "Christianity is in
the midst of a new reformation that will radically remake the faith."3 At
the Joint Annual Meeting of the Society of Biblical Literature (SBL) where
Tickle and McLaren shared a platform, one participant noted that, "[Tickle
said] Brian McLaren is to this new reformation what Martin Luther was to
the Protestant Reformation."4 Emergent ... is a gift given
to all the church that is placing us in tension with things as they
are.... we will discover courage to let go of the old orientations, see
creation expanding.5 He
continues: If the emergent conversation
is to have a "next chapter," it will need to learn from other sketches
outside of Western Christendom as well as from within the depths of other
traditions (denominations and communions) once dismissed on
rational-political grounds, and it must continue, all the more, to seek
ways of sketching that benefit the rest of
creation.6 Bronsink says that emergent
is "a guild of prophets" that will lead the way for "existing
practitioners of Christianity."7 He says they will create an "environment"
that will equip "any and all for the process of emergence."8 He adds that
"practices of meditation" are necessary to "sustain" the emergent hope(9)
but gives a word of caution to emerging seekers: [M]erely seeing ourselves as
a creative agent within the domain of the Christian church will
domesticate Emergent into what one critic has already claimed is an
"asterisk on the landscape of American church growth." On the other hand,
seeing the integrated whole of the church (emerging and otherwise) as a
creative agent within creation, Emergent can be a place where
practitioners embody the church's creative agency for all of emerging
society. (emphasis added)10 Bronsink says the emerging
church must not become confined within the structure of Christianity, and
this is perhaps where we can understand the theological limits of the
emerging church. Those limits? There are none! The sky is the limit for
the all-encompassing emerging church that includes all faiths, and all
creation. Atonement is not part of this new reformation because all
creation is already being saved and unified with God. It's no wonder
emerging prophets over the past several decades from [Henry] Fosdick to
Alan Jones to Brian McLaren reject penal substitution--in their grand
emergence, it just isn't needed. Not only soul, whole
body! This is very contradictory
to what Jesus said: Many will say to me in that
day, Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied in thy name? and in thy name have
cast out devils? and in thy name done many wonderful works? And then will
I profess unto them, I never knew you: depart from me, ye that work
iniquity. (Matthew 7:22-23) It's a noble and comforting
notion that all humanity and creation are redeemed, but it doesn't square
with biblical spiritual reality. We are being moved, as a
community, beyond theories about atonement, to enter into atonement
itself, or at-one-ment-the new reality and new relationship of oneness
with God which Christ incarnated (in life, cross, and resurrection) and
into which we are all invited "for all time."15 The
emergent reformation, when it comes to fruition, will stand on the side of
the line drawn in the sand that says all humanity is One--regardless of
religion, beliefs--we are all One. That Oneness will mean one with all
creation too, and inevitably with God. This is what the New Age movement
is striving for--a time when all of mankind will realize both their unity
and divinity--and the Gospel as we know it, according to Scripture, will
be no more. |
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Disclaimer: The views
expressed in this article are the sole responsibility of the author. If
you have a problem with the correctness of the information, please contact
the author. (In accordance with Title
17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to
those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included
information for research and educational purposes.) |
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