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Resources Worth Buying
  • Your First Two Years in Youth Ministry: A Personal and Practical Guide to Starting Right
    Your First Two Years in Youth Ministry: A Personal and Practical Guide to Starting Right
    by Doug Fields
  • How to Volunteer Like a Pro: An Amateur's Guide for Working with Teenagers
    How to Volunteer Like a Pro: An Amateur's Guide for Working with Teenagers
    by Jim Hancock
  • The Kingdom Experiment, Youth Edition: A Community Practice on Intentional Living
    The Kingdom Experiment, Youth Edition: A Community Practice on Intentional Living
    by Bruce Nuffer, Rachel McPherson, Liz Perry, Brooklyn Lindsey
  • Book of Uncommon Prayer, The
    Book of Uncommon Prayer, The
    by Steven L. Case
  • Great Emergence, The: How Christianity Is Changing and Why (emersion: Emergent Village resources for communities of faith)
    Great Emergence, The: How Christianity Is Changing and Why (emersion: Emergent Village resources for communities of faith)
    by Phyllis Tickle

Entries in Postmodernism (1)

Tuesday
Mar242009

The Great Emergence

I've been reading this book, The Great Emergence, and have been totally blown away by it! The basic gist of it is that every five hundred years or so, the church has what she calls a "rummage sale" and through that ends up spreading and becoming more relevant. Go back five hundred and you find the Protestant Reformation, five hundred before the Reformation you are at the Great Schism, before that Gregory the Great and the plunge into the dark ages, and five hundred before that the Great Transformation (Jesus and the apostles).

Right now we are in the middle of another one of those "rummage sales." This one is being called the Great Emergence. It's happening as our culture enters the post-modern era, and, accoring to Tickle, as the Reformation's motto of sola scriptura, scriptura sola (only scripture, and scrpture only) has been found wanting as an answer to the question of authority. We are asking again: Where now should we place our authority?

That is a loaded question that neither I nor the emergent thinkers have resolved. It is the task of the next twenty to thirty years. There are those who are called to start something new, and those called to reform the old to be relevant in a new culture. I feel called in a strong way to the latter. I look forward to figuring Methodism in a postmodern context, and discovering how God can use our Wesleyan heritage to relate to a radically different world.