dangerous practices

Well, someone has tipped my attention toward this review of Emergent Manifesto, which is described as the emerging church’s “coming out of the closet tribute”:

There is another underlying theme that is permeating the pages of this book and many of the other emerging church books in print, including Dan Kimball’s. There is a continual hammering away and chiseling down of the image of Christians (the kind who take the Bible literally and stand by its authority). This effort to villainize Christians is reminiscent of Germany in the 30s when artists would draw distorted pictures of Jews with certain facial features making them look weird, and when rumors and stories would run amuck even suggesting that Jews would rape your daughters, so don’t trust them. This all out effort to get society to hate and mistrust the Jews worked. It was a campaign, not based on fact, but based on a demonic kingdom that hates anything that has to do with Jesus Christ. In the Manifesto, Brian McLaren boils down the world’s evils to the fault of Western Christians and suggests that these resisting Christians might even become militant against people one day. (Hitler was able to persuade people that the Jews were a threat so they better take them out before the Jews got them.)

There you go. Brian McLaren as Hitler. QED. To be fair, the publishers of this book have a bit of a stated position:

In the year 2000, we learned that a mantra-style meditation coupled with a mystical spirituality had been introduced to the evangelical church and was infiltrating youth groups, churches, seminaries, and Bible studies at an alarming rate.

Thus, in the spring of 2001, we began Lighthouse Trails Publishing with the hope of exposing this dangerous and pervasive paradigm?six months later we published our first release, A Time of Departing by Ray Yungen.

As we learned more about contemplative spirituality (also known as the spiritual formation movement), we came to realize it had infected the church in a wide variety of aspects. Models like Willow Creek, Purpose Driven, and the emerging church had become avenues through which contemplative was entering Christendom.

I am reminded of my dear father who, upon hearing about “this postmodernism thing” decided he ought to research it, and later told me that he knew all about it because he had purchased and read a book from a prominent Melbourne Christian bookstore entitled something like “Why postmodernism is the divisive work of the devil”.

Anyway, I must admit that I am easily tired of the “the emerging church/liberal theology/alt worship/monastic thinking is the beginning of a slippery slope to a place where people wail and gnash their teeth in outer darkness” debate. I know plenty of people who I disagree with about a whole range of things but I am perfectly proud to call my brothers and sisters in Christ. But I know plenty of Christian people that I would like to put on the other side of a large brick wall labelled with a sign saying “These people don’t speak for the rest of us”.

204 Responses to “dangerous practices”

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  1. 181
    bec Says:

    Not getting old, getting wiser…realising that good conversation is an amazing thing, and that competititve exchanges of ideas are dead boring, and miss the point of communication. I just can’t be stuffed - I mean, what do we get out of it, when we approach the exchange of ideas in such a manner? I used to play in a lot of eisteddfods - winning was fantastic, but if our only goal had been to win, rather the miraculous experience of creating something beautiful with a group of people, I don’t think it would have been much fun at all.

  2. 182
    the rev Says:

    You ever notice how the losers always say, “its not about competition, its about communication” Sure it is.

    :)

    rev

  3. 183
    Emma Whale Says:

    ok here comes the testosterone… :)

    rev has just made a better argument for hetersexuality than saint or abtruth. imagine if the world was just full of blokes! :)

  4. 184
    bec Says:

    :lol:

  5. 185
    the rev Says:

    Yeah it would be great, cricket, footy, beer and power tools

    awesome

    and no whingey chicks telling us not to fight, or drink too much but who would drive us home? hmmmmm

    oh and here ya go girls, feast your eyes on this mass of testosterone

    http://rockass.net/therev/images/rev4hula.JPG

    rev

  6. 186
    abtruth Says:

    my eyes my eyes………..

  7. 187
    daisy Says:

    Lol who is the picture of? No you surely Rev?

  8. 188
    bec Says:

    Yes, that’s the Rev. He’s SUCH a poser!!

  9. 189
    saint Says:

    Poor Bec and Emma - Greg just accused me on the other thread of being argumentative and a Type A personality as if it was really bad (note to self: must have beer with Greg). So now you are telling me that’s a boy thing? Sheesh. What’s a saint gotta do to get an even break around here?

    Rev,

    I have the mother of all headaches today, and a brain still too focussed on work. Perhaps this may explain why I thought of you when I read this report of the Pope’s address about Tertullian (no I am not Catholic, but B16 is a bit of a fave; I can’t find the full text of his message just yet though I think this series on the Apostles and early church Fathers is going to get published by Ignatius Press later this year). Emphasis is mine:

    “Being with the Church and acceptance of its weaknesses” requires “humility” and “simplicity”, because “only God is truly holy, we are in need of His forgiveness”. The Pope made these observations today to over 40 thousand people gathered for the general audience in St Peter’s square, during reflections on the limitations of a great figure in Church history, Tertullian.

    […]

    Returning to “the line of great figures from the ancient Church, who still today are considered masters of the faith” Benedict XVI focused on the personality of Tertullian, the African apologist from the late II early III centuries, “the first great Christian author to write in Latin”, who communicates the positive essence of Christianity and illustrates its rational foundations.

    He underlined that Tertullian, is most famous for his apologetic writings, in which he aims to “counter grave pagan accusations against the Church” and “present positively the Gospel”, in dialogue with the culture of the time, but above all “denounce the un just behaviour of the political authorities of the time towards the Church, by explaining the Christian customs , illustrate the new religion” and show the triumph of the Spirit, which opposes the violence of the persecutors with the fact that “Christians blood is an effective seed, in the end their suffering will be victorious”. In fact, in a special way Tertullian exhorts Christians to have hope in those times of persecution, exalting hope not only as a virtue, but as “a characteristic which invests every aspect of Christian existence”.

    The Pope recalled that it was he who defined human nature as “naturaliter christiana” and maintained that “a Christian cannot hate, not even his own enemies” and that this is the moral repercussion of the choice of a faith which “proposes non violence as a way of life”.

    The Pope continued that from the human point of view, one can speak of a drama which plagued Tertullian: with the passing of the years he became ever more exigent of Christians: above all he expected them to face persecution heroically. In the end he found himself isolated: “an overly individualistic search for the truth along with his intemperance led to his breaking from communion with the Church to become a follower of the Montanist sect”. Still today “there is open debate regarding his behaviour”.

    “This great personality – commented the Pope – this figure so rigid in his convictions, who demanded Christians face persecution heroically, spurs me to thought. In the end it becomes clear that he lacked simplicity, the humility to become one with the Church, accepting its weaknesses”.

  10. 190
    Emma Whale Says:

    rev…and you telling me you looked like hellboy…why you’re just shy aren’t you??? :)

  11. 191
    the rev Says:

    I was told by others that hellboys character reminded them of me, I think more personality than looks.

    Saint, being compared to tertullian is not the worst thing I have been told. I will point out however, that I have many warm relationships with many Christians that do not live in the way I believe we are called to. The difference is that they do not try and support theologies that are incongruent with the life of Christ. My goal is not for everyone to be perfect, but rather for people to accept that we all fall short of Jesus, and that we fall upon God’s grace (as I do every day) and pray that He would enable us to be more conformed today than yesterday. That we would commend Christlike behaviour as much as we commend good theology, and that we would seek to give our lives in love to each other and the least of these.

    rev

  12. 192
    mn Says:

    Bec

    re your declining argumentativeness as you get older…I am reminded that the female of the species also requires testosterone to function at their best.

    Hmmmmm :)

    Cheers

    MN

  13. 193
    bluth Says:

    How many NIV study Bibles does one have to bench press to get pecs like the Revs? (It’s a professional interest question, OK???).

    Would Tertullian have posed half naked on the web…?

  14. 194
    Greg the explorer Says:

    Oh gees it makes me ill to see the girls go all wobbly over revs photoshopped photo!

    Now this is a real man

    Yeah it would be great, cricket, footy, beer and power tools
    awesome

    Actually I just finished building a dog kennel for our two dogs - ‘killer’ and ‘mauler’ - and by odens beard it felt good to on the end of a drop saw with a sliding arm. The zing of the blade, buzz of the sander, the whistle of the drill as it bit into the hardwood - it got my juices flowing and my testosterone pumping. My neigbour came over and helped me and we drank beer and I got meat and we BBQ’d while the girls oo’d and aah’d at our manliness and skill.

    power tools, beer and Jesus- that’s the theme of my next mens group meeting (which i actually refues to attend and hate with a passion - all old skinners with falkey skin and bad memories!

  15. 195
    Greg the explorer Says:

    this, actually is the real man

  16. 196
    Greg the explorer Says:

    Hey rev - I’m getting better at Karate - very soon now I will comne to Melbourne and we shall see what we shall see!

  17. 197
    the rev Says:

    like I said before, karate is cute.

    rev

    btw, I am not quite so fit anymore

  18. 198
    bec Says:

    ooooh…more testosterone. Help!! Signposts is drowning in the stuff!!

  19. 199
    Janet Says:

    I ignore Signposts for a few days, and it comes to this….

  20. 200
    ADHD.LIBRARIAN Says:

    I think we’ve just all witnessed some sort of pressure release valve effect.

    Now,
    back to regular programming?

  21. 201
    the rev Says:

    Librarian, I want to ask you a question:

    How much do you think I can bench press?

    :)

    rev

  22. 202
    ADHD.LIBRARIAN Says:

    I don’t care how much you can bench press, stupid macho stuff with no real world application or relevance to the current debate.

    what I want to know is how heavy a man could you lift in a rugby union lineout!

  23. 203
    the rev Says:

    About a hundred and twenty five kilos, that is bench press

    I can’t play rugby they don’t have enough pads and I might get hurt.

    rev

  24. 204
    daisy Says:

    Compass Sunday June 3rd- food for thought.

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