What I think captures the Emerging Church
What I think captures much of the feeling and flavour of the emerging church movement is that it seeks to identify deeply with the Other, and is thereby influenced by existential thought (Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, Heidegger, etc.), and some postmodern thinkers (i.e., Jacques Derrida, John Caputo). Part of existential philosophy emphasizes the individuality of each person and the impossibility of entering into another's shoes entirely. Existentialist philosophy emphasizes that reality must be studied not from "essences," but from existence. This is meant not to succumb to the object/subject divide and tries not to deteriorate into total relativism, but to emphasizes the necessity that Reality is interpreted and studied from the existence of the individual. I think the emerging church tries to take the Incarnation so seriously that it believes entering the shoes of another person has been done, in a sense, and so they must follow the one who has done it, to the best of their ability. This is why you'll see an emphasis on social justice, but also a concern to listen deeply to a homosexual struggling with the Bible. (You'll notice one of the Emergent Church's characteristics emphasizes friendship as a prerequisite to orthodoxy.) Therefore, the questions they are asking of the Bible are deeply morally individual, but also communally moral: how does the Bible speak against the personal existence of this person and how does it form the morality of the community, rooted in a tradition and made up of these individuals?
Labels: Emerging Church, Existentialism
2 Comments:
Excellent observations.
p.s. Have you read "The Last Word and the Word After That" by McLaren yet?
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