Philip Clayton on Big Tent Christianity

Philip Clayton recently wrote about Big Tent Christianity on Patheos.com. Here is an excerpt and you can click below to read the entire article. We highly recommend giving it a read.

More boldly, “big tent” is also a prophetic challenge to the rancorous debates and condemnations that are the church’s public face today. Christians on the Left and on the Right look more and more like Washington: you are on one side or the other of that great aisle or chasm; everything you say and do plays to your own party. Unity hardly exists, even as a goal. Even Patheos has to offer separate “portals” so that evangelicals and mainliners don’t have to enter through the same door.

Read his entire article here.

UnConference: May 24-26 at Meadowkirk

From May 24-26, 2010 a unique gathering of people will come together outside of Washington D.C. at Meadowkirk Retreat Center.  It will be a group of individuals who love Christ and desire to follow him in the context of the post-modern world.  Whether it is for rest, retreat, a desire for change, or surrounding oneself with people who have a new vision for the community of Christ, we invite you to join us for The UnConference.

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Become a Fan of Presbymergent on Facebook

We’re moving away from our Facebook group to a new Presbymergent Facebook page. This will enable more interaction between everyone and will help us stay better connected with everyone. Please go to our new Facebook Page and become our fan on Facebook.

New Church Development Discernment

The PC(USA) Office of Church Growth is sponsoring this New Church Development Discernment opportunity. If you are selected to attend, the Office of Church Growth covers all your meals and travel expenses (up to $250). Applications are due by September 1.

What: NCD Discernment
Where: Hot Metal Bridge Faith Community, Pittsburgh, PA
When: October 15-17, 2009
Why: If you are considering becoming an NCD pastor, or if you feel called to NCD ministry, then this event is a chance to pray, reflect, and spend time with other NCD pastors and coaches.

See the this NCD flier for more information. Feel free to email Meredith Kemp-Pappan or call if you have any questions. The number to call is 1-888-728-7228, ext. 5088.

When did Jesus get so personal…?

Surely it wasn’t Depeche Mode who awakened the church to this personal Jesus.  But it might have started somewhere around the time the greater church started issuing a space in liturgy where one could ‘accept Jesus as your personal Lord and Savior.’  Okay, so it was probably before that, but it is a fair place to start.  Sometimes I wonder if the traditions that issue this call find it awkward when followers do exactly that?  The declaration of ‘my’ has been an overwhelming call to empowerment and liberation.  My supposition is that as long as the ’my’ is synonymous with the familiarity of the tradition – empowerment is not such a threat.  It is possible though, that the greater church is rethinking its offer to make it personal.  Watching the theological evolution of a personal Jesus has somewhat dismantled the church.  Because really, are we equipped for that?  Shouldn’t we be equipped for that?

It is my experience that when we, as a collective, try to hammer down what or who ‘my Jesus’ really is, in a matter of minutes we subject ourselves ever so subtly to the sin of idolatry.  For those who refuse to believe Jesus is no other than a white man from Dallas, Texas – and for those who are firmly convinced Jesus is a woman, or is Indonesian – this is personal.  We want Jesus to identify with us.  As we are.  Why is it that we want Jesus to be exactly what we want?  In a ’my’ kind of way?  Is this really what we might call an emerging situation?  Plurality in its most infant stage?

The most rational explanation is that the time has come to understand Jesus as more than the white guy from Dallas.  Even though the female Jesus still scares the crap out of so many people – including women – we are even trying to understand the Black Jesus, the Queer Jesus, or the Chinese Jesus.  Substitute ‘my’ for whatever you are – and there you have it.  “_______ Jesus.”

I suppose it really is about knowing who we belong to from the standpoint of identity.  We now know that the answer to the question “who is Jesus?” all depends on who you ask.  We live in a time where what “I” believe is not critiqued as heavily as it once was – for good or for bad – you decide.  We no longer fear excommunication as much because we can just start over in another place.  Heresy is getting harder and harder to ’prove’.  All the “I”s find each other through technology, blogs and twitter.  They create space to dialogue.  A lively, yet untouchable space.  And most often, it is where the like minded “I”s can get together and cyber-duke it out against an opposing set of “I’s” for the entire world to read day after day because that is what we can do now.  No more Aereopagus’s.  Where you have to look your opponent in the eyes when you disagree.

Even more so, the ‘my Jesus’ critique of the traditional church has opened a lot of doors to those who have never had their kind of Jesus represented by the greater church.  And most of those doors have been opened in new spaces.  Store fronts.  Houses.  Back yards.  Industrial garages.  Away from the tradition that refuses to listen to the voice of ‘my‘.  But in my own attempt to critique even the critiquers of the church I have to ask – can the evolutionary personal Jesus stay in the church?  Monica’s Jesus wants that.  Can the ‘my’ crowd maintain a healthy ground in the greater church in order to help reform it?  Or is ‘my Jesus’ going to build a bridge and solidify plurality in a different space?  So that there are lots of ’my’ us’s?  Who knows.  My Jesus probably does.

-Submitted by Monica Hall-

Seeking Organizing Pastor for Presbymergent Community

A new CIF has been approved and funding grants are in place for a new community/church development in Bend, Oregon.  This new vision for reaching the 18 to 35 year olds in our community offers the opportunity to build a missional emerging community of Jesus followers in the dynamic and growing city of Bend Oregon.

Bend sits in the midst of millions of acres of national forests and wilderness offering world class nordic and alpine skiing, rock climbing, mountain biking, white water kayaking, golf, hiking, camping, fly fishing, boating, etc.  This is a great opportunity to build a church for the 21st century from scratch.  For more information contact Bob Pearson, bobpear@bendcable.com.

Associate Pastor Position in Sioux City, Iowa

Presbymergent will occasionally receive emails from pastors who would like us to post their CIFs and get the word out to some emergent-types. A brief description of the position is below, with a link to their CIF.

First Presbyterian Church of Sioux City, Iowa is looking for an Associate Pastor to engage the families of our church as followers of Jesus Christ and help them to shine the light of his love through their lives in the world.  We’re a fairly traditional downtown church eager to see how God will reform us as a mission outpost for the kingdom through friendship, discipleship, and acts of love.

View the CIF

The Great Emergence

This post is written by Rev. Carol Howard Merritt, the author of Tribal Church and a member of the Presbymergent Coordinating Group. It is cross-posted from her blog, Tribal Church.


I recently read The Great Emergence. It is an important piece in the conversation and there’s a lot to talk about in it. I thoroughly enjoyed it. It’s an easy read, and it’s friendly for lay people. Phyllis Tickle places the emerging church in the context of gritty history, and her writing style shines when she reminisces. The way that she details the women’s movement, for instance, is charming.

Tickle has a refreshing perspective, and much different than most Episcopalians that I’ve met. As an example, she highlights John Wimber and the Vineyard Church has an important moment in church history, while I’m often hard-pressed to find a mainliner who knows what that is.

At the heart of Tickle’s analysis, there is the question of power. And in particular, she points out the threat to sola scriptura. In the Reformation, “scripture alone” (along with the five other sola’s) became the source of authority became the passionate cry for so many who wanted to critique the Roman Catholic Church.

And now, in the midst of postmodern upheaval, with the evolution of literary criticism, we are beginning to realize how one cannot rely on the words of Scripture alone. There has to be someone reading, there has to be someone interpreting. And since we are all different, with a multiplicity of passions and histories, when we sit down with the Scriptures, we cannot divorce ourselves from the process.

We bring ourselves into it. We have on that page, not only the words, but also the context of the author. And the choices of the translators. Add to that, we have our own our educational background, our personal history, our historical context, our motivations. The page gets very crowded. And so, we realize that a plain reading is not possible. When there is a text, there is disagreement. And sola scriptura breaks down.

So, where is the power now?

It is in Scripture and in the community, the conversation, the network.

I appreciate the way that Tickle broadens the conversation, explaining the upheaval not only from the conservative corner of the church (which we most often hear about), but also pointing out what is happening with Social Justice Christians (Mainline denominations like PCUSA), Liturgicals (Episcopalians, Lutherans, and Roman Catholics), Renewalists (Charismatics, Pentacostals), and Conservatives (Evangelicals).

There are a couple of places that I have some disagreement, maybe in what was left out more than what was there. Although Tickle brought up the women’s movement and much of her conversation hinged on Diana Butler Bass’ important idea of sacred re-traditioning, I was hoping that she would write more about women.

All of the amazing and fresh work that is happening in theology, where women’s voices are being heard and taught. They have been earth shattering and courageous as they have take on texts of terror and demanded that their perspective be heard in our academies, with all of their particularities. What women have been doing in our pulpits for the past fifty years, surely that has shaken the foundations of Christendom. Feminist critiques, whether they be from Julia Kristeva or Rita Nakashima Brock, have had a highly significant impact on our faith in the midst of postmodernity.

Unfortunately, The Great Emergence does not reflect the great diversity of gender or ethnicities that are causing shifts in American religion. It is an account of players who are almost exclusively white males. This is not a new critique of the emerging church, and certainly not a new one from me. I was just hoping that Tickle would bring a much-needed corrective to the conversation.

There are other points of discussion that I could bring up. For instance, we could talk about technology, crowd-sourcing, and whether is it truly egalitarian (Albert-Laszlo Barabasi’s convincing me otherwise).

There also seems to be a sense, from Tickle’s analysis of the gathering center, that there are pure emergents, and others who are more on the edges (she nods to the metaphor of rose petals).

I would tend to disagree with this. It seems to me that we are all emerging from something, but Tickle seems to be saying that those who are emerging from evangelicalism are somehow more central to what is happening in the whole Christianity.

Am I understanding this correctly? And if I am, if evangelical emergence is at the heart, then that could explain the movement’s propensity for glossing over important women’s voices.

I’ll close with a question. In the pages, Tickle says that the hyphen-mergents (presbymergents, Angli-mergents, Metho-mergents, Luther-mergents) will need to decide, “Which are we, and where do we belong?”

This aside is probably the one place where I disagree with Tickle the most. I am a postmodern Presbyterian. I may not fit into a chart very easily, I may not fit into my own denomination very easily. But I do not feel any pressure to make a decision one way or the other about who I am or where I belong.

So, what do you think?