Some Presbymergent friends recently began a new venture in creating an alternative worship service at their church, Come ToGather. After receiving some criticism from other members of the Presbyterian (USA) church, they are now meeting in a new location and are questioning whether or not they want to identify the service as a Presbyterian one or not. I think their story offers some good insights into the challenges of trying new ways of being the church together. It sounds like they were doing some good work, and it just didn’t jibe with enough members at the church, thus prompting the decision to move the service.
To read all about it and hear Andy Smith share some about the story – check out The Messiah’s Misfits.
I came into the PCUSA through the emergent movement. Coming from a conservative evangelical background, I followed the emergent movement (before it was called emergent) into an emergent seminary until life circumstances led me to a mainline PCUSA seminary. I feared my emergent postmodern theology would be co-opted by modern mainline constructs, but I found the opposite. My theological imagination went deeper as I read constructive and post-colonial texts and learned to think more critically. Many of the theological and spiritual resources I had been longing for were present in the history and ongoing trajectory of progressive mainline theology.






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