Wednesday, July 19, 2006

anti-emergent

Calvary Chapel has made a formal statement against the Emergent Church (movement, conversation). Here are the issues:
  1. That Jesus is not the only way by which one might be saved. It seems that they are postulating a broader gate and a broader path to heaven, a sort of "all roads lead to heaven." That good people by every religious persuasion may be received into heaven. We feel that this goes against the plain teaching of the Scriptures and negates the need of the cross for the expiation of our sins. Paul wrote of those men in his letter to the Philippians and called them enemies of the cross of Christ. Jesus said, "I am the way, the truth and the life, no man can come to the Father but by Me." This is not relative truth, but absolute truth.
  2. The soft peddling of hell as the destiny for those who reject the salvation offered through Jesus Christ. There are suggestions of universalism in their teaching, that all will ultimately be saved.
  3. We have difficulty in their touchy-feely relating to God. Where the experience of certain feelings become the criteria for truth rather than the word of God.
  4. We have great problems with the use of icons to give them a sense of God or the presence of God. If they want to have a tie with the historicity of the church, why not go back to the church in Acts, which seems to be devoid of incense, candles, robes etc., but was filled with the Spirit.
  5. We do not believe that we should seek to make sinners feel safe and comfortable in church. Is it right for me to speak comfortable words to a man who is going to hell unless he turns from his sin? If I fail to warn him of the consequences of his sin, and he dies and goes to hell, will God require his blood at my hand? When is godly sorrow and conviction of sin such a wrong thing?
  6. Should we seek to condone what God has condemned, such as the homosexual lifestyle? Should we tell them that their problem is a genetic disorder rather than a blatant sin that God condemns over and over in the Bible? How long before they tell us that they have discovered that rapists, pedophiles, and adulterers have a genetic disorder and need to be understood rather than condemned?
  7. Should we look to Eastern religions with their practices of meditation through Yoga and special breathing techniques or repeating a mantra to hear God speak to us? If this is needed to enhance our communication with God, why do you suppose that God did not give us implicit instructions in the Scriptures to give us methods to hear His voice? Is it the position of my body or my heart that helps me to communicate with Him?
  8. The great confusion that exists in the divergent positions of the Emergent Church results from their challenging the final authority of the Scriptures. When you no longer have a final authority, then everyone's ideas become as valid as the next person's, and it cannot help but end in total confusion and contradictions.
Except for the fourth point, I can agree with all of the concerns listed. However, I'm not sure is if these charges are applicable to the Emergent Church.

I take exception with the fourth point because while the wording makes it sound scary, I think we need to be careful when discussing religious symbols. Our lives are filled with symbols. I haven't seen a gathering of Christians yet that didn't include them (Calvary Chapel included). I'm not sure that they are inherently wrong. It seems the issue is more about what is behind the symbols. That is, what is in the heart of the person using them. Therefore, as it is written, I couldn't say using "icons to give them a sense of God or the presence of God" is absolutely wrong.

But more than that, I wonder how many of the points listed would an Emergent Church guy say, "yep, that describes me"? Any insight?

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

wow, i'm surprised...not really shocked though. so, by issue this edict, is calvary chapel disparaging the emergent church as heretical? [understanding that being heretical does not necessarily disqualify the salvation in Jesus Christ]. i may be behind in a lot of reading for those who describe themselves as emergent church, but this thing called emergent church seems to be much more amorphous and divergent than the points listed. like you, i don't necessarily disagree with their points, but are they really applicable to the emergent church?...even a subset of 'recognized leaders'? i don't want to tackle it point-by-point, but their judgment in this case seems particularly skewed of a deep understanding of emergent or perhaps pre-mature at best...maybe they 'had' to issue a statement because those within calvary chapel were experiementing with icons and prayer beads, which seem more like odiaphora - things of indifference - to me.

ricki said...

Steve - I agree with you. Moreover, I see this as a very common thing in Christian circles. People argue against points that are not necessarily the view of those that they are accusing.

I suspect you are correct in that some number of Calvary Chapels were drifting from their "distinctive" and this is intended as a course correction. In doing so however it seems like they are saying EC = heretic.

David Rowe said...

Rick - very interesting article.

I have been looking recently at the alt worship / emergent 'movement' from a general interest point of view.

I wondered, prior to reading this, whether some of these churches have fallen into the trap of trying to appeal to the post-modern world view prevalent in the west, by becoming too much like the target group they are seeking to reach out to. Such that elements of that world view become their norm and at odds with the gospel.

I see some alignment of that thinking in what Calcarv Chapel are saying - but I also find it interesting that they view the emergent churches as a holistic group, which I didn't think they were.

I'm really not up with all this icon business - except the ones on my desktop.....

David Rowe said...

Eric Clapton a heratic ???

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