An article by my dear brother, Brandon Staggs. Brother Scott Ray | www.av-1611.com Reformation Reversed: Emergent Church and the Undoing of FaithBy Brandon Staggs | January 20, 2008
I have heard many times that if Christianity is to survive, it must adapt to the changing world around it; Christians must evolve if they are to be accepted by those around them. Usually this means things like rejecting the Biblical record of creation, Biblical precepts on gender and sexual behavior, etc. It also means that the underlying message of the Gospel that Christ is the one and only Redeemer and that all men must believe on him for salvation must be modified or adapted, or at least not held to as a fundamental tenet, to make it more palatable. There is a movement a strong movement to undo the Reformation of 500 years ago and return Christians to a religion of mystical ecumenism, away from the doctrine of Sola Scriptura that so many believers lost their lives over those many years ago. Certainly there is no overt movement to bring back the Spanish Inquisition (not that anyone would expect it), but the desire to eliminate Gods word as the sole authority by which a Christian lives and believes is as strong as it ever was under the guidance of Ignatius Loyola. This new Un-reformation, led by charismatic leaders like Dan Kimball and Rick Warren, with nice titles like vintage worship, the emergent church, the purpose driven church, etc, seeks to do what all grand doers of religion in the past have endeavoured to do: build Gods Kingdom on Earth. Theyll have this kingdom now, not after Christs return, thank you very much. To that end, Christianity must be tempered with the wisdom of the world, with the Bible playing just a small part here and there for those folks who still hold to it, at least until they die off as Rick Warren once put it. Roger Oakland has written a fascinating and sobering book: Faith Undone, exposing the Emerging Church for the return to mystical, man-based movement that it is. Oakland contends, and I agree, that this new reformation is simply another deception along the way to the end of this time and the return of Christ.
In order to bring about this man-built Kingdom of God, Emerging Church proponents see the Bible as a text that needs to be re-examined, and the foundational tenets of Christian theology as beliefs that need to be re-interpreted and modified in our post-modern world. The 21st Century Church, to them, is one that can not be contentious for anything, and must accept and adapt to all.
In his book, Oakland describes the methods of this Kingdom building, and that they are, in fact, nothing new. Chief among the methods of the Emerging Church is to translate the Gospel with mysticism centering prayer, contemplative prayer, ritualism, etc. Oakland writes:
There can be no doubt that Warren and other Emergents regard the Gospel as an afterthought in their work. In countless interviews, Warren touts his work as a good works movement to build build bridges between faiths (explicitly stating religion is irrelevant) and healing hearts. Their goal is unity at all costs and all costs includes Scripture. Thats a far cry from the Jesus Christ of the Bible, who said:
The Emerging Church has no room in it for the divisive words of Christ, since they only get in the way of the unity required to build a Kingdom in his name. Because of this, the place of Scripture, and of the Gospel, is completely lost. One Emergent Church leader said:
As Oakland points out, this is a far cry from how the New Testament describes evangelism:
By now just about everyone in the United States who calls themselves Christian has heard of Rick Warren, and by extension, the Emerging Church movement. But few really know whats actually going on and why it has so much momentum. I highly recommend reading Faith Undone to learn the history behind this modern un-reformation. History, especially Church history, has shown that so many of the worlds worst crimes have been done in the name of building Gods Kingdom. This time is no different though no inquisitors are killing those who wont convert, the minimization and perversion of the Gospel is just the same, for the message of Christ the ONLY Redeemer is not being preached by these Kingdom Builders. Rick Warren wrote in his book, The Purpose Driven Life:
Warren is simply wrong, because Jesus said much about his return and how to be prepared for it (Luke 12). Warren also said in a speech:
Anyone claiming that we can build Gods Kingdom on earth and ignore prophecy should read this warning:
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