Emerging church movement: Difference between revisions
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The '''emerging church movement''' is a recent Christian (mostly Protestant) movement that seeks to cater to the attitudes and experiences of what it sees as people who are [[Postmodernism|postmodern]], [[Generation X]] and "post-Christian" through a deconstructive and conversational approach to Christianity. Participation in the emerging church is often seen as a reaction to the overbearingly politicization of the evangelical right-wing. | The '''emerging church movement''' is a recent Christian (mostly Protestant) movement that seeks to cater to the attitudes and experiences of what it sees as people who are [[Postmodernism|postmodern]], [[Generation X]] and "post-Christian" through a deconstructive and conversational approach to Christianity. Participation in the emerging church is often seen as a reaction to the overbearingly politicization of the evangelical right-wing. | ||
Revision as of 14:24, 13 April 2008
The emerging church movement is a recent Christian (mostly Protestant) movement that seeks to cater to the attitudes and experiences of what it sees as people who are postmodern, Generation X and "post-Christian" through a deconstructive and conversational approach to Christianity. Participation in the emerging church is often seen as a reaction to the overbearingly politicization of the evangelical right-wing.
The emerging church movement tends to reject church hierarchy, has a strong focus on praxis - the practical consequences of faith, and tends to prefer theology as narrative rather than systematic.
Conservative evangelicals and fundamentalists often criticize the emerging church, alleging that it's unorthodox or heretical in it's embrace of postmodernism, which undermines Biblical truth.