CONTENTS
Preface: ‘Emerging churches’
The postmodern world
1. Essentials: God’s vision for his church
A learning church
A caring church
A worshipping church
An evangelizing church
2. Worship: Glorying in God’s holy name
Biblical worship
Congregational worship
Spiritual worship
Moral worship
3. Evangelism: Mission through the local church
Forms of evangelism
The church must understand itself: its theology
The church must organize itself: its structures
The church must express itself: its message
The church must be itself: its life
4. Ministry: The Twelve and the Seven
An every-member ministry
The pastoral ministry
The example of the apostle (the shepherd)
The invasion of false teachers (the wolves)
The value of the people (the sheep)
5. Fellowship: The implications of koinonia
Our common inheritance
Our common service
Our mutual responsibility
Some practical illustrations
6. Preaching: Five paradoxes
Biblical and contemporary
Authoritative and tentative
Prophetic and pastoral
Gifted and studied
Thoughtful and passionate
7. Giving: Ten principles
Springing from the Trinity
Creating equality according to our means
Careful supervision and friendly rivalry
A harvest with symbolic significance
The result: thanksgiving to God
8. Impact: Salt and light
The truths of salt and light
Weapons for social change
Christian distinctives
Conclusion: Looking for Timothys in the twenty-first century
A threefold appeal
Where are the Timothys?
Three historical appendices
An autobiographical sketch
I. Why I am still a member of the Church of England
II. I have a dream of a living church
III. Reflections of an octogenarian
PREFACE: ‘EMERGING CHURCHES’
‘If the current evangelical renewal in the Church of England is to have a lasting impact, then there must be more explicit attention given to the doctrine of the church.’
Thus spoke Robert Runcie, Archbishop of Canterbury, during his visit to the third National Evangelical Anglican Congress (NEAC), named a Celebration, at Caister-on-Sea in Norfolk in 1987.
Robert Runcie’s words divided us. Some nodded their assent, fearful that his stricture was correct. But others protested vigorously, having ‘turned away from the stubborn individualism for which we used to be notorious’.
What is clear is that during recent years there has been an extraordinary proliferation of books about the church. ...
What has precipitated this avalanche of books is the sense that the church is increasingly out of tune with contemporary culture, and that unless it comes to terms with change, it faces extinction. Of course it will not die, for Jesus promised that even the powers of death will not overcome it. Yet alarming statistics warn us of the current crisis, and the language of ‘seismic’ change enforces the situation.
It is not that the church’s calling is to ape the world, for it is called rather to develop a Christian counter-culture. At the same time, we must listen to the voices of the world in order to be able to respond to them sensitively, though without compromise. For example, in the Church of England, the Archbishops of Canterbury and York have sponsored the development of ‘fresh expressions of the church’,in part to proclaim the gospel relevantly in an increasingly postmodern population that views the church as a relic.
THE POSTMODERN WORLD
Keen-eyed social analysts are still trying to summarize what is involved in the cultural shift from the modernism of the Enlightenment to the arrival of postmodernism. The prefix ‘post’ in the word does not simply mean ‘after’. It rather hints at a protest against the Enlightenment years and the collapse of the intellectual and social edifices of modernism. Indeed, postmodernism is essentially parasitic on modernism, as a remora clings to a shark.
One has only to list a set of antitheses to recognize that both modernism and postmodernism are extremely varied phenomena. In general, modernism proclaims the autonomy of the human reason, especially in the cold objectivity of science, whereas postmodernism prefers the warmth of subjective experience. Modernism is committed to the quest for truth, believing that certainty is attainable; postmodernism is committed to pluralism, affirming the equal validity of all ideologies, and tolerance as the supreme virtue. Modernism declares the inevitability of social progress; postmodernism pricks the bubble of utopian dreams. Modernism exalts self-centred individualism; but postmodernism seeks the togetherness of community. Modernism is supremely self-confident, often guilty of that arrogant ambition which the ancient Greeks called hubris, whereas postmodernism is humble enough to question everything, for it lacks confidence in anything.
Some characteristics of postmodernism, in its critique of modernism, are to be applauded, and offer new opportunities for the gospel, whereas others are to be rejected. One needs discernment to determine which is which.
What then are the marks of a church in a postmodern culture, that is, of an ‘emerging church’? Most agree that what is evolving is as yet more a conversation than a movement, and are modest enough not to claim too much, since the situation is continuing to develop.
At the time of my writing, the most thorough analysis of such churches is Emerging Churches by Professors Eddie Gibbs and Ryan Bolger of Fuller Theological Seminary, sub-titled ‘creating Christian community in postmodern cultures’ (SPCK, 2006). It is the fruit of five years’ research, during which the authors listened to more than fifty leaders of innovative churches, and allowed them to tell their own stories.
From this comprehensive survey Eddie Gibbs and Ryan Bolger identified nine ‘patterns’ or ‘practices’ which kept appearing, three of which were ‘core’ practices common to the other six. Each is then given a chapter in the rest of the book.
The first is ‘identifying with the life (or way) of Jesus’, namely both his example and his teaching as verbalized in the Sermon on the Mount.
The second is ‘transforming secular space’ that is, rejecting the sacred-secular divide promoted by modernism.
The third is ‘living as community’, indeed as a kingdom or family community. To be sure, these three ‘core’ practices do not appear very new, since following Jesus, rejecting dualism and developing community should characterize every church. Nevertheless, what should be the case often differs from what actually is. And so, because many church structures actually inhibit these core practices, emerging churches are rediscovering them and giving them a fresh emphasis.
It seems to me that traditional and ‘emerging’ churches need to listen attentively to one another, with a view to learning from one another.
The former must recognize that much of what we recognize as traditional today was itself once revolutionary and even ‘emerging’, and therefore be open to today’s creative thinking. The latter should be wary of loving newness for newness’ sake. We both could afford to be less suspicious, less dismissive of one another, and more respectful and open. For, as Archbishop Rowan Williams has written, ‘there are many ways in which the reality of ‘‘church’’ can exist’. Nevertheless, it has certain essential marks which will always characterize an authentic and living church.
I have often said that we need more ‘R.C.’ churches, standing now not for Roman Catholic but for Radical Conservative churches – ‘conservative’ in the sense that they conserve what Scripture plainly requires, but ‘radical’ in relation to that combination of tradition and convention which we call ‘culture’. Scripture is unchangeable; culture is not.
The purpose of this book is to bring together a number of characteristics of what I will call an authentic or living church, whether it calls itself ‘emerging’ or not. I hope to show that these characteristics, being clearly biblical, must in some way be preserved.





