The Hyphenateds -- A review
THE HYPHENATEDS: How Emergence Christianity is Re-Traditioning Mainline Practices
. Edited by Phil
Snider; Foreword by Phyllis Tickle. St.
Louis: Chalice Press, 2011. Xxii + 162 pages.
It’s no
secret that Mainline Protestantism has experienced significant decline over the
past fifty years. If you’ve been to a
typical Mainline church you’ll likely notice that those present are relatively
order than the general population. Many
pundits have put this branch of the Christian community on a death watch. Although the theology and social views
(especially on issues such as homosexuality) of this brand of Christianity
would seem to position it well to attract younger generations (GenX and
Millennials), such has not been the case.
Despite attempts to contemporize
worship and become less traditional, these churches (my church) continue to
struggle.
Despite the apparent downward
trend, there are signs of hope springing up here and there. This
doesn’t mean that the present rate of decline won’t continue for the foreseeable
future (with such a large percentage of membership being over 65 this is
inevitable), but not all is gloom and doom.
There are examples of new and interesting forms of church life
emerging. These forms of Christian
community track with the theology and even some of the traditions of existing
Mainline Christianity, but they seem to be metamorphosing into new forms and
expressions that may in the end look very different from what we know as
Mainline Protestantism today.
Phil
Snider, a Disciples of Christ pastor, with Emergent inclinations has gathered
together a set of essays written by other Emergent-inclined Mainliners. The Emergent Church movement had its birth
among younger evangelicals who found the theological and social constraints of
evangelicalism problematic. As they
“moved left,” they began to encounter younger Mainline Protestants who also
were on a journey toward something new and engaging. They are not, Snider insists, “abandoning the
traditions that have shaped them; rather they are attempting to faithfully
appropriate their beloved traditions in new and innovative ways.” They are, he suggests, seeking to retradition
the church so that new life can emerge (p. xvi) As a result of these
conversations a new breed of Mainliner developed – a hyphenated
Emergent-Mainliner. Thus we have Presby-mergents, Luther-mergents,
[D]mergents, Angli-mergents, and more.
The
book, which carries a foreword by Phyllis Tickle and an afterword from Doug
Pagitt, contains essays from thirteen Emergent Mainliners. In their essays they express appreciation
for their varied traditions, hopes for a new way of being church, anger at the
way church is practiced, and critique.
Some of the writers, including Carol Howard Merritt and Nadia Bolz-Weber
are widely known, while other names may be new to many readers. There will be essays that one finds
resonating, and others that do not. Each
reader may respond differently to the perspective of a given author.
In my
reading I found several of the essays especially poignant. The first essay of the book is written by
Bolz-Weber, an Emergent Lutheran pasturing in Denver, and carries the title “innovating
with integrity.” She expresses the
desire of many Mainliners who wish to push boundaries, to innovate, but wish to
remain true to the core values and theologies of their tradition. She writes:
The core holds the history, the tradition, and the money. It includes the ecclesial structures, the traditional churches that have existed for generations . . . The innovative edges then are emerging churches, multicultural ministries, and any ministry being established outside the structure of the ELCA, especially by seminaries and laity in response to their context. (p. 5)
The question that flows from this continuum of core and
innovative edge is whether there is sufficient respect at both ends, but
especially at the core, for the other.
Are the voices of the Millennial Generation, for instance, being heard? In a similar fashion, Stephanie Sellers, an
Episcopalian, raises the question of how to balance freedom and order in a
church that has valued tradition and order.
Going forward, however, how does it allow sufficient freedom to
contextualize itself so as to be present in and with a new generation?
Sometimes
structures, which have served church and clergy well, have conspired to shut
down innovation. Elaine Heath, a United
Methodist, notes that the principles of guaranteed appointments have made it
difficult for Methodists to engage in the kind of bi-vocational ministries that
allow for a more incarnational presence.
You can serve as a bi-vocational pastor, but such an appointment does
not allow one to have the same voting privileges as full-time clergy (ordained
elders), or to serve as a district superintendent or bishop.
So, if you are an innovative, missional, creative, bivocational local pastor who is good at planting and leading emerging faith communities on the margins of society, you will never become a district superintendent, never become a bishop, and never be able to offer to the ailing UMC at large the ecclesiological medicine it needs in order to become healthy again. (p. 33)
There is in this vein at times deep anger at the way the
structures are laid out and how they may conspire against innovation and even
radical Christianity – as seen in Christopher Rodkey’s “Satan in the Suburbs,”
which offers what seemed to me to be a diatribe against the church and its use
of ordination to control.
Some of
the essays, such as Carol Howard Merritt’s explore the cultural terrain of
emergent/mainline ministry, while Matt Gallion, a graduate student in religious
studies explores postmodern philosophy, which has been a key component of the
emergent conversation. Gallion calls on
emergent Mainliners to face the truth that if it is to “radically enact or
incarnate transformative change – as it purportedly desires to do – then it
will have to face its overwhelming similarities to classical liberalism and
move beyond them” (p. 89).
These
essays that I’ve highlighted offer a taste of what can be found in this very
important book for the Mainline Protestant church. I
didn’t agree everything I read and I didn’t find equal value in every
essay. That is to be expected from a
collection of essays. However, this is,
as Doug Pagitt suggests, a family conversation.
The idea of being hyphenated reminds us that there is often discomfort
in bringing together different families, to form a new family identity. Pagitt
writes of the feeling among many Mainliners attracted to the Emergent
Conversation – their family of origin is too important to let go of the name.
This is, in my opinion, where the hyphenateds of the emerging church world find themselves. They recognize they are in a new relationship, but they also know where they came from. They want to be fully in the emerging family, but as a product of another family. (p. 156).
How
all of this will work out is unknown.
Will one of the family names get dropped over time, or will this new
hyphenated identity enrich the broader Christian conversation? As Matt Gallion notes, this new identity must
be more than simply repackaging traditional liberalism. It can’t be another gimmick to grow a dying
church. It must contribute something of
value to the realm of God.
One thing that can be said for the
convergence of the emergent church movement, which has evangelical origins, and
the Mainline, is that the ethnic and gender representation has been
broadened. One of the criticisms of many Emergent
gatherings is that the stage is dominated by white males. In this conversation, a significant portion
of the contributors are women (six of thirteen), some of whom are persons of
color.
As a Mainline Pastor who has been
engaged in this conversation, though I am of a generation older than most of
the participants, I am grateful to Phil Snider and to Chalice Press, for making
this volume available to the church. May
it stir a conversation that can lead to transformation of the church so that it
becomes flexible and innovative enough to engage the world that exists and will
exist, even as it seeks to be true to its core.
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