Oct
08
2009
Mark DeVine: Emergent or Emerging
SPEAKER: Mark DeVine, Associate Professor of Divinity at Beeson Divinity School
TITLE: Emergent or Emerging: Questions for Southern Baptists and North American Evangelicals (Audio here)
THE GIST: There are two streams in the Emerging Church – one that is doctrine-friendly and one that is doctrine-averse. From the doctrine-friendly, theologically orthodox stream of the Emerging Church, Southern Baptists can receive beneficial insights for church ministry. Likewise, Southern Baptists have much to offer the non-denominational Emerging Churches.
BRIEF OUTLINE:
Two Major Streams in the Emerging Church
- Doctrine-Friendly (affirming historic Christian teaching)
- Emergent (whether doctrine-averse or doctrine-wary)
Benefits of the (Doctrine-Friendly) Emerging Church for Southern Baptists
- An impressive zeal for church planting.
- A missionary heart for urban contexts.
- A missional mindset versus an attractional mindset.
- A desire to be culturally conscious. (They understand the cultural diversification of North America.)
- A patience in evangelism. (They understand the negative consequences of unconverted people thinking themselves to be born again.)
- A delay in baptism and full incorporation into the church congregation. (They understand the covenant nature of church membership and prepare the way for biblical church discipline by guarding the baptismal pool.)
- An emphasis on community. (Marked by transparency, honesty, doing life together)
MEMORABLE QUOTES:
The doctrine-friendly stream believes in “conversion-seeking evangelism” while the doctrine-averse stream believes in “belonging before believing.”
Church planting is not child’s play. Neither is church-replanting. If this is rebellion, it is an impressive way to rebel.
Culture profoundly affects the conveyance of meaning.
Culture should be studied with great care, with missiological purposes in mind, as it has been by missionaries in foreign fields for years.
“If we truly understood the true character of baptism, we might fear its reception more than its delay.” – Tertullian
If believers are deprived of the time and means of developing commitment to one another, how can they develop a commitment to the local church, much less a denomination?
The gospel is by divine design community-creating and community-nourishing.
Pastors should stay put in churches long enough to accomplish something.
The emphasis on community runs up against the refusal or inability to commit to almost anything, systemic in Baby Boomers.















