Thursday, January 29, 2026

Spiritual emergency (part 1)

 


So this unexpectedly came up. Does anyone today even *remember* the Emergent Church? Naturally, I had to ask ChatGPT about it. Here we go! 

What is the Emergent Church or emergent church movement in the United States?

The Emergent Church (or Emergent Church Movement) is a loose, mostly Protestant Christian network that arose in the United States in the late 1990s and early 2000s as a response to both conservative evangelicalism and modern secular culture. It is not a denomination but a conversation, culture, and style of Christianity that tries to rethink faith in a postmodern world.

It’s especially interesting if you’re drawn to things like mysticism, pluralism, and spiritual depth (which fits well with your interests in Zen, nondualism, and perennial philosophy).


1. Why it emerged

The Emergent Church arose from dissatisfaction with:

• rigid biblical literalism
• culture-war evangelicalism
• megachurch consumerism
• anti-intellectual faith
• exclusion of LGBTQ people
• rejection of science and other religions

Its founders felt that traditional evangelicalism had become:

culturally reactionary, spiritually thin, and intellectually brittle

They wanted Christianity that could survive postmodernity, globalism, and religious pluralism.


2. Core ideas

There is no single doctrine, but common themes include:

A. Christianity as a living tradition

Truth is not just propositions to believe — it is a way of life and spiritual journey.

B. Deconstruction of certainty

They reject:
• infallible Bible
• absolute theological systems
• rigid “saved vs damned” thinking

They emphasize humility, ambiguity, and dialogue.

C. Postmodern theology

They draw on:
• continental philosophy
• narrative theology
• process theology
• mystical traditions
• Eastern Orthodoxy and Catholic spirituality

D. Inclusion

Most emergent communities:
• affirm LGBTQ people
• accept women in leadership
• reject hell as eternal torture
• embrace other religions as spiritually meaningful


3. How Emergent churches look

Emergent congregations often:
• meet in cafés, art spaces, homes
• use candles, icons, poetry
• do meditation, silence, Taizé chants
• encourage dialogue instead of sermons
• avoid dogmatic creeds

It often feels more like:

a spiritual salon than a traditional church


4. Key figures

Brian McLaren

The most famous voice. His books:
A New Kind of Christian
A Generous Orthodoxy
The Great Spiritual Migration

He openly affirms religious pluralism and LGBTQ inclusion.

Rob Bell

Pastor of Mars Hill Bible Church and author of Love Wins.
Argued hell is not eternal punishment.

Doug Pagitt

Pushed conversational worship and postmodern theology.

Phyllis Tickle

Church historian who framed Emergent as part of Christianity’s 500-year renewal cycle.


5. Why conservatives hate it

Evangelicals accuse the Emergent Church of:
• denying biblical authority
• rejecting salvation through Christ alone
• embracing relativism
• being “New Age”

And honestly — from a traditional evangelical standpoint — those criticisms are largely true.

Emergent Christianity is closer to mystical, pluralist spirituality than to classical Protestant orthodoxy.


6. Why it matters spiritually

Emergent Christianity is one of the few modern Western Christian movements that seriously engages:

• mysticism
• nonduality
• contemplative prayer
• Buddhist-like awareness practices
• interreligious dialogue

This is why it resonates with people who read:

Dōgen, Hart, Vervaeke, Cutsinger, Zen, and Vedanta

It is Christianity trying to become sapiential again rather than merely doctrinal.


7. Where it is now (2026)

The original Emergent movement peaked around 2005–2012.
The brand faded, but its influence spread into:

• progressive Christianity
• contemplative Christianity
• deconstruction movement
• spiritual-but-not-religious Christians
• LGBTQ-affirming churches

It quietly reshaped American Christianity, even though many no longer use the name.


In one sentence

The Emergent Church is Christianity after it has passed through postmodernity, mysticism, and pluralism and refused to go back.

If you want, I can compare it to:

  • Sōtō Zen or nondual traditions

  • Perennial philosophy

  • Christian mysticism

  • David Bentley Hart’s theology

  • Or the “deconstruction” movement now popular on YouTube and TikTok

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