I have been interested of late in the emerging church. As one who grew up in the church I relate with many of those who are hungering for something deeper and wider. However, many are unaware of this movement or conversation that is happening on the fringes of the Church, in small house churches and creative urban ministries. So here are a few descriptions that I have found helpful:
From Jason Clark’s Blog review of Emerging Churches, by Eddie Gibbs, Ryan Bolger:
1. Re-centering on the kingdom of God.
2. Engaging culture with out a sacred and secular distinction.
3. Communal: Faith as communal experience.
4. Listening to the outsider.
5. Serving those in need without ulterior motives.
6. Involving participants in worship.
6. Valuing Creativity/Arts.
7. Leading through networks than top down hierarchies.
8. Ancient and Avant Garde
From exagorazo from an article on Urbana.org:
1. Having a high threshold for membership
(high expectations for believers)
2. Being real, not real religious
(being transparent, authentic, with one foot in “the world.”)
3. Teaching to obey rather than to know
(a practical faith)
4. Rewriting worship every week
(Creative, participatory Sunday morning services)
5. Living apostolically
(each believer as a missionary)
6. Expecting to change the world
(aggressively engaged in transforming communities)
7. Ordering actions according to purpose.
(Ruthless aligning of resources with mission)
8. Measuring growth by capacity to release rather than retain.
(Not megachurches but multiplying churches)
9. Placing kingdom concerns first
(in contrast to denomination first. Thus, cooperation with other churches)



July 2, 2006 at 12:43 pm
Thanks for droppng by and for the trackback. Jason.
July 5, 2006 at 9:43 pm
Thanks for the HT… I like your post, and your compilation of some of the issues surrounding the emerging church. Keep it up!
December 26, 2006 at 12:14 am
Thanks for these definitions of emerging church. Our young adults group is just beginning to get into an emerging way of being church, and these definitions are terrific. Blessings!
Bonnie Malone