Archive for October, 2007

Christian Education and the Emerging Church

Nathanael Berends October 21st, 2007

At the onset of this project, I had hoped to illuminate the connection between the declining condition of Christian education within the context of the Sunday school, and the emerging church. Not surprisingly, however, there exists very little information that directly discusses the intersection of the emerging church’s upward growth and the Sunday school’s decline. I did, however, notice a few very significant and pertinent connections between the two movements.

Most notably, the emphasis and necessity of community-centric involvement is strikingly evident in both movements. Within the selected articles found below, there is deep and recurrent evidence that the ideal emergent church will be centered in very tangible ways around community—the greatest majority of research suggests that Sunday school, in an ideal setting is much the same.

With that said, the emerging church demonstrates, if yet only hypothetically, great potential for the re-imagining of congregational, community-oriented education. This will not be significantly observable, however, until the emerging movement becomes more cohesive in its definition, practice, and membership. Once the emerging movement has begun to address its most critically decisive issues—particularly the role of traditional practice in the face of post-modern influence—there is great potential and opportunity for truly transformational educational structures.

These are things that are today only alluded to. Time will offer the ultimate say on the extent to which emerging congregations can rescue the institution of Sunday school and community education. If there is any hope for a re-visioning and renewal of Christian education in the context of the church, the possibility of the impetus coming from the emerging church is as likely—if not moreso—as any other source.

Discovery Park.

Nathanael Berends October 14th, 2007

I discovered a park yesterday.

Discovery Park, in fact.

(yes… you can click the pictues… there’s more where those came from.)

Discovery Park 1

Discovery Park 2

Modern Day Prophets?

Nathanael Berends October 7th, 2007

This morning I hiked up to the top of Queen Anne and went to church at Bethany Presbyterian for the first time. All throughout the service, there was a man sitting next to me, scribbling furiously in a notebook. His handwriting was fast, without regard for form or accuracy. He was writing what appeared to be coming to the top of his mind.

I would later discover that his name is Jason, and a few of those pages he was scribbling were for me.

This bring me to a question. Do prophets exist in today’s world? I completely believe that they do! To think that God is not still using people to speak truth into the lives of others just doesn’t make sense to me. And so all arguement about whether Jason is a prophet or not can be ignored right now–but the question is indeed a good one.

After the service, Jason shared with me a cliff-notes version of the full letter that he gave to me. A good deal of what he said to me was pretty spot on. And this could be for one of two reasons.

The Oedepus Effect–i.e. self fulfilling prophesey–states that, more or less, a situation becomes as real as you expect it to be. To this extent, did some part of me want to believe Jason’s words to be truth, such that I would find and even stretch reality to provide paralells in my own experience? There surely must be some psychological rule about this.

Therefore, I am forced to conclude either the aforementioned fact, or that Jason was indeed placed in my life (assumedly by God), in order to share with me words of importance.

In other words, he’s either nuts, or a man of God. Are there really any other options?

Click below to see the whole letter. Read it if you wish. And if you know me at all, I’d be very interested to hear your reaction to this event.

Mark Driscoll v. The Emergent Movement

Nathanael Berends October 5th, 2007

Mark had written several articles for secular magazines and had been interviewed a few times on the radio and had gotten this reputation as a pastor who said cusswords. It is true that Mark said alot of cusswords. I don’t know why he did it. He hadn’t become a Christian until he was in college, so maybe he didn’t know he wasn’t supposed to say cusswords and be a pastor.

(Donald Miller, Blue Like Jazz)

I read this book and excerpt nearly two years ago and I unwittingly sat through an entire service of Mark, The Cussing Pastor, without making the connection. Miller actually speaks quite well of Mark, and says that his church represented the first time in years that a church made him feel like he could breathe, but this wasn’t my experience.

Continue Reading »