The Great Emergence: How Christianity Is Changing and Why
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About this ebook
Combining history, a look at the causes of social upheaval, and current events, The Great Emergence shows readers what the Great Emergence in church and culture is, how it came to be, and where it is going. Anyone who is interested in the future of the church in America, no matter what their personal affiliation, will find this book a fascinating exploration.
Study guide by Danielle Shroyer.
Phyllis Tickle
Phyllis Tickle (1934–2015) was an authority on religion in America and a much sought after lecturer on the subject. Founding editor of the Religion Department of Publishers Weekly, she has been frequently quoted by media sources including USA Today, Christian Science Monitor, the New York Times, PBS, NPR, the Hallmark Channel, plus innumerable blogs and websites. In addition to lectures and numerous essays, articles, and interviews, Tickle is the author of over two dozen books in religion and spirituality, including The Great Emergence, How Christianity is Changing and Why, and The Words of Jesus, A Gospel of the Sayings of Our Lord.
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Reviews for The Great Emergence
7 ratings8 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Phyllis Tickle sets out in this book to show how Christianity is going through a radical reformation in the 21 century. This is a process already underway and is evident in much of the English-speaking world. Religion goes through major shifts in the world about every 500 years. This can be seen through what Christianity did to survive into the Dark Ages from around 500, the severing of Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox forms in the 11 th century, the Protestant Reformation in the 16th century (think Martin Luther), and now the appearance of emergent Christianity. This is marked by a greater sense of community, and the amelioration of the central Protestant idea of "sola scriptua" which has been under bombardment since the abolition of slavery in the 19th century. As we are living in the midst of this change, it is not obvious that Christianity right is going through this big change, but Tickle makes a vreyintersting case for it, and the book is a worthwhile read.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5This is a great little book - very easy to read and pretty incisive. Tickle takes a quick overview of church history and observes that every 500 years or so Christianity goes through a major period of upheaval and redifinition, a "rummage sale" is the metaphor she uses. Looking in more detail at the Reformation she notes how this process is inextricably entwined with changes in culture, technology, philosophy. She then goes on to point out how in terms of time, and in terms of recent history, that the church is ripe for another such upheaval, the "Great Emergence"So far so good. I like the way she puts it and agree with her analysis. Where the book leaves a little to be desired is her analysis of what the great Emergence will look like. Examining a number of current streams of Christianity she ponders the directions in which things are moving and the burning religious questions of our time, among which she correctly raises the nature of scriptural authority and Christian exclusivity. But she does not suggest answers to these questions or paint a very clear of what the 'ascendant' church of the Great Emergence will look like. I can't seriously fault her for this, as I don't think it's possible to accurately predict the outcome of a current period of turmoil. Could Luther have predicted where his 95 theses would lead?Definitely worth a read by anyone with an interest in where the church has come from and where it might be going. No clear answers, but some great history and some very good questions.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5An investigation into the many changes in and influencing Christianity over the past few generations in terms of a 500 year cycle.The author seeks to understand the many great changes going on throughout Christianity over the past few generations in terms of a 500 year cycle in which Christianity and society at large go through great tempestuous changes and come out with a new consensus, the first as the first century, then around 500-600 with the shift from the Roman Empire to medievalism and the rise of Gregory the Great and the monasteries, then 1054 with the Great Schism between East and West, the Reformation et al in the 1500s, and now in our own times.The narrative is the strongest in terms of the discussion of the past: the analysis of the Reformation and how it came about is excellent, and the discussion of the changes that have come to modern society over the past century and a half is excellent as well. By necessity, the challenge of such a work involves trying to figure out where everything is going. Perhaps people in the future will find this work rather prophetic, but we cannot know that yet. The author's analysis of how current trends might play out in the near future is insightful, but time will tell about how it all turns out.This book presents an interesting prism through which to see the history of Christianity and where it might lead, and is worth exploring.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5This little book was quite thought-provoking. That being said having been thinking about it I dont agree with much of it. I think that personally we all think that our time in history is different and a dynamic important part of history. Of course there is no unimportant point in history but it is a bit presumptuous, and almost arrogant, to conclude that our time is a monumental moment in history. Tickle's theory of 500 year cycles strikes me as way too simple. I think history more than likely works in cycles but to set a time for that is a bit much. Additionally, she glosses over a great deal. There is so much that happened inside those 500 years that is arguably as important as the events she lists. Having said all that it does make a reasonable conversation starter. She does put together some interesting thoughts about the new directions in Christianity.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Every five hundred years, Christianity has a rummage sale, and emerges much changed. We're in the midst of such change now.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I have great admiration for Phyllis Tickle, so I was intrigued by the perspective she puts forth in this book, that the church is ripe for reformation. I have experienced many of the early warning signs she points to, as old ways of doing religion become stale and decline, as conservative members of denominations retreat into their respective positions against change and liberals gather in the center around similar ideas. I doubt if any reformers knew what they were unleashing in their own times, but Tickle gives us much food for thought about how to understand the changes we are living. It is a very hopeful book.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5History will decide whether Tickle is a prophet or not.Here’s her idea: Every 500 years the church undergoes major change. During that period of change, a new form of Christianity is born which becomes the dominant form of the age. The remaining forms of Christianity stick around but lose their priority. Every time this happens, the gospel is proclaimed to more people than ever before.Around 500, Gregory the Great laid the foundation that saved the Church during the fall of the Roman Empire and into the dark ages. Around 1000, the Great Schism took place which separated the Eastern and Western church. Of course, around 1500, the Great Reformation took place which spawned Protestantism. Now, 500 years after the Great Reformation, Tickle places us on the cusp of The Great Emergence.Her final chapters on how modern denominations are shifting towards a common center are very important. Tickle seems to know precisely how to interpret the multitude of changes that are taking place in our churches.This is a book about hope. Even the forms of Christianity that do not get involved with the Great Emergence have an important role to play in the future of the Kingdom of God (albeit as ballast).I think history will treat Phyllis Tickle very well.
- Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5While describing herself as an "academic," the author makes broad generalizations without validating her historical "facts," and presents herself as an expert in an area in which she admits she has no expertise. She broadly dismisses and belittles anyone or any denomination that disagrees with her theology. The only good thing about this book is that it is mercifully as short in pages as it is in substance.
Book preview
The Great Emergence - Phyllis Tickle
© 2008, 2012 by Phyllis Tickle
Published by Baker Books
a division of Baker Publishing Group
P.O. Box 6287, Grand Rapids, MI 49516-6287
www.bakerbooks.com
Ebook edition created 2012
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—for example, electronic, photocopy, recording—without the prior written permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations in printed reviews.
ISBN 978-1-4412-4172-6
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is on file at the Library of Congress, Washington, DC.
Scripture quotations are from the Holy Bible, New International Version®. NIV®. Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984 by Biblica, Inc.™ Used by permission of Zondervan. All rights reserved worldwide. www.zondervan.com
The internet addresses, email addresses, and phone numbers in this book are accurate at the time of publication. They are provided as a resource. Baker Publishing Group does not endorse them or vouch for their content or permanence.
Contents
Cover
Title Page
Copyright Page
Illustrations
Preface to the Paperback Edition
Preface
PART 1: The Great Emergence: What Is It?
1. Rummage Sales: When the Church Cleans Out Its Attic
2. Cable of Meaning: The Loss and Discovery of a Common Story
PART 2: The Great Emergence: How Did It Come To Be?
3. The Great Reformation: A Prequel to Emergence
4. Questions of Re-formation: Darwin, Freud, and the Power of Myth
5. The Century of Emergence: Einstein, the Automobile, and the Marginalization of Grandma
PART 3: The Great Emergence: Where Is It Going?
6. The Gathering Center: And the Many Faces of a Church Emerging
7. The Way Ahead: Mapping Fault Lines and Fusions
Index
A Guide for Reading and Discussing . . .
About the Author
Notes
Back Ads
Back Cover
Illustrations
1. The Cable
2. Popes of the Late Fourteenth and Early Fifteenth Centuries
3. The Quadrilateral
4. The Cruciform
5. The Gathering Center
6. The Rose
7. The Surrounding Currents
8. The Bases of Authority (a)
9. The Bases of Authority (b)
Preface to the Paperback Edition
One singularly sunny midsummer day in 2006, Chad Allen, Doug Pagitt, and his wife, Shelley, took me to lunch. While I remember very little about what we ate, what we talked about has lived in every part of my life every day since, and that is a bold statement.
Allen, who is now editorial director of Baker Books, was an acquisitions editor at the time; and Pagitt was, as he still is, senior pastor of Solomon’s Porch in Minneapolis and a major voice in Emergent Village and Emergence Christianity both in this country and in the world at large. In 2006 he was also two other things. He was the editor, for Baker Books and in cooperation with Emergent Village, of a line of books designed to present and explicate this new form of Christianity that was burgeoning forth among us. He was also smart enough to bring Shelley to lunch. Of the three of them, she was probably the most persuasive about the fact that what the gentlemen wanted done did indeed want to be done. And what the gentlemen wanted was a book, under the ēmersion imprint, which would report in narrative form the history of Emergence and describe in accessible terms its place in North American Christianity in the twenty-first century.
Out of that luncheon came, in 2008, the original edition of the book you now hold in your hand. The only difference that has been effected in it over the years is that The Great Emergence no longer bears the ēmersion imprint, simply because Emergence and the Village have grown to such stature as to no longer need a series of books to introduce themselves to each other or to their fellow Christians. Pagitt, Allen, and Baker Books have done their job well, though I suspect Shelley and I are both a bit sad at the loss of ēmersion their success has brought with it.
But in all the changes and growth, listening and strenuous praying in the years since that pivotal luncheon, one thing has remained constant: Shelley was right. The Great Emergence and the Emergence Christianity that has come out of it, and that continues to come, have a story that wants telling . . . a story that must be told . . . a story both very holy and very human. So if this edition of The Great Emergence can be said to be dedicated to anything other than the urgency of its own message, then it is dedicated to Shelley Pagitt, who knew and understood from the first and had the grace to say so.
Preface
A word or two of explanation seems warranted, since what you are about to read has had a somewhat unusual story behind its presentation here.
While I began life as a teacher—first of Latin to high school students, then as a college instructor, and finally as a college dean—I have spent the bulk of my professional career in publishing. I left the academic world in 1971, in fact, to open and run a small Southern publishing house that, over the years, grew and morphed and grew again. All through those years, however, my yearning and urgency were toward my own writing; and in 1990 I left secular publishing to turn my full attention to living the life of the professional writer. But the late eighties and early nineties were also the years when religion was overtaking every other segment of America’s book publishing industry. By 1992, religion as a category of publishing was approaching triple-digit annual growth, and something had to be done by the larger industry to accommodate such massive change.
Publishers Weekly is the trade journal of the book publishing industry in the English language; but prior to 1992, it had not had a religion department for, truth be told, none had been needed. When the tsunami came that year, however, the journal had no choice other than to establish such a department, and quickly. Happily, for me anyway, I knew publishing from years of experience in the industry, I was a devout and observant member of the world’s largest religion, and I was free, more or less.
When Publishers Weekly called, I was startled at first. Most people who think they have the rest of their lives mapped out, only to discover otherwise, are startled, I suppose. But in due time and after further conversation, I was intrigued, came out of my self-imposed retirement-to-write stance, and went to New York to create out of whole cloth something that had never been before, and do it immediately. My training in religion is, as a result, not in any way formal. Rather, I became a student of religion by being cast dead center of the maelstrom and having to learn to swim right there and right then.
For religion books to get to the general readers who were ravenous for them, religion publishers had to be merged into secular media and secular retail book outlets. The industry’s trade journal was the logical forum for the transfer of the data and information required to effect such an integration of the niche into the general market. Many secular publishing houses, for their part, had never done much, if any, religion publishing. Suddenly, however, they had to have effective, accessible, and deadly accurate information about what was happening in American religion, why it was happening, what to publish that would feed the needs thus identified, and what was likely to come next. Again, the industry’s journal was the immediately obvious place for that transfer of data.
Over the years of that exchange, I changed too, of course. I became what is called a public intellectual or, in my old haunts as an academic, would have been called a scholar without portfolio.
What those terms mean is that I was in a field where there were not yet programs for formal training. I was, to use the more common expression, receiving on-the-job training in spades. I was being transformed into a sociologist of religion as it is commercially applied; I was learning to see religion and its patterns as they could be tracked and validated in sales figures and book subcategories and title/format flow as well as in more traditional demographic studies. I also (for I shall always be an academic) began to read and study what scholars had said, and were saying, about religion both now and in other times of upheaval and flux. Always, obviously, I read through the lens of my own professional obligations at Publishers Weekly and in terms of my own industry’s stated expectations of what their trade journal should provide; but I also learned far more than what was immediately applicable to publishing needs and purposes.
As a Christian, I became increasingly persuaded that what Publishers Weekly had taught me or had allowed me to learn had a greater place in the Christian community at large. Accordingly, I resigned my post at the journal and began a whole new life of talking to people—both lay and ordained—around the country about what it is that is happening to us just now, and why, and to what probable result. The book you are about to read is, in essence, a hard copy at last of what those lectures and speeches and interviews have been about.
One of the great joys for me in writing this book has, in fact, been the realization that at last I am being given the opportunity to assemble into one coherent, narrative whole what I have been delivering in pieces and parts for the last several years. I am grateful for that gift, just as I shall remain always grateful to those of you who come to share with me here this particular overview of the Great Emergence through which we are presently living.
PART 1
THE
Great
EMERGENCE
What Is It?
The Great Emergence
refers to a monumental phenomenon in our world, and this book asks three questions about it. Or looked at the other way around, this book is about a monumental phenomenon considered from the perspective of three very basic questions: What is this thing? How did it come to be? Where is it going? The third question is loaded, by the way. Fully stated, what it really means to ask is, not just where is this thing going, but also where is it taking us as it goes?
As a phenomenon, the Great Emergence has been slipping up on us for decades in very much the same way spring slips up on us week by week every year. Though it may have sent us a thousand harbingers of its approach, we are still surprised to wake up one balmy morning to a busy, chirping world that, a mere twenty-four hours before, had been a gray and silent one. Our surprise does not mean that all of us have failed to notice the first, subtle shiftings of the seasons. It just means that most of us haven’t bothered to think about them; because at a practical or useful level, spring isn’t here
until it’s fully enough here to make a difference in our mundane lives—in what we decide to wear, how we plan our activities, and what to do with our time, even in what and how much we decide to eat. So it has been with us and the Great Emergence. If it was indeed coming our way, then most of us would prefer to deal with it after it was fully here and not while it was merely sending intimations of itself.
There has been a certain economy of effort in that Wait ’til it actually gets here
attitude. For one thing, even during the closing years of the twentieth century, the Great Emergence was as hard to catch as spilled mercury on a high school lab counter. Like mercury, its major, public use was for making either conversation or amateur temperature gauges. For another thing, and very unlike liquid mercury, it was amorphous, lacking any cohesion or, for that matter, any clear borders or definable circumference. But since then, a century has rolled over us, bringing with it the rejuvenating hopes and promises of a new millennium and the keen awareness that, whatever it may be for good or ill, the Great Emergence is to be a major part of this new season in our human years.
Like every new season,
this one we recognize as the Great Emergence affects every part of our lives. In its totality, it interfaces with, and is the context for, everything we do socially, culturally, intellectually, politically, economically. When, for instance, a book on global economics can become a mega-seller, what we are really acknowledging to ourselves at a popular level is something we had already sensed but had not wanted to acknowledge, namely that the world really has gone flat again. Among other things, we are admitting at last that classic economics do not apply nearly so well to a service-based economy as they once did to our production-based ones. We are acknowledging as well that national borders and national loyalties no longer hold as once they did. We are accepting as well the absolute fact that now even a small nation can hold a large one hostage, because technology and the knowledge of how to use it have leveled the playing field. No one is privileged anymore, or at least not in the old ways of physical wealth and sheer manpower.
When we become agitated—and agitate each other—about how we are drowning in information overload, in correspondence, and in the stress of unending To-Do
lists, we are talking about the Great Emergence, or at least about one small part of its presence as a new time in human history. When, for example, we discover we can no longer do so simple a thing as running sums in our heads, but instead have to turn to our calculators, we are recognizing that we are storing more and more of our selves
outside of ourselves and thereby creating a dependency that is, at the very least, unsettling. Dependency on machines, in other words, is part of the Great Emergence, and it infiltrates far more than our mundane activities. It infiltrates as well our unsettled and unsettling inability to determine where the line is between us and machines . . . how many of them we will allow into our bodies, how much we will allow them to simulate our actions, how long we will be able to control them. For that matter, we pale before the questions of creating life itself or even of simply engineering it. We grow ever more alarmed that the so-called footprint of human presence in our tech-driven world is killing the earth, yet we feel powerless to stop her demise. Or we have to accept the relativeness of universal laws and the unpredictabilities of quantum physics and cannot stop those facts from leeching over into our ways of seeing truth
and fact.
These also are signs and evidences of the Great Emergence. Their listing, in fact, is almost boundless, so pervasive is the nature of the shift we are passing through.
It is, however, not with the whole of the Great Emergence that we are concerned here. Rather, it is with religion—and specifically with Christianity in North America—that we are concerned at the moment.
The Right Reverend Mark Dyer, an Anglican bishop known for his wit as well as his wisdom, famously observes from time to time that the only way to understand what is currently happening to us as twenty-first-century Christians in North America is first to understand that about every five hundred years the Church feels compelled to hold a giant rummage sale. And, he goes on to say, we are living in and through one of those five-hundred-year sales. Now, while the bishop may be using a bit of humor to make a point, his is nonetheless a deadly serious and exquisitely accurate point. Any usable discussion of the Great Emergence and what is happening in Christianity today must commence with yesterday and a discussion of history. Only history can expose the patterns and confluences of the past in such a way as to help us identify the patterns and flow of our own times and occupy them more faithfully.
The first pattern