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Opinions -
Editorials
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Contributed by Phil Spadaro
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Saturday, 12 November 2005 |
 Will Gen X forge unity? Is the Restoration Movement (RM) ready for unity? Why would it be ready
now? There has been a significant shift in philosophy in the past 20
years in western thought. Although many in Stone-Campbell churches have
seen post-modernism as a bane, it is not all bad and opens doors which
were previously closed.
The leadership demographics in the churches of
Christ (CoC), Independent Christian Churches / churches of Christ (ICC)
and International Churches of Christ (ICOC) are experiencing
significant shifts. Although the majority of senior leadership
(specifically elders) are still products of the baby boomers and hold
to a philosophy of rationalism, the mid-level “movers & shakers”
(deacons, small group leaders, Sunday school teachers) are cast from a
postmodern mold.
Postmodern thinkers are quite different than their modern and rational
baby-boomer forerunners. The postmodernist is more at ease with
ambiguity and tolerance. These qualities are not necessarily good or
bad as they can lead to extreme theological and doctrinal liberalism
(bad) or to embracing others who may not agree on all (non-critical)
elements (good).
The postmodernist is able to hold (and distinguish) convictions about
his / her theology and core salvation doctrine while being pliable (or
at least tolerant) in opinions concerning peripheral doctrine (i.e.
head coverings). They have also been raised in a more integrated
society and are willing (and expect) to have integrated congregations.
A move to postmodern thinking is finding difficulty in the CoC. RM
churches as a whole have a great resistance to change (mostly a good
characteristic). The CoC has viewed postmodernism with suspicion and
anti-biblical philosophy. The ICOC (and the discipling movement within
the CoC) can trace its roots to the late ‘60s. Postmodernism was
already making inroads into the youth of the day. The ICOC leadership
came from this period and has had an easier time adopting
postmodernism.
The men and women who are ready to build bridges and forge bonds
between RM churches are our Generation X people. I am not disparaging
our baby boomers, they have lead us through difficult times and made
choices which were biblically appropriate within their cultural
context. It is our next crop of leaders who will be responsible for
healing the gaps among congregations. My call is for those who are of
this mindset to be active in created unity among Restoration Movement
churches.
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Thanks! Written by mbardowell on 2005-11-15 14:51:19 Great post. I'm not sure if my reference point for modernism/postmodernism is the same as what your talking about, but for this post I'll just assume that it is. I think it's probably safe to say that most Christians are taught to revile postmodernism. I know personally, it's hard for me to stay open-minded when faced with its all-emcompassing relativism. I do think you have a fair point though, when you consider the alternative. It's scary to be a modernist and realize the limitations of your own reason. Especially since Christianity, at its root, is so illogical and counter-intuitive to our nature. No matter how well we have our apologetics memorized and ready to go at a moments notice there's somthing that seems so hollow about trying to justify Christianity that way. At any rate, I guess what I appreciate about what we've been learning now is how so many of our false dilemmas are being exposed and dealt with ("If you're really a Christian you'll do x every day," or "Why wouldn't people want to do y." This certainly leaves a lot more room for people to come to their own faith driven decisions. Thanks! |
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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 10 January 2006 )
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