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Isolationism

09/07/09

Permalink 05:59:20 am, by dissidens Email , 496 words, 1684 views   English (US)
Categories: Old Main

Isolationism

James Moore, 46 year old theologian and prose stylist, delivers himself of some tacky thoughts on a simpleton's faith.

I am intrigued by emergence for many reasons. I haven't yet ranked all the reasons for my interest—my wife wants me to get started on that—but high on the list has to be its daft theology: things like Moore's thoughts on Mister Rogers, McLaren's daffy commentary on Resurrection & Digestion and Scandrette's pathetic beat poetry.

But I have noticed not just its discontinuity with orthodoxy, which leaps out at anyone who's read the Bible, but its continuities with American evangelicalism. Like the fundamentalists and the neo-evangelicals before them, emergents have nursed this provincial attitude toward "community". Take a look at any of the three movements and you are struck by the insularity of them all, and each successive eccentricity has been touted as a remnant's reach back to some pristine Evangel. Yet what survives is conspicuously unattractive, unsuccessful, and isolated from the whole. Fundamentalism didn't preserve orthodoxy, neo-evangelicalism didn't preserve orthopraxy, and emergence can't even preserve meaning.

Emergence is Storytime-Over-at-the-Asylum. It is a demand that the testimony of the Evangelists be overpowered by the telling of a unique personal narrative we'll dignify with the word journey. So now we can all pretend that James Moore has something relevant to tell us about what is "right and correct with the world".

In the fog of the culture war we have overlooked one of the most important gifts of culture.

In a democratic culture people are inclined to believe that it is presumptuous to claim to have better taste than your neighbor. By doing so you are implicitly denying his right to be the thing that he is. You like Bach, she likes U2; you like Leonardo, he likes Mucha; she likes Jane Austen, you like Danielle Steele. Each of you exists in his own enclosed aesthetic world, and so long as neither harms the other, each says good morning over the fence, there is nothing further to be said.

But things are not so simple, as the democratic argument already implies. If it is so offensive to look down on another's taste, it is, as the democrat recognizes, because taste is intimately bound up with our personal life and moral identity. It is part of our rational nature to strive for a community of judgment, a shared conception of value, since that is what reason and the moral life require.

Of all that might be said about the inadequate aesthetics of contemporary liturgy, probably the most immediately recognizable fault is its austere parochialism. It would not be at all unfair to observe that for the last century the Christian religion has lacked any community of judgment. Not in the pulpit and not at the altar.

Whatever new remedy comes down the pike, examine it to see if it gives a fig about preserving a community of judgment worth handing down to our children.

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1 Comment from: exlibris [Visitor] Email
In addition to these three movements' disdain for the gifts of culture and perhaps related to this disdain, is this simpleton desire for a panacea - sort of like your Melba toast diet narrative.

Fundamentalists believe that preserving a small set of theological truths, and maybe a few pious disciplines, will save the day. Evangelicals believed they could assuage their uneasy conscience by tacking a piety of benevolence onto their fundamentalist credo. Emergents believe that if Christians would only recognize that we all have our own story, we wouldn't quibble about doctrine so much. Thus we would be able to fulfill the wish of Christ's prayer for unity.

As an illustration: young and impressionable people are rightly turned off with the lack of feeling in our worship. They often rightly criticize our perfunctory worship practices. Change this and we will once again have genuine Christianity. These same youth will then concoct their panacea by planning a worship service ripped right out of Bob Kauflin's hands and pound it out in a rather perfunctory fashion. Misdiagnosing the symptom as the disease, they still have the disease.

But how much of this inanity can we endure? How can you explain the subtleties of worship when the person to whom you are explaining thinks his custom strums on the guitar are on an equal plane with Bach's cantatas?
PermalinkPermalink 09/07/09 @ 09:52

Reply to comment 6416 by exlibris

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2 Comment from: dissidens [Member] Email

The more I observe this situation the more I am persuaded that people don’t want a remedy; they want an advertisement. They want something quick, something easy, something painless, something undemanding, and something that makes them feel as though they are “on the right side of the issue of our times”.

[Our adult SS class is now discussing Biblical Worship: Its Substance & Style. It promises to be a full 13-week headache.]

Most of us know, by virtue of being in the world, that religious music—religious art in general, but music specifically since that is the most ubiquitous and unavoidable expression of the Christian imagination—is what the readers of iMonk would call “lame”. It’s more than lame; it’s quadriplegic.

We know this; we don’t invite our music-loving friends over to discuss a recent recording from Soundfroth or Beach Street Records or Gotee. Only personal friends listen to the emergents’ affected coffeehouse schlock. We know this is a kind of aesthetic backwater which trades on the sad religious itch.

Religious folk have this mental category: Stuff we do only for God because we really don’t take him seriously.

How much of this inanity can be endured? I think we have already passed the point of quiet toleration.
PermalinkPermalink 09/07/09 @ 11:37

Reply to comment 6417 by dissidens

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3 Comment from: Servo [Member] Email
The more I observe this situation the more I am persuaded that people don’t want a remedy.
Before seeking a remedy, one needs to recognize the existence of a malady that needs a remedy. Therein is (at least part of) the problem: the maladies identified are typically with "them" and not with "us" or "me." How hard we learn the lesson of the mote and the beam!

I am also intrigued by the name of the blog to which Diss' article links: THEOOZE. I am wondering how seriously the authors there want me to take their writing and, more generally, their site when they refer to it as "ooze." Names and labels are important.
PermalinkPermalink 09/08/09 @ 16:47

Reply to comment 6418 by Servo

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4 Comment from: dissidens [Member] Email

I do think this is the crisis of the moment.

Sunday morning I sat through another series of snickers and self-congratulations—and this in a church that has vacated every one of its pastoral offices in a crippling split. One of the points of contention and one of the on-going tensions is its liturgy.

If opinions were horses….

It began with the old Charles Finney wheeze. Then we were invited to snicker at Warren, Hinn, Osteen and the RCC.

My grandfather was born in 1896 and came very close to living in three centuries. I myself intend to live for a hundred years in the hope that I might witness a profitable conversation among Christians on the subject of proper worship.
PermalinkPermalink 09/08/09 @ 21:00

Reply to comment 6419 by dissidens

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5 Comment from: exlibris [Visitor] Email
Don't hold your breath.
PermalinkPermalink 09/09/09 @ 08:56

Reply to comment 6420 by exlibris

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