Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Worship Symposium

Last weekend I had the privilege of attending the Calvin Symposium on Christian Worship. The conference was intended to present various styles of worship and ideas that can be incorporated to make worship more biblical, theologically accurate and fresh. It was definitely interdenominational - my first session was presented by a panel of emergent church leaders, the second was done by a Lutheran organist and the third was by an actor who performed dramatic Scripture readings at his Presbyterian church.

The first session, as mentioned earlier, was an honest look at the Emergent Church. In short, the movement was founded on the idea that church needs to adjust to a post-modern culture. This means the church needs to rethink everything, from how we worship to the buildings we meet in to the theology and ancient creeds.

The high point of the session came when Jason Clark, a pastor in London, England, discussed the topic of his Ph.D. disseration: consumerist tendencies in today's congregations. To me, the greatest danger in any modern church movement (especially the emergent movement) is that it makes church so fun and entertaining that people see it as a time of entertainment and refreshment rather than worship.

There was a whole lot I disagree with about the Emergent Church but if you want to read up on it more check out the following sources:



As I stated earlier, I don't endorse the movement (sorry, I still have some marketing tendencies), but there is a lot of really cool stuff that they're doing that any denomination can use. We need more creativity in worship and the EC folks really get that.

3 comments:

Zack said...

Do me a solid and explain again why you're against the emergent church? I think we've talked about this more in-depth but I've forgotten. I know a lot of non-emergent churches that attempt to make church entertaining and fun, so I'm thinking there's something more to your apprehension towards the emergent doctrine than just the feelgoodness. And I'm not siding with the emergents at all, I'm just curious.

Mark and Pam said...

It seems to me that they question EVERYTHING just for the sake of questioning it, and their answers are often so subjective that there's no way they'll stand the test of time.

I don't have a problem with any questioning of Christian ideas, but when people start to doubt the historical resurrection of Christ or the Bible as the Word of God, I have a problem with that.

Gina said...

I totally appreciate what you are saying about how excessive questioning sometimes leads to unnecessary and unhealthy doubting. Thanks for sharing your insights!