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Emergent Paradox

Relevant magazine interviewed Tony Jones, the national coordinator for Emergent. You can find the whole article here.  Below is an exerpt.

“If you believe that Christianity is—at its very heart—a tension-filled, dialectical endeavor, you have less problems with these tension-filled relationships with believers. Christianity is paradoxical. Life comes out of death. Jesus was fully human and fully divine. We haven’t yet found that there’s anything that justifies us breaking fellowship with somebody else who loves and is trying to follow Jesus. Why would you break fellowship with someone because you have a different understanding of the atonement than they do? Or a different understanding of human sexuality than they do? It seems nonsensical that we’d give each other tests and try to hang it over someone else’s head and say, “Hey, dude. I’m going to break fellowship with you if we can’t come to agreement on this particular issue.” It just doesn’t seem to be the nature of human life.”

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  1. “It just doesn’t seem to be the nature of human life”

    This is exactly the problem, isn’t it? Because it is the nature of human life to break with people we don’t agree with. If the (emergant) church thinks it’s somehow going to be popular with the masses (or that it can/should be), they have another think coming. The right tone of dialect is elusive, especially in a brief quote, or a blog comment. (I did read the article a few weeks ago) Jesus calls us to a better sensibility, but came for a particular work of obedience. I find it paradoxically hopeless/hopeful to think that if we just understood him better, all would be right with the world.
    just some thoughts…
    see you next month!

  2. thanks for sharing this ryan…
    see you at soliton!
    roy

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