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Resource: Books (P40134.0000) Emergence Christianity: What It Is, Where It Is Going, and Why It Matters     
Author: Tickle, Phyllis.
Publisher: Baker Book House, 2012
Length: 237 pages
Heading: 050 — Church Renewal
Subjects: Christianity / 21st century; Christianity-Church History General; Church history / 21st century; Emerging church movement; Postmodernism / Religious aspects / Christianity
Location: BR121.3 .T53 2012
# Copies: 1
ISBN/ISSN: 9780801013553
Description: FROM THE PUBLISHER: Whatever else one might say about Emergence Christianity, says Phyllis Tickle, one must agree it is shifting and re-configuring itself in such a prodigious way as to defy any final assessments or absolute pronouncements. Yet the insightful and well-read Tickle offers us a dispatch from the field to keep us informed of where Emergence Christianity now stands, where it may be going, and how it is aligning itself with other parts of God's church. Through her careful study and culture-watching, Tickle invites readers to join this investigation and conversation as open-minded explorers rather than fearful opponents.

As readers join Tickle down the winding stream of Emergence Christianity, they will discover fascinating insights into concerns, organizational patterns, theology, and most pressing questions. Anyone involved in an emergence church or a traditional one will find here a thorough and well-written account of where things are--and where they are going.


DESCRIPTION: "As Western culture and Christianity go through a period of upheaval, what historical forces and participants are shaping the birth of 'emergence Christianity?' Building upon the foundation she created in her previous volume The Great Emergence, longtime religion observer and scholar Tickle, founding religion editor at PW, argues that the current semimillennial cultural and religious transformation (the last one being the Protestant Reformation) 'is an across-the-board and still-accelerating shift in every single part and parcel of our lives as members in good standing of twenty-first-century Western or westernized civilization.' Tickle draws together strands as different as the Azusa Street revival, the Greenbelt music festival, the growth of house churches, and the birth of the Emergent Village Web site/community to chart the phenomena that have made the unseating of the old guard possible. In this complex and changeable context she includes groups like the 'Hyphenateds' (those still affiliated with
traditional Christian denominations), Emerging and Emergent communities, Neo-Monastics, and others. Not until near the book's end does the reader realize how breathtakingly ambitious is Tickle's attempt to describe the beliefs, disciplines, theology, and ecclesiology of this still-evolving movement. Readers who accept her thesis will appreciate and enjoy the book immensely. Even those who may not agree with her sweeping argument may find themselves fascinated by its audacity. (Sept.)" Publishers Weekly Copyright Pwxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Age Groups: None specified.


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