16 Sep, 2009 by Clayton Fopp

My invitation to World Vision’s “An evening with Brian McLaren” arrived in the post today. The nicely recycled-looking brochure didn’t do anything to alleviate my surprise at the partnership between this organisation (of which I happen to be a former employee) and McLaren, the “speaker, thinker and activist.”  I think I was at least expecting some acknowledgment of his position on the fringe of Christian orthodoxy, but none was made.

It is helpful to hear from people from outside our own “stable.”   We appreciate it when people are well-read and able to see past our own cultural blind-spots.  And as someone preparing to plant a church and seeking to engage the community around me with the gospel of Jesus, the opportunity to hear from one of the leaders of the Emerging/Emergent Movement definitely has some appeal.   As a pastor though, I believe there are good reasons for me to politely decline the invitation.  It’s my privilege to spend my time with people who wrestle daily with all sorts of issues, including many which are staple fare in McLaren’s writing and speaking.

10 Sep, 2009 by Cameron Munro

A newspaper columnist wrote:
“The average church goer takes a few hours out of the week to experience the sacred … But the rest of the time, he is immersed in a society that no longer acknowledges God as an omniscient and omnipotent force to be loved and worshipped… Today we are too sophisticated for God. We can stand on our own; we are prepared and ready to choose and define our own existence.”
As challenging as these words are, they do make a very real point. We do live in a society that has, in its own estimation, ‘outgrown God’. [We see the increasingly stark consequences of a ‘God-less’ society]. Hebrews addressed ‘exiles and strangers’ (Heb. 11v13), those who live by faith in the promises of God, walking ‘by faith and not by sight’ (2 Cor 5v7). How do you feed your faith in a barren world?