INTRODUCTION
Thesis
The purpose of this paper is two-fold. First, I will raise three areas of concern Evangelicals should focus most of their attention as they assess both the Emerging Church movement (hereafter ECM) and Emergent Village (hereafter EV). Specifically, I will point to some examples of what three prominent EV leaders say regarding each. These concerns culminate with my most serious concern and secondly, I will argue there is a potential drift away from orthodox Christian views in the leadership of Emergent Village and thus, constitutes a serious concern for the larger ECM.
Two Preliminary Remarks
Let me begin with two preliminary questions. If you are privy to ECM conversations, you may see the value in starting with these questions upon hearing them. First, am I qualified to offer a critical assessment of the ECM? Second, do I reject all that comes out of the ECM?
Am I Qualified?
There is considerable concern amongst the ECM's ranks with criticism coming from outside the movement. Certainly D.A. Carson's book, Becoming Conversant with the Emerging Church, has garnered much criticism from leaders in the ECM. Tony Jones has called it "breathtakingly bad."1 Or listen to Brian McLaren's comments that are simultaneously an endorsement on the back cover of Bolger and Gibb's book, Emerging Churches, and a swipe at Carson's: "If you want to be truly conversant with emerging churches, this is the book to read."2 Of course, the implication is Carson's book is not the one to read.