Emerging mission
As promised a few thoughts in response to the snapshot of the Emerging Church provided by Eddie Gibbs and Ryan Bolger.
Here’s the first of a number of posts: this one on the Emerging Church and mission.
Mission is obviously at the heart of the Emerging Church’s reason for existence. Unfortunately the authors don’t make clear what “missional” means. The one definition is circular. You are “missional” if you see the West as “ripe for mission engagement.”
What does the book say about the Emerging Church’s understanding of mission? A few sample quotes:
“The focus of emerging churches on the ‘gospel of the kingdom’ as distinct from a ‘gospel of salvation’ has produced a new ecclesiology.”Reading the book I was left with a sense of déjà vu.“Populating heaven” is not the main part of the gospel. For the Emerging Church, “the gospel is about being increasingly alive to God in the world. It is concerned with bringing heaven to earth.”
“Our mission is justice and social transformation in the world”.
One leader confided with the authors privately that, “We don’t dismiss the cross; it is still a central part. But the good news is not that he died but that the kingdom has come.”
The language and concepts of mission in the book sound identical to that developed by the post-war Ecumenical movement which found institutional expression in the World Council of Churches and the mainline denominations in the West.
The Emerging church has rejected the sort of institutionalism that characterised the Ecumenical movement.
If my hunch is correct, it should also be aware that this theology of mission has been tried and found wanting. The only relationship between it and a dynamic movement is an inverse one.





