Welcome to Planet Preterist
Search Site:     
Submit an article | Submit a link
3263 articles; 634 encyclopedia terms
 Submit  Links  Exclusives  Forum  Downloads  RSS Feeds New Account
Planet Preterist Blogs
Tools & Links
Login
Nickname

Password

Please create a free account to post in the forums, submit articles, links...etc.
Funny Stuff
God is the biggest failure in the Bible...the reason you've never thought that is because He never said He was one.
-- Kenneth Copeland, "Praise-a-thon", on TBN
Our Columnists
Catalog Items
News: RELIGION & ETHICS NEWSWEEKLY Explores the Emerging Church Movement
Posted on Tuesday, June 28 @ 11:17:58 PDT by Virgil

Church Washington, D.C., June 27, 2005 - RELIGION & ETHICS NEWSWEEKLY, the award-winning newsmagazine program hosted by Bob Abernethy and produced by Thirteen/WNET, will present a special series on a new movement in Protestant Christianity -- "The Emerging Church" -- to be included in programs distributed Friday July 8 and July 15 to PBS stations nationwide at 5 p.m. ET (check local listings)

In this two-part report, correspondent Kim Lawton examines how some evangelical and mainline Protestants are rethinking Christianity for a new generation. In conversations conducted largely through "blogs," leaders of the emerging church movement argue that old models and categories are no longer effective. They are developing new theologies and new forms of worship, often blending elements from different traditions -- and eras -- of Christianity. Some are generating controversy for urging a radical re-examination of conventional understandings of the faith.

In the first report, Lawton explores the diverse ways the emerging church movement is taking shape at the local level, profiling a congregation in Minneapolis that uses couches and recliners instead of pews, and going behind-the scenes at experimental worship sessions that blend contemporary technology with ancient religious practices. Lawton also talks with leaders of the movement about how they are reassessing what it means to follow Jesus in today's culture, and hears from one critic who says that some parts of the movement are threatening traditional Christianity.

In the conclusion, Lawton conducts an extended interview with Brian McLaren, named by Time magazine earlier this year as one of the 25 most influential evangelicals in America. McLaren, whose writings have played a key role in emerging church conversations, advocates a "generous orthodoxy" that is "post-conservative and post-liberal." He also raises provocative questions about traditional teachings on subjects such as hell and the afterlife.

Major funding for RELIGION & ETHICS NEWSWEEKLY is provided by Lilly Endowment Inc. with additional support from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and Mutual of America Life Insurance Company. Executive editor and host: Bob Abernethy; executive producer: Arnold Labaton.

If you are interested in receiving a transcript of each report, please e-mail Mary Schultz at schultzm@religionethics.org or contact her at 202-216-2394. Transcripts will be available on the day of the broadcast.

From: http://www.religionnews.com/press02/PR062805B.html


 
Related Links
· News.com
· More about Church
· News by Virgil


Most read story about Church:
Login

Article Rating
Average Score: 0
Votes: 0

Please take a second and vote for this article:

Bad
Regular
Good
Very Good
Excellent


Options
   ^^Go to Top - E-mail to Friend - Print - View PDF View PDF -   Subscribe -   Comments RSS

"Login" | Login/Create an Account | 4 comments
Threshold
The comments are owned by the poster. We aren't responsible for their content.
You are not logged in! Login to post comments:

Nickname:
Password:
[ Lost your password? | Create New Account ]
Re: RELIGION & ETHICS NEWSWEEKLY Explores the Emerging Church Movement (Score: 1)
by kfiech on Wednesday, June 29 @ 18:24:20 PDT
(User Info | Send a Message)
hmmmm. 68 reads of this article as of this communication and not one comment? Are we all busily reading our Generous Orthodoxy book before we say anything in response?


[ To reply to this, please login or register ]


Web site powered by Planetpreterist.com Apache Web ServerPHP Scripting Language

All logos and trademarks in this site are property of their respective owners.
The comments are property of their posters, all original content © 2008 by Planetpreterist.com
You can syndicate our articles using our RSS Feeds