Pastor, author, musician, speaker and modern Christian activist Brian McLaren is on the Board of directors for Sojourners, the Christian social justice magazine and movement, and was a founder member of Red Letter Christians, red letters being the printed words reported as spoken by Jesus in the New Testament. He is part of a growing [...]
Posts Tagged ‘Postmodern Christianity’
Brian D McLaren
Posted in People, tagged Brian McLaren, Cedar Ridge Community Church, Emergent Church, Postmodern Christianity on November 4, 2009 | 2 Comments »
Church Transformation: it’s a process…
Posted in Beliefs, Current events, People, tagged Christianity, Church Transformation, Postmodern Christianity on October 19, 2008 | Leave a Comment »
A document first circulated around Texas United Methodist Churches in 2006 has been adopted as a plan for how the Church can grow ‘traditional churches without traditional problems’: Your church can grow without many of the problems that often accompany change and transformation! Purposeful Pragmatic church growth is the key! This is the work of Rev [...]
THEOOZE: Conversation for the journey; the emerging church and post-modern Christianity
Posted in Beliefs, People, tagged Emerging Church, Postmodern Christianity, theology on October 1, 2008 | Leave a Comment »
Pastor, photographer, writer and post-modern Christian Spencer Burke tells on Theooze how he came to be managing an online magazine and seeker community: I used to be a pastor. More than that, I was a pastor at Mariners Church in Irvine, California-a bona fide mega church with a 25-acre property and a $7.8 million dollar budget. By most accounts, [...]
Creatio ex nihilo- isn’t everything?
Posted in People, tagged Postmodern Christianity on June 3, 2008 | 4 Comments »
Response to a critic of post-modernism as a school of thought on Don Heatley’s website Creatio Ex Nihilo ~how can postmodernism be merely ‘dumb’? It is an attempt to define and redefine realities, given a confusing name. That’s not new concept-either shifts in perceptions, or definitions, nor naming periods in history, even somewhat [...]