not always known for her sound theology, she is a woman with much
insight. Having an interest in the “emergence movement,” I was
intrigued by her view of history. As I was discussing this book
with John Muether, Librarian at Reformed Theological seminary in
Orlando, Florida, and a member of our Great Commission
Publications Board, I realized we had a similar reaction.
Therefore, I asked him to write the brief review you will find
below.
—Thanks John!
In this brief and breezy book, Phyllis Tickle
(formerly Religion editor for Publishers Weekly) introduces
readers to the phenomenon that has come to be known as the
emerging church movement.
Like clockwork, Christianity undergoes a great
paradigm shift every 500 years in Tickle’s reading of church
history. The monasticism of Gregory the Great (ca. 500), the Great
schism of 1054, and the Great Reformation of the sixteenth century
– together they prepare us for the “Great Emergence” of our day.
Tickle particularly presses the analogy of the Reformation to an
assessment of our time. Just as the Reformers had the printing
press and Copernicus, so we have technological and intellectual
tsunamis (the internet and Darwin) as precursors to our
revolution. sure, there will be resistance, but we should expect
that any Counter-Emergence will have as much success in thwarting
the movement as the Counter-Reformation did.
The central issue in the Great Emergence is
authority. our age has rendered sola Scriptura implausible
and Protestant notions of authority must be reconfigured after
controversies over slavery, divorce, the ordination of women, and
homosexuality. The debate over these issues has splintered
American Presbyterianism into PCA, EPC, OPC, and more, though
Tickle prefers other ways to describe the various camps:
traditionalists, re-traditionalists, progressives, and even the “Presby-mergents.”
While Tickle is uncertain what new form of Christianity will
emerge, she suggests that it will be post-denominational (other
ties will command greater allegiance), post-doctrinal (doctrine
being a Constantinian construct!) and even post-Protestant
(Protestant and Catholic animosities will recede into the past).
As far-fetched as this vision seems, this book is
worth reading to gain a scope of the brazenness of the claims of
the emerging church. It is a sobering reminder of why confessional
Presbyterians and other American Protestants must continue to
protest against errors and unbelief, both old and new.
— John Muether, Librarian, RTS Orlando