I have so much to say about the Emergent gathering in Glorieta, New Mexico, but I’m still processing the experiences and the conversations we had. However, I will try to point out some of the highlights from the 4-day retreat held by Emergent Village at the Southern Baptist campground, New Mexico, sixteen miles east of Santa Fe.
- No prepared agenda. The days consisted mostly of conversations and activities and anybody could take the initiative for a conversation/activity about something that was relevant to them. May sound like a loose schedule but there was no lack of people signing up for everything from discussion of the future of Emergent, jam sessions, connecting with unchurched youth, to photo gallery trips and coffee tasting.
- No names. In this group of people everbody are friends. It doesn’t matter if you were new or been around for a while, young or old, famous or a nobody, it all felt like a big family. Here were pastors/ministers, artists, authors, bloggers, workers, students, kids etc. and we all hanged out with each other as a big family. What a experience. What a testimony!
- Serving atmosphere. Some people bought groceries, some other people prepared the food and some other people cleaned up. Just like a family. It was about helping where help was needed. I talked to Andrew about this and he also thought this part was a hit. This is church. We were sharing the life toghether, with pizza, kids, kitchen cleaning and the rest.
- Global. People came from all over the US and some from Europe as well. Guess who!
- Conversations. They happened not only during the days but also everywhere in between. At the breakfast tables, out in the nature and at the night parties. People were connecting and sharing their stories, struggles, new ideas, experiences, encouragement, prayers, and just loving and caring for each other as brothers and sisters in Christ. For me personally it meant so much to meet other people going through the same kind of processes as I have done the last years. I realize that I’m not alone in experiencing a deconstruction/reconstruction phase. Another 40-year old pastor told me what I’m experiencing is nothing new to Christianity either, and recommended me a book from many hundred years ago. I had so many talks with people and every conversation was unique, as if God put it all toghether in the end. I met a coffee house pastor, some other people doing house churches, a Lutheran pastor, a Presbyterian pastor, a Hawaiian minister, a poetry guy, some artists, a DJ-club-freak, theologians, youth workers, authors (I taught Brian McLaren some Swedish for his visit in May next year), conservatives, liberals and many more.
Names and titles doesn’t really matter here, what I’m trying to say is that I experienced a community where we were all on the same level. It was a friendly and loving, non-judgmental, cool, relaxed and layback atmosphere. A quote from the Emergent Village web site: “Emergent is a growing generative friendship among missional Christian leaders seeking to love our world in the Spirit of Jesus Christ. Our dream is to join in the activity of God in the world wherever we are able, so that God’s dreams for our world come true. In the process, the world can be healed and changed, and so can we.”
Michael Kruse, a Presbyterian pastor [UPDATE: elder] I met at the gathering, writes on his blog: “Many people have a difficult time understanding Emergent as they look for a charismatic leader or an institutional umbrella to define what is going on. The Emergent Village is not a Church or an umbrella organization for a movement. Emergent folks are connected by informal networks. Just like a computer network, there are nodes but there is no central unit. The Emergent Village is a node.”
I’m working on the over 100 pictures that I have from the gathering. They will be up soon.