The Post-Evangelical – Index of Posts
Here’s an index of my chapter-by-chapter entries on The Post-Evangelical, by Dave Tomlinson:-
Here’s an index of my chapter-by-chapter entries on The Post-Evangelical, by Dave Tomlinson:-
[Index to this series of posts]
Nine down, one to go, in this chapter-by-chapter review of Dave Tomlinson’s The Post-Evangelical. Even though the book has been out for some time (published in the UK in 1995) I’ve gone back to it because it seems to have had a seminal importance in the ‘movement’ now known as the ‘emerging church’.
[Index to this series of posts]
Chapter 9 of Dave Tomlinson’s The Post-Evangelical discusses ‘positive worldliness’.
The author informs us that he was brought up to have a deep distrust of ‘the world’. The Christian was not to feel at home in the world. It was there to be evangelised, but not to be enjoyed. Of course, things have loosed up in more recent years, but the legalistic prohibitions have been replaced within the sub-culture by christianised alternatives. We have Christian festivals, Christian theatre, Christian computer games, and Christian aerobics set to Christian music. Beyond the world of entertainment, we have Christian businesses, Christian schools, Christian law practices, and so on.
[Index to this series of posts]
Chapter 8 of the The Post-Evangelical, by Dave Tomlinson, asks a ’straightforward’ question: what is a post-evangelical view of the Bible?
First, Tomlinson feels that there is a need to ‘exorcise’ the ghost of inerrancy. He finds it incredible that anyone thinks it even plausible to believe in such a thing.
[Index to this series of posts]
Chapter 7 of Dave Tomlinson’s The Post-Evangelical is entitled, ‘The Truth, the Whole Truth, and Something Quite Like the Truth’. It’s about epistemology – how we come to know things.
[Index to this series of posts]
Chapter 6 of Dave Tomlinson’s The Post-Evangelical is entitled ‘Let Me Tell You a Story’. This chapter deals with the failure of modern, and the rise of the postmodern, ’stories’.
What is the new postmodern world that is emerging?
[Index to this series of posts]
In chapter 5 – ‘Woolly Liberals?’ – Dave Tomlinson informs us that he shares with evangelicals a rejection of theological liberalism. But what he does not share are evangelicals’ reasons for opposing liberalism.
Indeed, he expresses amazement at ‘how paranoid evangelicals are about liberalism’. Evangelicals are constantly patrolling their boundaries, lest one of their number should trespass into liberal territory.
[Index to this series of posts]
Chapter 4 of Dave Tomlinson’s The Post-Evangelical is entitled ‘Longing to Grow’. In this chapter, an attempt is made to explain the evangelical ‘problem’ in terms of a couple of psychological models. ‘The problem’ for Tomlinson, as is becoming increasingly clear as the book develops, is that evangelicals are way too sure of themselves and need to grow up and start doubting things.
[Index to this series of posts]
Why are many people irritated by certain aspects of ‘evangelical culture’? This is the question addressed in chapter 3 of Dave Tomlinson’s book The Post-Evangelical. A summary and a brief comment follow.
Even in New Testament times, people were arguing that Gentile believers must submit to the Jewish law in order to be real Christians. Throught the Christian era, the missionary enterprise has been dogged by similar problems – requiring indigenous peoples to adopt not only a change of heart but also a change of culture. So it is that within evangelicalism has adopted, and seeks to impose, ‘conservative’ middle-class values on its members as if these values belonged to the essence of the Christian faith. This has an alienating effect on those who do not share those values, including ‘working-class’ people and many young people.
[Index to this series of posts]
Chapter 2 of The Post-Evangelical, by Dave Tomlinson, is entitled, ‘We’ve Never Had it so Good!’
Here, the author asks why, if evangelicalism has experienced such a resurgence over the past 30 years, many people have become dissatisfied with it.
Tomlinson notes a very considerable transformation that took place in British evangelicalism between 1980 and 1990. This was due to a considerable extent to the ‘charismaticizing’ of mainstream evangelicalism. Whereas the charismatic movement in its early days in the last 1960s and early 1970s was seen by many as a threat to evangelicalism, the former has been assimilated by the latter to a remarkable extent, so that much of the energy of current evangelical activity derives from charismatic believes and practices. Even the earlier hostily between the house church movement (now known as the New Churches) and evangelicalism has given way to positive co-operation.
[Index to this series of posts]
My reading on the emerging church has taken me back to Dave Tomlinson’s The Post-Evangelical. First published in the UK 1995 (but not until 2003 in the US), this book is regarded as something of a seminal piece amongst a number of emerging church people. It gave a voice to the disillusionment with evangelicalism that many felt.
You can read Dave Tomlinson’s own account of the writing of this book here. You can see reviews here and here. Graham Cray, Nigel Wright, and others have discussed issues arising from the book in The Post-evangelical Debate.
I plan to offer, in this series of posts, a chapter-by-chapter summary of the book together with some critical comment.