Is there something new stirring out there in religionland? Are there yet signs of hope for Christianity?
On Saturday June 18, “Huffington Post” carried a story of a Christian festival being planned for June 23-26 that seems to hold out the possibility that there may be a new kind of Christianity emerging that has the capacity to transcend the old religious politics of exclusivity, rigidity, and narrow doctrinaire bigotry.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/06/19/progressive-christians-to_n_879530.html
‘Wild Goose’: A New Kind Of Christian Revival
By Yonat Shimron
Religion News ServiceDURHAM, N.C. (RNS) It’s summer. It’s hot. It’s the South.
That must mean it’s time for an old-fashioned camp meeting.
Next week (June 23-26), the bygone staple of the tent revival will be reincarnated on a bucolic North Carolina farm as The Wild Goose Festival. Nearly 10 years in the making, the festival is an attempt to re-imagine Christianity for the 21st century under a bigger, wider more inclusive tent.
The four-day festival is expected to draw thousands of young campers and some of the leading lights of the so-called Emergent Christianity movement.
With musicians such as David Wilcox and Michelle Shocked, and speakers such as Brian McLaren, Jay Bakker and Shane Claiborne, festival leaders hope to establish the premier venue for 20-somethings who love God but aren’t thrilled with institutional Christianity, particularly the religious right.
“We want to look each other in the eye and say, ‘We may not agree on everything but we’re going to recognize our essential humanity,”‘ said Mike Morrell, a blogger in Raleigh, N.C., and festival spokesman.
Festival planners are a diverse bunch. They include more traditional evangelicals alongside emergent church leaders, neo-monastics and progressive Christians. Organizers want to distance themselves from the politicized versions of Christianity, and re-engage in social justice work — particularly prison reform, a topic of some of the sessions.
They will converge on Shakori Hills, a 72-acre tract of forest and meadows in North Carolina’s Piedmont region, better known as the site of an annual roots music festival.
Wild Goose leaders share a conviction that there are multiple streams of Christianity flowing into one river.
“We gather to learn what Jesus came to teach us, which is not how to be a Christian, but how to be human,” said festival organizer Gareth Higgins, a writer and film critic based in Durham, N.C.
Unlike other high-profile Christian events, the Wild Goose Festival will try to reverse the traditional dynamic between speakers and their audience. At least 20 of the speakers will frame questions for the audience and then sit among them as they listen to possible answers.
The festival is modeled on Greenbelt, a British Christian rock festival now in its 37th year. The term “wild goose” is a Celtic metaphor for the Holy Spirit: noisy, passionate, not easily tamed and tending to flock together.
Already, the festival has drawn the ire of more conventional evangelical bloggers who don’t like its inclusive nature or openness to gays and lesbians, though festival leaders have not taken any formal positions on such issues.
“The wise Christian will have nothing to do with these neo-Gnostic fools who’ve unbuckled themselves from the Word of God and have embarked upon their Wild Goose Chase of subjective experience,” wrote Southern Baptist blogger Ken Silva of New Hampshire-based Apprising Ministries.
Although there are several other annual U.S.-based Christian musi festivals — Creation, Cornerstone, Fishnet, to name a few — Wild Goose is pitching bigger theological stakes. Franciscan friar Richard Rohr will lead a workshop; as will “recovering evangelical” writer Frank Schaeffer, son of the 1970s evangelical icon Francis Schaeffer.
Unlike other Christian music festivals, the musicians invited to perform at Wild Goose are not members of the praise-and-worship music pantheon or even crossover artists. They are mainstream secular musicians who happen to be Christian.
The festival’s most impressive feat may be that all the speakers and performers have waived their fees, essentially appearing for free.
“There’s something moving here,” said David LaMotte, a Raleigh songwriter who works on peace issues for the North Carolina Council of Churches, a co-sponsor of the event. “We’ve created a vision. I hope it comes to pass.”
I wish “The Wild Goose Festival” well. May it point the way forward towards a gentler, kinder, more open, and responsive Christianity, able to connect with the world without abandoning the passion of deep Christian faith!
5 comments
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June 23, 2011 at 7:52 am
A Gentler Kinder…
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June 23, 2011 at 5:03 pm
jaqueline
“establish the premier venue for 20-somethings who love God but aren’t thrilled with institutional Christianity, particularly the religious right.”
are only the twenty somethings feeling this way?….I am a bit tired of the implied and stated ageism in what I read of the ’emerging’ church.
June 23, 2011 at 7:17 pm
David T. Brown
Hang in there Jaqueline. I’m 79 and I believe it cannot help but be a step forward into “”Emerging Christianity”The old message just does not resonate with young (and some old) people. I think they want to know just what Jesus” message really was. The historical conventional evangelical Christians will balk but I think it’s gotta change. People of all ages want it.
June 23, 2011 at 8:03 pm
jaqueline
Oh I so agree David.
Some of us ( as you know )…indeed have had this change living in ourselves already for a long time and have been lonely in it, and now that it is coming out into the open to have it focused toward, described as, or about the ‘young’ seems not quite accurate or appropriate. We are all ( hopefully ) all in this together I thought.
But haven’t we seen the same statements said about other young people though? ( Jesus People etc )
It occurs to me that anything identified with only the young grows old very quickly! 😉
June 24, 2011 at 7:46 am
Al
I think most of the people actually involved in these conversations are from a wide variety of ages and backgrounds. It is the media (in this case Huff Post) that might try to play up an age thing. The Wild Goose Festival describes itself as “…a space to deepen growth for those who want to connect faith and justice, and provide inspiration and energy for fresh expressions of Christianity in today’s world.”
I’d love to have been a part of the festival, but it’s a long way across the continent! But every blog conversation or chat over coffee is a meaningful part of the dialogue. Thank God for writers and thinkers that stimulate the heart and mind.