Brian McLaren Tour Starts Soon


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Excerpts
from

Lighthousetrailsresearch.com
– Newsletter, January 28, 2008

 

Everything
Must Change



Brian McLaren Tour Starts Soon

 

Read the entire newsletter at



http://www.lighthousetrailsresearch.com/newsletter012808.htm




Emergent leader

Brian McLaren
will begin his

“Everything Must Change”
tour in February. The tour will run in several
different US cities and is named after his book, Everything Must Change.

McLaren was one of the early emerging church leaders when Leadership Network
(Bob Buford) pulled together a group of young church leaders – a group that
eventually became known as “Emergent.”

McLaren’s message that everything must change is the ongoing message of the
emerging church. Much of that message has to do with rejecting biblical prophecy
of a last days period prior to Jesus Christ returning. Roger Oakland explains
some of McLaren’s philosophy:

It is no secret that Brian McLaren rejects the Book of Revelation’s
reference to a coming apocalyptic judgment in the future. McLaren’s book
The Secret Message of Jesus
, reveals much of his outlook on this matter.
Of the book, he says, “Everything I’ve written to this point has been a
preparation for this book.”1 In a chapter titled “The Future of the
Kingdom,” he writes:

The book of Revelation is an example of popular literary genre of
ancient Judaism, known today as Jewish apocalyptic. Trying to read it
without understanding its genre would be like watching Star Trek
or some other science fiction show thinking it was a historical
documentary, or watching a sitcom as if it were a religious parable, or
reading a satire as if it were a biography–or like thinking you knew
all about lions because you watched one pacing on a concrete slab one
afternoon… instead of being a book about the distant future, it
becomes a way of talking about the challenges of the immediate present.
It becomes a book of warnings and promises.2

Further, discrediting the validity of the Book of Revelation as a book that
provides prophetic insight, McLaren states:

If Revelation were a blueprint of the distant future, it would have been
unintelligible for its original readers, as well as the readers of all
succeeding generations, and would only become truly and fully relevant
for one generation–the one who happened to live in one period of time
it is prognosticating about. But if Revelation is instead an example of
the literature of the oppressed, full of ever-relevant warnings and
promises, it presents each generation with needed inspiration and wisdom
and encouragement. In this light, Revelation becomes a powerful book
about the kingdom of God here and now, available to all.3

Not only does McLaren believe this last book of the Bible is about “the
kingdom of God here and now,” he claims that Jesus had nothing to say about
a period of catastrophic judgment:

Other readers will be thinking of long passages in the Gospels that seem
to be full of prognostication from the lips of Jesus
himself–prognostications that seem to relate to the end of the world.
What are we to make of these passages, such as Matthew 24-25? …

Since Jewish apocalyptic was a popular genre in Jesus’ day, we would
expect him to be influenced by it and use its language and metaphors….
against the backdrop of Jewish apocalyptic, we discover that phrases
that sound like they’re about the destruction of the world–like “the
moon will turn to blood” or “the stars will fall from the sky”–are
actually rather typical stock phrases in Jewish apocalyptic. They are no
more to be taken literally than phrases we might read in the paper
today.4

Someone who might agree with McLaren is New Age leader Barbara Marx Hubbard.
But she puts a little twist in the Kingdom Now theology. She calls it
Armageddon Alternative, which basically means that if enough people join
together and think positively about the earth and the world, then this
disastrous end-time scenario described in the Book of Revelation
doesn’t have to occur at all. She explains:

Here we are, now poised either on the brink of destruction greater than
the world has ever seen–a destruction which will cripple planet Earth
forever and release only the few to go on–or on the threshold of global
co-creation wherein each person on Earth will be attracted to
participate in his or her own evolution to godliness.5

This quote is from Marx Hubbard’s book she titles Revelation. In
essence, she is describing what the New Age believes is going to take
place–that man will evolve into “godliness” and thus prevent what the Bible
has prophesied. Using language from the Bible, she describes this time
period:

In the twinkling of an eye, we are all changed by this experience. It is
a mass metanoia, a shared spiritual experience for the human race, a
peaceful second coming of the divine in us as us.6

What Marx Hubbard is proposing is not much different than McLaren’s message
that the kingdom of God will be established here on earth by Christians
without King Jesus being physically present. McLaren describes his
all-inclusive kingdom:

Sadly, for centuries at a time in too many places to count, the
Christian religion has downplayed, misconstrued, or forgotten the secret
message of Jesus entirely. Instead of being about the kingdom of God
coming to earth, the Christian religion has too often been preoccupied
with abandoning or escaping the earth and going to heaven… We have
betrayed the message that the kingdom of God is available for all,
beginning with the least and last and the lost–and have instead
believed and taught that the kingdom of God is available for the elite,
beginning with the correct and the clean and the powerful.7

Barbara Marx Hubbard also speaks of this coming kingdom where all humanity
will realize its divine potential and thus avoid Armageddon:

You are to prepare the way for the alternative to Armageddon, which is
the Planetary Pentecost, the great Instant of Co-operation which can
transform enough, en masse, to avoid the necessity of the seventh seal
being broken.8(Faith
Undone
, pp 157-160).

Brian McLaren would agree with Marx Hubbard when she talks about the “en masse”
(critical mass) transformation of people. In his book, Everything Must Change,
he states: If it [“revolution of hope”] happens in enough of us, we will face
and overcome the global crises that threaten us” (p. 6).

If you have a family member or friend who is planning on attending the
“Everything Must Change” tour, we hope he or she will look at the evidence and
documentation and reconsider.

For I am the LORD, I change not. Malachi 3:6

Who changed the truth of God into a lie, and worshipped and served the creature
more than the Creator, who is blessed for ever. Romans 1:25

Notes:
1. From biography on Brian McLaren’s website: http://www.brianmclaren.net/biography.html.
2. Brian McLaren, The Secret Message of Jesus (Nashville, TN: W.
Publishing Group, A division of Thomas Nelson, 2006), pp. 175-176.
3. Ibid., pp. 176-177.
4. Ibid., pp. 177-178.
5. Barbara Marx Hubbard, The Revelation (Mill Valley, CA: Nataraj
Publishing, 1995), p. 174.
6. Ibid., p. 324.
7. Brian McLaren, The Secret Message of Jesus, op. cit. pp. 78-79.
8. Barbara Marx Hubbard, The Revelation, op. cit., pp. 172, (for more
information, this topic, see Reinventing Jesus Christ by Warren Smith,
http://www.reinventingjesuschrist.com).

For more information:


Brian McLaren Calls Hell and the Cross “False Advertising for God”


Leadership Network Launched Emerging Church

 


For more information on
The Secret:
Erwin McManus: The secret behind The Secret
&


The Secret: A new era for humankind

Earlier reports from
www.lighthousetrailsresearch.com:


Emergent Manifesto
|
Deceptive
Roots of the Emerging Church

The
Re-Think Conference
| Deceptive
Roots of the Emerging Church


Yoga, Mysticism & Moody Bible Institute


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