Christianity: Details about 'Center For Progressive Christianity'
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The Center for Progressive Christianity (TCPC) was founded in 1996 by a retired Episcopalian priest, James Adams, in Cambridge, MA. It currently represents the most liberal established Christian group within Christianity. It is not a religious denomination. Rather it is a network of affiliated congregations, informal groups, and individuals.
MissionThe mission of The Center for Progressive Christianity is:
MembersWhat kind of people are attracted to Progressive Christianity?Progressive Christianity casts a very broad tent. All people are welcome as affiliates. Their fourth point invites: "..all people to participate in our community and worship life without insisting that they become like us in order to be acceptable (including but not limited to): believers and agnostics, conventional Christians and questioning skeptics, women and men, those of all sexual orientations and gender identities, those of all races and cultures, those of all classes and abilities, those who hope for a better world and those who have lost hope." Most affiliates probably view religious belief as a process -- a searching for truth rather than establishing truth. Most are probably liberal Christians or post-Christians who stress justice and tolerance above creedal beliefs. They include people who:
The website gives an analogy that symbolizes the methodology of the Progressive Christianity movement. It involves a Sunday school teacher and a class of 9 or 10-year-olds. Even at that age, some were skeptical of the inerrancy of the Bible. They felt that many events recorded in the Bible never happened. Rather than try to convince the children otherwise, the teacher suggested that they read Charlotte's Web instead -- an enduring story of a bashful pig named Wilbur who befriended a spider named Charlotte. The class enjoyed the book. After some great discussions, the teacher interjected the thought that pigs and spiders cannot talk. The kids protested: "Well, it's a story." The teacher asked whether the story was true. They decided that it was sort of true. "In a way, it was true." So the teacher suggested: "All right, well let's look at the Bible in the same way." For the movement's founder, James Adams, "such open-ended and searching conversations are at the heart of what it means to be religious. They are the very thing he hopes to foster through the work of his small, but visionary organization. Education is at the core of the Center’s work, but it is a vision of education that calls for open-ended conversation, the use of scholarship and intellectual gifts, as well as personal experience and emotion." Eight PointsThese are a series of ideas that describe the TCPC's approach to Christianity. 5 It is not a statement of faith or creed. It is more a description of how Progressive Christians approach life. They are paraphrased for brevity and to avoid copyright conflicts:
The Progressive Christian symbol is an eight-pointed star, representing the eight ideas that they hold in common. See alsoMore InformationThe provides access to all of the Progressive Christianity web sites. It links to web sites in Britain, Canada, Ireland, New Zealand, South Australia and the United States.
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