Profile: Doug Pagitt

Doug Pagitt was a name I had not heard before I sought out a final subject for the Emergent Gurus series (for the time being); I got his name from a list of emergent leaders online. How best to describe him? “Brian McLaren with fewer footnotes and even less rationality” would be appropriate.

I sought out his most recent books, but one, Church Re-imagined, turned out to be of no use for this study since it was only edited by him, and offered writings of his church members. So I was left with one book: A Christianity Worth Believing (CWB). But that was enough, because it’s got all the standard themes, only with more water added.

In conclusion: I think I have found out one reason why so many people are attracted to the emergent movement. It is revealed on page 53 where Pagitt admits:

I wasn’t much of a reader (I didn’t read a book from beginning to end until I was in college)...

Pagitt tells a story of how someone in his early years laid out the Four Spiritual Laws to him using the famous train illustration with “fact” as the engine and “feelings” at the end. He was disturbed that it “made the story seem far more complicated” than the presentation offered in a passion play he had just seen, and where, he says, he had “experienced something real.” [25] I have never heard anyone say that the Four Spiritual Laws is “complicated,” but I must say that it takes someone of serious intellectual deficiency to make that kind of assessment. He says that the train analogy, rather than helping him, led him into a “crisis” of faith. [26] Pagitt’s justification for this is that he didn’t need so much of fact and faith because his feelings were real enough.

In reality, Pagitt’s admission about his reading habits tells the story. As we have noted in relating the findings of certain commentators on literacy and technology, the act of reading trains the mind to have a sort of depth aspect to thinking, one in which serious contemplation and intellectual development is the result.

Emergents all too often manifest like people who don’t read books. Like Pagitt, their thinking is shallow and only concerned with the moment, and how people feel. Facts make them confused and are seen an unnecessary complications; so likewise answered questions as opposed to hanging ones. People like these are essential to the Body of Christ as our specialists in ministering to the poor. Where we have a problem is when they become leaders who set the pace and decide what is good for the whole.