Phyllis Tickle’s Holy Ghost heresy
Jonathan Merritt
Phyllis Tickle may look like a sweet grandmother, but do not be fooled. Shes sassy, smart, and always does her homework.
Tickle is founding editor of the religion department at Publishers Weekly, the author of multiple books, and a matriarch among many progressive Protestants. For several years, shes argued that Christianity undergoes a massive transformation every 500 or so years and is currently entering a period she has labeled the Great Emergence. Here, we discuss her newest book, The Age of the Spirit: How the Ghost of an Ancient Controversy is Shaping the Church, and the revival of interest in the Holy Spirit seen in churches across the theological spectrum. Her answers, which she labels heresy, will undoubtedly make some Christians squirm.
RNS: Phyllis, youre always out there stirring up trouble and I can assume youre doing no less with this book. Why did you want to write a book about the Holy Spirit?
PT: You cut right to the chase, dont you Mr. Merritt? I began the whole business of chasing emergence Christianity when I was at Publishers Weekly and I began to write about how this was one of many upheavals in Christian history. When my first two books on the topic were finished, it was clear that this thing that what was happeningwhatever you want to call itwas going to have the significance of what we saw 2000 years ago. And one of the key characteristics of this period is the completion of the Trinity, whereby we engage the third part of the Trinity more
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