The Exiled Church explores how churches and faith communities are faring
in a highly secular contemporary culture. In many places, traditional
denominations are in steep decline, church buildings are up for sale,
even fast-growing new churches appear to be in a ‘boom and bust’
trajectory, and religion has effectively retreated from public life. Yet
it was in exile that Israel discovered a deeper and truer knowledge of
God.
Drawing on theories of secularisation, the experiences of a wide variety
of churches, new religious groups, and voices in the emerging field of
secular and sacred community innovation, Martyn Percy charts the shifts
in power from institutional religion to individualistic spirituality. He
asks whether the age of institutional Christianity is effectively over,
and is being replaced by networks of socio-spiritual-political values
focused around issues of common concern.
Imaginatively and engagingly written, The Exiled Church is ultimately a
hopeful and confident book that offers a lifeline for all churches on
the margins. It does not advocate for turning the clock back, or some
recovery but rather for a citizenship that is adaptive to spirituality
and religion in a culture of increasing diversity and individualism.
Martyn Percy is a writer, theologian and
academic. He has held numerous roles in public life and writes for
Prospect magazine, the Times and the Guardian. He lives in Aberdeen and
is licensed to the Scottish Episcopal Church. He serves as the Canon
Theologian to the Convocation of Episcopal Churches in Europe, teaches
at the University of Bern and University of Saint Joseph (Macao) and
serves as Honorary Provost-Theologian for the Hong Kong Anglican
Province.