No, it's not, for there is barely a shred of truth in either of the videos. That being the case, the issue could be either confirmation bias, or willful ignorance --either of which are born of fear -- but not
truth.
I believe God gave us the scriptures and we all need the objective Word of God to test and correct our subjective and so often misguided thoughts and experiences, spiritual or otherwise.
The bible is far from "objective." Far from it. The bible isn't (as has been pointed out many times) the "word of God." It is a written collection of the (usually oral) Tradition of the community of faith.
Again, it is not about fear, but using wisdom, discernment, and living in God’s revealed truth.
the "experts" certainly haven't shown much in the way of either wisdom of discernment, with their treatment of both spiritual formation practices and the Emergent Movement, because they've somehow, in their Eminent Wisdom, managed to misrepresent both.
One main truth of the scriptures is that Jesus Christ alone is the Savior of the world and He is the only mediator through whom we approach God.
No one in the Emergent Movement disagrees with that. No Christian who engages in spiritual formation does, either.
It is only through His love and power that each person and this world are changed, not by human effort to create a manmade utopia or contemplative/emergent practices which have no power to transform lives and deal with sin which is the pervasive cause of all the problems in the world.
But we have to meet God halfway. Jesus didn't just sit back and wait for God to feed the hungry. He told his disciples to feed the multitude. Jesus sent 70 of his disciples out to preach, heal and drive out demons -- not God. god gave us the world to take care of, which means that it
is partly our job to live into who God created us to be, and it's up to us to honor all people as children of God, and the earth as the body of God.
The person who truly cares about an individual is willing to share the “words of eternal life”
And just what are those words? Those words are that we are all created as the
imago dei, and that we are all loved and deserving of love. Those words remind us of the original Word at the core of our being -- the word of love that spoke creation into existence -- and enjoin us to remember that word and to live it out as the core of our identity.
So I can understand why you both get so emotional and defensive.
We're not defensive. We're
derisive of the sort of faux scholarship and faux spiritualism that so blithely misrepresents this very deep and important part of Christianity as "demonic." It's irresponsible, it's disingenuous, and it's unethical.
Yet, I think it is similar to one who is trapped in the midst of a cult. Your perspectives are from the inside out having so much personal, emotional, and spiritual investment that you can’t see the big picture and are not willing, possibly even unable at this point to question whether your practices are wrong or you are being deceived.
The operative term in this ridiculous opinion is "I think."
You think. There's a difference between seeing the fidelity of the Emergent Movement with the heart of Christianity and seeing demons in every corner that disagrees with one's particular, uninformed take on religion. But your hubris and condescension in being able to "counsel" us in our "blindness" is touching -- in a saccharin, sort of mawkish way.