Frequently Asked Questions about the Evangelical Covenant Church Executive Board Recommendation to Remove First Covenant Church of Minneapolis from the Roster of Covenant Churches

The Covenant Executive Board has communicated to the constituency of the Evangelical Covenant Church, or Evangelical Covenant Church, that it is bringing a recommendation to the upcoming Covenant Annual Meeting to remove First Covenant Church of Minneapolis, or FCCM, from the roster of Covenant churches, having found FCCM to be out of harmony with the Evangelical Covenant Church regarding human sexuality and pastoral credentialing.

 The Covenant Executive Board is mindful of the gravity, complexity, sensitivity, and pain that matters of human sexuality can bring, as well as the weighty considerations to our community, such as the significance of recommending the removal of a congregation.

 In this document we seek to respectfully address common questions and comments received since the announcement.

 —The Executive Committee of the Covenant Executive Board

 

What is the center of the Covenant’s position on human sexuality?

The Covenant is a union of churches that have mutually agreed to partner together. We have agreed to “Covenant” together. The Covenant Annual Meeting is the highest constituted authority in the Evangelical Covenant Church. Action at a previous Covenant Annual Meeting established the following biblically derived ethic as the center of the Evangelical Covenant Church’s position on human sexuality: “Heterosexual marriage, faithfulness within marriage, abstinence outside of marriage—these constitute the Christian standard. When we fall short, we are invited to repent, receive the forgiveness of God, and amend our lives.”

The Annual Meeting further determined that “The Evangelical Covenant Church position serves as 1) our guiding statement on human sexuality and the marriage ethic and 2) the basis for Evangelical Covenant Church policy, practices, and guidelines on these matters.”

In serving as the basis for Evangelical Covenant Church policy, practices, and guidelines, touchpoints for relevant instructions and expectations may be found in the following: Ethical Principles for Those Serving in Vocational Ministry in the Evangelical Covenant Church; personal ordination vows (which promise adherence to the ethical principles); and Guidelines for Covenant Pastors and Congregations Regarding Human Sexuality.

As noted in the guidelines, “The Evangelical Covenant Church affirms that God’s boundaries, whatever the dimension of life, are meant for our flourishing…There is no intent to single out select behavior. It is a high calling to every one of us: single, married, young, old, both genders, all orientations.” When understood correctly, the Evangelical Covenant Church position addresses each of us.

 

In what areas is FCCM out of harmony?

The Executive Board has determined that FCCM is out of harmony by contravening the Evangelical Covenant Church in five areas:

  1. The Evangelical Covenant Church’s standard of marriage by eliminating its heterosexual nature;
  2. The Evangelical Covenant Church’s prohibition of clergy officiating and participating at same-sex weddings;
  3. The Evangelical Covenant Church’s requirement that clergy adhere to a personal behavioral standard of celibacy in singleness and faithfulness in heterosexual marriage;
  4. The Evangelical Covenant Church’s expectation that congregations refrain from hosting same-sex weddings and related events; and
  5. The determination of the Board of the Ordered Ministry by locally credentialing a pastor whose Evangelical Covenant Church credential was suspended for cause.

 

Can we be assured this recommendation is being made only after exhaustive engagement with FCCM?

We love First Covenant Church of Minneapolis. We love FCCM’s concern and care for LGBTQ+ individuals and communities, as well as other ministries in their community. We share this concern and agree that LTBTQ+ people have been hurt and marginalized for too long by the Church.

We have included a timeline in the delegate notebook that details all the steps taken in this process dating back to 2014 and recounts the extensive efforts by both the Northwest Conference and the Evangelical Covenant Church to, using the language of the Evangelical Covenant Church Bylaws, “steer the congregation back into harmony.” Despite extensive interaction, FCCM has asserted its opposition to adhering to the areas identified above.

In the midst of this challenging season, we believe it is important to reiterate our concern for LGBTQ+ people. The Evangelical Covenant Church, being grounded in the historical doctrine of human sexuality, is firmly committed to growing in our ability to love and affirm all people as being created in God’s image and loved by God.

 

Can we be assured this recommendation is based on a thorough process, consistent with Bylaw provisions?

Yes. In addition to the interactions referenced in the timeline to steer the congregation into harmony, the Bylaws call for two independent and separate reviews, one by the regional Conference Executive Board and another by the Covenant Executive Board. The Northwest Conference Executive Board consists of 11 voting members, elected by the Annual Meeting of the conference. The Covenant Executive Board consists of 30 voting members, elected by the Evangelical Covenant Church Annual Meeting, and includes four voting liaison members from other Evangelical Covenant Church boards. FCCM exercised its right to defend itself to each board. Each of these boards independently and separately concluded FCCM to be out of harmony.

You may read the Covenant Executive Board decision here.

 

What about Covenant freedom?

Freedom in the Covenant is a cherished value. Yet freedom also carries responsibilities as noted in the Preamble to the Covenant Constitution, which says, “The Evangelical Covenant Church embraces this freedom in Christ as a gift that preserves personal conviction, yet guards against an individualism that disregards the centrality of the word of God and the mutual responsibilities and disciplines of the spiritual community.” As referenced above, the Evangelical Covenant Church has articulated certain responsibilities and disciplines in this matter. Freedom of conviction is preserved, but action remains subject to those responsibilities and disciplines.

 

What about unity?

We care deeply about community, and unity is indeed a high value in the Evangelical Covenant Church. We agree that at all times, we must, as Ephesians 4:3 says, “make every effort to keep the unity of the Spirit through the bond of peace.”

The Covenant does not often speak definitively, but it does speak when a lack of clarity magnifies confusion that can threaten unity. For example, the Covenant Affirmations are the result of a desire for a clarified and gravitational description of Covenant identity during a tense period concerning theological direction. Similarly, the Covenant sought to bring clarity to baptismal practices, and later to the participation of women at all levels of church life and leadership. Likewise, the Annual Meeting asked for greater clarity around human sexuality for the sake of unified mission.

When the Evangelical Covenant Church speaks, it does not speak capriciously. A discerned Covenant position is derived through the deliberation and action of the Annual Meeting, at which delegate representation from every congregation is available.

 

Isn’t human sexuality a non-salvific matter over which Evangelical Covenant Church churches can disagree?

Matters of importance fall into more categories than simply salvific or non-salvific. The Covenant Confession of Faith recognizes the dimensions of faith, doctrine, and practice, reading, “The Evangelical Covenant Church confesses that the Holy Scripture, the Old and the New Testament, is the Word of God and the only perfect rule for faith, doctrine, and conduct.” Scripture identifies sexual practice as an important ethical matter of conduct that is vital to holiness and discipleship.

The report of the Executive Board also contains a discussion of this specific matter.

 

Isn’t a motion to remove a church from the roster unprecedented?

It may be unprecedented, but that does not mean it is unanticipated. The very inclusion of provisions in the Bylaws for this action anticipates a circumstance for removal could arise.

The unprecedented nature is bi-directional. The uniqueness of the recommendation by the board is matched by the distinctiveness of the church in opting for this step.

Covenant Bylaws outline two prior options, which have been the normative way of approaching stressed relationships between a congregation, its regional conference and the Evangelical Covenant Church. The first is deep and earnest engagement with the conference and the Evangelical Covenant Church, which results in “steering back into harmony.” As the timeline shows, this route was engaged extensively between FCCM, the Northwest Conference and the Evangelical Covenant Church, but ultimately the breach was not restored as FCCM has asserted its opposition.

The second route is the voluntary withdrawal of a church from the Evangelical Covenant Church roster where a congregation, for reasons of its own—including differences of conscience with the Evangelical Covenant Church—chooses to pursue its own future apart from the Evangelical Covenant Church. In this path, a congregation is free to pursue its own future, with all its assets, unencumbered by Evangelical Covenant Church requirements and expectations. This pathway was not chosen by FCCM.

 

Could FCCM apply for membership at a later date if removed from the roster?

Yes, subject to considerations for Evangelical Covenant Church compatibility as applicable to all new and adopting churches.

 

Given this recommendation, can the Covenant really say it cares about LGBTQ+ people?

We understand that churches, including Evangelical Covenant Church congregations, have hurt and wounded the LGBTQ+ community, family and friends. We share a deep concern for LGBTQ+ individuals and communities who have been hurt and marginalized for too long by many Christian communities. Our posture in the Evangelical Covenant Church is to lament and to do better.

We take seriously our commitment to offer pastoral care to anyone regardless of race, gender, creed, ethnic origin, socioeconomic status or sexual orientation. We do not hold this posture as a retrenchment from ministry but as a context from which we extend the love and grace of Christ. Indeed, the Evangelical Covenant Church has worked intentionally to equip pastors and churches. The Evangelical Covenant Church’s Embrace materials are a suite of human sexuality discipleship resources and learning experiences curated and created by the Evangelical Covenant Church’s Make and Deepen Disciples ministry area.

We know we have more to do and learn. We will continue to encounter new situations never anticipated, new complexities never envisioned, and new insights from new interactions. And so the Evangelical Covenant Church will keep moving toward loving better.

 

What if there are more questions?

We invite anyone to e-mail questions@covchurch.org with additional questions. As more questions come in, this FAQ may continue to be updated.

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