The Evangelical Covenant Church has its roots in historical Christianity as
it emerged in the Protestant Reformation, in the biblical instruction of the
Lutheran Church of Sweden, and in the great spiritual awakenings of the
nineteenth century.
We are an apostolic church. We confess the historic faith of the
apostles. We believe in Jesus Christ the Son of God, our Savior and Lord. We
accept the Holy Scriptures, the Old and New Testaments, as the "Word of God
and the only perfect rule for faith, doctrine, and conduct."
We are a catholic church. We see ourselves to be part of the universal
church of Jesus Christ from the days of the apostles until now.
We are a Reformation Church. We stand in the mainstream of the
sixteenth-century Protestant movement which insisted on justification by grace
alone through faith alone.
We are an evangelical church. We were born out of the revival movement
that touched all of Europe in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries and came
to flower for us in nineteenth and twentieth-century North America.
Appreciating this classical Christian heritage and hungering for an ever more
vital experience of new life in Christ, Covenanters affirm a number of
evangelical emphases. Among these are:
The centrality of the Scriptures, the Old and New Testament, as the
authoritative Word of God and the only perfect rule for faith, doctrine, and
conduct. We believe it is essential to the life of the church that it be a
company of people who want, above all else, that their lives be shaped by the
powerful and living Word of God. The alternative is clear. Not to be shaped by
the Word is to be shaped by the world.
The Church as a fellowship of believers, characterized by mutual
participation in and sharing of the new life in Christ. Membership is by
confession of personal faith in Jesus Christ as Savior and Lord. It is open to all
believers. Considerations of class or race, education or pedigree, wealth or
prestige do not enter. Uniformity in creedal details is not expected. What is
required is that one be "born anew to a living hope through the
resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead" (I Peter 1:3). "The doors
of the church are wide enough to admit all who believe and narrow enough to
exclude those who do not," said our forbears. We affirm no less today.
The ministry of the Holy Spirit, who with the Father and the Son call
the church into being, empowers its witness, guides its mission, and supplies
the gifts needed by the Church and its members to exalt Christ
The reality of freedom in Christ, who delivers us from the power of
sin and moves us by grace into a whole new experience of obedience and life.
This freedom creates an ecclesiastical climate which allows for differences of
opinion in matters if interpretation, doctrine, and practice within the context
of biblical guidelines and historical Christianity. Such freedom "is to be
distinguished from the individualism that disregards the centrality of the Word
of God and the mutual responsibilities and disciplines of the spiritual
community" (Preamble to the Constitution).
Affirmations like these are not to be taken as creedal statements. They are
rather to be understood as true and valid descriptions of what Covenanters
believe and cherish as they continue to grow in the grace and knowledge of God,
awaiting that day when "the kingdom of this world has become the kingdom of
our Lord and of his Christ, and he shall reign for ever and ever"
(Revelation 11:15).