Matthew Braddock

The Space Between


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God takes sides in the struggle for justice. As Gustavo Gutierrez says,

      We tell plenty of stories that blame others for our problems. Paul calls us to another conversation. Narratives of covenant and community can lift us out of our ruts by allowing us to participate with God and one another in bearing our living traditions into the future.

      But here is the thing about covenants; the promises are often so intense that it can feel impossible to consistently live up to them. We will fall short of our promises. What happens when we break covenant? Breaking a covenant is different than violating a contract. In a contract, if one party breaks the agreement it can be voided. Sometimes the offending party is penalized, but both sides may be released from obligations. Think of the early termination clause on your mobile phone contract. You can get out of it. You are going to pay big bucks, but once you shell out some money, the contract terms are over. A covenant is different. Covenants go on even when we fail to meet the terms. With each failure, the parties may renter the agreement with hope. Covenants are re-established with the intent of living up to them again.

      My faith tradition, the United Church of Christ, can be described as a covenantal polity. While we are non-creedal and non-catechetical, we do establish boundaries around our common practice of faith by creating local covenants. When someone joins our church, there is not a standard set of beliefs one must profess. There is not a statement of faith one must obey. To be part of our church means to agree to a covenant. We do not care so much about what one believes, but rather how we relate to one another with norms like righteousness, devotion, and love. The most important question is not, “Do you believe what we believe?” but rather, “How do we treat our neighbor, that is, how do we show God’s love to others?” We make enduring, deeply held promises about how we want to treat each other and work together. Our covenants come from the hearts, hands, and minds of our people.

      The congregation I serve has a covenant as part of its constitution. It explains how we agree to walk in the ways of God’s abiding love. Every Sunday morning, we open worship by reminding each other of our covenant. I say, “Here, we honor and celebrate people of all races, cultures, ages, abilities, sexual orientations, and gender identities.” These words give shape to our identity and guide our behavior. It is one of my favorite parts of our worship service. One day, a member of our church who is gay pulled me aside and said, “I cannot express how much it means to me to hear those words every Sunday. I am constantly reminded that God loves me, and I belong.” The faithful expression of our covenant becomes a form of reconciliation, inviting people into right relationship with God and one another.

      My congregation also has three covenants that direct our spiritual activism. Our “Just Peace Covenant” reminds us of the mutual promises we have made to work for peace by seeking justice for all peoples. Our “Open and Affirming Covenant” speaks to our promise to welcome and affirm gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender persons to participate fully in the life of our congregation. Our “Anti-Racism Covenant” acknowledges our ongoing journey to develop and implement strategies to dismantle racism through our adult and children’s education, our worship services, our mission giving, our business practices, and our community social action. Each of these covenants can be found in the appendices.

      Just like any covenant, our social action covenants represent our ideals. The reality is we do not always do a great job at living out our mutual promises. Sometimes we allow ourselves to get offended by someone’s behavior and we stop looking for the image of the Divine in the one with whom we disagree. Sometimes we fail to support peace. Sometimes we forget that a covenant is not a policy statement, but a promise about loving relationships. Sometimes we are afraid to face our biases and privileges, so we do not meet the challenges of our anti-racism covenant. But failure does not mean we give up. God is not done with us. We reevaluate. We ask forgiveness, when necessary. We reconcile with each other.

      Covenant reorients spiritual activists in the direction of love. When we falter, we ask God to give us a new heart. We recommit ourselves to sharing a common human journey and we covenant to value what is similar among us over what separates us. We recommit ourselves to appreciating our unique dignity and gifts and we covenant to recognize and celebrate the variety of gifts among us. We recommit ourselves to creating a better world and we covenant to support and encourage our individual and common efforts towards its fulfillment. We recommit ourselves to remember that our lives are worthy of love and we covenant to help each other engage our communities’ compassion. We covenant to value our human journey, to achieve a better world, to praise the mystery, and to engage in the practices of a faith.

      For Conversation

      Covenant building begins with defining community norms. Think of a time when your faith community combined individual talents in ways that enhanced your mission. What talents did others bring to the table? What did you achieve, as a faith community, that would not have happened if people were working as individuals?

      Covenants