Evangelical Covenant Church of America
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The Evangelical Covenant Church (ECC) is a
Radical Pietistic Radical Pietism are those Christian churches who decided to break with denominational Lutheranism in order to emphasize certain teachings regarding holy living. Radical Pietists contrast with Church Pietists, who chose to remain within their Luthe ...
denomination with Lutheran roots in the evangelical Christian tradition. The denomination has 129,015 members in 878 congregations and an average worship attendance of 219,000 people in the United States and Canada with ministries on five continents. Founded in 1885 in North America by Swedish immigrants, the church is now one of the most rapidly growing and multi-ethnic denominations on the continent. Historically Lutheran in theology, piety and background, it is now a broadly evangelical movement.


Background

The Evangelical Covenant Church's background is in free-church Swedish immigrants known as
Mission Friends The Mission Friends (Swedish: ) was a Christian association in Sweden and among Swedish immigrants in the United States. History Background and Mission Friends in Sweden The Mission Friends had their origins in the spiritual reform movements ...
who had broken off from the Lutheran Church of Sweden. They formed a mission society and in the 1880s, meetings were held to determine whether or not to form a union of mission churches. The majority joined together, forming the Swedish Evangelical Mission Covenant of America (now ECC) on February 20, 1885, in Chicago, Illinois. A smaller percentage known as the Free Friends remained independent and became what is now the Evangelical Free Church. A pietistic religious awakening had swept through Sweden around the middle of the 19th century. Before leaving their homeland some Swedes met in people's homes, as they felt the state church was becoming overly powerful. There they conducted private services ( conventicles), including hymn singing accompanied by guitars, and read scripture from their Bibles, but they were sometimes interrupted by church officials, who wanted to keep them in congregations at church. The Conventicle Act, in effect until 1858, prevented them from holding private religious gatherings. This reinforced their yearning to be in a church where they could worship freely. With this awakening and reformation came the Swedish Mission Church in 1878. The state church discouraged the gathering of these believers. People from this movement emigrated to North America, where they formed the Swedish Evangelical Mission Covenant of America. Early leaders and influences included
Carl August Björk Carl August Björk (27 July 1837 – 29 October 1916) was a Swedish missionary preacher in the Midwestern United States. He was the founder of the Mission Friends – some of which later developed into the Evangelical Covenant Church, a Radical P ...
(1837–1916) Paul Petter Waldenström (1838–1917) and
David Nyvall David Nyvall (January 19, 1863 – February 6, 1946) was a Swedish immigrant to the United States and church leader who helped shape the Evangelical Covenant Church and establish North Park University in Chicago. Biography Upbringing and educat ...
(1863–1946), among others. They desired to create a voluntary "covenant of churches" that were committed to sharing the Gospel of Jesus, as well as provide means for ministerial training. The name was changed to the ''Evangelical Covenant Church of America'' in 1954. The "of America" was eventually abandoned because the denomination includes a Canadian conference.


Status

The denominational offices are located in Chicago, Illinois, where they are also affiliated with North Park University and
North Park Theological Seminary North Park Theological Seminary is a seminary located in the North Park neighborhood of Chicago, Illinois. It is the sole graduate theological school of the Evangelical Covenant Church. History In 1891, the school was founded by the Evangelical ...
. The church was formerly affiliated with
Swedish Hospital Swedish Hospital (formerly Swedish Covenant Hospital) is a 312-bed nonprofit teaching hospital located on the north side of Chicago, Illinois. The hospital offers over 50 medical specialties, including neurosurgery for the spine and brain, integr ...
, then known as Swedish Covenant Hospital. There are related Bible colleges in Alaska, where the church established early missions, and California. They are also affiliated with Minnehaha Academy, a pre-K-12 school in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The church is divided into eleven regional conferences – Canada Conference, Central Conference, East Coast Conference (organized 1890), Great Lakes Conference, Midsouth Conference, Midwest Conference, Pacific Northwest Conference, Northwest Conference, Pacific Southwest Conference, Southeast Conference – and its newest conference, the Alaska Conference. The Covenant presence in Alaska started from 1887 as a foreign mission outpost, but gradually transitioned its status to a home mission, and finally full conference standing in 2015. Annual meetings are held, to which delegates are sent by the congregations, reporting back to local churches. Covenant Publications are the communication arm of the denomination. The denominational hymnal is ''The Covenant Hymnal: A Worship Book''. A major ministry of the denomination includes senior living facilities and is supplemented through its Covenant Benevolent Institutions department. Among the ECC retirement systems, The Samarkand and Covenant Shores are considered to be two of the top facilities in the United States. As of 2011, denomination membership was 124,669 in 820 congregations in the United States (43 states) of US and an estimated 1500 members in 23 congregations in Canada (five provinces). Average attendance in 2009 was 178,997. The denomination also has ongoing missions work in 25 countries worldwide, with 125 long-term missionaries, project missionaries and short-term missionaries. The ECC has a worldwide membership of almost 278,000. Membership is concentrated primarily in three regions of the United States: the
Midwest The Midwestern United States, also referred to as the Midwest or the American Midwest, is one of four Census Bureau Region, census regions of the United States Census Bureau (also known as "Region 2"). It occupies the northern central part of ...
, along the West Coast, and in the
Great Plains The Great Plains (french: Grandes Plaines), sometimes simply "the Plains", is a broad expanse of flatland in North America. It is located west of the Mississippi River and east of the Rocky Mountains, much of it covered in prairie, steppe, an ...
region. California has the largest number of members, but the highest rates of membership are in Minnesota, Alaska, Kansas, Nebraska, and Washington.


Other

Forerunners of the Swedish Evangelical Mission Covenant were the Swedish Evangelical Lutheran Ansgar Synod and the Swedish Evangelical Lutheran Mission Synod. When members of the two synods dissolved and the Swedish Evangelical Mission Covenant was formed, some of those who did not enter the Mission Covenant formed the Swedish Evangelical Free Mission (now the
Evangelical Free Church of America The Evangelical Free Church of America (EFCA) is a denomination in the Evangelical Protestant tradition. The EFCA was formed in 1950 from the merger of the Swedish Evangelical Free Church and the Norwegian-Danish Evangelical Free Church Associa ...
). The Evangelical Covenant Church maintains ties with the Mission Covenant Church of Sweden (formerly known as the ''Svenska Missionsförbundet''; see Svenska Missionskyrkan and CIPE), and the other churches in the
International Federation of Free Evangelical Churches International Federation of Free Evangelical Churches (IFFEC) is a worldwide federation of evangelical free churches that trace their roots to the Radical Pietist movement (which split off/diverged from Pietistic Lutheranism). The member federa ...
. In the 1920s,
Warner Sallman Warner Elias Sallman (April 30, 1892 – May 25, 1968) was an American painter from Chicago best known for his works of Christian religious imagery. He also worked in commercial advertising, as well as in freelance illustration. He is most ass ...
created illustrations for the denominational magazine, ''Covenant Companion'', including his charcoal sketch ''The Son of Man'' for a 1924 magazine cover that was later redone as the famous oil painting ''The Head of Christ''. Since 1976, the denomination has ordained and licensed women as ministers. Many figures in the Jesus Movement have formally linked themselves to the ECC. In 2022, the Rev. Tammy Swanson-Draheim was elected as the first female president of the denomination.


Stance on same-sex marriage

The ECC officially excludes same-sex marriage from its theology and practice. The ECC's 1996 resolution adopted by the Covenant Annual Meeting entitled "Resolution on Human Sexuality" represents the ongoing consensus position of the ECC. The resolution upholds "celibacy, the state of abstaining (outside of marriage) in singleness, and heterosexual relations as the Christian standard". Additionally, the ECC does not permit ministers to perform same-sex marriages. The ECC, though, has been a pioneer among evangelical denominations with regard to its commitment to engagement with the LGBT community. In 2018, the ECC launched Embrace, a suite of human sexuality discipleship resources and learning experiences which are in harmony with the adopted position of the ECC. A special emphasis of Embrace is equipping ECC churches and individuals to flourish in love for LGBT individuals and communities. The ECC does allow ministers to exercise pastoral discretion by attending a same-sex marriage ceremony. One congregation in Portland, OR developed differing all-inclusive policy statements, prompting the ECC to remove that congregation in 2015. Moreover, some individuals affiliated with Covenant congregations have organized to advocate for more inclusive national policies. At the June 2019 annual meeting of the ECC, First Covenant Church of Minneapolis was dismissed from the ECC's roster of churches after being deemed out of harmony with regard to its position on human sexuality and pastoral credentialing after a vote for involuntary dismissal by delegates surpassed a two-thirds supermajority. Delegates also surpassed a two-thirds supermajority in removing the ordination standing of two pastors who contravened the ECC's communally discerned position on human sexuality.


Notable members

*
Lincoln Brewster Lincoln Brewster (born July 30, 1971) is an American contemporary Christian musician and worship pastor. As a guitarist, singer, and songwriter, Brewster became a sought-after session guitarist in the early 90s. Brewster is the former senior wo ...
, musician *
Paul Carlson Paul may refer to: *Paul (given name), a given name (includes a list of people with that name) *Paul (surname), a list of people People Christianity * Paul the Apostle (AD c.5–c.64/65), also known as Saul of Tarsus or Saint Paul, early Chri ...
, missionary doctor *
Brian T. Carroll Brian Thomas Carroll (born December 15, 1949) is an American teacher who was the American Solidarity Party's presidential nominee in the 2020 United States presidential election. He is a proponent of Christian democracy. Life and career Ca ...
, American presidential candidate for the American Solidarity Party * Alice Cooper, singer, songwriter, actor *
Nils Frykman Nils Frykman (1842-1911) was a Swedish teacher, evangelist and hymnwriter. Nils Frykman ''sv.wikipedia.org''. Retrieved: December 9, 2012. He came to the United States in 1888 and was a pastor at Covenant Churches in Illinois and Minnesota for nea ...
, hymnwriter *
Craig Groeschel Craig Groeschel (born December 2, 1967) is the founder and senior pastor of Life.Church, an American evangelical multi-site church with locations in 12 U.S. states. Early life and education Groeschel grew up in southern Oklahoma, attending Ar ...
, minister of
Life.Church Life.Church (pronounced "Life Church", formerly known as LifeChurch.tv, Life Covenant Church, and Life Church) is an American evangelical multi-site church based in Edmond, Oklahoma. Craig Groeschel is the founder and senior pastor of Life.Chur ...
*
Kirsten Haglund Kirsten Iora Müller-Daubermann (née Haglund; born September 14, 1988) is a public speaker, eating disorder awareness activist, commentator, and president of the Kirsten Haglund Foundation. She served as Miss America 2008. Education At age 12, ...
, Miss America 2008 *
Mike Holmgren Michael George Holmgren (born June 15, 1948) is a former American football coach and executive. He began his NFL career as a quarterbacks' coach and later as an offensive coordinator with the San Francisco 49ers, where they won Super Bowls XXII ...
, former Super Bowl-winning National Football League head coach *Johannes Alfred Hultman, musician *Timothy Johnson (TV medical presenter), Timothy Johnson, ABC News medical editor *Lorenzo Romar, head coach of the Pepperdine University men's basketball team *
Warner Sallman Warner Elias Sallman (April 30, 1892 – May 25, 1968) was an American painter from Chicago best known for his works of Christian religious imagery. He also worked in commercial advertising, as well as in freelance illustration. He is most ass ...
, artist


See also

* Läsare – Swedish Pietistic movement which influenced those who eventually founded the ECC * Nyevangelism – related Swedish movement with ties to the Mission Friends and ECC


References


Further reading

* Blanck, Dag, "Two Churches, One Community: The Augustana Synod and the Covenant Church, 1860–1920," ''Swedish-American Historical Quarterly'' 63 (April–July 2012), 158–73. * Granquist, Mark, "Parallel Paths: The Augustana Synod and the Covenant Church, 1920–1945," ''Swedish-American Historical Quarterly,'' 63 (April–July 2012), 174–86. *
Covenant Affirmations
' (2005, 24 page denominational summary, .pdf) *''Covenant Roots'', Glenn P. Anderson, editor *''David Nyvall and the Shape of an Immigrant Church'', by Scott E. Erickson *''Encyclopedia of American Religions'', J. Gordon Melton, editor *''Handbook of Denominations in the United States'', by Frank S. Mead, Samuel S. Hill, and Craig D. Atwood *''Religious Congregations & Membership in the United States (2000)'', Glenmary Research Center *''2004 Annual Meeting Update: Delegate Summary Report'' *''2005 Annual Meeting Update: Delegate Summary Report'' *''2006 Annual Meeting Update: Delegate Summary Report'' *''Covenant Yearbook: Statistical Data & Resources for Churches 2005-2006'' *

', Everett L. Wilson and Donald Lindman, authors * *By One Spirit by Karl Olsson


External links

*
North Park UniversityNorth Park Theological SeminaryAlaska Christian CollegeMinnehaha AcademySwedish Covenant HospitalPacific Southwest ConferenceEast Coast Conference (org. 1890) Covenant Bookstore
– Church resources and Covenant publications
Profile of the Evangelical Covenant Church on the Association of Religion Data Archives website
{{authority control Radical Pietism Religious organizations established in 1885 Religious organizations based in Chicago Jesus movement Swedish migration to North America Evangelicalism in Illinois Evangelical denominations in North America Evangelical organizations established in the 19th century 1885 establishments in Illinois Lutheranism in Illinois Members of the International Federation of Free Evangelical Churches