You might think that freedom and community exist in tension with each other, but the congregational tradition reveals a profound truth about how individual conscience and collective covenant can work together.
From the very beginning, this tradition has offered space for complete freedom of individual conscience while simultaneously organizing itself around covenant and community. You witness this beautiful paradox every time your congregation gathers – no one forces you to be here, yet you choose to show up anyway because you believe you are better together than apart.
The reality of being the church extends far beyond Sunday morning gatherings into countless expressions of faith in action. Whether you’re protecting the environment, caring for the poor, rejecting racism, or simply saying hello to someone new, you’re participating in the million different ways of being the church. Sometimes it’s the big, visible acts of service, but mostly it’s the small, unseen moments of connection and care that define your community life together.
“When we disagree, it does not have to mean that we are divided. Peace is not the same thing as unity, and a church that was always silent would not be unified – it would be lifeless.”
Your disagreements and tensions don’t signal failure in your community system; they represent the very strength of how you’ve designed your life together. Just like the early church described in Acts, your community experiences both harmony and conflict, both agreement and disagreement.
What matters most is not that you avoid all friction, but that you continue choosing each other through it all. In a time when fewer than one in ten Americans belongs to a church like yours, your commitment to covenant becomes even more precious and necessary.
You’re called to pay attention to the practices of being together, to discern what shape God is calling you to become, and to choose each other again and again as you journey toward whatever comes next.