Covenant Service
We plan to hold our Covenant Service on Sunday, 11 January, 2026 at 10:30am. The service will include the sacrament of Holy Communion. All are welcome.
From the earliest days of Methodism (in the 1700s), John Wesley invited Methodist people regularly to renew their covenant relation with God. It is that tradition, which some regard as being one of the key aspects of Methodism, that we will be continuing in the service.
The following background information is taken from here on the web-site of the Methodist Connexion, where more details can be found.
Background
The covenant service, often celebrated at the start of each new calendar year, is at the heart of Methodists’ devotion and discipleship, and their dedication in working for social justice. In the service the Church joyfully celebrates God’s gracious offer that I will be their God and they shall be my people
.
That relationship primarily involves the corporate life of the community of God’s people. It is concerned with individuals within that group.
What God offers is a loving relationship. The Covenant is not a contract in which God and human beings agree to provide particular goods and services for each other. It is not something that we have to do to create a relationship with God. God has freely and graciously already made it possible.
Rather, the Covenant is the means of grace by which we accept the relationship and then seek to sustain it. It is therefore not so much about getting in to a relationship with God as it is about staying in it. It is not about acquiring a relationship with God, but living within the loving relationship that God has already offered us.
God’s gracious offer to us is therefore simultaneously a challenge. If God is committed to us, are we prepared to accept that as reality and commit ourselves in return to God? Even if we do choose to accept it, how can we manage to live out our commitment adequately, frail and human as we are?
It is in Jesus Christ that we discover the supreme example of what it is to live in relationship with God. The New Testament suggests that as we join the group of those seeking to follow the way of Jesus, we respond to God’s challenge with him and begin to share his relationship with God as Father. Within the group of disciples, this leads to his Spirit bubbling up in us as individuals, encouraging and enabling us to live out our side of the relationship: that is writing God’s ways on our heart
as the book of Jeremiah (chapter 31) describes it.