The United Church of Christ dares to confess something both ancient and urgently contemporary:
“He bestows upon us his Holy Spirit, creating and renewing the church of Jesus Christ, binding in covenant faithful people of all ages, tongues, and races.”
These words are not a summary of belief; they are a vision of the Church as God intends it to be. It tells us who acts, how the Church comes into being, what holds us together, and why our differences are not an accident but a gift. It is, in many ways, a Candlemas confession, a statement meant to be held up to the light and trusted even when the world still feels cold.
We gather in a season shaped by thresholds. Candlemas marks the Presentation of Jesus in the Temple. Imbolc marks the stirring of life beneath winter’s surface. And the witness of St. Brigid stands between them, holding fire in one hand and bread in the other. These are not competing traditions. They are converging testimonies to a God who works slowly, bodily, and relationally.
We begin where the Statement of Faith begins, not with us, but with God.
“He bestows upon us his Holy Spirit.”
The Church does not create itself. We do not vote the Spirit into existence, manage it through committees, or confine it to buildings or doctrines. The Spirit is bestowed, given freely, unpredictably, generously. Like breath. Like fire. Like light.
At Candlemas, we see this bestowal clearly. Mary and Joseph do not arrive at the Temple with answers or influence. They arrive with a child, with obedience, with poverty. And yet Simeon recognizes what others miss. He sees that the Spirit has already been at work, guiding him to this moment. He takes the child in his arms and speaks words that still shape the Church’s imagination: “My eyes have seen your salvation… a light for revelation to the Gentiles” (Luke 2:30–32).
This light is not seized; it is received just as the Spirit is not earned, but bestowed.
This is where Imbolc quietly deepens our understanding. Imbolc names the truth that life begins before it is visible. The land does not announce its readiness. Milk returns to the fields before spring arrives. Lambs are born while snow still covers the ground. The Spirit works like that, bestowed beneath the surface, stirring what cannot yet be proven.
The Church, then, is not built on certainty. It is born of trust.
The Statement of Faith continues:
“…creating and renewing the church of Jesus Christ.”
Creation and renewal are not the same thing, and the Spirit does both.
Creation is about origins: Pentecost, baptism, the first yes to faith. Renewal is about what happens when the Church grows tired, compromised, or afraid. Renewal is what God does when we have lost our way but not our calling.
Candlemas reminds us that renewal begins early. Jesus has barely been born, and already his life is being oriented toward purpose, sacrifice, and promise. Simeon’s blessing contains both praise and warning. Light is named, but so is the cost. “A sword will pierce your own soul too.”
Renewal is never sentimental.
Here, St. Brigid becomes essential to our understanding. Brigid’s faith was not abstract or protected from the world. It was embodied, expressed through hospitality, healing, and justice. She renewed the Church not by consolidating power, but by tending flame. The perpetual fire at Kildare was not a symbol of domination; it was a sign of vigilance. Fire kept alive by care.
This is how renewal happens. Not through force, but through faithfulness. Not through spectacle, but through attention.
The Spirit creates the Church, but the Spirit also renews it when it forgets why it exists.
Then the Statement of Faith gives us one of its most radical claims:
“…binding in covenant faithful people…”
Not organizing. Not controlling. Binding.
Covenant is not a contract. A contract is conditional and transactional. A covenant is relational and enduring. It holds even when one party falters. Covenant assumes difference and commits anyway.
At Candlemas, covenant looks like elders and infants sharing the same space. Simeon and Anna recognize what the parents cannot yet fully understand. Faith passes across generations not as certainty, but as trust.
Imbolc teaches the same truth. The land does not hurry itself. It trusts the rhythm it has been given. Covenant is patience sanctified.
Brigid lived covenant by refusing to separate prayer from justice, spirituality from material need. Her generosity, sometimes legendary, sometimes inconvenient, was not recklessness. It was covenantal confidence. A belief that God’s abundance is not diminished by sharing.
This has consequences for how we understand the Church.
The Statement of Faith does not say the Spirit binds like-minded people. It says:
“…faithful people of all ages, tongues, and races.”
This is not aspirational language. It is descriptive. This is what the Church looks like when the Spirit is allowed to lead.
In the New Testament, the Greek term pneuma continues this theme of divine breath and movement.
Pentecost (Acts 2) is foundational for a Christian understanding of the Spirit. The Spirit is poured out universally, crossing linguistic and cultural boundaries. With this in mind, theologians often emphasize Pentecost as a symbol of radical inclusion and pluralism.
Theologian Luke Timothy Johnson writes:
“Pentecost represents not uniformity but Spirit-enabled diversity within community.” —Johnson, The Acts of the Apostles (1992)
The Johannine tradition highlights the Spirit as Paraclete, comforter, advocate, and teacher (John 14–16). The Spirit guides believers into evolving truth rather than static doctrinal finality.
Difference is not a problem to be solved; it is a sign of the Spirit’s presence. Pentecost did not eliminate language. It made understanding possible. Communion does not erase bodies. It makes them one without making them the same.
In a world that confuses unity with uniformity, this confession matters deeply.
Racism, nationalism, and exclusion are not merely social failures; they are theological failures. They deny the Spirit’s work. They fracture the covenant. They extinguish light rather than tending it.
St. Brigid’s life stands as a rebuke to such distortions. She did not ask who deserved warmth before lighting the fire. She did not calculate worthiness before sharing bread. She trusted that holiness expressed through mercy reveals the truth of God.
Candlemas light exposes the Church’s temptation to control who belongs. Simeon’s words stretch beyond Israel. The light is for the nations. The Spirit’s work is always wider than our comfort.
Imbolc reminds us that such widening happens slowly. Hearts change before structures do. Renewal stirs beneath resistance.
So, what does this mean for us, here and now?
It means the Church is constantly being created and continually being renewed. Always being bound together, sometimes despite itself. The Church is not and cannot be static, for God is still speaking.
It means we are not called to preserve an institution, but to tend a flame. It means our task is not to dominate the darkness, but to walk faithfully within it, trusting that light returns.
It means the Spirit is already at work, in the young and the old, in familiar voices and unsettling ones, in places we would rather avoid.
Beloved, the Statement of Faith is not something we recite and move past. It is something we live into.
The Spirit has been bestowed. The Church is still being created and renewed.
The covenant still binds us—across difference, across fear, across time.
The question is not whether the light is real. The question is whether we will tend it.
Candlemas places the light in our hands.
Imbolc teaches us to trust what is becoming.
Brigid shows us how to live as keepers of the flame.
May we have the courage to be that Church, patient enough to wait, bold enough to love, and faithful enough to believe that God is not finished with us yet. Amen.










