Christ Reformed Fellowship

Membership

The New Testament does not merely permit church membership — it presupposes it. The shepherd must know his flock. The flock must know their shepherd. Membership is how that happens.

The New Testament assumes you belong to a church.

Every command to submit to elders assumes there are specific elders you are submitting to. Every command to care for the saints assumes there are specific saints you are caring for. Every warning about church discipline assumes there is a specific body to which you are accountable.

Formal church membership is not a tradition invented by institutions — it is the only coherent way to obey what Scripture commands about the local church. The New Testament does not envision a Christian who floats between congregations with no accountability and no commitment.

At CRF, membership is the formal expression of that covenant commitment — the moment a believer publicly places themselves under the care of these elders and within the accountability of this congregation.

Hebrews 13:17
"Obey your leaders and submit to them, for they are keeping watch over your souls, as those who will have to give an account."
1 Peter 5:2–3
"Shepherd the flock of God that is among you, exercising oversight... not domineering over those in your charge, but being examples to the flock."
Acts 2:41–42
"Those who received his word were baptized, and there were added that day about three thousand souls. And they devoted themselves to the apostles' teaching and the fellowship..."
1 Thessalonians 5:12–13
"We ask you, brothers, to respect those who labor among you and are over you in the Lord and admonish you, and to esteem them very highly in love because of their work."

What membership gives you

Membership is not a burden. It is a gift.

When you become a member of CRF, you receive pastoral care with accountability and intentionality that cannot exist without a defined relationship. These are not abstract promises — they are covenant commitments the elders make to you.

Pastoral Oversight
The elders of CRF are responsible to keep watch over your soul (Hebrews 13:17). Membership formalizes that relationship — you know who your shepherds are, and they know who their flock is.
Congregational Accountability
Membership means you have brothers and sisters who are obligated — not merely willing — to care for you, warn you, and walk alongside you. The Membership Covenant binds the whole body to mutual watchfulness.
Member Care Priority
Members receive priority in pastoral care, biblical counseling, and elder attention. "Let us do good to everyone, and especially to those who are of the household of faith." (Galatians 6:10)
Voice in Church Life
Members participate in congregational affirmations — including the appointment of elders and major financial decisions. The wisdom of the membership is a gift the elders actively seek.
Confessional Clarity
You know what this church believes and what it will teach. The 1689 Confession is our secondary standard. Membership means you understand our doctrine and have disclosed any disagreements to the elders.
Covenant Community
Membership is the formal entry into a covenant household — a family with shared obligations, shared joys, and shared labor for the advance of Christ's kingdom. You are not a consumer. You are a participant.

What you commit to

Membership is a covenant with obligations on both sides.

When you sign the CRF Membership Covenant, you are making specific, binding commitments before God and this congregation. These are not suggestions. They are the shape of a life lived in covenant with Christ and with His people.

Read each one carefully before you pursue membership. The elders will gladly discuss any of them with you.

Submit to church leadershipObey and honor those who labor in the Word and have charge in the Lord, esteeming them highly in love because of their work.Hebrews 13:7,17 · 1 Thessalonians 5:12–13
Watch over one anotherExercise Christian care over fellow members — faithfully warning, exhorting, and admonishing one another as occasion requires.Colossians 1:28 · Hebrews 3:13
Not forsake the assemblyUphold the public worship of God by participating in weekly services, communion, and the corporate life of the church.Hebrews 10:23–25 · Acts 2:42–47
Family devotion and covenant parentingNot omit personal and family devotions at home, nor neglect the biblical training of children in the nurture and admonition of the Lord.Ephesians 6:4 · Deuteronomy 6:6–9
Proclaim the GospelWalk in obedience to the Great Commission, making the most of every opportunity to proclaim Christ.Matthew 28:16–20 · Ephesians 5:16
Confess sin and pursue holinessConfess sins to brothers and sisters at CRF, seek help in putting sin to death, and walk in holiness before God.James 5:16 · Romans 8:13 · 1 John 1:6–10
Give cheerfully and sacrificiallyContribute regularly to the support of the ministry, the relief of the poor, and the spread of the Gospel — as God has prospered.1 Corinthians 16:2 · 2 Corinthians 9:6–7

Who may become a member

The qualifications for membership at CRF

Membership at CRF is open to any believer who meets the following qualifications. The Council of Elders is responsible for evaluating each candidate according to these standards.

A credible profession of faith
You must be a disciple of Jesus Christ who gives biblical evidence of regeneration. The elders will evaluate your profession by means of a written or recorded testimony, your character of life, and such other evidence as they deem appropriate.
Baptism by immersion
Membership at CRF requires believer's baptism — normatively by full immersion — in obedience to Christ's command. If you have not been baptized as a professing believer, this will need to be addressed before membership.
Knowledge of our confession
You must understand the 1689 Baptist Confession of Faith and the CRF Constitution and Bylaws. You do not need to agree with every point — but you must understand what we teach and disclose any disagreements to the elders before membership.
Commitment not to be divisive
Where you disagree with our Level Two distinctives, you may still be welcomed as a member — but you covenant not to sow disunity or undermine the elders' teaching on those matters. Iron sharpens iron; division destroys the body.

How it works

The path to membership at CRF

The membership process is a series of intentional steps designed to ensure that both you and the elders have confidence that this is the right covenant home for you.

01
Express interest
Inform an elder or deacon that you wish to pursue membership. This begins the process and opens the conversation.
02
Submit your testimony
Prepare a written or recorded testimony answering two questions: What is the Gospel? What has been your experience with the Gospel?
03
Meet with the elders
The Council of Elders will meet with you to hear your testimony, discuss the confession, and evaluate your readiness for membership.
04
Presented to the congregation
If approved, your name and testimony are presented to the current membership for a minimum two-week period. Members may raise any concerns in writing.
05
Public covenant signing
If no valid concerns are raised, you publicly sign the CRF Membership Covenant as part of a corporate observance of the Lord's Table.

Preparing your testimony

What we ask you to write

Before meeting with the elders, you will prepare a written or recorded testimony. This is not a performance. It is not a theological exam. It is an honest account of your encounter with the Gospel and the grace of God in your life.

The elders are looking for evidence of regeneration — not eloquence, not theological precision, and not a dramatic conversion story. They want to hear that you know what the Gospel is and that you have personally received it.

There is no set length requirement. Give a sufficient and thorough answer to the best of your ability. The elders look forward to hearing how Christ has saved you.

Question 1
What is the Gospel?
Describe what you understand the Gospel to be — not what you have been told to say, but what you actually believe about who Christ is, what He has done, and how a sinner is saved.
Question 2
What has been your experience with the Gospel?
Describe your own encounter with the Gospel — your awareness of sin, your coming to faith in Christ, and the ways in which God has been at work in your life since. Faithfulness and growth over time is as much evidence of grace as a sudden conversion.

Once you have prepared your testimony, contact an elder to schedule your meeting. We look forward to sitting down with you and hearing of your desire to become a member and how Christ has saved you.

What we require and what we permit

Three levels of doctrinal importance

CRF distinguishes between doctrines essential to Christianity, doctrines that define us as a congregation, and doctrines on which members may charitably disagree.

Level One
Essential to orthodoxy

These define genuine Christianity. Agreement is required for membership. There is no charitable disagreement here — these are the non-negotiables of the faith once delivered to the saints.

Scripture alone as supreme authority
Salvation by grace alone, through faith alone, in Christ alone
The Trinity — one God in three Persons
Virgin birth, perfect life, bodily resurrection of Christ
Penal substitutionary atonement
Six-day recent creation
Level Two
Defining distinctives of CRF

These distinguish CRF from other orthodox churches. We hold them with conviction and they will be taught here. Members who disagree must disclose this and covenant not to sow disunity.

Believer's baptism by immersion
Elder-rule church polity
Biblical patriarchy and complementarianism
Cessationism of sign gifts
Family-integrated corporate worship
Postmillennialism and theonomy
Level Three
Charitable member variety

These are matters of ongoing discussion among faithful believers. CRF permits a range of views, though the elders hold their own positions and will teach them from the text.

Differing views of eschatology (elders are committed postmillennialists)
Views on the covenants
Head coverings
Celebrating Christian holidays
K–12 education approaches

The Membership Covenant

What you will publicly commit to

"Having been brought by divine grace to embrace the Lord Jesus Christ, and to give myself wholly to Him, I do now solemnly and joyfully covenant with CRF, to walk together in Christ Jesus, with brotherly love, to His glory, as our common Lord."

I willSupport the Constitution, Bylaws, and Confession of Faith of CRF.
I willSubmit to church leadership and be diligent to preserve unity and peace, esteeming the elders highly in love because of their work. (Hebrews 13:7,17)
I willExercise Christian care and watchfulness over other church members, faithfully warning, exhorting, and admonishing one another. (Colossians 1:28)
I will notForsake the assembling together, but uphold public worship, the ordinances, and a joyful life that glorifies the Lord Jesus. (Hebrews 10:23–25)
I will notOmit personal and family devotions at home, nor neglect the biblical training of my children for the service of Christ. (Ephesians 6:4)
I willWalk in obedience to the Great Commission, making the most of every opportunity to proclaim the Gospel. (Matthew 28:16–20)
I willConfess my sins to brothers and sisters at CRF and seek help to put sin to death. (Romans 8:13 · 1 John 1:6–10)
I willContribute cheerfully and regularly to the support of the ministry, the relief of the poor, and the spread of the Gospel. (1 Corinthians 16:2)
I willIn all conditions, even till death, strive to live to the glory of Him who has called us out of darkness into His marvelous light. (1 Peter 2:9)

Ready to begin? Reach out to an elder or deacon and let us know you would like to pursue membership at Christ Reformed Fellowship.

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