The Marriage Commitment: A Call to the Episcopal Church
Over the course of this series, we have traced how the Episcopal Church helped lead the movement for marriage equality—but has since failed to defend the institution it once championed.
We now call on the Church to complete that work—not simply by blessing same-sex unions, but by renewing its moral voice in support of monogamy, marriage, and family.
READY TO ADD YOUR NAME TO THE CALL TO ACTION?
By completing the form of support below, you are joining a growing call to the Episcopal Church to reaffirm monogamy, marriage, and family.
This is not a petition in the conventional sense. It is a commitment. A shared act of moral clarity. A public call to our Church to speak with courage and compassion in a culture that has forgotten what covenant means.
Your responses will remain confidential unless you choose otherwise.
We cannot let this moment pass quietly. Let us call on the Episcopal Church to fulfill its forgotten mission—to provide moral clarity and spiritual guidance to a community looking for more than acceptance. Our community deserves nothing less than the full realization of what equality promised—not merely equal rights, but the equal dignity and responsibility of marriage. The Episcopal Church must now step forward, leading boldly into a future defined by the sacred and transformative power of sacrificial love.
Read about our call for the Epsicopal Church to finishing the work of making marriage equal, including:
The Data: The Urgent Need for Action
The Commodification of Sex
Retreat from Marriage
Hyper-individualism & Isolation
The Three Pillars of Cultural Renewal
Monogamy
Marriage
Family
The Six Missions for Cultural Renewal
Leadership: The Episcopal Covenant on Monogamy
Formation: National Episcopal Monogamy Institute
Witness: Monogamy Champions
Community: Inclusive Family Formation Project
Evangelism: Episcopal Monogamy Advocacy and Outreach
Healing and Pastoral Support: Episcopal Recovery Ministries
Who Will Lead? The Episcopal Church's Forgotten Mission
Over the course of this series, we have traced the long arc of marriage equality—how the Episcopal Church played a central role in opening its doors to same-sex couples, how the arguments that won over hearts and minds ultimately betrayed the promise it made, and why marriage itself is not just a personal institution but a