A white woman dressed in a rainbow dress and hat poses next to a young white man in a white shirt and khaki pants. The man is holding a progressive Pride flag and they are at a march.
Newfoundland minister Dianne Crewe (left) at a Pride event. (Image courtesy of Dianne Crewe)

Topics: UCC in Focus | Church News, LGBTQ2S+

Rural Newfoundland minister ousted from congregation for pro-2SLGBTQ+ stance

Rev. Dianne Crewe says she was forced to resign after posting about Pride service

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Just a day after Rev. Dianne Crewe said she was asked to leave her small-town Newfoundland pastoral charge, a 14-year-old congregant’s Facebook post about their experience at the church went viral.

Evan Pritchett’s post outlined the difficulties they have faced as a queer teenager in a small town. “I have been bullied in every single way since I was 7. Just because I’m queer,” they wrote on June 4. “And the second Dianne Crewe tries to welcome us at church — just one single thing to make us feel even an ounce of openness — the whole town goes into an uproar. She’s been asked to leave this town.”


Crewe, 75, became a minister in 2011 after having worked as a teacher for 22 years. She had been working halftime at the Gambo pastoral charge, which encompasses two faith communities — Emmanuel United in Gambo and the smaller Knox United in nearby Hare Bay — since February 2023. She said that Knox United had been without a minister for six years.

She said she faced resistance in that congregation right away. “They were very difficult to handle,” she said, adding that congregants didn’t like her more collaborative leadership style, she said, and preferred a more “evangelical” kind of worship. “It got so bad,” she added of the relationship, “I had to take somebody with me [to an evening service], as a witness to what might happen.” 

Things took a turn at Emmanuel on June 1, after Crewe posted about an upcoming Pride service in the church’s Facebook group and asked everyone to wear rainbow colours. She received negative comments on her post. The next day, she said she was making the same announcement in church when two people stood up and interrupted her, one saying church was “no place to talk about this.” One of those people also came up to her while she was shaking hands with congregants at the end of service, emphasizing how upset they were about her announcement. 


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On June 3, there was a previously scheduled meeting with regional council staffers to discuss Hare Bay. Crewe said a staffer told her that she was not to attend the meeting. Afterward, Crewe was called to the church to be told that the congregations wanted a change in pastoral relations due to her music choices and her leadership style. “I should have been there to defend myself,” Crewe said. She still does not know exactly what was said at the meeting, but said that she was given two options: her tenure would end in 90 days, which was the notice the pastoral charge was required to give her, or she could leave right away and be paid for the remaining work days. She chose the latter. 

“[The question about asking Crewe to leave] came out of the blue,” explained Robin Brentnall, who was in attendance. “It was not what the meeting was called for, and I was very surprised when the question was raised.” For more than 12 years, Brentnall was the central treasurer for both Emmanuel and Knox, mowed the grass in the graveyard, ran the audio/visuals for services, was a lay worship leader, and more. He resigned from all positions after the meeting.

The next day, Pritchett’s Facebook post about their experience as a queer teen in Gambo publicized the news that Crewe had been asked to leave the church. “I was shocked,” Crewe said, “because in order for this person to write this, somebody had to leave that meeting and tell.” The story of Crewe’s departure from the church was later picked up by CBC News and SaltWire.

Crewe says she agreed to talk to the media because Pritchett’s post told a different tale about the June 3 meeting than Crewe knew, and she wanted to share her side of the story. 

She also thinks that the incident is only one example of homophobia in small-town United churches. “Do not put a black mark on Gambo,” she said. “Gambo is no different than any other rural community right across this country.”

She sees a disconnect between the denomination’s broader 2SLGBTQ+-affirming stance and what happened at Emmanuel United on June 3. “There should not even have been an issue that morning,” she said. “We are The United Church of Canada, and if this is who we are, welcoming to all, then nobody should have stood up.”


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According to Brentnall, a replacement minister has yet to be hired and services have been overseen by lay worship ministers, though a few were cancelled because no one was available. 

Emmanuel United still held the June 23 pride service. Brentnall was in the pews and said it was well-attended, with patrons from a variety of denominations in Gambo. He added that those who spoke out against Crewe’s plans to hold the service were also there.

Crewe, who has just moved from the manse to a nearby seniors’ apartment, said some congregants have reached out to apologize for what happened at Emmanuel, including a person who interrupted her June 2 service. She said she feels supported by many in the community, as well as her former teaching colleagues. However, she added that only one United Church colleague has been checking in on her. “I’m very, very disappointed in the clergy,” she said.

First Dawn Eastern Edge Regional Council declined Broadview’s request for comment on this story, calling it an employment issue. “Rev. Crewe requested a change in pastoral relations, effective June 4. The official board met and accepted her request, effective immediately,” executive minister Faith March-MacCuish said in a statement. The regional council reiterated its belief “that full participation in all aspects of our calling is the right of people of all racial backgrounds, creeds, ages, cultural backgrounds, sexual orientations, gender expressions, economic statuses, abilities or any other lived experiences that have led to marginalization and oppression.” 

The board chair for Emmanuel and Knox United churches, Jordan Paul, also declined to comment on this story. 

Despite the hardship, Crewe is able to look at the silver linings. “I was called here to break this open,” she explained of 2SLGBTQ+ issues. “People are talking around their dinner tables; people are talking in coffee shops.” She is calling on others in the community to maintain the momentum. Going forward, she has offered her help to other pastoral charges in the region; she is not currently planning on taking an appointment anywhere else, but said she “doesn’t know what God has up God’s sleeve.”

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Drew-Anne Glennie was a 2024 intern at Broadview.


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  • says:

    Re Minister ‘expelled’ in NL charge.
    Very sad! Shows zero understanding of the Christ example “love your neighbour”
    A local UCC congregation has acted at least 2X in the past decade to live inclusivity. A local person, who identified as ‘different’ came out to their chosen identity- in a special, regular Sunday. Also, a local Pastor in a sister denomination, who ‘came out’ to his people was ejected like he was common roadkill.. This same local UCC invited him into their care and assisted him to become Minister in a relatively local UCC congregation.
    As a lifetime (80+ year) member of this community, I speak with pride in that congregation and its example to others.

  • says:

    This is one of many problems with "denominations", especially one's that reach across a large area and with many cultures.
    There are a few issues here. First, the calling of the minister; unfortunately it's an employer/employee relationship. Did either side convey their needs and goals? (It doesn't appear so.) How do you let it go so bad? I would hate to think of going to work with a body guard. Someone was digging in their heels.
    I didn't see the announcement, did Crewe ask? or was it more than a suggestion to wear "rainbow" colours? Why not ask for people to attend and leave it at that? It seems those who were against the idea were not against going.
    Secondly, Is Crewe so sensitive that one or two congregants who oppose her ideals upset her? I should hope not. You need a pretty thick skin to be a Christian leader, Satan is at every corner to attack you.
    In regards to Gordon Garlough's statement, "Shows zero understanding of the Christ example “love your neighbour”" Just because you don't agree with your neighbour, it does not mean you don't love them.

  • says:

    Having been a minister in several Newfoundland pastoral charges I came to realize that my education of seven years, getting my B.A and my M. Div. meant nothing to the people I was serving. I, too, was asked to leave two pastoral charges. The people choose to walk in darkness. The main concern is money. If people are offended by the minister's message then they won't come to church. If they don't attend on Sunday, the church doesn't get their offering. That, in my experience, is what it boils down to and I was told exactly that in my very first pastoral charge. I don't regret having gotten my theological education and I continue it to this day even though I've been retired ten years; but I did what God called me to do and for that I am grateful and I met my beautiful partner in my first pastoral charge so God truly blessed me. No regrets.

  • says:

    Since I read this article and particularly the quote from Rev. Crewe (“Gambo is no different than any other rural community right across this country.”), I have ranged from being offended, outraged, and then resigned to the attitude of Rev. Crewe (and no doubt many others) who consign small community churches to the same dustbin, and as not worthy of the time to identify the differences and uniqueness of many of them.

    Bella Coola is a rural community of about 2500 on the west coast of B.C., with two United Churches about 15 km apart -- one primarily indigenous and one primarily not. There are other protestant churches here (e.g. Mormon, Seventh Day) but the United Church minister is the only ordained clergy within about 450 km. I am a long time (60+ years) member of the United Church and have served on the board on Bella Coola for the last 30 years.

    Prior to recent retirement, our last minister(s) was a married lesbian. She identified as such early in our search interview and the response was a collective shrug. Nobody cared. Would her other attributes be a good fit? -- yes. That was all that mattered to us. She and her spouse were both ordained in the U.S. and were evicted from their churches due to their relationship. They moved to Canada and mainly did hospice and social justice work before coming to us. When they left Bella Coola, there were over a hundred Facebook comments of affection and appreciation -- a majority from indigenous commenters (many of whom are not church members). Not one was negative.

    At the last service they said this (I paraphrase): "This community has changed our lives -- don't ever let anyone tell you that small places don't matter."

    So that's my response to Rev, Crewe and others who think that Gambo is the stereotype for all the rest of us who live and worship in small communities. It is not.