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Gene Robinson

Vicky Gene Robinson[a][1] (born May 29, 1947) is a retired bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of New Hampshire.[2][3] Robinson was elected bishop coadjutor in 2003 and succeeded as bishop diocesan in March 2004. Before becoming bishop, he served as Canon to the Ordinary for the Diocese of New Hampshire.

The Right Reverend

Gene Robinson
Bishop of New Hampshire
Robinson in 2013
ChurchEpiscopal Church
DioceseNew Hampshire
ElectedJune 7, 2003
InstalledMarch 7, 2004
Term endedJanuary 5, 2013
PredecessorDouglas E. Theuner
SuccessorA. Robert Hirschfeld
Orders
OrdinationDecember 15, 1973
by George Rath
ConsecrationNovember 2, 2003
by Frank Griswold
Personal details
Born (1947-05-29) May 29, 1947 (age 76)
DenominationAnglican
Spouse
  • Isabella Martin
    (m. 1972⁠–⁠1986)
  • Mark Andrew
    (m. 2008⁠–⁠2014)
Children2
ProfessionClergyman
Education

Robinson is widely known for being the first openly gay priest to be consecrated a bishop in a major Christian denomination believing in the historic episcopate, a matter of significant controversy.[b] After his election, many theologically traditional Episcopalians in the United States abandoned the Episcopal Church, formed the Anglican Church in North America (ACNA) and aligned themselves with bishops outside the Episcopal Church in the United States, a process called the Anglican realignment. His story has appeared in print and film.

In 2010, Robinson announced his intention to retire in 2013 at 65.[4] His successor is A. Robert Hirschfeld.[5]

Early life edit

Robinson's parents were poor tenant farmers who worked in the tobacco fields as sharecroppers. The family used an outhouse, drew water from a cistern, and did laundry in a cast-iron tub over an open flame. Their house did not have running water until Robinson was ten years old.[2] When Robinson was born, he was so seriously ill that the doctor was certain he would not survive. He was temporarily paralyzed from birth and his head was misshapen. So likely was Robinson's death that the physician asked Robinson's father Charles for a name for the baby's birth and death certificates.[clarification needed][6] Robinson's parents were young (his mother Imogene was twenty) and they were hoping for a girl.[2] They named the baby "Vicky Gene Robinson" for Charles' father Victor and the baby's mother Imogene.[2][7] For a long time, Robinson's parents believed the boy would die soon. Much later in life, Robinson's father would tell him he couldn't take any joy in the boy's development because he always thought each step was going to be the last thing.[2] Robinson's parents were and still are members of a small Disciples of Christ congregation. Robinson describes his childhood as very religious.[2] Robinson had perfect Sunday School attendance for thirteen years.[2]

Education and marriage edit

Robinson chose the University of the South in Sewanee, Tennessee, in 1965 because they offered him a full scholarship.[2] Robinson intended to study towards a medical degree but decided to major in American studies. During his college days, Robinson began to seriously consider the ordained ministry and said it almost immediately felt right.[2] During high school and then college, Robinson had been exploring philosophical and theological questions and has said, "The Episcopal Church got a hold on me." He graduated from Sewanee cum laude[1] with a Bachelor of Arts degree in American studies in 1969 and attended seminary that fall.[2] Robinson studied for a Master of Divinity degree from the Episcopal General Theological Seminary in New York City.

While doing an intern year as a chaplain at the University of Vermont, he began dating his future wife, Isabella "Boo" Martin. Robinson says that about "a month into their relationship, [he] explained his background and his fears about his sexuality." They continued dating and, as Robinson puts it, "about a month before the marriage, [he] became frightened that ... this thing would raise its ugly head some day, and cause her and me great pain." Robinson and Martin discussed it and decided to go ahead with the marriage in 1972.[2]

Early career and children edit

Robinson received his degree in 1973 and was ordained a deacon in June 1973 at the cathedral of the diocese of Newark, New Jersey. He served as curate at Christ Church in Ridgewood, New Jersey, and was ordained a priest six months later. He and his wife remained at the Ridgewood parish for two years until June 1975. They then moved to New Hampshire, where Boo had grown up. Their goal was to start a business and ministry: in the winter it was called "The Sign of the Dove Retreat Center" and in the summer it became "Pony Farm". Boo still runs "Pony Farm" as a horse camp for children.[2]

In 1977, Robinson began working with a committee in the Diocese of New Hampshire to study human sexuality and co-authored a small manual on the subject.[2] Robinson and Boo's first daughter, Jamee, was born in 1977, followed by a second daughter, Ella, in 1981.[2] Robinson treasures his marriage stating, "[T]hat is inextricably tied up with having children. And since I cannot imagine my life without Jamee and Ella, it's just a completely irrelevant question for me. And I don't regret having been married to Boo, either, even if there had not been children. It's just a part of my journey, and why would I possibly regret that?"[2]

Coming out and career edit

Robinson came out to his and Boo's friends in 1986[8] and he sold his share in the business to Boo. They remained friends.[2]

In November 1987, Robinson met his partner, Mark Andrew, while on vacation in St. Croix. Andrew was also on vacation and worked in Washington, D.C., at the national office of the Peace Corps. On July 2, 1988, Robinson and Andrew moved into a new house in Weare, New Hampshire[9] and had it blessed by Bishop Douglas Theuner, an event which they considered to be the formal recognition of their life together.[2] Andrew currently works in the New Hampshire state government. He and Robinson were legally joined in June 2008 in a private civil union ceremony, followed by a religious ceremony, both in St Paul's Church, Concord.[10][11] Earlier, Robinson had said, "I always wanted to be a June bride."[12][13] Robinson and Andrew divorced in 2014.[14]

Robinson became Canon to the Ordinary in 1988, the executive assistant to the then bishop of New Hampshire, Douglas Theuner. Robinson remained in this job for the next seventeen years until he was elected bishop.[2] Robinson and his daughters are very close. Ella actively helped her father with public relations at the General Convention in 2003. Just a week before the General Convention, Robinson had been with his daughter Jamee and held his four-hour-old first granddaughter.[2] He now has two granddaughters.[3][15]

Election as bishop edit

Robinson was elected bishop by the New Hampshire diocese on June 7, 2003, at St. Paul's Church in Concord. Thirty-nine clergy votes and 83 lay votes were the threshold necessary to elect a bishop in the Diocese of New Hampshire at that time. The clergy cast 58 votes for Robinson, and the laity voted 96 for Robinson on the second ballot.[2] The Episcopal Church requires in its Canon 16 that the election procedure and the candidate who is elected be subjected to review and must be consented to by the national church. No objections were raised to the procedure of the election. If diocesan election occurred within 120 days (3 months) of a General Convention, canon law requires consent by the House of Deputies and then the House of Bishops at the General Convention itself.[2] Consent to the election of Robinson was given in August at the 2003 General Convention. The General Convention of 2003 became the center for debate over Robinson's election, as conservatives and liberals within the Church argued over whether Robinson should be allowed to become bishop. Some conservative factions threatened a schism within both the Episcopal Church and the Anglican Communion should Robinson be elected. Before the House of Deputies can vote on a resolution, a legislative committee must examine the piece of legislation first. The Committee on the Consecration of Bishops held a two-hour hearing on Robinson's election and supporters and opponents were allowed to speak. One of the speakers was Robinson's daughter, Ella, who read a letter from his ex-wife Boo in strong support of Robinson. The House of Deputies, which consists of laypersons and priests, voted in the affirmative: the laity voted 63 in favor, 32 opposed, and 13 divided; the clergy voted 65 in favor, 31 opposed, and 12 divided.[2]

 
Bishop Robinson in 2005

Robinson won the first two of three votes required for his election to be ratified, but allegations suddenly arose in August 2003 that Robinson had inappropriately touched a male parishioner and had connections with OutRight.org, which at the time carried a link to AllThingsBi.com, a resource site for bisexual people that included links to pornography sites. The final vote was postponed to address these last-minute charges. David W. Virtue, a critic of gay ordination, brought up the pornography allegation, claiming that: "Gene Robinson's website is linked by one click to 5,000 pornographic websites."[16] When no such link was found on the Diocese of New Hampshire web page profiling the bishop-elect, Virtue stated that the link was on the website of an organization Robinson supported. Robinson was already known to be associated with Outright, a secular organization for the support of young LGBT people. Fred Barnes, a Fox News commentator, repeated the allegations on the website of The Weekly Standard.[17] On the day the allegations arose, the website issued a press release[18] stating that it had removed the offending link, that it had been unaware of the pornographic links on allthingsbi.com, and that Robinson had no involvement with that particular chapter of Outright.

The male parishioner of Manchester, Vermont (in a diocese neighboring Robinson's) who had alleged the "touching" was then reported to have said, during the investigating committee's telephone call with him, that the acts in question were two separate occasions of what felt to him like intentionally seductive arm-squeezing and back-stroking, although in a public setting. The man acknowledged that others might have regarded the two incidents as "natural", yet the incidents were disturbing to him nonetheless.[2] The investigating committee's report also stated that the man regretted having used the word "harassment" in his e-mail, and that the man declined an invitation to bring formal charges.[2] After a two-day investigation, neither allegation proved of merit.[2] The House of Bishops voted for Robinson in the affirmative, with 62 in favor, 43 opposed, and 2 abstaining.[2]

Consecration as bishop edit

The election in New Hampshire, like all elections of bishops in the Episcopal Church, was done by a synodical election process, unlike many other parts of the Anglican Communion where bishops are appointed.[2] This detail would be misunderstood when the international commentary following Robinson's election suggested he should voluntarily step down or be asked to do so.[2] The Jeffrey John case in the Church of England is the best example to contrast the election of bishops with the appointment of bishops.[2] Jeffrey John is an openly gay priest living in a long-standing celibate relationship (he self-identifies as celibate) and was appointed as a bishop.[2] One person alone, Richard Harries, then Bishop of Oxford, had the authority to appoint the Bishop of Reading (an area bishop in Oxford diocese),[2] though new bishops are customarily consecrated by the archbishop. Rowan Williams, then Archbishop of Canterbury, however, allegedly persuaded Harries to not proceed with the appointment.[2] This precedent would be used by the wider Anglican Communion to pressure Robinson.[2] Robinson said that "there was not a single bishop involved in the choosing of me to be Bishop of New Hampshire."[2]

The Elections and Transitions Committee arranged for the Whittemore Center to be used for the consecration, a large hockey rink on the campus of the University of New Hampshire in Durham. The numbers expected were about 3,000 people, 300 press, a 200-strong choir, and 48 bishops. The security was strong: just as Barbara Harris had to wear a bullet-proof vest at her consecration,[19] Robinson was showing his bullet-proof vest to Harris herself. Robinson's parents, sister, daughter and their families and his ex-wife Boo were all at the consecration. Robinson was consecrated on November 2, 2003, in the presence of Frank Griswold, Presiding Bishop, and six co-consecrating bishops: 48 bishops in all.[2]

Robinson's election and consecration prompted a group of 19 bishops, led by Robert Duncan, Bishop of the Diocese of Pittsburgh, to make a statement warning the church of a possible schism between the Episcopal Church and the Anglican Communion. Rowan Williams, Archbishop of Canterbury, stated that "[it] will inevitably have a significant impact on the Anglican Communion throughout the world and it is too early to say what the result of that will be." He added: "[I]t is my hope that the church in America and the rest of the Anglican Communion will have the opportunity to consider this development before significant and irrevocable decisions are made in response."[20] Desmond Tutu, Archbishop emeritus of Cape Town, stated that he did not see what "all the fuss" was about, saying the election would not roil the Church of the Province of Southern Africa. Other senior bishops of the church, like Peter Akinola, Archbishop of the Church of Nigeria and head of the Global South, have made Robinson a figurehead in their dispute with the Episcopal Church.[citation needed] Some disaffected Episcopalians have disaffiliated from the Episcopal Church and formed the Convocation of Anglicans in North America with the support of the Nigerian church.

Episcopate edit

 
Bishop Robinson in 2006, during the 75th General Convention of the Episcopal Church

Reports from Britain describe how Robinson has received death threats, had to wear bulletproof vests, and needed protection since his election and consecration.[21][22][23]

In February 2006, Robinson was treated at an inpatient rehabilitation facility to deal with his "increasing dependence on alcohol".[2] Diocesan officials were surprised by the news and asserted that they did not notice his alcoholism affect his ministry in any way. The Episcopal Church, through its General Convention, has long recognized alcoholism as a treatable human disease, not a failure of character or will. The members of the Standing Committee issued a statement fully supporting Robinson.[24] He returned to work in March 2006.[25]

Robinson was featured prominently in a documentary film entitled For the Bible Tells Me So, which screened at the 2007 Sundance Film Festival.[26]

He has opposed the Roman Catholic ban on homosexual seminarians, stating: "I find it so vile that they think they are going to end the child abuse scandal by throwing out homosexuals from seminaries."[27]

Due to the controversy surrounding his consecration, Bishop Robinson was not invited to the 2008 Lambeth Conferences by the Archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams.[28] A group of conservative bishops (including Akinola and Duncan) who opposed Robinson's consecration gathered in Jerusalem one month prior to Lambeth 2008, at the Global Anglican Future Conference, an event which is perceived by some as schismatic.[29][30]

Robinson did however visit the United Kingdom privately in July 2008, during which he participated in a film screening and question and answer session with Sir Ian McKellen at the Royal Festival Hall, and was invited to preach at St Mary's Putney, events which attracted much media attention. The sermon was interrupted by a heckler who was then escorted out of the service. Robinson asked the rest of the congregation, most of whom greeted the interruption with slow-clapping, to "pray for that man", before completing his sermon.[31][32][33][34] The Primate of the Episcopal Church of the Sudan, Archbishop Daniel Deng Bul, on July 22 at a public press conference during the 2008 Lambeth Conference called for Robinson to resign, and for all those who had participated in his consecration to confess their sin to the conference.[35]

In 2009 Robinson was selected to deliver the invocation at the kickoff event of President Barack Obama's inaugural weekend. Despite his extended involvement with Obama during the campaign, his selection was widely discussed as an effort to counterbalance the role of the choice of evangelical pastor Rick Warren. Media outlets noted Warren compared the legitimization of same-sex marriage to the legalization of "incest, polygamy or 'an older guy marrying a child'".[36][37][38][39][40] Warren also supported California Proposition 8, which banned same-sex marriage in the state.[41][42] However, Warren took a conciliatory tone towards Obama: "I applaud his desire to be the president of every citizen."[43] The kickoff event was held at the Lincoln Memorial two days before Obama's swearing-in.[44] It asked "the God of our many understandings" for seven blessings, and to help Obama, as president, in seven ways. Neither HBO's exclusive live broadcast, nor the Presidential Inauguration Committee's blog of the event included the invocation, but the prepared text was posted in full on the website of the Episcopal Diocese of New Hampshire, and video shot informally by attendees was posted on YouTube. National Public Radio, which relied on the HBO feed that omitted it, broadcast a recording the following day with an interview of Robinson about its limited exposure; in that venue, Robinson described it as conforming to the four-fold Franciscan prayer model. According to the Washington Blade, it was the Presidential Inaugural Committee that made the decision for the prayer to be a part of the pre-show and not the show, itself, with a spokesman from that committee maintaining the prayer was dropped through an unspecified "error." Some gay activists maintain that this was a slight on the part of the Obama administration.[45]

In April 2009, Robinson made the Out magazine Third Annual Power 50 list of the most influential gay men and women in the US, landing at number 7.[46] In August 2009, Gene Robinson was a key speaker at the 2009 Greenbelt Festival, held at Cheltenham Racecourse, Gloucestershire, England. Here he delivered three talks, each garnering an attendance in the thousands, based not only on his views of Christianity and homosexuality, but also on human sexuality in general and the rights of LGBT members of society. The three talks were entitled "Homosexuality: What the Bible says & why it matters", "Keeping your cool in the eye of the storm" and "Sexuality and spirituality: keeping them together".[47] As well as these three talks, Gene Robinson made a big impact on some gay and lesbian festival-goers by leading them collectively in prayer on the second night of the festival as part of a small group.

In 2009 he was given the Stephen F. Kolzak Media Award.

In 2012, Macky Alston premiered a documentary about Robinson, Love Free or Die: How the Bishop of New Hampshire is Changing the World, it was screened at Sundance Film Festival.[48][49]

Since retirement edit

After resigning as bishop of New Hampshire in 2013, Robinson moved to Washington, D.C. to join the Center for American Progress as a senior fellow and serve as bishop-in-residence at St. Thomas' Parish.[50] In 2014, Robinson and his husband, Mark Andrew, divorced.[51] In 2017, Robinson was named Vice-President and Senior Pastor of the Chautauqua Institution, a center for arts, education, recreation and religion in upstate New York.[52]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Robinson states his birth name as Vicky Gene Robinson from his grandfather Victor and his mother Imogene; as a baby he was not expected to survive and his parents were expecting a girl. Various sources also reported "Vicki" and "Imogene". Robinson and most reliable sources use V. Gene Robinson.
  2. ^ Otis Charles is a retired bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Utah. After his retirement in 1993, Charles publicly came out as a gay man, the first Christian bishop ever to take such a step.

References edit

  1. ^ a b Bates, Stephen (October 30, 2003). "The Guardian profile: Gene Robinson". The Guardian. Retrieved June 21, 2016.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj Adams, Elizabeth (2006). Going to Heaven: The Life and Election of Bishop Gene Robinson. Brooklyn, New York: Soft Skull Press. ISBN 978-1-933368-22-1.
  3. ^ a b "The Right Reverend V. Gene Robinson: IX Bishop of New Hampshire". Diocese of New Hampshire.[permanent dead link]
  4. ^ Kerber, Ross; Cooney, Peter (November 7, 2010). "First openly gay Episcopal bishop to retire in 2013". Reuters. Retrieved June 21, 2016.
  5. ^ Robinson, Gene (November 6, 2010). "Bishop of New Hampshire Calls for Election of Successor". Episcopal Diocese of New Hampshire. Retrieved January 5, 2013.[permanent dead link]
  6. ^ Terry Gross (2013-01-10). "Fresh Air interview". NPR.org.
  7. ^ Timmins, AnnMarie (2003-07-19). "Years of rejection, now understanding: Bishop-elect has accepted his homosexuality". Concord Monitor. Retrieved 2012-12-13.
  8. ^ "Gay bishop Gene Robinson: '20 years ago, coming out was almost like committing suicide'". Pink News. September 9, 2009. Retrieved June 21, 2016.
  9. ^ "A Church Asunder". The New Yorker. 17 April 2006. Retrieved 23 August 2018.
  10. ^ Norma Love (9 June 2008). "N.H. Gay Bishop, Partner Unite in Civil Union". The New York Sun. Associated Press.
  11. ^ . Episcopal Diocese of New Hampshire. 7 June 2008. Archived from the original on 14 December 2008.
  12. ^ Priscilla Greear (4 December 2007). "Gay Episcopal Bishop Prepares for June Wedding". EDGE Miami.
  13. ^ . Reuters. 10 May 2007. Archived from the original on 16 May 2007.
  14. ^ Gene Robinson (4 May 2014). "A Bishop's Decision to Divorce". The Daily Beast.
  15. ^ "New Hampshire's Bishop Gene Robinson". NPR (Fresh Air from WHYY). 9 December 2004.
  16. ^ Flad, Ethan (2003-08-05). . thewitness.org. Archived from the original on 2007-09-27. Retrieved 2007-10-26.
  17. ^ Barnes, Fred (August 4, 2003). "The Gay Bishop's Links: Episcopalian bishop-elect Gene Robinson has some curious affiliations". The Weekly Standard.
  18. ^ Cathy Kidman (2003-08-04). . Archived from the original on 2005-11-26.
  19. ^ Ruth Gledhill (2009-12-10). "Canon Mary Glasspool: time for Church to open door to rights for gays". The Times.
  20. ^ . Archbishop of Canterbury. 2003-08-06. Archived from the original on 2007-02-02.
  21. ^ Buncombe, Andrew (2003-11-03). "Consecrated: but nothing prepared Gene Robinson for the protests". The Independent. Retrieved 2010-07-11.
  22. ^ "Williams criticised by gay bishop". BBC News. 2008-04-30. Retrieved 2010-07-11.
  23. ^ "Robinson under FBI protection after death threats". The Advocate. 2003-10-28. Retrieved 2012-12-13.
  24. ^ Bibber, Paula (2006-02-13). . Diocese of New Hampshire news release. Archived from the original on 2010-01-20.
  25. ^ Robinson, V. Gene (2006-03-07). . Diocese of New Hampshire news release. Archived from the original on 2010-01-20.
  26. ^ "For the Bible Tells Me So". Forthebibletellsmeso.org. Retrieved 2012-12-13.
  27. ^ "Gay bishop attacks Catholic stand". BBC News. 2005-11-06. Retrieved 2012-12-13.
  28. ^ Landau, Christopher (2008-01-01). "US Church 'unfairly criticised'". BBC News. Retrieved 2012-12-13. But Presiding Bishop Jefferts Schori says she thinks he might yet be invited.
  29. ^ Richard Vara (2008-01-12). "Carey says Anglican Communion is in crisis". Houston Chronicle.
  30. ^ . GAFCON. 2007-12-24. Archived from the original on 2008-10-05.
  31. ^ "Preaching to the converted—Gene Robinson is the Anglican church's only openly gay bishop. He was denied an invitation to this week's Lambeth conference but came anyway and on Sunday gave a dramatic sermon in London disrupted by heckling. What's all the fuss about? Stephen Bates explains, while political sketch-writer Simon Hoggart, theatre critic Lyn Gardner and gay atheist Gareth McLean review the bishop's performance". The Guardian. July 14, 2008. Retrieved April 28, 2009.
  32. ^ Siddique, Haroon (July 14, 2008). "Gene Robinson 'saddened' by London church heckler—The presence in the UK of the first openly gay Anglican bishop has highlighted the schism within the church". The Guardian. Retrieved April 28, 2009.
  33. ^ "Protest disrupts bishop's sermon". BBC News. July 13, 2008. Retrieved April 28, 2009.
  34. ^ Davies, Rob (July 18, 2008). "Sir Ian McKellen: I received death threats". London: The Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on September 13, 2012. Retrieved April 28, 2009.
  35. ^ Mary Frances Schjonberg (2008-07-22). "Sudanese primate wants Robinson's resignation". Episcopal Church. Retrieved 2012-12-13.
  36. ^ "Obama's choice of Rick Warren to lead prayer dismays Hollywood liberals" by Tina Daunt, LA Times, December 20, 2009.
  37. ^ "Obama's Choice of Pastor Creates Furor" by Jeff Zeleny and David D. Kirkpatrick; New York Times, December 19, 2008.
  38. ^ "Rick Warren Chooses Silence" by Laurie Goodstein, New York Times, January 15, 2009.
  39. ^ Pastor Warren Sets Inclusive Tone at Inaugural: Under Fire for Anti-Gay Views, Warren Avoids Controversy at Obama's Inaugural Invocation by Susan Donaldson James; ABC News. January 20, 2009.
  40. ^ "Gays, lesbians hopeful despite inaugural pastor" by Rachel Gordon, San Francisco Chronicle, January 21, 2009.
  41. ^ (PDF). California Attorney General. 2007-11-29. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-06-24. Retrieved 2009-03-17.
  42. ^ . California Secretary of State. 2008-07-03. Archived from the original on 2009-04-30.
  43. ^ "Pastor Rick Warren Sparks 'Culture Wars' - ABC News". ABC News. Retrieved 2009-11-28.
  44. ^ Obama chooses gay bishop to pray at inaugural event, January 13, 2009, Los Angeles Times.
  45. ^ Why gay bishop's prayer didn't air on HBO music special, January 19, 2009, San Francisco Chronicle.
  46. ^ "3rd Annual Power 50". Out. 2009-04-03.
  47. ^ . Greenbelt festival. 2009. Archived from the original on 2012-07-16.
  48. ^ Rooney, David (23 January 2012). "Love Free or Die: Sundance Film Review". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 17 July 2019.
  49. ^ "Meet the 2012 Sundance Filmmakers #17: Macky Alston, "Love Free Or Die"". indiewire.com. 8 January 2012. Retrieved 17 July 2019.
  50. ^ Service, Jeffrey Macdonald| Religion News (2012-11-27). "Gay bishop Gene Robinson sets sights on D.C. as retirement looms". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 2017-12-08.
  51. ^ Zoll, Rachel (May 4, 2014). "1st openly gay Episcopal bishop to divorce husband". Associated Press. Retrieved June 21, 2016.
  52. ^ . Episcopal News Service. 2017-05-22. Archived from the original on 2018-11-20. Retrieved 2017-12-08.

Further reading edit

  • Hein, David; Gardiner H. Shattuck, Jr. (2004). The Episcopalians. New York: Church Publishing. ISBN 978-0-89869-497-0.
  • Robinson, Gene (2008). In the Eye of the Storm: Swept to the Center by God. Seabury Books. ISBN 978-1-59627-088-6.

External links edit

  • at the Diocese of New Hampshire website
  • Messages from Bishop Robinson
  • CNN June 8, 2003 "Episcopalians Approve Gay Bishop, and Conflict"
  • CNN November 2, 2003 "Gay bishop-elect: 'This is what God wants for me'"
  • The Guardian 10/21/03 "Profile: Gene Robinson"
  • Online radio interview with Gene Robinson and Donald Armstrong, March 2007
  • Invocation at "We Are One" Concert before Obama Inaugural on YouTube video recorded January 18, 2009.
  • Interview of Gene Robinson by Terry Gross of NPR Station WHYY's Fresh Air, January 2013
  • Op-ed piece in USA Today by Gene Robinson regarding the Hobby Lobby case

gene, robinson, american, entomologist, gene, robinson, vicky, born, 1947, retired, bishop, episcopal, diocese, hampshire, robinson, elected, bishop, coadjutor, 2003, succeeded, bishop, diocesan, march, 2004, before, becoming, bishop, served, canon, ordinary, . For the American entomologist see Gene E Robinson Vicky Gene Robinson a 1 born May 29 1947 is a retired bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of New Hampshire 2 3 Robinson was elected bishop coadjutor in 2003 and succeeded as bishop diocesan in March 2004 Before becoming bishop he served as Canon to the Ordinary for the Diocese of New Hampshire The Right ReverendGene RobinsonBishop of New HampshireRobinson in 2013ChurchEpiscopal ChurchDioceseNew HampshireElectedJune 7 2003InstalledMarch 7 2004Term endedJanuary 5 2013PredecessorDouglas E TheunerSuccessorA Robert HirschfeldOrdersOrdinationDecember 15 1973by George RathConsecrationNovember 2 2003by Frank GriswoldPersonal detailsBorn 1947 05 29 May 29 1947 age 76 Lexington Kentucky U S DenominationAnglicanSpouseIsabella Martin m 1972 1986 wbr Mark Andrew m 2008 2014 wbr Children2ProfessionClergymanEducationSewanee The University of the SouthGeneral Theological SeminaryRobinson is widely known for being the first openly gay priest to be consecrated a bishop in a major Christian denomination believing in the historic episcopate a matter of significant controversy b After his election many theologically traditional Episcopalians in the United States abandoned the Episcopal Church formed the Anglican Church in North America ACNA and aligned themselves with bishops outside the Episcopal Church in the United States a process called the Anglican realignment His story has appeared in print and film In 2010 Robinson announced his intention to retire in 2013 at 65 4 His successor is A Robert Hirschfeld 5 Contents 1 Early life 2 Education and marriage 3 Early career and children 4 Coming out and career 5 Election as bishop 6 Consecration as bishop 7 Episcopate 8 Since retirement 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksEarly life editRobinson s parents were poor tenant farmers who worked in the tobacco fields as sharecroppers The family used an outhouse drew water from a cistern and did laundry in a cast iron tub over an open flame Their house did not have running water until Robinson was ten years old 2 When Robinson was born he was so seriously ill that the doctor was certain he would not survive He was temporarily paralyzed from birth and his head was misshapen So likely was Robinson s death that the physician asked Robinson s father Charles for a name for the baby s birth and death certificates clarification needed 6 Robinson s parents were young his mother Imogene was twenty and they were hoping for a girl 2 They named the baby Vicky Gene Robinson for Charles father Victor and the baby s mother Imogene 2 7 For a long time Robinson s parents believed the boy would die soon Much later in life Robinson s father would tell him he couldn t take any joy in the boy s development because he always thought each step was going to be the last thing 2 Robinson s parents were and still are members of a small Disciples of Christ congregation Robinson describes his childhood as very religious 2 Robinson had perfect Sunday School attendance for thirteen years 2 Education and marriage editRobinson chose the University of the South in Sewanee Tennessee in 1965 because they offered him a full scholarship 2 Robinson intended to study towards a medical degree but decided to major in American studies During his college days Robinson began to seriously consider the ordained ministry and said it almost immediately felt right 2 During high school and then college Robinson had been exploring philosophical and theological questions and has said The Episcopal Church got a hold on me He graduated from Sewanee cum laude 1 with a Bachelor of Arts degree in American studies in 1969 and attended seminary that fall 2 Robinson studied for a Master of Divinity degree from the Episcopal General Theological Seminary in New York City While doing an intern year as a chaplain at the University of Vermont he began dating his future wife Isabella Boo Martin Robinson says that about a month into their relationship he explained his background and his fears about his sexuality They continued dating and as Robinson puts it about a month before the marriage he became frightened that this thing would raise its ugly head some day and cause her and me great pain Robinson and Martin discussed it and decided to go ahead with the marriage in 1972 2 Early career and children editRobinson received his degree in 1973 and was ordained a deacon in June 1973 at the cathedral of the diocese of Newark New Jersey He served as curate at Christ Church in Ridgewood New Jersey and was ordained a priest six months later He and his wife remained at the Ridgewood parish for two years until June 1975 They then moved to New Hampshire where Boo had grown up Their goal was to start a business and ministry in the winter it was called The Sign of the Dove Retreat Center and in the summer it became Pony Farm Boo still runs Pony Farm as a horse camp for children 2 In 1977 Robinson began working with a committee in the Diocese of New Hampshire to study human sexuality and co authored a small manual on the subject 2 Robinson and Boo s first daughter Jamee was born in 1977 followed by a second daughter Ella in 1981 2 Robinson treasures his marriage stating T hat is inextricably tied up with having children And since I cannot imagine my life without Jamee and Ella it s just a completely irrelevant question for me And I don t regret having been married to Boo either even if there had not been children It s just a part of my journey and why would I possibly regret that 2 Coming out and career editRobinson came out to his and Boo s friends in 1986 8 and he sold his share in the business to Boo They remained friends 2 In November 1987 Robinson met his partner Mark Andrew while on vacation in St Croix Andrew was also on vacation and worked in Washington D C at the national office of the Peace Corps On July 2 1988 Robinson and Andrew moved into a new house in Weare New Hampshire 9 and had it blessed by Bishop Douglas Theuner an event which they considered to be the formal recognition of their life together 2 Andrew currently works in the New Hampshire state government He and Robinson were legally joined in June 2008 in a private civil union ceremony followed by a religious ceremony both in St Paul s Church Concord 10 11 Earlier Robinson had said I always wanted to be a June bride 12 13 Robinson and Andrew divorced in 2014 14 Robinson became Canon to the Ordinary in 1988 the executive assistant to the then bishop of New Hampshire Douglas Theuner Robinson remained in this job for the next seventeen years until he was elected bishop 2 Robinson and his daughters are very close Ella actively helped her father with public relations at the General Convention in 2003 Just a week before the General Convention Robinson had been with his daughter Jamee and held his four hour old first granddaughter 2 He now has two granddaughters 3 15 Election as bishop editSome of this article s listed sources may not be reliable Please help this article by looking for better more reliable sources Unreliable citations may be challenged or deleted October 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Robinson was elected bishop by the New Hampshire diocese on June 7 2003 at St Paul s Church in Concord Thirty nine clergy votes and 83 lay votes were the threshold necessary to elect a bishop in the Diocese of New Hampshire at that time The clergy cast 58 votes for Robinson and the laity voted 96 for Robinson on the second ballot 2 The Episcopal Church requires in its Canon 16 that the election procedure and the candidate who is elected be subjected to review and must be consented to by the national church No objections were raised to the procedure of the election If diocesan election occurred within 120 days 3 months of a General Convention canon law requires consent by the House of Deputies and then the House of Bishops at the General Convention itself 2 Consent to the election of Robinson was given in August at the 2003 General Convention The General Convention of 2003 became the center for debate over Robinson s election as conservatives and liberals within the Church argued over whether Robinson should be allowed to become bishop Some conservative factions threatened a schism within both the Episcopal Church and the Anglican Communion should Robinson be elected Before the House of Deputies can vote on a resolution a legislative committee must examine the piece of legislation first The Committee on the Consecration of Bishops held a two hour hearing on Robinson s election and supporters and opponents were allowed to speak One of the speakers was Robinson s daughter Ella who read a letter from his ex wife Boo in strong support of Robinson The House of Deputies which consists of laypersons and priests voted in the affirmative the laity voted 63 in favor 32 opposed and 13 divided the clergy voted 65 in favor 31 opposed and 12 divided 2 nbsp Bishop Robinson in 2005Robinson won the first two of three votes required for his election to be ratified but allegations suddenly arose in August 2003 that Robinson had inappropriately touched a male parishioner and had connections with OutRight org which at the time carried a link to AllThingsBi com a resource site for bisexual people that included links to pornography sites The final vote was postponed to address these last minute charges David W Virtue a critic of gay ordination brought up the pornography allegation claiming that Gene Robinson s website is linked by one click to 5 000 pornographic websites 16 When no such link was found on the Diocese of New Hampshire web page profiling the bishop elect Virtue stated that the link was on the website of an organization Robinson supported Robinson was already known to be associated with Outright a secular organization for the support of young LGBT people Fred Barnes a Fox News commentator repeated the allegations on the website of The Weekly Standard 17 On the day the allegations arose the website issued a press release 18 stating that it had removed the offending link that it had been unaware of the pornographic links on allthingsbi com and that Robinson had no involvement with that particular chapter of Outright The male parishioner of Manchester Vermont in a diocese neighboring Robinson s who had alleged the touching was then reported to have said during the investigating committee s telephone call with him that the acts in question were two separate occasions of what felt to him like intentionally seductive arm squeezing and back stroking although in a public setting The man acknowledged that others might have regarded the two incidents as natural yet the incidents were disturbing to him nonetheless 2 The investigating committee s report also stated that the man regretted having used the word harassment in his e mail and that the man declined an invitation to bring formal charges 2 After a two day investigation neither allegation proved of merit 2 The House of Bishops voted for Robinson in the affirmative with 62 in favor 43 opposed and 2 abstaining 2 Consecration as bishop editThis biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification Please help by adding reliable sources Contentious material about living persons that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately from the article and its talk page especially if potentially libelous Find sources Gene Robinson news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The election in New Hampshire like all elections of bishops in the Episcopal Church was done by a synodical election process unlike many other parts of the Anglican Communion where bishops are appointed 2 This detail would be misunderstood when the international commentary following Robinson s election suggested he should voluntarily step down or be asked to do so 2 The Jeffrey John case in the Church of England is the best example to contrast the election of bishops with the appointment of bishops 2 Jeffrey John is an openly gay priest living in a long standing celibate relationship he self identifies as celibate and was appointed as a bishop 2 One person alone Richard Harries then Bishop of Oxford had the authority to appoint the Bishop of Reading an area bishop in Oxford diocese 2 though new bishops are customarily consecrated by the archbishop Rowan Williams then Archbishop of Canterbury however allegedly persuaded Harries to not proceed with the appointment 2 This precedent would be used by the wider Anglican Communion to pressure Robinson 2 Robinson said that there was not a single bishop involved in the choosing of me to be Bishop of New Hampshire 2 The Elections and Transitions Committee arranged for the Whittemore Center to be used for the consecration a large hockey rink on the campus of the University of New Hampshire in Durham The numbers expected were about 3 000 people 300 press a 200 strong choir and 48 bishops The security was strong just as Barbara Harris had to wear a bullet proof vest at her consecration 19 Robinson was showing his bullet proof vest to Harris herself Robinson s parents sister daughter and their families and his ex wife Boo were all at the consecration Robinson was consecrated on November 2 2003 in the presence of Frank Griswold Presiding Bishop and six co consecrating bishops 48 bishops in all 2 Robinson s election and consecration prompted a group of 19 bishops led by Robert Duncan Bishop of the Diocese of Pittsburgh to make a statement warning the church of a possible schism between the Episcopal Church and the Anglican Communion Rowan Williams Archbishop of Canterbury stated that it will inevitably have a significant impact on the Anglican Communion throughout the world and it is too early to say what the result of that will be He added I t is my hope that the church in America and the rest of the Anglican Communion will have the opportunity to consider this development before significant and irrevocable decisions are made in response 20 Desmond Tutu Archbishop emeritus of Cape Town stated that he did not see what all the fuss was about saying the election would not roil the Church of the Province of Southern Africa Other senior bishops of the church like Peter Akinola Archbishop of the Church of Nigeria and head of the Global South have made Robinson a figurehead in their dispute with the Episcopal Church citation needed Some disaffected Episcopalians have disaffiliated from the Episcopal Church and formed the Convocation of Anglicans in North America with the support of the Nigerian church Episcopate edit nbsp Bishop Robinson in 2006 during the 75th General Convention of the Episcopal ChurchReports from Britain describe how Robinson has received death threats had to wear bulletproof vests and needed protection since his election and consecration 21 22 23 In February 2006 Robinson was treated at an inpatient rehabilitation facility to deal with his increasing dependence on alcohol 2 Diocesan officials were surprised by the news and asserted that they did not notice his alcoholism affect his ministry in any way The Episcopal Church through its General Convention has long recognized alcoholism as a treatable human disease not a failure of character or will The members of the Standing Committee issued a statement fully supporting Robinson 24 He returned to work in March 2006 25 Robinson was featured prominently in a documentary film entitled For the Bible Tells Me So which screened at the 2007 Sundance Film Festival 26 He has opposed the Roman Catholic ban on homosexual seminarians stating I find it so vile that they think they are going to end the child abuse scandal by throwing out homosexuals from seminaries 27 Due to the controversy surrounding his consecration Bishop Robinson was not invited to the 2008 Lambeth Conferences by the Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams 28 A group of conservative bishops including Akinola and Duncan who opposed Robinson s consecration gathered in Jerusalem one month prior to Lambeth 2008 at the Global Anglican Future Conference an event which is perceived by some as schismatic 29 30 Robinson did however visit the United Kingdom privately in July 2008 during which he participated in a film screening and question and answer session with Sir Ian McKellen at the Royal Festival Hall and was invited to preach at St Mary s Putney events which attracted much media attention The sermon was interrupted by a heckler who was then escorted out of the service Robinson asked the rest of the congregation most of whom greeted the interruption with slow clapping to pray for that man before completing his sermon 31 32 33 34 The Primate of the Episcopal Church of the Sudan Archbishop Daniel Deng Bul on July 22 at a public press conference during the 2008 Lambeth Conference called for Robinson to resign and for all those who had participated in his consecration to confess their sin to the conference 35 In 2009 Robinson was selected to deliver the invocation at the kickoff event of President Barack Obama s inaugural weekend Despite his extended involvement with Obama during the campaign his selection was widely discussed as an effort to counterbalance the role of the choice of evangelical pastor Rick Warren Media outlets noted Warren compared the legitimization of same sex marriage to the legalization of incest polygamy or an older guy marrying a child 36 37 38 39 40 Warren also supported California Proposition 8 which banned same sex marriage in the state 41 42 However Warren took a conciliatory tone towards Obama I applaud his desire to be the president of every citizen 43 The kickoff event was held at the Lincoln Memorial two days before Obama s swearing in 44 It asked the God of our many understandings for seven blessings and to help Obama as president in seven ways Neither HBO s exclusive live broadcast nor the Presidential Inauguration Committee s blog of the event included the invocation but the prepared text was posted in full on the website of the Episcopal Diocese of New Hampshire and video shot informally by attendees was posted on YouTube National Public Radio which relied on the HBO feed that omitted it broadcast a recording the following day with an interview of Robinson about its limited exposure in that venue Robinson described it as conforming to the four fold Franciscan prayer model According to the Washington Blade it was the Presidential Inaugural Committee that made the decision for the prayer to be a part of the pre show and not the show itself with a spokesman from that committee maintaining the prayer was dropped through an unspecified error Some gay activists maintain that this was a slight on the part of the Obama administration 45 In April 2009 Robinson made the Out magazine Third Annual Power 50 list of the most influential gay men and women in the US landing at number 7 46 In August 2009 Gene Robinson was a key speaker at the 2009 Greenbelt Festival held at Cheltenham Racecourse Gloucestershire England Here he delivered three talks each garnering an attendance in the thousands based not only on his views of Christianity and homosexuality but also on human sexuality in general and the rights of LGBT members of society The three talks were entitled Homosexuality What the Bible says amp why it matters Keeping your cool in the eye of the storm and Sexuality and spirituality keeping them together 47 As well as these three talks Gene Robinson made a big impact on some gay and lesbian festival goers by leading them collectively in prayer on the second night of the festival as part of a small group In 2009 he was given the Stephen F Kolzak Media Award In 2012 Macky Alston premiered a documentary about Robinson Love Free or Die How the Bishop of New Hampshire is Changing the World it was screened at Sundance Film Festival 48 49 Since retirement editAfter resigning as bishop of New Hampshire in 2013 Robinson moved to Washington D C to join the Center for American Progress as a senior fellow and serve as bishop in residence at St Thomas Parish 50 In 2014 Robinson and his husband Mark Andrew divorced 51 In 2017 Robinson was named Vice President and Senior Pastor of the Chautauqua Institution a center for arts education recreation and religion in upstate New York 52 See also edit nbsp Christianity portal nbsp Biography portal nbsp LGBT portalGay bishops Homosexuality and the Anglican Communion Christianity and homosexualityNotes edit Robinson states his birth name as Vicky Gene Robinson from his grandfather Victor and his mother Imogene as a baby he was not expected to survive and his parents were expecting a girl Various sources also reported Vicki and Imogene Robinson and most reliable sources use V Gene Robinson Otis Charles is a retired bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Utah After his retirement in 1993 Charles publicly came out as a gay man the first Christian bishop ever to take such a step References edit a b Bates Stephen October 30 2003 The Guardian profile Gene Robinson The Guardian Retrieved June 21 2016 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj Adams Elizabeth 2006 Going to Heaven The Life and Election of Bishop Gene Robinson Brooklyn New York Soft Skull Press ISBN 978 1 933368 22 1 a b The Right Reverend V Gene Robinson IX Bishop of New Hampshire Diocese of New Hampshire permanent dead link Kerber Ross Cooney Peter November 7 2010 First openly gay Episcopal bishop to retire in 2013 Reuters Retrieved June 21 2016 Robinson Gene November 6 2010 Bishop of New Hampshire Calls for Election of Successor Episcopal Diocese of New Hampshire Retrieved January 5 2013 permanent dead link Terry Gross 2013 01 10 Fresh Air interview NPR org Timmins AnnMarie 2003 07 19 Years of rejection now understanding Bishop elect has accepted his homosexuality Concord Monitor Retrieved 2012 12 13 Gay bishop Gene Robinson 20 years ago coming out was almost like committing suicide Pink News September 9 2009 Retrieved June 21 2016 A Church Asunder The New Yorker 17 April 2006 Retrieved 23 August 2018 Norma Love 9 June 2008 N H Gay Bishop Partner Unite in Civil Union The New York Sun Associated Press Bishop Robinson Mark Andrew joined in Civil Union Episcopal Diocese of New Hampshire 7 June 2008 Archived from the original on 14 December 2008 Priscilla Greear 4 December 2007 Gay Episcopal Bishop Prepares for June Wedding EDGE Miami Gay bishop plans civil union with partner of 18 years Reuters 10 May 2007 Archived from the original on 16 May 2007 Gene Robinson 4 May 2014 A Bishop s Decision to Divorce The Daily Beast New Hampshire s Bishop Gene Robinson NPR Fresh Air from WHYY 9 December 2004 Flad Ethan 2003 08 05 Virtual Trickery Backfires thewitness org Archived from the original on 2007 09 27 Retrieved 2007 10 26 Barnes Fred August 4 2003 The Gay Bishop s Links Episcopalian bishop elect Gene Robinson has some curious affiliations The Weekly Standard Cathy Kidman 2003 08 04 Outright News Release August 4 2003 Archived from the original on 2005 11 26 Ruth Gledhill 2009 12 10 Canon Mary Glasspool time for Church to open door to rights for gays The Times Archbishop difficult days ahead Archbishop of Canterbury 2003 08 06 Archived from the original on 2007 02 02 Buncombe Andrew 2003 11 03 Consecrated but nothing prepared Gene Robinson for the protests The Independent Retrieved 2010 07 11 Williams criticised by gay bishop BBC News 2008 04 30 Retrieved 2010 07 11 Robinson under FBI protection after death threats The Advocate 2003 10 28 Retrieved 2012 12 13 Bibber Paula 2006 02 13 Letters from the Bishop and the Standing Committee Diocese of New Hampshire news release Archived from the original on 2010 01 20 Robinson V Gene 2006 03 07 Bishop s Return Diocese of New Hampshire news release Archived from the original on 2010 01 20 For the Bible Tells Me So Forthebibletellsmeso org Retrieved 2012 12 13 Gay bishop attacks Catholic stand BBC News 2005 11 06 Retrieved 2012 12 13 Landau Christopher 2008 01 01 US Church unfairly criticised BBC News Retrieved 2012 12 13 But Presiding Bishop Jefferts Schori says she thinks he might yet be invited Richard Vara 2008 01 12 Carey says Anglican Communion is in crisis Houston Chronicle Global Anglican Future Conference in Holy Land announced by Orthodox Primates GAFCON 2007 12 24 Archived from the original on 2008 10 05 Preaching to the converted Gene Robinson is the Anglican church s only openly gay bishop He was denied an invitation to this week s Lambeth conference but came anyway and on Sunday gave a dramatic sermon in London disrupted by heckling What s all the fuss about Stephen Bates explains while political sketch writer Simon Hoggart theatre critic Lyn Gardner and gay atheist Gareth McLean review the bishop s performance The Guardian July 14 2008 Retrieved April 28 2009 Siddique Haroon July 14 2008 Gene Robinson saddened by London church heckler The presence in the UK of the first openly gay Anglican bishop has highlighted the schism within the church The Guardian Retrieved April 28 2009 Protest disrupts bishop s sermon BBC News July 13 2008 Retrieved April 28 2009 Davies Rob July 18 2008 Sir Ian McKellen I received death threats London The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on September 13 2012 Retrieved April 28 2009 Mary Frances Schjonberg 2008 07 22 Sudanese primate wants Robinson s resignation Episcopal Church Retrieved 2012 12 13 Obama s choice of Rick Warren to lead prayer dismays Hollywood liberals by Tina Daunt LA Times December 20 2009 Obama s Choice of Pastor Creates Furor by Jeff Zeleny and David D Kirkpatrick New York Times December 19 2008 Rick Warren Chooses Silence by Laurie Goodstein New York Times January 15 2009 Pastor Warren Sets Inclusive Tone at Inaugural Under Fire for Anti Gay Views Warren Avoids Controversy at Obama s Inaugural Invocation by Susan Donaldson James ABC News January 20 2009 Gays lesbians hopeful despite inaugural pastor by Rachel Gordon San Francisco Chronicle January 21 2009 Initiative Measure Title and Summary 07 0068 PDF California Attorney General 2007 11 29 Archived from the original PDF on 2008 06 24 Retrieved 2009 03 17 Proposition 8 Title and Summary Voter Information Guide 2008 California Secretary of State 2008 07 03 Archived from the original on 2009 04 30 Pastor Rick Warren Sparks Culture Wars ABC News ABC News Retrieved 2009 11 28 Obama chooses gay bishop to pray at inaugural event January 13 2009 Los Angeles Times Why gay bishop s prayer didn t air on HBO music special January 19 2009 San Francisco Chronicle 3rd Annual Power 50 Out 2009 04 03 Greenbelt 2009 Standing in the Long Now Greenbelt festival 2009 Archived from the original on 2012 07 16 Rooney David 23 January 2012 Love Free or Die Sundance Film Review The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved 17 July 2019 Meet the 2012 Sundance Filmmakers 17 Macky Alston Love Free Or Die indiewire com 8 January 2012 Retrieved 17 July 2019 Service Jeffrey Macdonald Religion News 2012 11 27 Gay bishop Gene Robinson sets sights on D C as retirement looms Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved 2017 12 08 Zoll Rachel May 4 2014 1st openly gay Episcopal bishop to divorce husband Associated Press Retrieved June 21 2016 Gene Robinson named to two Chautauqua Institution posts Episcopal News Service 2017 05 22 Archived from the original on 2018 11 20 Retrieved 2017 12 08 Further reading editHein David Gardiner H Shattuck Jr 2004 The Episcopalians New York Church Publishing ISBN 978 0 89869 497 0 Robinson Gene 2008 In the Eye of the Storm Swept to the Center by God Seabury Books ISBN 978 1 59627 088 6 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gene Robinson Biography of Bishop Robinson at the Diocese of New Hampshire website Messages from Bishop Robinson CNN June 8 2003 Episcopalians Approve Gay Bishop and Conflict CNN November 2 2003 Gay bishop elect This is what God wants for me The Guardian 10 21 03 Profile Gene Robinson Online radio interview with Gene Robinson and Donald Armstrong March 2007 Invocation at We Are One Concert before Obama Inaugural on YouTube video recorded January 18 2009 Interview of Gene Robinson by Terry Gross of NPR Station WHYY s Fresh Air January 2013 Op ed piece in USA Today by Gene Robinson regarding the Hobby Lobby case Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gene Robinson amp oldid 1189455992, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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