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Opening the Cathedral Doors:
The Consecration of Gene Robinson

Photo of Gene Robinson
Bishop Coadjutor Gene Robinson giving his blessing


Editor Euan Bear shares her experience of the consecration ceremony for the Episcopal Church's first openly gay bishop.

      Getting into the arena at the University of New Hampshire on All Saints Sunday meant first passing a large van draped in banners calling on the Episcopalians to halt the ceremony lest God treat them as He (sic) treated Sodom and Gomorrah.
Photo of Protestor     
After climbing the stairs from the parking lot, we walked a gantlet of Westboro Baptist Church/Fred Phelps-style protestors (I did not see the man himself, but reportedly they were demonstrating at several churches in the area) outside the arena. Monitoring the scene was a collection of state, local, and campus cops, some mounted on horseback. To the best of my knowledge there were no physical confrontations.
      One guy addressed me directly, "Homosexuality is a sin against God, ma'am." A step later I turned and said, "No, hate is!" A few yards further on, I overheard a woman in the anti-gay protest pen telling an interviewer, "Oh, no, our God is not about love!"
      Even two hours before the ceremony's official start time, the line to get into the arena building stretched more than 50 feet, with many of the people waiting carrying ecclesiastical robes.
      There were three (pre-upgrade) airport-style metal-detector screening stations; workers confiscated camera batteries, pocket knives, bottle-openers with corkscrews, you name it. Press bags were gone over by bomb-sniffing dogs. The arena easily held more than 4000, the number of tickets distributed, but it wasn't full. One news outlet reported 2500 attendees, which roughly agreed with my estimate.
      The service started 20 minutes late with a choir of handbell ringers; it lasted for 3 hours. Parishes processed in from the Zamboni door with their banners and walked halfway around the arena before taking their seats in the sections above me. After various ecumenical and family guests, the bishops processed by, led by a fluttering, floating representation of a dove, with Gene Robinson in their midst. His presence was so unassuming that I wasn't sure it was him until the congregation behind me started cheering.
      Dressed in a simple cream-colored robe with a hood, he turned and smiled at the parish folk before walking over to his chair facing Presiding Bishop and Episcopal Primate Frank Griswold and the half-dozen senior bishop co-consecrators (including the retired Barbara Harris, the first woman consecrated as bishop, resplendent in a turquoise blue cape and miter setting off her coffee-with-milk skin and white hair). Another 50 bishops, dressed in white albs under sleeveless dark orange cassocks, sat in ranks to the left and right.
      At the center of the ceremony, Bishop Griswold asked for testimonials, an essentially pro-forma request. Letters and documents attesting to Gene's baptism, ordination, election as bishop by New Hampshire Episcopalians and confirmation by the national convention were produced and read.
      Then Griswold asked another pro-forma question: "If any of you know any reason why we should not proceed, let it now be made known." He tempered that request with a cautionary discourse. "You seem to be a demonstrative congregation," he said with a smile before he went on to caution those present against responding in any way, yay or nay, to the statements of objectors.
      There were three who spoke, some with clumps of supporters who stood behind them.
      The first was a Father Earle Fox of Pennsylvania. He said, "It breaks my heart to be here," and went on, "We are not to judge persons, but we are required to judge behavior." He then began detailing the sexual acts of gay men based on unidentified research (the third and last of his statements was "91 percent engage in rimming, which is touching of the anus..."). Bishop Griswold interrupted firmly: "Father Fox! I think you could spare us these details and get to the substance." "You know what I'm getting at," Fox returned. "Yes," Griswold answered drily, "I think we do."
      The second objector was Meredith Harwood, from Ashland, New Hampshire, who said that if the consecration were completed, it would "break God's heart." She asked, "How dare this diocese carry out this cowardly act of capitulation to an elite culture?" The third was an assistant bishop from Albany, New York, bringing a letter from 36 dissenting bishops.
      No other objectors spoke, and those who had - and their supporters - quickly left the arena.
      The Presiding Bishop said the substance of the objections had already been aired, and the consecration would continue. Bishop Griswold asked us all to stand and said, "Is it your will to consecrate Gene as your bishop?"
      The assembled spoke loudly and in unison: "THAT IS OUR WILL!" "Will you uphold Gene as your bishop?" "WE WILL!"
      The ceremony went on, with prayers and scriptures and a sermon from retiring New Hampshire Bishop Douglas Theuner that was relaxed, yet pointed. With ironic humor Theuner compared all the berobed ecclesiasts present to the scribes and Pharisees with whom the Biblical Jesus was so displeased, evoking gentle laughter.
      He told Gene that he was a "symbol of unity as no one else among us can be." When he said, "Gene, your presence in the Episcopate will bring among us an entire group of Christians who have heretofore been unacknowledged," sustained applause rang out again.
      There were questions asked of and answered by the bishop-elect. The bishops gathered round for the laying on of hands. Gene was named the ninth bishop of the Diocese of New Hampshire.
      When he was vested by his family - including his grown daughters and his partner Mark Andrew - with stole, chasuble (a cape-like outer robe, his made of gold-colored cloth lined in kelly green and patterned with green and red leaves), miter (pointed hat), shepherd's crook and all, the applause in the hall was sustained for a full five minutes.
      "You cannot imagine," said newly consecrated Bishop Coadjutor V. Gene Robinson as his voice cracked with emotion, "what an honor you have conferred upon me. I want to remind you of what you already know: that there are wonderful, faithful Christian people for whom this is a moment of great pain and confusion." Any who felt the need to leave the church over his ordination, he said, were "always welcome back." And he urged those assembled to use the worldwide attention his consecration had generated - "The eyes of the world are upon us, we couldn't buy this kind of attention" - for God.
      His first job as Bishop Coadjutor (the bishop who works with a soon-to-retire bishop whom he will replace) was to celebrate communion, serving the bishops bread and wine as teams of co-celebrants spread out into the stands.
      The new bishop was applauded and cheered again during the recessional, as the bishops in their many-colored robes disappeared through the Zamboni door.
      Outside the arena, the dozen or so Phelps-folk and their allies were still there in the evening darkness, shouting about hell and Sodom and Gomorrah. But now they were nearly drowned out from across the sidewalk by ten times their number of students from the university, some guys wearing shirts that said "gay? fine by me," cheering as loudly as they could and applauding everyone who left the consecration, thanking us, wishing us peace, holding signs that said "God is Love" and "Remember Matthew Shepard - Say No to Hate for UNH." They didn't have to do that, they had no formal structure writing the script, they just did it, and they kept it up for a very long time.

Euan Bear identifies as a skeptic regarding organized religion, following a traditional New England Protestant childhood.




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