Faith+Values: Gay bishops: private lives behind the public activism
Two books paint similar pictures of Episcopal Church leaders who feared that gossip would overshadow their work.
I want to be known as a good bishop, not a gay bishop," said Bishop Gene Robinson. But so far, at least to most of the world, that hasn't happened. He's known as the homosexual man whose controversial election as the bishop of New Hampshire threatens to split the Episcopal Church into two denominations.
"A wide variety of the media typecasts me as a one-issue person, but if I were just a one-issue person, why would the people of New Hampshire want me [as their leader]?" he said in an interview. "I hope to open people's eyes to a much broader vision of me."
To that end, he has written a book, "In the Eye of the Storm" (Church Publishing, $25), which, as coincidence would have it, is hitting bookstores the same time as another book about a gay Episcopal bishop. In "The Bishop's Daughter" (W.W. Norton, $25.95), poet and author Honor Moore writes about her relationship with her late father, Bishop Paul Moore Jr., who spent 17 years as the bishop of New York without the public knowing that he was bisexual.
Both books paint portraits of men who worried that the titillating aspects of their private lives would have a negative impact on their lifelong work on a vast range of social and theological issues.
Faith+Values: Gay bishops: private lives behind the public activism
Minneapolis Star Tribune



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