A documentary film on Gene Robinson, the first openly gay Episcopal bishop,is being featured today at the Sundance film festival in Utah.
“Love Free or Die,” is a documentary about Robinson and the rift within the church after his election as bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of New Hampshire. Bishop Robinson will be in Utah talking about the movie and meeting with local clergy.
“As far as we’ve come in terms of equal rights for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people, we still have a long way to go, particularly in the central part of the country,” Robinson told The Salt Lake Tribune this week. “If my story can help a young boy or girl in their teens believe they can have a wonderful and productive life and family, then it’s worth my putting up with a film crew following me around for two years in order to comfort and inspire them.”
The film follows Robinson as the church grapples with how to handle LGBT issues. Robinson’s election brought to a head divisions between liberal and conservative members of both the Episcopal Church in the United States and the worldwide body of which it is a part, the Anglican Communion.
Filmmakers followed Robinson to England in 2008, where he was excluded from a global gathering of bishops called the Lambeth Conference. And they followed him to the Episcopal Church’s 2009 General Convention, where leaders voted to give bishops discretion to permit blessings of same-sex marriages, civil unions or domestic partnerships (where legal) and allow gay men and women to become bishops.
Along the way, they interviewed Robinson, his family and other church leaders, many of whom supported his quest for equality and some of whom did not. In one scene, a woman sobs that she is torn between wanting to do what’s best for the people around her while also remaining true to scripture.
Filmmakers also interviewed other gay church leaders, including former Episcopal Diocese of Utah Bishop Otis Charles, who regrets not coming out sooner.
“It’s like trying to put on a suit that doesn’t fit,” Charles says in the documentary of being closeted. Though Charles didn’t come out until he retired, he has long spoken in support of fully including gay and lesbian worshippers and ministers.
Robinson sees himself as part of a new generation of church leaders who want to be open and honest about who they are. He wants to show that people need not choose between their faith and their sexuality.
“The church asks its clergy to climb into the pulpit every week and call people to a life of integrity, but for countless generations it’s asked its gay and lesbian clergy to live a life without integrity while calling on other people to do it, and that just seems crazy to me,” Robinson said. “I think people are drawn to a religion that supports integrity and honesty and openness.”
It’s a message Robinson and filmmakers know could resonate, especially in Utah, home to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, which opposes same-sex marriage.
http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/sundance/53324531-177/robinson-church-bishop-film.html.csp