Robert Williams (American priest) explained

Type:Priest
Honorific Prefix:The Reverend
Robert Williams
Church:Episcopal Church
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Retired:-->
Ordination:16 December 1989
Ordained By:John Shelby Spong
Birth Date:21 July 1955
Birth Place:Abilene, Texas, United States
Death Place:Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Tomb:-->
Religion:Anglican
Previously Southern Baptist
Partner:Kevin McKowen
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Alma Mater:Hardin–Simmons University

Robert Williams (July 21, 1955 in Abilene, Texas – December 24, 1992, Boston, Massachusetts), was the first openly gay male priest whose ordination in the Episcopal Church was acknowledged beforehand by the ordaining diocese and was consequently the subject of considerable publicity. Ellen Barrett, openly lesbian, had been ordained a priest by Paul Moore, Bishop of New York, in January 1977 and this was reported in The New York Times. There had been numerous ordinations of men and, after 1976, women whose homosexuality was known to their bishops and Commissions on Ministry but which were not publicly acknowledged. This is what led to widespread misreporting of the Williams ordination.

Biography

Williams, raised a Southern Baptist was a graduate of Hardin-Simmons University, and subsequently worked as a journalist in Dallas. He founded a branch of IntegrityUSA, a gay and lesbian Episcopalian organization. He took a Masters of Divinity at Episcopal Divinity School, graduating in 1988.[1] He was ordained on December 16, 1989, by John Shelby Spong, Bishop of Newark, having publicly stated that he was in a sexual homosexual relationship with James Skelley, a divorced father of two.[2] He was appointed as founding head of The Oasis, an outreach for homosexuals at All Saints Church Hoboken, New Jersey.[3]

The appointment caused a great deal of controversy, and in January 1990 Williams stated 'Monogamy is as unnatural as celibacy. If people want to try, O.K., but the fact is, people are not monogamous. It is crazy to hold up this ideal and pretend it's what we're doing and we're not',[4] adding that Mother Teresa would have benefited from having sex. He said of his exposure to heterosexuals that "in my pastoral relationships I find that very few people are monogamous individuals" and "I can't say anything good about celibacy. I think it comes out of a sex-negative philosophy." Williams was forced to resign from his ministry as a result of his comments. He embarked upon a study of human sexuality at New York University, moving to Provincetown, Massachusetts when he began suffering from the complications of AIDS. He sought to establish an Episcopalian healing ministry there in June 1991, but was denied a license by the Rt Reverend David Johnson, Bishop of Massachusetts.[5] He chose to run his healing ministry independently. He died in hospital in Boston on December 24, 1992, from AIDS, being survived by his partner Kevin McKowen.

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Hevesi, Dennis. (1992-12-28) No Headline - Biography; Obituary – NYTimes.com. Select.nytimes.com. Retrieved on 2010-11-26.
  2. Web site: The Williams—Asher Debate On Homosexuality . 1990-01-20.
  3. News: Goldman . Ari L. . Times . Special To the New York . 1989-06-21 . Episcopal Diocese Blesses An Oasis for Homosexuals . en-US . The New York Times . 2022-10-14 . 0362-4331.
  4. Web site: 2008-12-15 . Knocking Monogamy – Time . https://web.archive.org/web/20081215161714/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,969368,00.html . 2008-12-15 . 2022-10-14 .
  5. Web site: 2012-11-04 . Outspoken Gay Priest Irks Bishop . The Record (Bergen County, NJ) . 2022-10-14 . https://web.archive.org/web/20121104181613/http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P1-22590505.html . 2012-11-04 .