Washington National Cathedral in November 2011 file photo
The Associated Press
The Washington National Cathedral, where the nation gathers to mourn tragedies and celebrate new presidents, will soon begin performing same-sex marriages.
Cathedral
officials tell The Associated Press the church will be among the first
Episcopal congregations to implement a new rite of marriage for gay,
lesbian, bisexual and transgender members. The church will announce its
new policy Wednesday.
As the nation's most prominent
church, the decision carries huge symbolism. The 106-year-old cathedral
has long been a spiritual center for the nation, hosting presidential
inaugural services and funerals for Ronald Reagan and Gerald Ford. It
draws hundreds of thousands of visitors.
In light of the
legality of same-sex marriage in the District of Columbia and now
Maryland, the Rt. Rev. Mariann Edgar Budde, the Episcopal bishop of
Washington, decided in December to allow an expansion of the Christian
marriage sacrament. The diocese covers the district and four counties in
Maryland. The change is allowed under a "local option" granted by the
church's General Convention, church leaders said. Each priest in the
diocese can then decide whether to perform same-sex unions.
The
Very Rev. Gary Hall, the cathedral's dean, said performing same-sex
marriages is an opportunity to break down barriers and build a more
inclusive community "that reflects the diversity of God's world."
"I
read the Bible as seriously as fundamentalists do," Hall told the AP.
"And my reading of the Bible leads me to want to do this because I think
it's being faithful to the kind of community that Jesus would have us
be."
Celebrating same-sex weddings is important beyond
the Episcopal Church, Hall said. Church debate is largely settled on the
matter, allowing for local decisions, he said. The move is also a
chance to influence the nation.
"As a kind of
tall-steeple, public church in the nation's capital, by saying we're
going to bless same-sex marriages, conduct same-sex marriages, we are
really trying to take the next step for marriage equality in the nation
and in the culture," Hall said.
Hall is the 10th dean of
the cathedral and has been an ordained minister for more than 35 years.
He said he began performing same-sex blessings in 1990 when he served at
All Saints Church in Pasadena, Calif.
It will likely be
six months to a year before the first gay marriages are performed at the
cathedral due to its busy schedule and its pre-marital counseling
requirement. Generally, only couples affiliated with the cathedral will
be eligible. Church leaders had not received any requests for weddings
ahead of Wednesday's announcement.
While Hall does not
expect any objections within the National Cathedral congregation, he
said the change may draw criticism from outside. It may be divisive for
some, just as it was to preach against segregation or to push for the
ordination of women, Hall said.
The New York-based
Episcopal Church is the U.S. body of the 77 million-member Anglican
Communion. The House of Bishops voted last year, 111-41, to authorize a
provisional rite for same-sex unions. Some congregations have left the
church over its inclusion of gays and lesbians over the years.
Same-sex
marriage is now legal in nine states and the District of Columbia.
Legislators in Illinois and Rhode Island are set to take up bills to
possibly join them, and the Supreme Court is scheduled to hear cases on
gay marriage in March.
The first same-sex wedding
performed last month at West Point's Cadet Chapel drew some protests
from conservatives. The National Cathedral is even more visible.
Hall,
the cathedral dean, said the church has a long history of taking stands
on public issues. But he said he sees marriage as a human issue, not a
political issue.
"For us to be able to say we embrace
same-sex marriage as a tool for faithful people to live their lives as
Christian people," he said, "for us to be able to say that at a moment
when so many other barriers toward full equality and full inclusion for
gay and lesbian people are falling, I think it is an important symbolic
moment."