Top 34 Quotes & Sayings by Gene Robinson

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American priest Gene Robinson.
Last updated on December 24, 2024.
Gene Robinson

Vicky Gene Robinson is a former bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of New Hampshire. Robinson was elected bishop coadjutor in 2003 and succeeded as bishop diocesan in March 2004. Before becoming bishop, he served as Canon to the Ordinary for the Diocese of New Hampshire.

If indeed this is the work of God... then it's a crisis that calls for the church to be its very best self, and not worry about risking itself for the right thing.
It's not about me. It's about not having to be ashamed.
I think people often come to the synagogue, mosque, the church looking for God, and what we give them is religion. — © Gene Robinson
I think people often come to the synagogue, mosque, the church looking for God, and what we give them is religion.
Sometimes there are things worth risking your life for. It was Jesus who said if you want to save your life, you have to lose it.
The truly longstanding tradition in the church is that some are called to celibacy. Some feel called to it. But the church has never supported that celibacy be mandated for someone not called to it. It's never imposed on someone.
Left to our own devices and passions, we human beings have a hard time seeing beyond what is immediately in front of us.
But by virtue of our baptism, Peter Akinola and I are brothers in Christ and one day we are going to be in heaven together, so we might as well learn to get along here because we will have to get along there. God won't have it any other way.
God calls all of his children to the table. We can disagree and even say a lot of hateful things, but what we can't do in good conscience is leave the table. Or demand that someone else not be at the table.
There are enormously gifted Episcopal priests around this church who are gay and lesbian, some of whom are partnered, who would make wonderful bishops and they're going to be nominated and they're going to be elected.
I will always speak out when someone says that a principle or a rule or a tradition trumps people.
Historically speaking, institutions are slow to change and usually resistant to any sudden moves - churches especially so.
When you claim to have the truth, as opposed to the truth as you perceive it, then you move us toward a theocratic view of government.
Stability is why society has an interest in marriage.
Discerning the will of God is a very tricky thing, partly because, you know, the little voice in my head can either be God's voice or it can be my own ego doing a magnificent impression of God's voice.
Only God is the same yesterday, today and tomorrow. The Church has always been changing.
I've long been really intrigued with what is the... proper role of faith and religion in public life.
And God is always calling me to open myself to all kinds of people that I've never thought about before and also calling me on this inward spiritual journey.
The state's interest in marriage is stability. Generally speaking, polygamy does not work for stability. Inherent in the whole polygamous movement is a deep and abiding misogyny and denigration of women. So polygamy is objectionable on lots of grounds.
What I love about believing in a living God is that I believe God is constantly revealing God's self to us over time, and with each succeeding generation, we come a little closer to understanding the mind of God.
It seems to me that if God calls us to anything it's to a life of integrity.
I think my election is one of several indications that gay and lesbian folk are being brought more into the center of things. I'd like to think that my election signals my bringing of gay and lesbian folk into the center of the church.
Faith is a dynamic and ever-changing process, not some fixed body of truth that exists outside our world and our understanding. God's truth may be fixed and unchanging, but our comprehension of that truth will always be partial and flawed at best.
You know, I think Jesus was famous and also in a lot of trouble because he always chose people over sort of established procedures.
I think there's a terrible price to be paid when your exterior life is not an honest reflection of your interior life.
You know, we live in a time when if somebody wants to kill you, they're going to kill you, and you can either go in a hole and, you know, pull the roof in over you, or you just continue putting one foot in front of the other and hope that you're doing some good in the world.
The bees learn where they live by landmarks. If they're moved within their home range, they get confused. — © Gene Robinson
The bees learn where they live by landmarks. If they're moved within their home range, they get confused.
One of the joys of being a Christian or being a person of faith is that you believe deep down that death isn't the worst thing, you know. Not living your life: that's the worst thing. And death is not, it's not all it's cracked up to be. It's not, it's not the end of the world.
It is at least a small comfort to me, as a gay rights and marriage equality advocate, to know that like any marriage, gay and lesbian couples are subject to the same complications and hardships that afflict marriages between heterosexual couples.
It seems to me, then, that vulnerability and and self-disclosure are at the heart of what we understand about the nature of God. And the reason I believe gay and lesbian people are spiritual people is that we too have participated in vulnerability and self-disclosure, especially in the process of coming-out. When someone shares with you who they really, really are, it is a special offering. To do so when it risks rejection is a profound, holy gift.
I believe God is doing a new thing in the world. God is always moving us to include more people in the kingdom. God has taught us that about people of color, about women, and now I think God is teaching that about gay and lesbian folk. And I am humbled and privileged that I might be playing a very small part in that grand and wonderful plan of God's.
My conservative brothers and sisters seem to argue that God revealed everything to us in scripture. Ever since, it has simply been our difficult but straightforward task to conform ourselves to God's will revealed there and to repent when we are unable or unwilling to do so. For me, there is something static and lifeless in such a view of God. Could it be that even the Bible is too small a box in which to enclose God?
I'll be at Lambeth telling my story
We love to talk about justice. It's the doing of justice that's hard...I believe it is work we are called to do
I've long been really intrigued with what is the ... proper role of faith and religion in public life.
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