Acts of Faith
Thousands pour into National Cathedral as Matthew Shepard, a symbol of gay rights, is interred
By Michelle Boorstein and Samantha Schmidt
October 26 at 2:27 PM
Bells chimed softly, a flute slowly played Morning Has Broken and thousands filled the soaring nave of the Washington National Cathedral for the interment service of Matthew Shepard, the young man whose murder 20 years ago horrified the nation and became a milestone in the fight for gay rights. ... The poignant service was at once a funeral and a celebration of life, a moment of closure for Shepards loved ones and of remembrance for all those moved by the murder of Shepard, who was pistol-whipped and left for dead in a remote Wyoming prairie.
Presiding over the worship service at the second-largest cathedral in the country, in front of a crowd of about 2,025 people, was Bishop Gene Robinson, whose elevation in the early 2000s as the first openly gay bishop in the Episcopal Church marked another huge and controversial milestone in the push for LGBT equality.
In his homily, Robinson shared an anecdote from the first police officer who arrived at the site of Shepards attack, a remote fence to which his battered body was lashed and had spent the cold night. When the officer arrived, he said, a deer was laying beside Shepards body. Upon her arrival, the animal looked straight into the officers eyes and ran away. ... What she said was: That was the good Lord, no doubt in my mind.' And theres no doubt in my mind either. God has always loved Matt, Robinson said.
Rippling through the Cathedral at times was the crackling energy of a political rally, with Robinson urging the crowd not to simply commemorate Shepard but to train their eyes on continued discrimination against sexual minorities, especially transgender people, who he called a target" right now.
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Michelle Boorstein is a religion reporter, covering the busy marketplace of American faith. Her career has included a decade of globe-trotting with the Associated Press, covering topics including terrorism in the Arizona desert, debates on male circumcision, Ugandan royalty, and how strapped doctors in Afghanistan decide who lives and who dies. Follow
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Samantha Schmidt is a reporter covering gender and family issues. Follow
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