Harvard Minister Rev. Gomes Dead at 68
A pastor, a gardener, a Republican, a Democrat, a gay man, child of God: These are terms used to describe one man, the Rev. Peter J. Gomes, longtime pastor of Harvard's Memorial Church who died Monday evening of complications from a stroke. He was 68.
"Just as there are no two snowflakes alike, there are no two Peters," Cynthia Rossano, Gomes' friend and editor for more than 25 years, said today. "He was unique. His personality was large and his character was deep."
Gomes was perhaps best known at Harvard for his role as a professor at the Harvard School of Divinity and where he served as the minister at the school's Memorial Church. But his voice and reach extended far beyond the confines of the Cambridge campus. He was a best-selling author who was named one of Time magazine's most outstanding preachers in 1979 and who preached at churches around the world.
"He was like a conductor in the pulpit, he really orchestrated an audience," Rossano said. "His depth of his knowledge came through along with his humor and wit when he preached a sermon."
The Massachusetts native was almost impossible to categorize. He was baptized a Catholic but grew up in the Baptist church before graduating from Bates College in Lewiston, Maine, and Harvard Divinity School. He was an African-American man raised in a Republican family who ministered at Harvard University and who came out as gay in 1991.
He was the son of a cranberry bog worker who went on to pray at the inaugurations of Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush. And he was a devoted minister who urged Christians to look beyond a literal interpretation of the Bible to capture its spirit.
"He taught Bible interpretation and he firmly believed that both liberals and conservatives needed to step back from looking at specific Bible passages that would only reinforce their point of view," Rossano said.
"In a way, he thought of the Bible as a living thing. He always preached against intolerance wherever it came from."
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