Rock star wants to change Mormon faith
Dan Reynolds, lead singer of the Grammy-winning Imagine Dragons, is on a mission.
That’s nothing new for him. After finishing high school, Reynolds spent two years in Omaha, Nebraska, knocking on thousands of doors as part of his commitment to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. On average, only one in 100 homes he approached would let him in to share his message.
His new mission is trying to get the Mormon faith to be more inclusive for the LGBTQ community. The focal point of his efforts, the LoveLoud music festival, is the subject of Believer, a documentary that debuted Monday on HBO. It was released to coincide with June’s Pride Month festivities.
The determination Reynolds learned during his two years in Omaha became the foundation for his commitment to spark a change in church thinking.
“One of the things I talk about in the documentary is that a determined Mormon is a very scary thing,” Reynolds says.
“Mormons are taught to persevere for what you believe in. So, really, the Mormon church is really to blame for me rallying so hard for LGBTQ rights within the Mormon Church.”
How determined is Reynolds? He stresses he is “ready to go to war” and looks at the documentary as the opening salvo of a long and difficult battle to bring about change.
Directed by Don Argott, Believer looks at how after becoming aware of rocketing teenage suicide rates in Utah, Reynolds decides he’s been silent too long about the church’s intolerance towards the LGBTQ community. He starts with an apology to Neon Trees lead singer Tyler Glenn, who, after publicly coming out, left the church after he learned of its opposition to samesex marriage and policies banning children of same-sex couples from being baptized before age 18. Reynolds works with Glenn to help co-ordinate the first LoveLoud Festival, intended to promote greater LGBTQ inclusivity in the Mormon community.
Reynolds has focused his attention on the Mormon church but wants to show through the documentary the need for more inclusiveness is something that needs to be embraced by all religions.
“Mormons are only about one per cent of the U.S. population. The documentary is pointed at people of all Orthodox faiths. That’s a lot of the population,” Reynolds says. “It is really far-reaching to teach that to be gay is a sin.
“I think that the 20,000 people we reached with the first concert is a grain of sand. I hope this documentary gets into the homes of families, they sit down and watch it together and there are discussions around the dinner table. That’s the most important thing.”
Believer includes behind-thescenes footage of Reynolds as he deals with a long string of setbacks leading up to the concert. It also looks at those who are personally dealing with the church. Savannah is a young girl who comes out during a church service by saying: “I was made the way I am, all parts of me, by my heavenly parents. They did not mess up when they gave me freckles or when they made me to be gay. God loves me just this way, because I believe that he loves all his creations.”
There are also heartbreaking stories, such as the one shared by Alyson and George, whose teenage son, Stockton, committed suicide after feeling alienated from his community.
Believer also shows how Reynolds’ marriage to Aja Volkman was a major piece in his decision to find support for the LGBTQ community. There’s no question in Reynolds’ mind that he’s on the road he is today because of her. “She is such a spirit of love and acceptance and activist since she was a little kid, which, for me as a Mormon, was an alien thing,” Reynolds says. “As a Mormon you want to live an inoffensive life. She instilled in me the courage to stand up and to offend sometimes in my life.”
Believer shows how Reynolds needed that strength, as the initial LoveLoud Festival was almost cancelled due to problems that popped up in the final weeks. The concert does take place, but the results aren’t what Reynolds wanted. Months later, despite encouraging talks with the church, an announcement at its biannual general conference made an even stronger stand against the LGBTQ community.
Reynolds vowed to hold LoveLoud annually until it’s no longer necessary and swears to “continue to knock on this door until somebody answers.”