Los Angeles Times

Pasadena rector and crusader for progressiv­ism

- By Jennifer Lu

George Regas, a longtime rector of All Saints Church in Pasadena and pioneering crusader for progressiv­e causes who opposed the Vietnam War and embraced gay marriage, died Sunday. He was 90.

Regas died at his Pasadena home after an infection not related to the coronaviru­s, according to the Episcopal Diocese of Los Angeles.

When Regas, a native of Tennessee who was raised in the Greek Orthodox church, arrived in Pasadena in 1967, All Saints was a far cry from the liberal bastion it would become. Gary Hall, who attended All Saints at the time and was later dean of Washington National Cathedral, described the congregati­on as a “typical country club parish.”

Regas, who was 37 when he took the helm at All Saints, was not afraid to cause a stir. After he preached against the Vietnam War in 1971, some parishione­rs made a failed attempt to oust him.

Years later, as rector emeritus, Regas’ pacifist beliefs again attracted attention, this time from the Internal Revenue Service.

In a 2004 sermon that imagined Jesus debating presidenti­al candidates George W. Bush and John Kerry, Regas toed the line between expressing his religious values and political campaignin­g, an act that would jeopardize the church’s taxexempt status. At one point in the sermon, which Regas delivered two days before the election, Jesus said to both candidates: “The sin at the heart of this war against Iraq is your belief that an American life is of more value than an Iraqi life, that an American child is more precious than an Iraqi baby.”

The IRS sent a warning letter and launched a lengthy investigat­ion, which it ended in 2007 without imposing penalties. But the agency noted in a letter to the church that it considered Regas’ sermon to be illegal.

Regas sometimes took his antiwar beliefs to the streets and was arrested multiple times, including in 2003, when he protested the U. S. invasion of Iraq. A photo from 2011 shows him in a purple cassock and handcuffs, f lanked by two police officers, after being arrested during a protest against the war in Afghanista­n.

“You don’t grow up in the Episcopal church and not know the name George Regas,” said All Saints Rector Mike Kinman, who has led the church since 2016. “Every major issue that the church was moving forward on, George was on the forefront.”

Regas, who retired in 1995 after nearly 30 years as the head of All Saints, often said that a good preacher had a Bible in one hand and a newspaper in the other.

“You can’t read the Hebrew prophets and not hear that cry for justice,” he said in a 2014 interview with The Times. “The same thing in Islam — the righteous person shares with his brothers and sisters.”

Regas was born Oct. 1, 1930, in Knoxville, Tenn., and baptized into the Greek Orthodox Church. His mother died when he was 5. His father, a Greek immigrant, owned a restaurant.

As a child, Regas attended Orthodox services held at the local Episcopal church. He befriended the Episcopali­an rector and eventually joined the congregati­on.

Regas went to seminary after college, studied abroad and almost became a theologian until health problems brought him back to the U. S. After stints with congregati­ons in Tennessee and New York state, he arrived in Pasadena.

“A lot of people had issues with George, but he didn’t let people intimidate him,” said Mary Regas, his wife of almost 44 years.

“George could stand up against some of the worst evils, but he was never a scold,” Kinman said. “He always came from a place of love.”

Regas’ deeply held views about equality led him to support samesex unions in 1992, well before they were accepted in mainstream society. After years of appeals from gay and lesbian parishione­rs to bless their unions, Regas began what he called “a long pilgrimage” to research and study the topic. He deliberate­d, prayed and asked questions such as whether the blessings were Biblical and whether the ceremonies should be public. He also consulted the LGBTQ community.

The issue, along with the consecrati­on of gay bishops, split the Episcopal Church for years, with conservati­ve parishes breaking away to start a rival church.

In 2012, the Episcopal Church arrived at the place where Regas had landed long before, approving a liturgy allowing priests to bless the unions of gay and lesbian couples.

“In 1992, I began blessing samesex unions at the altar,” he said in the 2014 interview. “To think that we were doing that 20 years ago, and we survived. It showed that religion could be a place for all people.”

Susan Russell, an assisting priest at All Saints, said Regas “literally paved the way” for women to become church leaders and for her to marry her wife.

“For all of his larger- than- life persona, there was also a grounded humility to George Regas — that he didn’t have all of the answers, that he turned to God to feed him and guide him, that he turned to the community to be part of the process,” Russell said.

Regas put his belief in interfaith dialogue into practice. Two of his closest friends were Leonard Beerman, a rabbi and activist who died in 2014, and Hassan Hathout, a physician, poet and leader of the Islamic Center of Southern California.

Regas met Beerman in 1967 at an antiwar rally. During a friendship spanning nearly 50 years, they met regularly at Patys Restaurant, a diner between Pasadena and West L. A., where they would talk about pressing issues, their worries and fears. They attended each other’s services and borrowed ideas from each other — “sometimes attributed, sometimes not,” said Beerman’s widow, Joan Beerman.

Regas and Hathout bonded over their genuine interest in each other’s religions, said Hathout’s daughter Eba Hathout.

During the Persian Gulf War, Regas, Beerman and Hathout organized weekly services for Muslims, Christians and Jews to worship together.

Amid his activism, Regas attended to the spiritual needs of his congregati­on. In the f inal days of his illness, people told stories of how he consoled them through a divorce or a spouse’s death, or how he helped them achieve their own ideals, such as becoming a conscienti­ous objector.

“George had impact that was enormous in scale, but perhaps the biggest impact he had was one person at a time,” Kinman said. “Those are lives that are forever changed by him.”

Regas is survived by his wife, Mary; children Susan Regas, Tim Regas and Tyler Regas; and Mary’s sons Lowry Smith and Burke Smith. Regas’ daughter Michelle Regas Worrel died in 2002.

 ?? Nick Ut Associated Press ?? A ‘ CRY FOR JUSTICE’
The Rev. George Regas, left, in 2006 with then- L. A. Mayor Antonio Villaraigo­sa outside All Saints Church in Pasadena.
Nick Ut Associated Press A ‘ CRY FOR JUSTICE’ The Rev. George Regas, left, in 2006 with then- L. A. Mayor Antonio Villaraigo­sa outside All Saints Church in Pasadena.

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