Don't be so naive - there is no evidence that Farron was 'friends' with either Rigg or Lindsay - they were party colleagues.
Both links you provide are to articles written by senior LibDem party officials, written in the middle of a general election campaign where their leader's record on gay rights was under fire. What do you expect them to say under those circumstances - they will, and were almost certainly asked to by the campaign management, come to his defence. That both have distances themselves from Farron more recently speaks volumes as to their real thoughts on Farron and LGBT+ issues.
This is what Rigg said, when not required to support him in a general election campaign, triggered by his resignation speech, which you will remember effectively said he couldn't be leader and a christian:
'It was awful. Pious, self-pitying, upsetting to all three of the overlapping circles in the Venn diagram of liberals, Christians, and LGBT+ people, and semantically dubious to boot. I genuinely do not know what he was thinking, other than (I suspect) “I am knackered after a bruising election campaign in which I came within 500 votes of doubling our seats”. Many LGBT+ people are horrified that the speech confirmed all their worst fears about “what Tim really thinks”. LGBT+ Christians are horrified that he has posited a basic incompatibility between their religion and their sexuality. Liberals are horrified that he said that he had to choose between liberalism and Christianity, when one of our founding principles is freedom of religion.'
Note the line:
'Many LGBT+ people are horrified that the speech confirmed all their worst fears about “what Tim really thinks”.'
You're confused Prof D - it was Rhiannon who claimed Rigg and Farron were political friends and I was responding to her point that they were political friends. Let's not derail the thread by you irrelevantly insisting that your opinions on friends are right and anyone who disagrees with you is wrong. We'll just agree to disagree.
In fact the headline of Jennie's response to Farron's resignation speech was "Tim Farron's resignation speech was awful - but he was a friend to Lib Dem LGBT members".
I am sure it will be relatively easy for you to contact Jennie and advise her to stop being naive for describing Farron as a friend.
https://www.newstatesman.com/politics/staggers/2017/06/tim-farrons-resignation-speech-was-awful-he-was-friend-lib-dem-lgbtBy the way - you copy and paste the URL to add a link so people can read and interpret the whole article for themselves rather than take your word for it - if you only paste selective quotes without the link you appear dishonest and untrustworthy.
My view is that Farron has previously changed his political position on political issues - as have other MPs - and I don't have a problem with an MP changing their political position so long as they inform the party members and voters of their new position. I don't have an issue with waiting and seeing what emerges politically after his "awful" resignation speech in terms of his political work for LGBT+.
I don't care what his theological position is - he is not my friend, I don't need to hang out with him, this is not a personal relationship. Not that the media ever got around to asking him this theological question but if they did hound him on it and if he was forced to answer and he described practising Islam as a sin it has little impact on me and I think his freedom to hold that belief is more important than any discomfort I feel - as much as I believe your right to tell me I have inferior behavioural standards to you is more important than any discomfort I might feel about your opinion (given we're not friends either). It wouldn't surprise me if some Christians say that practising Islam is a sin based on their interpretation of their own theology.
Farron's speech started off well - he talked about his Christian faith i.e. his interpretation rather than saying he speaks for all Christians. But then it got awful when he started generalising by saying "living as a faithful Christian" as though Christians who disagreed with his interpretation weren't faithful Christians. But after that blip he went back to talking about his own short-comings in being unable to reconcile his faith with his role as leader - as he said a better, wiser person than him might have been able to deal with this more successfully. I didn't think that part was awful. And I thought the next part was spot on:
"I'm a liberal to my finger tips, and that liberalism means that I am passionate about defending the rights and liberties of people who believe different things to me.
There are Christians in politics who take the view that they should impose the tenets of faith on society, but I have not taken that approach because I disagree with it - it's not liberal and it is counterproductive when it comes to advancing the gospel.
Even so, I seem to be the subject of suspicion because of what I believe and who my faith is in.
In which case we are kidding ourselves if we think we yet live in a tolerant, liberal society.
That's why I have chosen to step down as leader of the Liberal Democrats."
https://www.libdems.org.uk/liberal-democrat-leader-tim-farron-resignsIn the world of politics I am only interested in Farron's political stance and how it impacts me.