Dear Elder Holland:
You have long
been one of my heroes. Your leadership while at BYU was
remarkable. Your approach as a speaker and writer to challenging
issues has usually in my experience been both enlightening
and uplifting. I particularly remember hearing you speak
while I was in university in the early 1980s respect the
nature of human dignity, the challenges you faced as a graduate
student laboring through "dark" times during which
you did not have enough time or energy to go around, and
other related things. You encouraged me while in similar
circumstances – a young family, not enough money,
way too much to do comfortably, and sometimes doubt as to
whether I could keep going.
Maureen Ursenbach
Beecher is a family friend, and has been liberal in her
praise of you from both personal and professional points
of view. Because of these things, I have chosen to write
this letter to you. It would mean a lot to me and many like
me if you would read it yourself, and assess the significance
of the issues it raises. They are of great concern to a
growing percentage of the LDS community, of which I still
count myself a member.
Personal
Background
I should provide
a little personal background. I am of pioneer stock. I served
a mission to Peru in the late 1970s and from then until
about a year ago I served continually and faithfully in
a variety of Church positions. I was called to be a bishop
at age thirty-one and served for a five-year term. I am
now forty-five years old. I have also served in most other
callings at the Stake and Ward levels. I released myself
from my last calling, that of Stake Mission President, just
over a year ago. Last December I resigned my membership
as a result of being required not to talk about things like
those published in Grant Palmer's recent book "An Insider's
View of Mormon Origins". I had agreed not to discuss
these matters in public, but the requirement was that I
not do so in private, even with other members of the Church
who were already well aware of things of that nature. I
was not prepared to agree to that.
My Stake President,
who I still count as a friend, developed his strategy respecting
me in consultation with Salt Lake City based General Authorities.
Hence it is fair to assume that he was following either
formal or informal Church policy in my case. I have heard
of numerous other similar cases that were dealt with in
much the same way. Spiritual and social isolation through
the suppression of communication appears to the common denominator
in these cases, presumably to prevent the spread of the
kind of "germs" Elder Packer described in his
influential 1981 talk entitled "The Mantle is Far,
Far Greater than the Intellect".
I am a tax attorney
and partner in one of Canada's largest law firms. I enjoy
reading and thinking, and was one of the more respected
speakers at Church meetings and firesides within our Stake
and in other places where we have lived. My wife and I have
seven children. Our oldest son is currently serving a mission.
One of my friends
here in Calgary, Bryce Tingle, has told me a number of entertaining
stories about his friendship with your son while at BYU,
and your concern with respect to both their advancing bachelorhoods.
Bryce is now happily married and raising a family. I hope
the same for your son.
Free
Will v. Authoritarianism
As I trace the
Church's attitude respecting freedom of thought, speech
and inquiry, I see a disturbing trend. For many years, the
Church's leaders from Joseph Smith through David O. McKay
encouraged these things. But it seems that during the 1970s
and early 1980s things changed, and since then questioning
and exploration have been suppressed. I was most discouraged
by President Hinckley's and your addresses at the last General
Conference. President Hinckley said:
The book of Revelation
declares: "I know thy works, that thou art neither
cold nor hot: I would thou wert cold or hot. So then because
thou art lukewarm, and neither cold nor hot, I will spew
thee out of my mouth" (Revelation 3:15–16). …
Each of us has to face the matter—either the Church
is true, or it is a fraud. There is no middle ground. It
is the Church and kingdom of God, or it is nothing.
And you said:
…may
I address a rather specific aspect of [our children’s]
safety? In this I speak carefully and lovingly to any
of the adults of the Church, parents or otherwise, who
may be given to cynicism or skepticism, who in matters
of whole-souled devotion always seem to hang back a little,
who at the Church’s doctrinal campsite always like
to pitch their tents out on the periphery of religious
faith. To all such – whom we do love and wish were
more comfortable camping nearer to us – I say, please
be aware that the full price to be paid for such a stance
does not always come due in your lifetime… with
payments coming out of your children’s and grandchildren’s
pockets in far more expensive ways than you ever intended
it to be. …
In such basic
matters of faith, prophets do not apologize for requesting
unity, indeed conformity…
In these and
a variety of other ways, your message seemed to me to be
that Church members should not doubt or question in any
way that would lead to disagreement with Church orthodoxy
as interpreted from time to time by current Church authorities.
President Hinckley
added that the issue is one of black and white – there
is no room for doubt or uncertainty.
Contrast these
with the following quotes from earlier Church leaders. Joseph
Smith taught:
I
will not seek to compel any man to believe as I do, only
by the force of reasoning, for truth will cut its own
way. (History of the Church, vol. V, pp. 498, 499)
I
ask, Did I ever exercise any compulsion over any man?
Did I not give him the liberty of disbelieving any doctrine
I have preached, if he saw fit? (Documentary History of
the Church, vol. VI, 273-274, as quoted in Alma P. Burton,
Discourses of the Prophet Joseph Smith, p. 105, 106)
It
looks too much like the Methodists, and not like the Latter-day
Saints. Methodists have a creed which a man must believe
or be asked out of their church. I want the liberty of
thinking and believing as I please. It feels so good not
to be trammeled. It does not prove that a man is not a
good man because he errs in doctrine. The high counsel
undertook to censure and correct Elder Brown, because
of his teachings … Whether they actually corrected
him or not, I am a little doubtful, but don’t care.
(Documentary History of the Church, Vol. VI, 273- 274,
as quoted in Alma P. Burton, Discourses of the Prophet
Joseph Smith, p. 106, 107)
And David O.
McKay, at the General Conference just after his famous encounter
with Sterling McMurrin and in reference to it, said:
Ours
is the responsibility … to proclaim the truth that
each individual is a child of God and important in his
sight; that he is entitled to freedom of thought, freedom
of speech, freedom of assembly; that he has the right
to worship God according to the dictates of his conscience.
In this positive declaration, we imply that organizations
or churches which deprive the individual of these inherent
rights are not in harmony with God's will nor with his
revealed word. (124th Annual
Conference, p. 24)
And my personal
favorite, from Hugh B. Brown, who said:
I
hope that you will develop the questing spirit. Be unafraid
of new ideas for they are the stepping stones of progress.
You will of course respect the opinions of others but
be unafraid to dissent if you are informed. Now I have
mentioned freedom to express your thoughts, but I caution
you that your thoughts and expressions must meet competition
in the marketplace of thought, and in that competition
truth will emerge triumphant. Only error needs to fear
freedom of expression. Seek the truth in all fields, and
in that search you will need at least three virtues: courage,
zest and modesty. The ancients put that thought in the
form of a prayer. They said, “From the cowardice
that shrinks from new truth, from the laziness that is
content with half truth, from the arrogance that thinks
it has all truth – O God of truth, deliver us. (BYU
Devotional, 1958)
There are many
other such quotes, but you are probably familiar with them
and so I will not take more space or time to repeat them
here.
It seems to me
that a sea change has occurred within the Church on this
point. It appears to me that Church leaders once were confident
that the more questioning and exploration occurred, the
quicker the Church's claims would be verified, thus leading
to a "Let's find out!" attitude. Now, it appears,
a lack of confidence in that regard has created a "Don't
look!" attitude. This, in my view, is a shame on a
variety of fronts.
Where does that
leave people who, with good reason, see issues that cry
out for exploration, and as a result perceive a spiritual
reality characterized by shades of grey? Is there no place
for them? I felt that there was no place for me, and as
a result my considerable energy and meager talents have
been directed elsewhere. Is that what the leaders of the
Church want to happen? If they continue on their current
course, I predict that it will happen with increasing frequency.
Obedience
to Authority Overrides More Important Values
I would like
you to consider the nature of the influence that you and
the other leaders exercise over Church members. One of the
results of the trend toward increasing deference to Church
authority is that the importance of orthodoxy within the
Church has risen to levels at which it overrides almost
all other values, such as the importance of love and respect
within family relationships. Hence, if after the most careful
study, prayer and spiritual effort of which he is capable
a person feels to disagree with Church leadership, he is
bad per se, regardless of what else he does or is.
Think of the
difficulty in which I find myself with respect to my family.
I am successful in most senses of that word. I have chosen
to dedicate myself to providing for and raising seven children,
and now one grandchild who lives with us. I have been faithful
to my wife throughout our marriage, and continue to be faithful
to her. I give heavily of my time and other resources to
community causes, many involving my children, such as coaching
sports teams and being involved in things at their schools.
I am in the process of looking for another church to attend,
where I will also give generously of my time, talent and
other resources. I am recognized as someone within our community
who has good judgement, is hard working and honest. Hence,
people who know me seek my advice and other involvement
respecting business, personal and community affairs.
I seem like a
pretty good guy, right? Well, my parents and other family
members are heartbroken and our relationships are in some
cases in tatters because of one thing – I have chosen
not to follow my religious leaders who first told me that
I must not question them, and then told me that if I did
not obey, I would have to relinquish my membership. My relationships
with these family members has been badly damaged, perhaps
irreparably so, because the value of obedience to Church
authority trumps all other values.
It is any wonder
that fine members of the Church who value obedience and
Church orthodoxy to this extent also have trouble recognizing
the condescending attitude with which they sometimes regard
others who are not of their faith, which attitude I held
myself until recently? Is this what Christ would want? I
am sure you will agree that he would not. But how can this
attitude be avoided by those who are taught to believe that
anyone who does not experience spiritual life as they do
is at best incomplete?
And what of my
relationship with my wife and children? My wife and I were
on the brink of divorce because she could not respect and
love me as I am now in the fashion she did the priesthood
leader I used to be. I could feel a loss of intimacy –
an emptiness and sorrow where her love for me used to be.
Something had died between us. Thankfully, she now recognizes
the legitimacy of my concerns respecting the Church's influence
in our lives and the importance of ensuring that our children
are raised with an understanding that religious matters
are not clear-cut. The world is full of shades of grey,
and the Church is no different. And while she continues
to be an active and faithful member, she respects what I
have done and supports me. We made it over the precipice
with nothing to spare. I recently became aware of an unpublished
master's degree thesis in anthropology at a Canadian university
that surveyed LDS returned missionaries who had gone through
something similar to what I have, and found an 80% divorce
rate. That does not surprise me given my recent experience.
And what of my
missionary son? I am told that he wept for most of two days
when he heard of my "apostasy." We have had great
difficulty communicating since then. And what of my faithful
LDS daughter who attends BYU? More pain and difficulty.
Other members of our family have reacted differently. Our
twenty-one and sixteen-year-old daughters feel that their
deep-seated concerns respecting many Church practices have
been validated, as have they themselves, by what I have
done. They are flourishing, but the fact that their views
differ from that of their siblings, and to some extent their
Mother, creates additional tension within our home. The
three youngest children are confused by all of this difficulty
between people who obviously love each other and yet behave
in some ways as if they do not.
How can we justify
religious beliefs that cause ruptures such as those I have
described between good hearted, moral, family members who
love each other, treat each other otherwise with respect,
and have dedicated themselves to building their lives together?
Does not such
relationship rupture, which I assure you is common in situations
similar to mine, suggest a dysfunction in the belief system
that causes it?
Religious
Faith Does Not Change Reality
Religious belief
is close to center of my life, as is the thoughtful examination
of the world around me. I think that my experience of attempting
to integrate the manner in which I experience the world
with my religious faith will be close to that of many well-educated
or thoughtful members. In short, in order for religious
belief to inform me and help me to become more spiritual,
more moral and a better person, it has to make sense in
light of my understanding of how the world works around
me. There is nothing new in this approach. Those who study
the formation and evolution of religious belief tell us
that this is how things have been for at least as long as
human beings have kept records, and the many of the changes
in most religions (including the LDS Church and Christianity
in general) can be cogently explained on this basis.
If my religious
affiliation is to serve a useful function in my life, it
must not require me to believe things that, on the basis
of reasonable evidence that I see all around me, are highly
likely to be non-sense and to disconnect me from reality.
And I must not be told by my religious leaders, in contradiction
to those within prior Church leaderships who I believe to
be among the most enlightened we have had, to suppress the
natural and healthy inclination I feel to try to understand
reality and harmonize my faith with it.
Religious history
is full of examples of how this can and should occur. Why
should I think that my religious beliefs will always triumph
over evidence that strongly suggests they are out of sync
with reality, particularly after learning about the many
chapters in LDS Church history in which misplaced belief
has given way as better information about reality has come
to light?
I feel that I
was being put by the Church in a position where my useful
desire to explore legitimate questions was being suppressed,
and by inference, that I was required to believe non-sense
in a fashion similar to the Catholics of Galileo's day.
As Leonard Arrington
said so well in one of his essays on this topic, whether
something is literally true or metaphorically true does
not matter. The Catholic Church first had to let go of the
idea that the earth was flat and then that it was immobile
and at the center of the universe, both clearly supported
by biblical texts that continue today to enliven organizations
such as the Flat Earth Society and various young earth creationist
movements. Why should members of the Mormon Church be required
to base their faith on the historicity of events that probably
did not happen? Faith so based is fragile, and much less
useful than faith based on the kind of metaphoric truth
of which Arrington and many others have written. If after
being given a reasonable chance and encouragement to consider
the evidence, members choose to base their faith on the
literal occurrence of certain events, that is fine. They
have their agency, and can exercise it as they wish. However,
it is wrong in my view to suppress the discussion or other
consideration of anything that might conflict with such
belief.
For example,
I acknowledge the possibility that the Book of Mormon is
an historic record. Whether it is historic or not, however,
is not important to me and nor was it to Arrington and countless
other respected members of the Church. What is important
is its value as a tool with which to explore and improve
my soul, and to enlighten my way through life. The truth
will, as Joseph Smith said, "cut its own way".
It does not need me, you or anyone else to protect it. And
those who protect partial, misleading truth that amounts
to falsehood may eventually look like those who ran the
Inquisition and persecuted Galileo. And the fact that the
religious and other leaders who made those mistakes did
so with the best intent and powerful religious faith will
besmirch both them and that kind of faith.
The Reality Gap
What about the
cost in terms of human suffering that is inflicted by the
Church's continued suppression of its history, and insistence
that the members not question or look? The gap between the
faith picture and the real picture will continue to widen,
and ruptures like the one I experienced will become more
common. And then marriages will founder on the rocks of
that same reality gap, as one spouse is less able to navigate
the treacherous waters surrounding them than the other.
And other family relationships will also suffer, as have
mine.
I note a tremendous
irony with respect to this reality gap. The greater the
gap, the more at risk a person is respecting the kind of
things I have just outlined, and the more painful the experience
will likely be when reality comes crashing in. For whom
is the reality gap the greatest? Those who are most faithful
to admonitions such as your "don't look, don't question,
don't doubt" advice in your talk last April. That is,
the most obedient to what the Church tells them are in a
sense those harmed the most.
I was faithful.
My faith for a long time trumped all else. However, as it
became increasingly clear that living as I was would lead
to spiritual death and moral dysfunction in my case given
my individual makeup, I began to try other things. Many
of my friends, who are still active members of the Church
have told me that my main problem was that I was too obedient
and did not read "faith threatening" materials,
and that had I done so (as they have for many years) that
I would not have experienced the rupture I have, and that
my spiritual life would have been more healthy all the way
along. That is, were I less obedient I would have been better
off. I suggest that any religious system that produces this
kind of result is out of kilter.
I further note
that I now spend a lot of time speaking and corresponding
with Church members about heterodox things that are not
taught through Church channels. Several of them have told
me that I aid the development of their LDS faith (one said
I was the "leaven" of his testimony) as we explore
spirituality in broad terms and how it is connected to our
common LDS roots. One of these friends lamented my departure
from the Church because, he said, our conversations are
so fruitful from his point of view. I then reminded him
that if I had remained a member, we could not have had our
conversations because of the agreement I was required to
enter into which prohibited me from talking about the very
things he finds helpful. I am assisting him to ingest the
spiritual food that should avoid the decay in him that led
to my questioning and eventual forced departure from the
Church. I ask how suppressing this kind of spiritual growth
can be consistent with Christ's teachings, or those of early
Church leaders as set out above?
The
Effect of Literalism and Authoritarianism on Spiritual and
Moral Development
Let's consider
the effect that the Church's attitude toward its position
at the pinnacle of truth and its leadership's practical
inerrancy have on the spiritual and moral development of
members of the Church. Many studies have been done that
show how people, as they mature, tend to grow out of beliefs
that are literalistic and exclusive in nature, and into
beliefs that recognize the metaphoric value of religious
teachings and the harm that is often done by believing that
any one religious tradition is God's one and only. Please
do not equate this with mere skeptical questioning or a
loss of faith. I am more excited about learning to be a
better, more moral, more spiritual person that ever. My
experience in this regard is typical of people who approach
life as I do, and we are legion, as well as being many of
your potential local leaders.
Can religions
function on this metaphoric basis? Of course they can, and
during the past couple of months I have found some much
larger than the LDS Church that do. Many of them do not
trumpet the "hard questions" or their answers,
but when those so inclined begin to question, they are provided
with ways to keep their faith intact as they evolve toward
the kind of metaphoric, inclusive view of religion and humanity
described above. They are also encouraged to be respectful
of those of their co-religionists who might find such views
threatening to their more brittle and less mature faith.
Why can't we do that?
My faith needed
to continue to grow, and the narrowness of LDS orthodoxy
did not provide the necessary room or encouragement. In
fact, it actively discouraged the growth that I needed,
making me feel for the past number of years that I was dying
from a spiritual point of view, despite my efforts to "lengthen
my stride" etc. in the conventional Mormon way. Many,
of course, do not experience life as I do, and feel that
Mormon orthodoxy is as good as spirituality can possibility
be. I am not critical of them, while wishing that those
who are part of my life had the chance to at least consider
a broader point of view. But why would we assume that all
will be like them, or that such is "the" way to
be? Life is not that simple. Many people are similar to
me, and the Church's current tendency to further narrow
the acceptable ways of approaching spirituality will drive
such people out, as it did me. I again ask, is this what
you want? Is this what Christ would want?
Other studies
have shown a strong correlation between people who think
in broad, metaphoric and inclusive terms and those who engage
in the most advanced forms of moral reasoning. That is,
people who believe that their religion is "the"
religion and that their scripture is to be literally interpreted
and is 100% "true" are often those who have trouble
making moral judgements that require a broad understanding
of humanity, its diversity, complexity and needs. Think
of September 11th and what we know about how fundamentalist
communities of all types operate. Regrettably, the LDS Church
is much further up the fundamentalist scale than is, in
my respectful opinion, healthy for many people. As a result,
Mormons tend toward a mild version of the kind of narrow
thinking that produces abhorrent, immoral, religiously motivated
behavior.
In that vein,
we should ask ourselves why a material percentage of the
Church's members in Utah and certain other areas are still
inclined toward a polygamous lifestyle, based on a literal
interpretation of certain LDS scriptural passage that are
no longer "emphasized". I was recently informed
of a family in Cardston, Alberta near where I live, who
after fasting, praying etc. and receiving answers in which
they confided, moved to Arizona to join a polygamous group.
I suspect that you are aware of many more stories of this
type than I am. It seems to me that the tendency toward
literalism and deference to religious authority makes members
of the Church vulnerable to this kind of thing. Section
132 of the D&C still says what it says. When this scripture
is combined with the behavior of the Church's leadership
between the first and second Manifestos, some charismatic
authority figures within the polygamous groups, and the
tendencies of Church members that I have noted, it does
not surprise me that these seemingly archaic and dangerous
groups continue to thrive in many places, including Canada.
The Church has inadvertently sown the wind in that regard,
and as a result some unfortunates reap the whirlwind.
Based on personal
experience and on my review of the relevant research, it
is my view that the Church's approach to spirituality, regrettably,
augers against the development of inclusive and flexible
moral judgement by insisting that it is the "one true
church", that its scriptures are to be interpreted
literally, and that its authorities are not to be questioned.
These attitudes shut down the ability to learn anything
that conflicts with the orthodox line in all areas they
touch, and so short-circuit many important moral judgement
and reasoning functions.
We
Have Entrusted Church Leaders as Our Spiritual Guides
We have entrusted
you as our spiritual guides. We look to you as both judge
and jury. It is not right for you to respond to that trust
by giving us a one-sided story and leave us to make up our
minds on that basis. This is what the so-called "faithful
history" policy does.
As Elder Oaks
said at a CES conference at BYU in 1985,
Balance
is telling both sides. This is not the mission of the
official Church literature or avowedly anti-Mormon literature.
Neither has any responsibility to present both sides.
In this he echoes
Elder Packer's "The Mantle" talk which was the
keynote from which my Institute of Religion instructors
taught me.
I can't tell
you how disappointed it made me feel to read things of this
nature coming from those to whom I had entrusted my heart
and soul, and to whom I had given all of the time and other
resources for which they had asked over a period of more
than twenty-five years. I did not know that they expected
me to act as judge in this exercise, while they presented
one side of the story and the anti-Mormons presented the
other. In fact, I believed them when they told me that I
should not read anything that was faith threatening. How,
in that case, could I possibly have acted as judge? And
if I could not act as judge, who was looking after my interest
in this matter? The Church led me to believe that it was
doing that for me, and now I find out that it never intended
to do more than advocate a one-sided position. It still
makes me feel ill each time I think of this.
I respectfully
suggest that you and your confreres have a moral obligation
to close the reality gap that is causing the problems I
have described. The longer you put off discharging that
responsibility, the more people like me and my family needlessly
suffer, and the more other Church members are being set
up to do the same as the Internet in particular brings vast
amounts of information into our lives that we did not have
access to previously.
The only reason
I am no longer a member of the Church is that as a Church
member my right of free speech was taken from me, and an
attempt was made to repress my spiritual development by
cutting me off from the only others with whom I was able
to discuss the things required to continue to progress.
I have trusted and looked to my church for spiritual guidance.
It has been the most disappointing and painful experience
of my life to see honest, sincere inquiry treated in the
fashion it has been in my case, and many others of which
I have been made aware. This ran contrary to all for which
I believed the Church stood.
I recognize that
the things which have so disappointed me respecting the
Church are likely done by well-intentioned people who think
that by suppressing free speech and thought that a greater
good is accomplished. I do not believe that to be the case,
given my reading of religious history and my own experience.
Throughout history those who have suppressed speech and
thought have done more harm that good – much more
– and in many cases have ended up looking, if not
playing, the fool.
The gap between
faith and reality referred to above has created massive
problems for members of the Church, and will create more.
This is like deficit financing – the larger the accumulated
debt becomes the greater the price eventually to be paid.
New
Fuel in a New Age
We have much
to be proud of with respect to our history and theology.
The real story is much more interesting and uplifting than
the sanitized one, once it is put in context. I marvel at
what was accomplished by flawed – even tragically
flawed – human beings such as Joseph Smith while illuminated
by inspiration's faltering spark. Those that came after
him fanned that spark into first a small flame and then
a refiner's fire that attracted and purified my great-grandparents
as well as many others, and that still burns, but in my
view not as brightly or usefully as it once did. The nature
of the fuel piled upon it has changed, and the fire is choking
and sputtering. That new fuel is the information readily
available to an increasing percentage of members of the
Church and others over the Internet with respect to the
origins and current reality of their religious faith and
the Church itself.
Where are baptismal
rates falling? What I learned during my recent tenure as
Stake Mission President suggests that they are falling where
Internet access, and hence access to information respecting
the Church, is greatest. That is not a good sign. The truth
does cut its own way. More information about the truth should
hence mean more converts, and the opposite is occurring.
Investigators
in "wired" areas tend to check the Church out
independently much more often than used to be the case,
just as they do when purchasing a car or house. When they
do this, they find credible information that contradicts
the simple story told by the missionaries. I have checked
this theory with some of my friends who, while I was Stake
Mission President, I encouraged to join the Church. After
expressions of initial interest, they politely declined
my advances and then seemed uncomfortable when religion
was hinted at during our social encounters. Now I know why.
What I describe
above is not the force of evil anti-Mormons amplified by
the Internet. Shrill, anti-Mormon rhetoric is not effective.
Well-reasoned, relatively impartial scholarship is, and
there is lots of that now available at a few mouse-clicks
distance. It is the gap between that and the Church's version
of many events that really catches the eye. And after the
most careful research I can do, I am not certain as to the
nature of the Church's foundational events, and do not expect
ever to be. But I am certain that my Church and its leaders,
who I trusted with all my heart, have grossly mislead me
as to the probability that the story they told me is an
accurate summary of the facts. There is great uncertainty
with respect to many important aspects of the stories I
was told, and have repeated and borne testimony to countless
times. This breach of trust has created a terrific sense
of loss in me.
I do not know
about apostasy rates, but you would. Do they display the
same trend as falling baptism rates? I will be astonished
if they do not.
Abundant information
is rich fuel that will drown fires that have insufficient
oxygen to deal with it, and will create great blazes out
of what may now only be sparks somewhere that have the openness
required to use that fuel.
Mankind, now
as ever, needs a meaningful spirituality. Most traditional
religions fail to deliver what is needed, at least in the
developed world. My perception is that the Church is also
failing in this regard. However, it is my view that the
Church has imbedded in its foundational theology and current
social structures some ideas that well suit it to provide
spiritual leadership and meaning in a world where science
and theology will walk increasingly overlapping paths.
You can increase
the amount of oxygen around the fire. That is what it needs
– the oxygen that will come from leadership openness
and honesty, combined with the greater exercise of agency
and freedom on the members' part. This will clear the smoke,
re-harness much energy (such as mine) that is currently
lying idle or directed elsewhere, and permit the best ideas
to step forward.
I implore you
to use your tremendous talents as an educator, expositor
and storyteller to help us understand our history and why
it has not been told properly until now. And then turn us
loose to govern ourselves. Encourage us and nurture us with
your wisdom as we seek paths through the ever-changing forest
that will provide us the joy of which the Book of Mormon
speaks. Encourage us to nurture each other in any way we
see fit, even if it means crossing organizational boundaries
in ways that complicate your administrative tasks. We do
not need to be controlled. We need to be nurtured. If you
do these things, you will provide the oxygen needed to restore
the fire, and close the reality gap. Future generations
will bless your name.
And please, get
us out of our current predicament in which we are surrounded
by ticking information bombs that at any time can explode
and disintegrate a picture that never should have been painted.
The good intentions of those who painted it do not help
in the end. Give us the meat that we have heard about for
so long. When is a 45-year-old former bishop with three
university degrees going to be ready for some meat? Treat
us like we do our children when it comes to Santa Claus
and sexuality. When we begin to ask legitimate questions,
do your best to help us understand instead of telling us
that our questions, and by implication we, are bad.
Conclusion
I hope you will
do what you can to reverse an unfortunate trend. And I again
thank you for all of the wonderful things you do. You have
a weighty responsibility made even more difficult because
of the virtually blind faith millions of members of the
Church vest in you. Such responsibility brings awesome duties.
I do not envy your position, and exercise all of my small
but growing faith in your behalf.
All the best,
Bob McCue
251209 Range
Road 33
Calgary, Alberta
T3Z 1K7
email: mccuer@telusplanet.net
Telephone: (403) 298-1070
Elder Holland did reply to Bob McCue's Letter, but requested
that it be kept confidential. However, Bob McCue did respond
to Elder Holland's letter.
You can read that second
letter here. (It's an 80-page PDF file)
|