If you think that’s what my point was, you are missing the point.
I didn’t choose Rwanda because your priest there killed ten times as many innocent men women and children as during the Mountain Meadows Massacre.
I chose it because the Rwanda bulldozed church incident is incredibly parallel to the exact hideous incidents of the MMM.
-A backdrop of extreme violence along religious lines.
-A low level member of the clergy instigates and leads the atrocity.
-Other clergy members are more distantly involved, and help the instigator escape punishment for a time, but eventually turn him over and denounce him.
-Numerous men, women, and children lured into a vulnerable situation, under the promise of protection, and then butchered.
-The instigating cleric acted without permission of the broader church hierarchy.
-However the church helped to “create the climate” in which the atrocity could occur. (Thanks, Rebeccca and Neb.)
-the church decries the instigator’s “individual act” but disclaims church responsibility. (As I think they should in both cases).
Rebecca, you say that the LDS church essay falls short of how you think a Christian religion should respond under these sort of circumstances. You are outraged that BY would protect Lee for two whole years.
theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/apr/08/catholic-church-apologise-failure-rwanda-genocide-vatican
I’m not taking The Guardian’s position here. I’m just saying that the tone here sounds a lot like your harsh judgment of Young and the modern LDS church for describing circumstances of anarchy and impending civil war in mitigation for an inexcusable atrocity. I’ve searched for the Catholic church account of the Rwanda situation, and can’t find anything. I hope you can help me. I could better understand your criticism if you can show me a positive example of how a Christian church leadership should respond to a horrible betrayal and atrocity like the MMM or like the Rwanda bulldozer event.
This isn’t about competition. Not for me at least. But your church has been around for 1700 years or so, therefore I look to y’all to provide me a positive example of the rules you’ve applied to judge the church of my fathers.