C
Chris-Wa1
Guest
For those of you who keep up with developments in the Mormon church, there have been a large number of changes over the last couple of years to make the religion more palatable to the membership and keep the wheels from falling off. Naturally, the LDS leadership spins theses changes as new revelation (usually in stark contrast to previous revelation, which is never talked about), but the truth is so many Mormons are leaving and so many who stay are not putting in the effort to keep the machine running that the leadership is making one change after another to stem the tide.
Here are some of the changes:
Here are some of the changes:
- The required age for missionaries was lowered from 19 to 18 for males and from 21 to 19 for females. Why the two are still not the same seems weird, but the lowering was due to ever-decreasing numbers of young Mormons willing or qualified to go on missions and the ever-increasing number of missionaries coming home early for all kinds of reasons. They needed to get the numbers up.
- It was just announced today that missionaries will now be allowed to contact family members once per week (during their planning day on Monday) via phone, video chat, etc. Up until today, missionaries could only call home TWICE PER YEAR (Christmas and Mother’s Day for one hour each.) So many missionaries are coming home early they had to do something. Leadership used to say how important it was for missionaries to focus on their missions and not be distracted by family contact, so much so that even when missionaries who took ill or had serious accidents while away in foreign lands were not allowed to speak with their family (unless they were lucky enough to be hospitalized on Christmas or Mother’s Day of course).
- Church time was just reduced starting in January from 3 hours to 2 hours. Members were really getting burned out on spending so much time in church on Sunday at the expense of family. Sunday was more like a work day than a day of rest. In its place the church has started a home education program that the parents are responsible for. Somehow I think the stress level will still be high for those parents that actually follow through.
- Considered taboo in the Mormon Church until just recently, caffeinated drinks are now being sold at BYU and are no longer considered sinful to consume. For decades, consuming caffeinated drinks was highly discouraged and you would never find them in most Mormons’ homes and certainly not at their institutions.
- Female missionaries are now allowed to wear pants (except on Sundays). Still have to wear dresses to church on Sunday though.