J
Joe_Kelley
Guest
Glad to see it was peacefully resolved.
This is pretty hard to imagine.Yes, if this pattern stays true to form, the LDS parents will encourage the 15 year-old to call them “mom” and “dad” and style themselves as her “new parents”. Then they will convince the girl that her real parents are “unworthy” and get her to cut off communications with them.
This is the pattern that is repeated over and over in the tales of woe told on “Mormons Have My Child” - a google email forum I belong to. This pattern of emotionally stealing children from their parents is SOP in Mormon culture.
I know it is not “official Mormon doctrine” but it is a staple of Mormon culture.
Very sad.
I was a Mormon for 11 years of my adult life (ages 21 - 32). I saw this kind of thing way too often. And since I left the LDS church I have known many parents whose children were stolen from them in this manner, but they did not know what to do about it until it was too late and now they have no relationship with their children or their grandchildren, not through any fault of theirs but because their children feel that the parents are unworthy and because if the parents will not embrace Mormonism then they are “persecutors” from Satan.Absolute nonsense. I was a member of the LDS church for several years in my teens, and I can promise you I encountered nothing of what you described. At best you may or may not be referring to an isolated incident, at worst you’re wildly fabricating theories.
The missionaries are transferred and gone. Let’s not turn this into a paranoid Mormon hunt.
I’m glad it was dealt with and resolved quickly. I’m a little apprehensive about the fact that they were just transferred to a different area, though. Hopefully they learned an important lesson and won’t try it again in their new area. The situation of the missionaries being in a house with two 15 year old girls, without any parental supervision, is certainly a very serious concern. :ehh:An update:
The mother had her husband call the mission president. The mission president promised to look into the matter and get back to him. Two days later, the president called back and reported that indeed the missionaries admitted to teaching this young girl without her parents knowledge, sometimes with the LDS parents present and other times when no parents were present (just the two 15 year-old girls and the missionaries). The president promised that this would never happen again and both missionaries were transferred the next day. He also promised to send a letter to all his missionaries restating the policy (no teaching kids without explicit parental permission and absolutely no teaching young girls without a parent present - permission or no permission).
The non-LDS girl’s parents are satisfied, but will never let their daughter go to that house again.
They still have a bad taste in their mouths about Mormons.
An update:
The mother had her husband call the mission president. The mission president promised to look into the matter and get back to him. Two days later, the president called back and reported that indeed the missionaries admitted to teaching this young girl without her parents knowledge, sometimes with the LDS parents present and other times when no parents were present (just the two 15 year-old girls and the missionaries). The president promised that this would never happen again and both missionaries were transferred the next day. He also promised to send a letter to all his missionaries restating the policy (no teaching kids without explicit parental permission and absolutely no teaching young girls without a parent present - permission or no permission).
The non-LDS girl’s parents are satisfied, but will never let their daughter go to that house again.
They still have a bad taste in their mouths about Mormons.
When I first permitted missionaries to give me lessons at home (I’d ordered a Book of Mormon online), my parents cautiously conceded. The missionaries and Church as a whole treated my parents with respect, knowing they were probably never going to convert. The Mormons even helped us move to different houses on two separate occasions (part of their “helping others” objective). Those are my personal experiences. Perhaps the wards I attended happened to just be the most angelic of all and all others are demented. Somehow highly unlikely.I was a Mormon for 11 years of my adult life (ages 21 - 32). I saw this kind of thing way too often. And since I left the LDS church I have known many parents whose children were stolen from them in this manner, but they did not know what to do about it until it was too late and now they have no relationship with their children or their grandchildren, not through any fault of theirs but because their children feel that the parents are unworthy and because if the parents will not embrace Mormonism then they are “persecutors” from Satan.
This is the LDS way of getting total control of converts. It is so ubiquitous that there are support groups like “Mormons Have My Child”.
You know just because I am a cynic, I would ask for a cc of the letter sent to all missionaries.An update:
The mother had her husband call the mission president. The mission president promised to look into the matter and get back to him. Two days later, the president called back and reported that indeed the missionaries admitted to teaching this young girl without her parents knowledge, sometimes with the LDS parents present and other times when no parents were present (just the two 15 year-old girls and the missionaries). The president promised that this would never happen again and both missionaries were transferred the next day. He also promised to send a letter to all his missionaries restating the policy (no teaching kids without explicit parental permission and absolutely no teaching young girls without a parent present - permission or no permission).
The non-LDS girl’s parents are satisfied, but will never let their daughter go to that house again.
They still have a bad taste in their mouths about Mormons.
Paul, I believe your claims are a gross overgeneralization based soley on your opinion or second hand information. Legally that would be slander.Yes, if this pattern stays true to form, the LDS parents will encourage the 15 year-old to call them “mom” and “dad” and style themselves as her “new parents”. Then they will convince the girl that her real parents are “unworthy” and get her to cut off communications with them.
This is the pattern that is repeated over and over in the tales of woe told on “Mormons Have My Child” - a google email forum I belong to. This pattern of emotionally stealing children from their parents is SOP in Mormon culture.
I know it is not “official Mormon doctrine” but it is a staple of Mormon culture.
Very sad.
Paul,I was a Mormon for 11 years of my adult life (ages 21 - 32). I saw this kind of thing way too often. And since I left the LDS church I have known many parents whose children were stolen from them in this manner, but they did not know what to do about it until it was too late and now they have no relationship with their children or their grandchildren, not through any fault of theirs but because their children feel that the parents are unworthy and because if the parents will not embrace Mormonism then they are “persecutors” from Satan.
This is the LDS way of getting total control of converts. It is so ubiquitous that there are support groups like “Mormons Have My Child”.
I would too. Of course I am also a cynic.You know just because I am a cynic, I would ask for a cc of the letter sent to all missionaries.
If you look into the LDS baseball baptism you’ll find a totally different story.I was 15 when I joined the LDS church (in the 80’s). When I went thru the discussions not only did the missionaries have to have parental consent, when I was baptized, parental consent had to be given AGAIN. And in written form. Yes, my parents had to sign a form of consent.
I have a hard time believing that these policies have changed. I can see some eager young missionaries going a bit rogue but meaning no harm (remember we are talking young men aged 19-21 or young women 21-23…I cant see a senior couple teaching teenagers).
Mission presidents KNOW that keeping the reputation of of the missionaries in his area is of great value. The idea of “stealing young teens out from under their parents control” would be detrimental to their image. The LDS church is BIG on image and positive PR.
I should qualify that I am speaking of American missions only. Probably European too. I have no idea of what happens down in South America.
What the missionaries show is not love, it’s manipulation. Love seeks the good of another person without expecting anything in return. A missionary being nice to someone in order to convert them is not showing them love, he’s using them to meet a conversion quota. It’s no different than an 18 year old boy seducing a 16 year old girl.Love and kindness are not “bombs”, but I guess if someone feels like they need to be wary of being “bombed” by love, then they have other worries in their life that go along with that worry.
This makes total sense; I would bet a majority of girls in that age group probably fantasize of the perfect fairytale wedding and having these young men tell them that they will be “sealed” for all eternity in the most beautiful temple they could imagine.Marie,
The 15 year-old girl in this case is gorgeous and I can see how a 19 year-old boy would be motivated to bend the rules in order to spend time with her.
They invite her to Family Home Evening, teach her about the pre-existence and eternal marriage and so forth…
As the early mormons used to say…" bring them all and bringum’ young."This makes total sense; I would bet a majority of girls in that age group probably fantasize of the perfect fairytale wedding and having these young men tell them that they will be “sealed” for all eternity in the most beautiful temple they could imagine.
My ex-wife used to tell me that when she was younger all she fantasized about, was being sealed in the temple. The way she described it made it sound like a fairytale. That was the end of our marriage, because I couldn’t give her what she had dreamt about.
It is still true. If a Mormon woman graduates BYU without her MRS degree, she is considered a failure.The pressure at BYU to get married and FAST was extreme at the time (the 80’s). I dont know if that is still true.
That’s probably true. 15 year old girls are often fixated on marriage, and no religion reveres marriage more than Mormons. So there is a natural appeal.This makes total sense; I would bet a majority of girls in that age group probably fantasize of the perfect fairytale wedding and having these young men tell them that they will be “sealed” for all eternity in the most beautiful temple they could imagine.
My ex-wife used to tell me that when she was younger all she fantasized about, was being sealed in the temple. The way she described it made it sound like a fairytale. That was the end of our marriage, because I couldn’t give her what she had dreamt about.