Hi GIMR, missed ya! Nice to 'read' You again! You said:
The LDS church has no monopoly on youth programs, in fact, I would say that many of the mainstream Christian churches today are upping the ante on youth groups (starting very early, kindergarten age to teen), because they see that society is not always the safest place to leave your kids alone. My church has an amazing youth program, they have resources for the kids, every tuesday night the youth come out to church, they get taught, they play games, they get to know each other. This is for kids from about ages 11-18 (pastor feels that any younger, you need to be at home in bed). Sundays the kids are off having fun together and learning what we learn that day, but packaged differently. I once worked at a huge United Methodist megachurch (about 3,000 members) that had a place called kidzone, they had nurseries for infants, and resources for the parents for every age group up to about 14-15. I was in the room with the 2-year-olds (can't believe I got paid to have so much fun!), and they were taught too, a ten-minute lesson from "Baby Bible". All they did was learn about a good character trait from a Bible character (like David, for example), and they were given sheets to color for the rest of the time.
If someone really wants to raise their kids in a church environment outside the LDS church, all you need to do is hop churches on sunday, ask questions. If you don't, then trust yourself and do it on your own. Either way, the ultimate responsibility is on the parent. (Bold dded by RM)
Wise woman! We have church-hopped for several years and, as you, have found kid/youth programs equal to & better than LDS programs--depends a lot on the Ward size & human resources at hand. The "United Methodist Church" has a lot going for it: programs to cover most spiritual/social needs, great spirit in the one we attended, highly qualified Pastors, music folks, & a Black Woman Pastor, et al!
My only fault-find is they still teach an after-life, and salvation by the blood of Jesus. Albeit, in a less fundamentalist fashion. "Charity" is what we felt to be most obvious in their congregation. Anyone looking for a better-church, check it out...
"...got paid..." Now that says a lot too! No frazzled, compelled called-by-"God" folks manipulated to obey authority! That LDS 'peculiarity' is another that hopefully will soon be "inspired" into 'past-practices'. IMSCO, that change alone could not help but improve local operations--in most cases. Seems strange, the richest church, per capita, works with 'slave-labour'--so-to-speak :-) chosen by fiat. One cannot volunteer, or apply for Ward positions... Like, why???
"Parents" are the key to "love-at-home" and justice-in-society. Too often folks join churches, in good intent, thinking the church can fix their dysfunctions. Rarely the case. Good-families bring into the (LDS) church the things that make the church good. Do well functioning, perceptive, compassionate families need the/a church? Possibly as a social/community centre--as the LDS pretends to be, but isn't. The fact still has to be accepted that religion and morality are not one-and-the-same.
Turn churches into Community Centres then maybe what Jesus taught about how to live together in 'Harmony' ;-) might eventually come-to-pass. Teaching 'Religion', hasn't done all that well in that regard--up to this point in time... Warm regards, Roger