Repent and return. I'm not sure about that. Leaders definitely make mistakes and excommunication is not something to put forward for someone to later repent and return; like an LDS RM leader told me. They (The excommunicated) are not coming back. That's what he is hearing in meetings. Of course they are not coming back. Why would they when what they did would be treated so differently in another church and congregation.Huckleberry wrote:Yellowstone, I know little about courts of love except what I have read here. I think the idea is to set up guides to repent and return to the church for people who make mistakes. It makes sense to attend if you believe and are holding some hope to repent and return. For individual who no longer believe I think it makes sense to decline to attend and just propose resignation. I do not imagine that making a big fuss over it would accomplish much.
But for Mormons is about power and fear. Just like polygamy.
It also can lead to PTSD symptoms: Losing jobs, no stable relationships, impulsiveness, outbursts to name a few. Give it time in 20 years and a thousand people who were excommunicated, not told they lost their blessings but went into deep details about their life, recorded on a real to real tape recorder by 16 old white men in the room will sue for mental distress and the fall out of that.
Do you know that it's likely that in the 80s the Bishop would hear a sexual sin and go speak to the stake president? Before long, 25 men and their spouses would know what happened.
Do you know that if a priest in the Catholic Church discloses a confession to anyone, even someone higher up, he will be excommunicated? They consider confession a sacrament.