just me wrote:Respectfully, can we keep this thread about what the Mormon interpretation is of these types of stories and events?
Just Me,
The very last stake conference I attended included a talk by a man who had served as the scout master of a ward. He had been asked to tell us about a miraculous event where a couple of scouts were miraculously saved during a snow storm after they were lost.
I was angry after the story. I could not believe anyone would see it as some miracle from God. Rather, it was a textbook story of how stupid, ill-prepared adults could endanger the lives of young teens who were trusting them to know what they were doing.
The details that stood out to me:
- None of the adults in the group had much experience in back-country camping or hiking
- Despite it being mid-fall, because the group lived in an area where the weather was ok that time of year, no one had thought to check the weather for the location they would be camping in. Turns out, it snows in the mountains that time of year, but none of the group was prepared for cold weather conditions.
- When the inevitable happened, it snowed, and the group had to make their way back to camp without adequate clothing in order to leave early, the leaders did not have a system in place where everyone was accounted for. So apparently two of the boys became separated from the group as well as each other.
- Faith promoting moment: one of the boys was discovered quickly by a leader after they had made it all the way back to camp. Don't remember the details of how. But the fact they had hiked for hours before getting to camp, had packed up and were leaving before anyone realized the two boys were missing killed me.
- Bigger faith promoting moment: the second lost boy, while walking, claims he heard an audible voice tell him to take one fork in the trail over another. By taking that fork, he came across a camp with people who were prepared for the snow, treated him for hypothermia, and saved his life. So when the leaders found him - the next day! - he was sitting by a fire in a borrowed winter coat waiting for them.
That was one of the worst stories I've ever heard in a church setting. Maybe it came across different to others. To me, the man speaking never once acknowledged that the leaders involved had no business leading kids into that kind of environment and that they personally nearly killed two kids.
I'm opposed to church scouting programs now, too.