Doctor Steuss wrote:harmony wrote:[...]
That stake president would have sacrificed my son as an easy fix to throw a scare into the rest of the youth of the stake. [...]
Such an action would have only scared others into being too afraid to "confess" their sins should they commit them. It was over two years after my cupcake was licked before I talked to my bishop about it (and to a very large degree, the only reason I finally did was because of who the new bishop was… I.e. a compassionate, caring, wise man).
I've posted about unresolved guilt before, Dr. Steuss.
Because Mormons feel they should confess sin to a Bishop, then I'm sure they carry around a lot of unresolved guilt if they're afraid or embarrassed to talk to their Bishops. Having a particularly harsh Bishop makes matters worse, I know. I had a very harsh Bishop as a teenage girl and I'd have been terrified to confess anything to him, especially after I confessed to French kissing (after he told us to at a Standards Night presentation) and he punished me by disallowing me to do baptisms for the dead on the youth temple trip. I'd rather have wallowed in guilt and misery than face him again! It's funny, I felt dirtier after confessing to French kissing than I ever did while I was doing it, lol! I didn't even know it was such a vile sin.
Also, I've wondered exactly when some people expect to be told the person they're dating isn't a virgin? I mean, if folks are dirty after they're "used", like the cupcake analogy, chewed gum analogy, etc, teaches, then when exactly are people to make that known? Third date? Before the first kiss? When? It's obvious from the MAD thread that some Mormons still see "licked cupcakes" as undesirable, so should that be made known before even the first date? Would going ahead and stitching a scarlet letter "A" on the chest be the most appropriate thing to do? I honestly wondered about that question as a girl, and I wonder about how Mormons should go about it now? They should answer that question after those analogies. Maybe being asked that would give the teacher a clue that the lesson is morally bankrupt.
Just for the record, I married a convert and I have never, to this day, asked if he was a virgin before we married. I didn't care.
KA