honorentheos wrote:What I find most damning in Simon's response is that President Young clearly describes the justice of blood atonement, claims he knows of instances of it happening, and approves in his recorded speeched on the matter. To quote John D Lee's recorded account of such an instance is unnecessary at that point. Simon may say this one occurrence is not called for by the church but was just the actions of the same men who committed the MMM.
Frankly, I have very little patience with folks who seek to minimize drastically the culpability of LDS leaders of this period. Indeed, I think the better course would be to own up to the fact that Brigham Young et al. were culpable, and then move on. Of course, I am not one of those folks who thinks that every past misdeed of the LDS Church damns the organization in the present. Nor do I think apologists should run around looking to respond to every silly attempt to blacken the reputation of the LDS Church, no matter how old the history.
The problem for apologists is that their credibility suffers the harder they work to deny even the most obvious problems. It is when they seek to exculpate men like Brigham Young from every error that they cross the line from apologetic to Mopologetic.