asbestosman wrote:Bishops probably do need better instruction on how to handle cases of abuse, but I don't know what they currently receive. Maybe this one ignored guidance?
I see nothing wrong with calling for forgiveness when done in the right context. The abuser needs to be brought to justice despite forgiveness (for various reasons). However, forgiveness can help one the forgiver to find personal healing. Yet reaching the point where that is possible is difficult.
Calling someone to be more obedient also has it's place, but the problem is that people in many stressful situations (abuse isn't the only one) may have more difficulty doing this, and repeated calls to obedience will likely only serve towards more frustration. God isn't going to withhold His aide because you're not perfect.
In my opinion, bishops have no role in the abuse situation. Not as confessors, not as judges. Abuse is a crime. If one ward member was caught burglarizing the home of another ward member, would the bishop be involved? Would he, along Elder Scott's line of reasoning, suggest to the member whose home was burgled that he explore the degree to which that homeowner is responsible for the burglary? I'd bet not. Does god cause the homeowner to feel guilt because maybe they'd previously invited the burglar into their home as a dinner guest, where he saw their new flat screen TV that was taken in the burglary? No.
But when someone abuses someone else, physically, sexually, and/or emotionally, why might the Brethren think god would cause that victim to feel guilt? Maybe because the Brethren have dealt with so many situations where the perp of the abuse is in a role of authority, and the Church is so invested in hierarchy and authority, the Brethren sympathize with the perp more than would be the case outside such a highly-structured bureaucratic organization.
Maybe it is because the Brethren are themselves hoisted on such petards of respect and authority that they naturally empathize with the abusing perp who was, vis-a-vis the victim, in the position of authority. So far removed from the subordinate, the weak, and the vulnerable, the Brethren assume in the abuse situation that there must have been some complicity for which god will cause the victim to feel guilt.
If anything, I think Elder Scott's remarks just point out how out of touch with reality the Brethren are. Not being snarky, maybe it is better if they limit themselves to dictating how many earrings people ought to wear per ear. At least that advice is pretty harmless.
What amazes me is how deluded the Church is about the effect of 'repentance'. Why when a scout leader has abused young scouts do they let him return to being a scout leader after he has 'repented'? You don't put somebody with a proven proclivity back in the 'candy store'.