charity wrote:the road to hana wrote:
[ignore charity's patronization, again]Yes, Charity, I know all about what ward clerks do, and am well aware that a head count is taken. That's not what I'm talking about. I'm asking, how would the bishop know if the student was or was not in attendance at a student ward, unless he was specifically looking for him or her?
Most of the branch presidents I had at BYU wouldn't have had a clue who was there and who wasn't, aside from people in higher leadership callings.
I just wanted to know who was taking individual attendance, if at all.[/ignore patronization]
Nobody is "taking attendance." Today, our ward had 208 people in attendance. I think I could pretty much write out a list right now of who was there. I'll bet our elder's quorum has a really good idea of who was there from the elder's quorum. I think our Relief Presidency knows who came today and who didn't of the sisters. Ditto Primary and YM/YW. This is not some fantastic trick.
And when you begin to "miss" someone, you look for them even harder the next time. And the next. I think you are ignoring basic human memory.
Again, I think you might be being slightly more patronizing than you need to be.
I've spent many many years in the LDS Church; I know the drill. BYU student wards are not like other wards, at least they certainly weren't when I was there. People aren't there for five, ten, twenty years, and like I said, when I was there, attendance was sporadic depending on whether people were in town or went home for the weekend. Branches then were quite large and not everyone knew everyone else. We certainly didn't sit around and pay attention to who was there and who wasn't.
Plus, that was before the block schedule, so we were at some meetings earlier in the day, and Sacrament Meeting on Sunday night. Someone might have made it to Sacrament Meeting, but not morning meetings, or vice versa.
I was in several student branches (now wards) while there, and I can assure you that there were only two branch presidents who would have known me by name.
I've been in plenty of wards before and since where yes, people knew each other and might have noticed whether someone was missing. For that matter, I could attend the local ward here and tell you if someone was out of town, and I'm not even a member.
That isn't the same as BYU wards, particularly BYU singles wards, at least, it doesn't match with my (yes, personal) several years of experience with them.