He was my bishop when my father died, leaving behind a 29-year-old widow and four children. He is the reason I remain active in the Church and believe.
For whatever reason, Bob's post sparked a memory in me that I've shared before, but I'll share it again, for those who haven't heard it.
When my mother became pregnant with me, she had three children, the oldest of whom was 5. Dad was working on a Ph.D. at USC and working one day a week for an aerospace company. They had very little money and were living in a garage apartment behind someone's house. And of course they had no health insurance.
A few months into the pregnancy my mom started having problems, mostly pain and bleeding. The doctor urged her to abort, as clearly she would not carry me to term. When she said that wasn't an option, he told her she'd have to stay in bed for the rest of the pregnancy. My brother and two sisters went off to Utah to stay with my grandparents so my mom could rest.
When I was born, the doctor said I looked normal and healthy, which he considered a miracle. But a serious birth defect was detected, and I had major surgery the day I was born. Over the next five years I spent one or two nights a week in the hospital to have my esophagus dilated.
My dad had to quit school and go to work full-time (he never did finish his Ph.D.) to begin paying off the mountain of medical bills.
Throughout that six-year period, no one from the church helped out. No one babysat, no one brought in meals, nothing. Years later, the former Relief Society president approached my mom and tearfully begged her forgiveness for not helping. She said that in ward council, the bishop had said that no one was to help the Williams family because my father was not a full tithe payer. So no one did.
My father never told me this story until about five years ago. And I was thinking that, if Bob's bishop's example had kept Bob in the church, my parents' bishop should have driven me out of the church. But it didn't. My leaving the church had nothing to do with his appalling behavior, and frankly nothing anyone has done in the church has ever affected my beliefs about Mormonism.
I left because it isn't true. All the good or bad bishops in the world don't change that.