stemelbow wrote:That's the general rule, but of course repentence is a personal thing.
much of it is, but when the offense is against one or more people then by LDS teachings the repentance process has to include making amends to those you offended. In this case it would mean going public an apologizing for lying. Simple as that, and I think you know that, but of course have a desire to protect an LDS President.
I don't think messing up when interviewed is something he needs to apologize to you about, for instance.
For lying, yes he would need to. If he got his facts wrong no.
He clarified to all he felt it necessary when he suggested that they need not worry, he knows and understands the teachings.
It didn't really cover what the church teaches about repentance. He did not admit to lying to the world. His admission to the members also wasn't really an admission of wrong doing.
And apology could've worked, but then all we're doing is berating him at this point. If his lack of apology was a mistake too, then I still don't see it as a problem, necessarily. It is that we all fail to apologize from time to time.
I have never made a big deal out of it, but he did intentionally lie and never tried to rectify that lie.