Harmony wrote:The heirarchy of the church was created for one reason: to sustain the status quo. From the beginnings of the church, the leaders have sought to fortify their personal gain first, the status of the church itself second, and as an afterthought, they worried about the members only as circumstances forced them to.
I think the reason for the judgmentalism is rooted deep in church history. Our ancestors took great pride in being a "peculiar people". Due to the circumstances under which they lived, some of which they brought on themselves, they were persecuted, threatened, and driven out for being peculiar. It became a badge of honor, to be part of this peculiar people. Marching to one's own drummer was not acceptable; one had to march to the drummer called to lead the peculiar people in order to be acceptable. They judged, and judged harshly, based only on gossip and rumors. The same system is still in place today. Members are called into the bishop's office for a little chat, based on rumors and gossip. People are excommunicated, based on rumors and gossip. Some of our most basic foolishness, or as Packer says, "the unwritten order of things", a woman and man not married to each other are to not ride together to a meeting, eating with someone not one's spouse in a public place is forbidden, missionaries cannot ride in a car with a single woman, a single woman or family of only women cannot feed the missionaries in the family home, men should never openly visit women who live alone, etc. It is all based on accepting gossip and rumor as fact, which the Saints have done for generations, going to back to when Joseph was maligning the women who refused to marry him as whores. (That's one of the reasons why women are told to stay home with the children. What happens in many office settings? Women and men must work together, eat together, go to meetings together. The church cannot control the office setting, so they strive to control the women.)
I missed your post earlier, Harmony.
Yes, the whole "appearance of evil" concept was strongly preached in the 80's. It seems to have tapered off a little bit. But the rules around missionaries eating in a home with a single Mom, etc. are still very staunchly abided by.
It's interesting because I had never really correlated the whole concept of gossip and Church discipline with the early Church before you mentioned it.
Did Joseph really refer to the women who refused to marry him as whores? I would be curious as to where this is documented.