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To: All
Why December 9? Why would the Mormon church choose to release this statement now?

Well, Nelson Mandela spent all Summer in a hospital with a reoccurring lung infection; and then was back in the hospital by Nov. 13. His health has been continually in decline this year.

And this was regularly conveyed in the media.

I believe the PR folks @ Salt Lake City realized that one day soon Mandela would pass away. And so they drafted and redrafted and redrafted and redrafted and redrafted a very fine-tuned "crafted" message that would toss their own historical guilt right alongside the white guilt of South Africa. They were simply waiting for Mandela to die.

That way, in coming out of the racist closet, they wouldn't have to "be alone." They wouldn't be bare naked. They could "atone" for their corporate sin without somebody doing it bloodily...

Besides...people are quite busy in December...pre-occupied with other things...it's the "Friday afternoon" of the 12-month calendar.

3 posted on 12/10/2013 5:46:37 AM PST by Colofornian
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To: Colofornian; All
Here's one Mormon blog by Gina Colvin commenting on the Mandela timing of this statement:
Mormons, Mandela, and the Race and Priesthood Statement:

Colvin's blog excerpt:

Call me cynical but the timing of the Race and the Priesthood statement from the LDS Newsroom; the PR department; the First Presidency, or wherever it came from appears to be an effort, in light of Mandela’s death, to mitigate for the church being positioned on the bad side history. Or perhaps it’s just a coincidence. Either way, as a church we have no right to effuse over Mandela’s Long Walk to Freedom...

Cont'd: His greatest work was as a political subversive and in his challenge to the racial, political and economic order of things, the very things our church has historically excommunicated for – calling it ‘apostasy’. So we don’t get to join hands with the rest of the world in celebrating a figure who would have been deprived of influence, priesthood, and even membership had he been a Mormon. And notwithstanding the long awaited honesty of the Race and the Priesthood statement, we are not yet that church that was once racist, and is no longer. Yet more needs to be said and done.

Cont'd:

Firstly, an apology is in order. The lives of faithful people both black and white were destroyed, upended, devastated by this doctrine. There are generations and generations of Black and Coloured folk who have had to wonder who they are in God’s eyes because church leaders sustained a discourse that blatantly positioned them as inferior. They need an apology.

Cont'd:

There were those who were excommunicated for their outspoken criticism of the church’s position on the divine order of mortal color – have they received an apology and a reinstatement– even posthumously? They deserve an apology. And there are white folk who have been lead astray be a vicious doctrine upheld by white men. White priesthood leaders who have not had to think about what their own race means in the order of Godly things and have apparently privileged their own credibility as inspired religious leaders above their need to put things right, and they have not put things right when they could have been put right – white folk deserve an apology for being lead to believe things that are simply not true.

And this admission has taken a long, long time, too long in fact – a wait that deserves an apology in and of itself.

Secondly, this is not something for the newsroom alone. This is not an incidental explanation that gets to sneak in quietly on a discrete webpage. The racial theories of the past were declared, understood and promulgated as doctrines and thus need to be officially repudiated in General Conference, as letters to be read by Bishoprics to their congregations, in addendum documents provided with curriculum materials. This statement should have come with an explanatory letter from the First Presidency, signed by the First Presidency and Quorum of the Twelve and backed up with procedures for dealing with those who continue to teach and preach these spurious doctrines. There must be some protection for those who will continue to be affected by those who cling to these false doctrines, and feel justified in preaching them in church. Will those who refuse to part with their racist accounting of the order of heaven be treated as harshly as those who had in the past raised the voice of protest to those racist doctrines?

Thirdly...there are huge implications in this admission of wrong that now need to be tackled; 1) Those we had thought were talking to God, had in fact made a God of their culture, their politics, their privilege, their race. They were wrong. What else have they been wrong about?
2) Given that they were wrong and it has taken the Brethren this long to admit it, what do we accept now as doctrine that might be repudiated in a few years time?
3) Where are the curriculum lessons that address our need to deal with institutional and even prophetic error?

Bingo...

This Mormon blogger is starting to "get it."

4 posted on 12/10/2013 6:03:15 AM PST by Colofornian
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