moksha wrote: ↑Tue Feb 26, 2019 7:52 pm
I imagine that General Authorities will continue to be picked because they mirror the attitudes and values of the current GAs sitting in the board room. They will represent point A, while the Millennial LDS and those who follow them will be moving way past point A. The further the gulf the higher the dropout rate for Millennials and subsequent generations of young LDS.
Just a thought.
Right. One charitable way to look at the apostles is that they are the "current" victims of the LDS advancement process. This process evolved over decades and has resulted in this deeply conservative leadership pool that values unity and stability far more than the radical prophets that founded the LDS church.
It's no secret that the LDS church tracks its leadership candidates. Any large organization would prudently do so. A man gets ordained as a ward bishop and his performance is watched. The best bishops become stake president, and the best stake presidents become Seventies, Mission Presidents, and Temple Presidents. The "very elect" are in the final pool that become apostles.
Each position a
man holds (again, sorry ladies) gives him the chance to show what he is made of and his loyalty to the organization. The men who ascend to the highest quorum have demonstrated decades of loyalty and service to the institutional church. At any step, a man will simply "not be advanced" due to
any embarassment or disployalty, however slight or well-meaning. It's not that this is a bad thing since there are plenty of ex-bishops who continue to serve in their wards and enjoy their church experience. But the LDS church needs men who will advance the agenda.
The other half of the problem is a defining contrast between a church and a corporation. If a publicly traded company is not doing well, they can fire their CEO and pull in some new guy to shake things up. This is sometimes a really good plan and you get some well known leaders who moved their companies through rough times. Lee Iacocca came into Chrysler in the 1980s to do just this.
But the LDS church cannot "fire their CEO" nor "hire someone from outside their organization". What would they do? Contact a Roman Catholic Cardinal or ex-Pope to come in and give them new direction? Pope Benedict XVI is still around and he's considered a religious conservative. But there is no way that this kind of infusion of new ideas would ever work in the LDS church. It's stuck in this process. The only question is whether or not
we, as the members, will also be stuck with them.