Posted by:
facsimile3
(
)
Date: May 22, 2012 06:33PM
When I left the Church I was bitter about the $50k+ I had sunk into tithing for the immediate five years prior to our exit, and even considered bringing a suit when they refused my formal request to return my money. I spent a great deal of time looking for hard evidence of fraud, only to discover that since the 1970s, the Church has been very careful to avoid outright fraudulent statements in official publications (e.g. seminary manuals, study guides, church magazines). It eventually occurred to me that the more appropriate tort would be negligence, which also carries a lower standard of proof than does fraud. Unfortunately for my case, I came to this realization a few months after the statute of limitations expired for negligence, which is generally shorter than that for fraud.
My reasoning for negligence is twofold:
1. The Church relies heavily on members to teach one another about doctrine and Church history. Members inevitably circulate myths and misinformation as facts, thereby creating a self-sustaining faith engine that indoctrinates each new generation with verifiable falsehoods and myths. I was the victim of such misinformation coming from my parents, seminary teachers, Sunday school and primary teachers, and priesthood leaders. Since the Church has full, centralized control over all official teaching materials, it is not unreasonable to expect that it should dedicate adequate materials to counter the misinformation circulated among the membership AND to fully disclose the uncomfortable facts from the early decades of the Church.
2. In the past, Church leaders and scholars have made false claims that were never formally corrected or repudiated. Instead, their books were usually just taken out of print and de-emphasized, or adorned with the standard disclaimer. This passive approach has left members to continue to trust and rely on these false statements, and continue to share them with subsequent generations. It is negligent for the Church to NOT correct the record when its leaders have profited from these books by virtue of their positions in the Church. Given its tight central control and the various forms of media at its disposal, the Church certainly has the ability and obligation to make a good faith effort at setting the record straight.