Clearly
the hardest thing that I had when I was stake president is I was
president when the medical community first became aware of AIDS.
We had a significant number of our men who found that they had AIDS,
some of them had not been in the Church, the majority of them, a few
had. We found that we had seventeen men with AIDS, and at that point
there was no cure. And all seventeen of them ultimately died of AIDS
while I was stake president.
I learned some incredible lessons through
that process, that as a Mormon community, it’s a loving and
compassionate community. I watched Bishops who made incredible
sacrifices to take care of some of these young men who were dying. I
watched them try very hard to reconnect them with their families and to
have their families take care of them, and again at that time there was
no cure, and no abeyance of it. I watched them take care of each other.
And I watched some of them, one of them comes to mind in particular, a
returned missionary, in a single incidence of conduct, took it upon
himself to take care of the most difficult situations, those that were
the most ill, and he was the last one to die.
I think the lesson that I
learned from that is that as a Church nobody should be more loving and
compassionate. No family who has anybody
who has a same-gender issue should exclude them from the family circle.
They need to be part of the family circle.
Do we teach the
Proclamation on the Family? Do we teach Heavenly Father’s plan? Do we
teach the first chapter in the second handbook? Yes, we do. We have a
plan of salvation. And having children come into our lives is part of
Heavenly Father’s plan. But let us be at
the forefront in terms of expressing love, compassion, and outreach to (homosexual members), and let's not have families exclude or be disrespectful of those
who choose a different lifestyle as a result of their feelings about
their own gender.
I’m sorry [for the tears]; I feel very strongly about this, as you can tell. I think it’s a very important principle. (Elder Cook, "mormonsandgays.org")
2 comments:
I really, really like this.
I find it very unfortunate that 1) some people want to say that to withhold an endorsement of gay marriage, etc. just is to hurt them and 2) other people think that withholding an endorsement of gay marriage, etc. gives us license to hurt them.
Both of these people are wrong, and for a very similar reason.
I appreciate the sentiment of the posting -- but it is important that the homosexual family member also be respectful to his or her family.
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