The High Commissioner noted several shocking recent
examples. “A few Sundays ago, in Madison,
Wisconsin, several CTR 7s were left to forage for their own spiritual sustenance
when neither of their teachers showed up,” explained the Commissioner. She went on, saying that “by the time we
found them, frightened and huddled in a corner (and perhaps playing Minecraft
on the tablet of one of the refugees), they seemed to have lost track entirely
of why they had arrived at church in the first place.”
Fear about their future and a growing desperation (often
masked by apathy, chit-chat, and Temple Run II) at ever getting their needs met
has only exacerbated the refugee crisis.
The High Commissioner also noted that local leaders, often
with resources stretched well beyond the breaking point, struggle to contain
the flood of refugees. On this point the
Commissioner noted that “a Primary President may try to find some parents to
substitute or may try to see if other classes can absorb the sudden influx of
spiritual asylum seekers. That sudden
influx,” continued the Commissioner, “can jeopardize another community’s delicate
social, cultural, and spiritual equilibrium, or worse, there may not be enough
treats for everyone.”
The High Commissioner on Primary Refugees’ press conference
has generated considerable conversation at all levels of the church. There are reports of efforts to give
Primaries across the church better safeguards to prevent the spread of the
crisis and resources to handle current problems. Unnamed sources suggest that fathers of
Primary children may receive additional training “so that when a crisis
presents itself, they can step in, meet the needs, and not just play hangman for
35 minutes.”
In contrast with the buzz generated by the High Commissioner on Primary Refugees, the Moderate Commissioner for Adult Sunday School
Refugees has seen his single suggestion for stopping his problem roundly
rejected. That suggestion was the
formation of an adult foyer or lobby class to count as Sunday School for those
(perhaps willingly) wandering adults.
Laughed out loud.
ReplyDeleteI know in our ward there are 3 year old refugees who are constantly stealing all the bread from the sacrament trays when it comes to them. Someone should really do something about their plight.
ReplyDeletein ward council on Sunday, I sat by the primary president who received no fewer than 4 texts from primary teachers who weren't going to be at church that day . . . she will love this!
ReplyDeleteHilarious! Very well done!
ReplyDelete