In some sectors of the orthodox world there is a tendency for people to effusively exclaim how great a Church leader or Church leaders are. Of course I’m not opposed in principle to making such statements, but I’ve wondered who the audience or what the purpose is of such acclamations.
If the purpose is to demonstrate solidarity and support for the Church or some particular aspect thereof it would be more effective to direct one’s rhetoric towards the Church itself or the specific characteristic or thing the Church is doing since, as the leaders would agree, the Church is the thing. (I could see some cases where support for the individual is warranted if they are being assailed by the media, but this rarely happens divorced from attacks against the Church more generally.)
While much of the time such acclamations are done tastefully, sometimes it can come off as hagiography for hagiography’s sake, and in some extreme cases has a bit of a “dear leader” vibe. Furthermore, there are several potential negative side effects:
- Prophets are people too, and are also subject to the risks inherent in excessive adulation. In a moment of more vulnerability and openness than we ever get from political leaders (see, even I do it sometimes), President Hinckley noted to Peggy Fletcher Stack that “adulation is a disease I fight every day.” I don’t know much about the personal lives of the brethren, but purely speculating I have this sense that they deal with people who (living as they do near Salt Lake City) either absolutely hate them or adore them. They don’t have the non-member neighbor Bill who thinks that Elder so and so is nice enough but that his dog could sure shut the heck up sometimes (again, purely speculating).
- The more we lionize and deify leaders, the harder they fall when we’re faced with their complexities as human beings. Dear leader-esque acclamations don’t help us easily transition to seeing them as human beings when they inevitably do something that makes us realize that if they are pricked they bleed too.
- When non-members sometimes hear us singing the praises of our leaders it comes off as a little culty. Anecdotally it has led to a lot of cringe moments with investigators in Elder’s Quorum and sacrament meeting.
So again, I’m not against providing some support per se, especially when they are actually under specific and direct attack, but it can easily slide into something that feels a little off.
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