
In any event, what says NOM about this? To me, it kind of illustrates how clueless Mormons are on how the wider world sees them, and the problems of having zero loyal opposition, or in the immortal words of Oaks "criticizing leaders of the church is wrong, even if the criticism is true." Members cannot see the challenges of their own church, even when it's reported in a neutral fashion in a major newspaper (albeit a notoriously liberal one.)
The best obit I saw, a middle ground between the fawning of Deseret News and the NYT obit, is on the faithful blog By Common Consent.
https://bycommonconsent.com/2018/01/04/ ... ore-104521
For those with zero time, it basically lauds the guy for being a service oriented dude, which he was, but then says this in a key paragraph:
"But gosh, the 10 years of his presidency were difficult. I’ll probably look back on this era not as one of increased compassion and charity, but as a divisive period when so many friends and loved ones left the church. I don’t know if that’s fair to President Monson. The world changed so fast during his tenure, and I may never know which church actions and policies should be attributed to him. There isn’t a lot of information about his deteriorating mental faculties, the mechanics of how specific decisions were made, or his views on crucial issues."
And that's how I view the Monson presidency; he was personally a good dude, but clearly there's been a large leadership vacuum even when he wasn't suffering from dementia. The gulf between conservative/liberal Mormons is even wider, and the Google apostasy has taken firm root during his tenure. And like the author, I'm not sure it's TSM's fault. But it DID happen under his watch, and I think the NYT was fair in pointing it out, along with the Ordain Woman and LGBTQ controversies. What say you?