The Columbus Dispatch

Mormons cut some ties with Boy Scouts

- By Brady McCombs

SALT LAKE CITY — The Mormon church, the biggest sponsor of Boy Scout troops in the United States, announced Thursday it is pulling as many as 185,000 older youths from the organizati­on as part of an effort to start its own scouting-like program.

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints said the move wasn’t triggered by the Boy Scouts’ decision in 2015 to allow gay troop leaders, since Mormon-sponsored troops have remained free to exclude such adults on religious grounds.

But at least one leading Mormon scholar said that the Boy Scouts and the church have been diverging on values in recent years and that the policy on gays was probably a contributi­ng factor in the split.

Saying it wants a new, simplified program of its own that is more closely tailored to Mormon teenagers, the church announced that boys ages 14 to 18 will no longer participat­e in the Boy Scouts starting next year. The church said the decision will affect 185,000 teens; the Boy Scouts put the number at 130,000.

The loss is only a fraction of the 2.3 million youths in the Boy Scouts of America, but the organizati­on has been grappling with declining membership for years and has enjoyed an unusually close bond with the Mormon church for more than a century because of their shared values. Joining the Boy Scouts is practicall­y automatic among Mormon boys.

Boy Scouts of America spokeswoma­n Effie Delimarkos said the organizati­on is saddened by the decision but understand­s the church’s desire to customize a program.

About 280,000 Mormon boys ages 8 to 13 will remain in the Scouts while the church develops its program, the Mormons said. The Boy Scouts estimated their number at 330,000. The church did not say when the younger boys will be withdrawn from the Boy Scouts.

Like other conservati­ve faiths, the Mormon church opposes gay marriage and teaches that being in a homosexual relationsh­ip is a sin. The church initially said it was “deeply troubled” by the Boy Scouts’ policy change on gays but stayed with the organizati­on after receiving assurances it could appoint troop leaders according to its own religious and moral values.

In Thursday’s announceme­nt, the church said that it learned recently that the Boy Scouts are considerin­g admitting girls, but that its decision was made independen­tly of that.

Matthew Bowman, a Mormon scholar and history professor at Henderson State University, said the schism reflects the two organizati­ons’ diverging values, with gays and girls among the issues on which they are moving apart.

“The church is wedded very much to traditiona­l gender roles, and they see the Boy Scouts of America increasing­ly move away from that,” Bowman said. “That means that they have come to see it as less of a hospitable place.”

Thursday’s announceme­nt represents a first step toward something that has been in the works for years: a Mormon-run scouting-type program that could be used in congregati­ons around the world. The church has 15.8 million members, nearly 6 in 10 of them outside the U.S. and Canada. Scouting is available only in the U.S. and Canada.

“The long game here is the church looking forward to a time when Americans are even more of a minority in the church than they are now,” Bowman said.

Mormon teenagers who want to continue working toward the Eagle Scout rank will be able to do that on their own while also participat­ing in the new program, said church spokesman Eric Hawkins.

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