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Come Saturday Morning: Two More Phelpses Leave Westboro Baptist Church

You may know that the Westboro Baptist Church, aka the extended family of Fred Phelps, has had a few folks leave it over the years. The latest persons to leave, two of Fred’s granddaughters, are notable in that they represent the rising generation that’s being groomed to take over the family when Fred goes to the Great Beyond.

Here is a part of Megan Phelps-Roper and Grace Phelps-Roper’s statement on their leaving the WBC — and being shunned by their family members still within it:

In a city in a state in the center of a country lives a group of people who believe they are the center of the universe; they know Right and Wrong, and they are Right. They work hard and go to school and get married and have kids who they take to church and teach that continually protesting the lives, deaths, and daily activities of The World is the only genuine statement of compassion that a God-loving human can sincerely make. As parents, they are attentive and engaged, and the children learn their lessons well.

This is my framework.

Until very recently, this is what I lived, breathed, studied, believed, preached – loudly, daily, and for nearly 27 years.

I never thought it would change. I never wanted it to.

Then suddenly: it did.

Here is Fast Company editor David Chu’s take:

[Megan] kept trying to conquer the doubts. Westboro teaches that one cannot trust his or her feelings. They’re unreliable. Human nature “is inherently sinful and inherently completely sinful,” Megan explains. “All that’s trustworthy is the Bible. And if you have a feeling or a thought that’s against the church’s interpretations of the Bible, then it’s a feeling or a thought against God himself.”

This, of course, assumes that the church’s teachings and God’s feelings are one and the same. And this, of course, assumes that the church’s interpretation of the Bible is infallible, that this much-debated document handed down over the centuries has, in 2013, been processed and understood correctly only by a small band of believers in Topeka. “Now?” Megan says. “That sounds crazy to me.”

In December, she went to a public library in Lawrence, Kansas. She was looking through books on philosophy and religion, and it struck her that people had devoted their entire lives to studying these questions of how to live and what is right and wrong. “The idea that only WBC had the right answer seemed crazy,” she says. “It just seemed impossible.”

Her Uncle Nate, who up to now has been Westboro’s highest-profile defector, has already offered Megan and Grace whatever help they might need. Godspeed!

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