Nonsense. He hasn't trusted any of them yet. He "required" their involvement for a period but he certainly didn't trust them. That was forced on him.
Now
that is nonsense. He was trusting them, otherwise, it would have made no sense to have that many random players in the field, which could make things go wrong at any second. He most certainly trusted them, but later flip flopped, and had to be talked down by Michonne
.
He won't trust them until they show they can be trusted. The first step towards that is accepting his leadership
..and what leadership has he actually demonstrated? In-series time, he just arrived on the scene, telling everyone how ill-prepared they were, but in the period when he was arguing with Deanna (late season 5), he's just
saying he's better prepared. Truth be told, this is a group that was recently and easily captured by Terminus, had a member's leg devoured by Terminus members who successfully tracked them, botched a trade with a valuable (murdered) police officer that ultimately led to a standoff and Beth's death, etc.
That is the recent leadership check sheet of one Rick Grimes.
Alexandria had survived for a considerable amount of time since the ZA--long before Rick's group was saved from the wild, while other groups--from Randall's Woodbury / Governor 2.0 to the prison, Noah's hometown & Terminus did not. Since luck does not exist, Alexandria's survival was no accident, and no, the immoral practice of leaving behind those in trouble was not the key to that success.
I don't mean it's useless in and of itself, I mean it's useless as a means of proving his worth to Rick.
If you cannot defend yourself--the most necessary of survival skills--then you're a greater liability than any questionable notion of worth in the eyes of another.
He needs to demonstrate that he is trustworthy and useful to the community. As yet, there's nothing to suggest he is.
--an opinion completely negated by Sasha's return from the edge of self destruction, and Maggie's own restoration of faith. Two extremely valuable members would hardly be in the right frame of mind dealing with suicidal thoughts and depression, respectively. Rick owes Gabriel for that.
None of that is character. All of that is charlatanism. Sasha and Maggie would be the ones who showed character in those situations. The prayer meeting is the same thing; it's about him and his need for comfort and purpose, not theirs.
That's simply an aggressively atheistic position, as Maggie--raised in a house of faith--would be more sensitive to seeing the difference between an honest believer and a fraud, and certainly would not encourage Sasha to participate if she felt that way--unless one wants to paint Maggie and Sasha as gullible / stupid women.
A completely different issue. We're talking about Gabriel's ability in the heat of the moment to put himself first and not run away when you're in a tight spot. Rick is quite right to be very wary of him until proven otherwise.
You cannot prove anything if you're constantly pushed away. Rick has lad to learn hard, lethal lesson before--all due to his one-sided, hostile behavior, and I will not be surprised if he's due for another class in 6A/E8, during the rest of the season.
Finally, Gabriel left a gate open and three walkers entered. No one died.
Rick did not kill Andrew, and for his troubles, his wife and T-Dog died.
As i've said before, if anyone wants to play the blame game, or question character, you will be in Rick land for some time before even thinking about another.
I'm not blaming him so much as pointing out that he's a liability. I'd still rather have Rick at my back when the shit hits the fan. That's the point.
Most of the WD characters were at the point of being untrained. Carol, Beth, Carl, Andrea, and others were once green in dealing with walkers, but they required training. No one was born being a survivalist killer.
And, incidentally, we also saw the doctor willingly joining a conspiracy to lie to the entire community, without even having the slightest idea why. We saw the kid stealing ammunition in order to murder someone. And yet Gabriel is 'the only one not on board'? Seriously?
Well said, and we can guess how Rick's WTF
trust in the son of the man he murdered will turn out. But Rick seems to think his every decision is prefect, and everyone else just has to accept it, so yeah, training Ron to use a gun was the best decision in the world.