3 ways to adapt your lessons to the new Sunday class schedule
We asked experienced teachers to share their best tips for narrowing down what to teach.
Youth, parents, and leaders are invited to participate by reading one chapter of the new “For the Strength of Youth” guide a week.
1 Min Read
This phrase from Exodus can change how you see yourself and your contributions to the world.
4 Min Read
All four older siblings have desires to serve the Lord.
1 Min Read
A thoughtful gift for the women in your life can say thank you in a lasting way.
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Reading about the Atonement is one thing but truly feeling it is another. This visual could make a difference.
2 Min Read
“When we turn towards Jesus Christ, we begin to reflect His light.”
1 Min Read
The temple features design elements that reflect the local landscape and communities.
1 Min Read
Podcasts
Using our influence as women of God to make a difference in the world.
Elder Neil L. Andersen recently joined his youngest son for a podcast interview. He shared what he’s learned from serving as an Apostle for over 17 years.
1 Min Read
During the ceremony, the graduates gave a standing ovation to their parents, spouses, and children.
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“The Savior comes down to us at our level, but He doesn’t leave us there.”
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Why do temples have symbols? Where do symbols come from? Is all temple symbolism unique to Latter-day Saints? These and many more questions like them are answered in Jack M. Lyon's new book, Understanding Temple Symbols Through Scripture, History, and Art. Following is an excerpt that gives five tips to help Latter-day Saints better understand temple symbols.
8 Min Read
I receive hundreds of letters in my office, and many of them describe the heartache that results from the categories we sometimes create for each other. Below is a letter describing the pain of being single in a Church focused on family:
1 Min Read
Not long after Michael H. MacKay took a job in the Department of Church History and Doctrine at Brigham Young University, he was approached by William G. Hartley.
4 Min Read
I was taught, as were many girls, that you should always say yes to a boy who asks you to a dance and even a casual date. Although times have changed, that idea still persists, and while on the surface it seems great, I want to explore what we are teaching our teens—both girls and boys—when we enforce that rule.
7 Min Read
As they approach later life, Latter-day Saints share many concerns with people of all faiths, such as financial planning, maintaining good health, and future association with family and friends. But some things are unique. Latter-day Saints live longer and have a different set of values than people of other faiths, which impels them toward a more active life of service and personal development. The high value they place on family life also makes a significant difference. Finding fulfillment in later life will depend on a number of factors, several of which are within our own volition. As we “embrace the future,” with all its opportunities and challenges, we should remember with Longfellow that “age is opportunity no less Than youth itself, though in another dress.”1
8 Min Read
As they swam from England to France—the Mount Everest of long-distance swims—brothers David and Richard Barnes braved frigid temperatures and treacherous water currents, faced high winds and waves, endured physical pain, tangled with jellyfish, and carried on through other obstacles.
5 Min Read
"I knew there was a void in my life," Natalie says about a time when her boys were young. Her husband, Ryan, adds, "We both felt like something was missing and we were just at a lower point in our relationship with God." As Natalie and Ryan searched for a deeper connection with diety, they attended different churches every Sunday, but nothing helped them connect.
1 Min Read
At 6:45 a.m. on Nov. 14, 1985, President Gordon B. Hinckley, chairman of the Executive Committee of the BYU Board of Trustees, received an urgent phone call from BYU President Jeffrey R. Holland.
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