“Their kindness turned my sadness into great happiness.”
1 Min Read
“From the earliest hours, individuals of all ages responded to help those in need.”
1 Min Read
“When my children were young, I felt unsure how to commemorate the sad elements of Good Friday. In fact, I found myself wanting to skip past it.”
4 Min Read
Andy Reid, the Kansas City Chiefs head coach, will join The Tabernacle Choir and Orchestra at Temple Square in July as a guest narrator.
1 Min Read
Accounts of the risen Christ may do more than validate His Resurrection.
4 Min Read
The artwork depicts sacred scenes from the life, ministry, and teachings of Jesus Christ.
1 Min Read
Morgan Casteel believes that landscape art can communicate the Savior’s love in special ways.
2 Min Read
The exhibit is now open and will remain on view through 2027.
1 Min Read
These symbols from Palm Sunday can help prepare our hearts for Holy Week.
5 Min Read
“We saw on their faces the desire, even at such a young age, to already be missionaries.”
1 Min Read
This idea can encourage you to drink more deeply of the Savior’s living water.
3 Min Read
“Effective immediately, the bishop may call a man or a woman to serve as ward Sunday School president.”
1 Min Read
“As aspiring Christians but still imperfect saints, we may not always understand the struggles of others or know how to help, but we can always love them, creating safe spaces where others — and often we ourselves — can struggle with the ‘hard sayings’ in life,” BYU professor Eric D. Huntsman said.
1 Min Read
When asked who W. W. Phelps is and what he might be remembered for, most Latter-day Saints respond with something like this: “Didn’t he write (or compose) many of our hymns?” But when pressed, most even have difficulty identifying all of Phelps’s most frequently sung hymns such as “The Spirit of God,” “Now Let Us Rejoice,” “Redeemer of Israel,” “Praise to the Man,” “O God, the Eternal Father,” and “If You Could Hie to Kolob.” Virtually none realizes that in the Church’s most recent hymnal, Hymns (1985), Phelps has the largest number of songs attributed in some way to him. He has 15, more than any other composer or author except Evan Stephens.
4 Min Read
Do we understand who we really are? Do we grasp the significance of the divine potential that lies within each of us? Based on the decisions I see many people make—decisions that seem to be founded on temporal trivia rather than eternal truth—I’m afraid the answer is "No, not really."
7 Min Read
Though all scriptures are powerful and inspired, some of them stand out for their poetic language and use of imagery. Here are just 30 of our favorite, beautiful lines from scripture.
8 Min Read
I fell in love with Kelly Clarkson’s voice as a 13-year-old little girl watching American Idol. I’ll shamelessly admit that I still, nearly 16 years later, get teary-eyed each time I see the clip of her singing “A Moment Like This” after being named the reality show’s inaugural winner.
3 Min Read
Elder Bruce R. McConkie of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles wrote, “Nothing is more absolutely universal than the Resurrection.”[1] Though all people will be resurrected (1 Corinthians 15:22), not all will be resurrected at the same time. Technically speaking, there are four resurrections.
3 Min Read
When Lizzy was undergoing a divorce, she found escape during this "very bleak time" at the gym. It was there she also discovered an unexpected source of peace—the Book of Mormon. After her Kindle suggested the Book of Mormon for her reading list, Lizzy began a journey that would transform her life.
1 Min Read
We've heard them before. So-and-so's cousin was helped by three strangers he swears were the Three Nephites. Bigfoot is actually Cain. Or today's youths were generals in the war in heaven. Mormon myths and legends have become embedded in our culture, told around ward campfires, and discussed at FHEs. But they're just myths and legends, right?
1 Min Read
LDS father Craig Chilton was on top of a volcano when a 6.4-magnitude earthquake struck, and he thought he would never see his family again.
1 Min Read