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Latest from LDS General Conference women’s session: ‘Be cautious,’ apostle says, when it comes to Heavenly Mother “Sisters,” Primary leader proclaims, “the power is in us to bring to ...
The LDS Church announced Friday that its upcoming 192nd General Conference will be in person, after meeting virtually for the past two years. A women's session also will be held.
The general women's meeting represents an opportunity for many LDS women all over the world to learn and have their unique spiritual needs addressed. This session of conference also represents an ...
SALT LAKE CITY - (KUTV) -- The annual LDS women's conference took place at The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Conference Center in downtown Salt Lake Citybetween general sessions of ...
SALT LAKE CITY – A slight change to the name of a semi-annual women’s meeting put on by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints suggests a big change in how the LDS Church is working ...
(KUTV) The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints General Conference begins Sept. 24 with the semi-annual General Women's Session.The gathering of Mormon women ages eight and older begins at ...
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The latest from Sunday’s LDS General Conference: Heaven isn’t for ‘perfect’ people, says Young Women leader(The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints) Tamara W. Runia, first counselor in the Young Women General Presidency, speaks at General Conference on Sunday, April 6, 2025.
The topics LDS Church leaders discuss in General Conference messages to women — such as homemaking, birth control and motherhood — have changed over the decades, according to data from the LDS ...
Women have regularly been asked to speak during General Conference, but in its nearly 200-year history, there is no record of women leading the opening and closing prayers.
Moreover, the opening session of General Conference – the women’s meeting that happened last Saturday – was downright wonderful. The Relief Society’s focus on helping refugees and the ...
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is hosting its 195th annual general conference this weekend, a tradition it has kept since the religion's birth in 1830.
Though Randy Nicholls, of Auburn, Wash., hadn’t heard any discussions of women praying at LDS General Conference, he was startled when he heard on the television who would be praying.
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