A Broadway power couple will join the esteemed guest list of the coveted Tabernacle Choir at Temple Square's annual Christmas ...
SALT LAKE CITY — The Mormon Tabernacle is famous for its "you can hear a pin drop" acoustics, which missionaries show off on visitor tours by literally dropping a pin. But for the past two years the ...
Mourners focus on hope Funerals in the faith known widely as the Mormon church are typically "marked by an ... Nelson's hymn 'Our Prayer to Thee' was sung The famed Tabernacle Choir performed a hymn ...
Carter Faith is bubbly enough to write a pop-country hook, but she's gritty enough to sing about dosing her morning coffee with whiskey, and sharp enough to hold a lifelong grudge. The North ...
Russell Nelson, center, sits during the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints' biannual General Conference in Salt Lake City in 2019. George Frey/Getty Images Yet one of his initiatives made an ...
(ANALYSIS) Russell M. Nelson, a former heart surgeon and longtime church leader, was 93 years old when he became president of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in 2018. But anyone who ...
GRAND BLANC TOWNSHIP, Mich. (AP) — The man who opened fire in a Michigan church and killed four people while setting it ablaze long harbored hatred toward the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day ...
SALT LAKE CITY — The Tabernacle Choir at Temple Square performed songs dedicated to the late President Russell M. Nelson on Sunday, filling the historic auditorium with music, applause and tears.
GREENFIELD — Through raw emotion wrapped up around his wife’s cancer diagnosis, a young Greenfield musician is touching the hearts of people around the world. Isaiah and Victoria Carrell stand at the ...
The New York Times found it remarkable that the Tabernacle Choir at Temple Square — previously the Mormon Tabernacle Choir — has broadcast its weekly show of inspiration and music with the same ...
On Sunday, July 13, 2025, The Tabernacle Choir at Temple Square’s iconic “Music & the Spoken Word” program marked a historic milestone, airing its 5,000th episode from the Conference Center in Salt ...
During the final song of the 5,000th broadcast Sunday — “High on the Mountain Top” — music director Mack Wilberg used the baton director Anthony C. Lund used in that first broadcast on July 15, 1929.