After the LDS Church retired “Beehives,” “MIA Maids” and “Laurels” as names for its Young Women groups, many teenage girls yearn for new monikers.
Classes for teenage Latter-day Saint girls once had names like Beehives, MIA Maids and Laurels, but those were removed in 2019. After more than six years, the groups finally got new ones.
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Until quite recently, the prevailing image to outsiders of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has been male missionaries wearing white shirts and name tags, evoked by ...
(RNS) — LDS church leaders have said it is merely a ‘narrative’ that more young adults are leaving the faith. But in the US at least, it’s a narrative driven by data. (RNS) — The research question I ...
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has introduced new Young Women class names—Builders of Faith, Messengers of Hope, and Gatherers of Light—drawing inspiration from the early 20th-century ...
MomTok is growing with the arrival of The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives: Orange County. “A new group of dynamic young mothers in Orange County collide in a community where beliefs are not just their ...