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In March 2011, the church released a revised cut of the film, which is available to watch in select visitors' centers and online. [2] Additionally, the church has released the film in several languages including ASL, Spanish, French, German, and Japanese. The film is available for free on YouTube, on the LDS Church's official channel. [3]
Alyssa Grenfell was raised in an LDS Church member family and attended Brigham Young University (BYU), [1] where she adhered to the church's social and religious guidelines. At 23, [2] she was married in one of the church's temples, filling traditional expectations of her upbringing. [3] Grenfell's departure from the LDS Church began in her mid ...
60 min. Portrays the life of Joseph Smith, Jr.; released in commemoration of the 200th anniversary of Smith's birth. [7] Meet the Mormons: 2014 78 min. Documents the lives of six devout Mormons living across the world. Received a PG MPAA rating, and was distributed by the LDS Church to movie theaters, both firsts for the church. [8] [9]
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has an investment portfolio of over $100 billion that includes $55 billion invested in publicly traded stocks. ... In a "60 Minutes" special last ...
The head of the Catholic Church for more than a decade, Francis had previously never spoken at length with an English-language American broadcast network, and he spoke to 60 Minutes in his native ...
A production of CBS News, “60 Minutes” is the most-watched newsmagazine on American TV. Trump is currently suing CBS and its parent company Paramount Global over the program’s interview with ...
How Rare a Possession is a 64-minute film produced by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). It depicts the conversion stories of Parley P. Pratt, a church leader in the 19th century, and Vincenzo di Francesca, an Italian pastor in the 20th century, who both join the church after studying the Book of Mormon.
The church-owned Deseret News published the excommunication the next day, declaring that "Richard R. Lyman has been excommunicated from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints for violation of the Christian law of chastity." [8] Lyman's wife, Amy B. Lyman, was the general president of the Relief Society at the time of his excommunication.