Sunday, November 2, 2025

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Poised to Establish Presence in Seychelles

On October 29, 2025, Elder Ronald A. Rasband of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints met with the vice president of the Republic of Seychelles. This marks what appears to be the first visit of an apostle to the island nation of Seychelles which is inhabited by approximately 100,000 people. The Church has never maintained an official presence in Seychelles. In 2018, the country was placed under the Africa Southeast Area, and in 2020 it was reassigned to the newly created Africa Central Area. However, it has not yet been assigned to any specific mission. In 1988, there were approximately 20 Seychellois worldwide. Nine-tenths of the population is Christian. There are no recent concerns with restrictions on religious freedom. To register with the government, a religious group must have at least seven members. The Church Newsroom on Facebook noted that a "small group" of Latter-day Saints currently lives in the Seychelles. Elder Rasband participated in a sacrament meeting service with Seychellois Latter-day Saints, and he reported that the Church is ready to "launch forth" in the Seychelles. It appears that a small member group operates in the capital city of Victoria under the direct supervision of the Africa Central Area. It is likely that Seychelles will be assigned to a mission to oversee Church operations and missionary work. Given economic ties and significant resources, it is probable that one of the two missions in Nairobi, Kenya will administer to Seychelles once it is assigned to a mission.

These developments are significant given Seychelles’ remote location, small and predominantly Christian population, government stability, religious freedom, and bilingual environment (English and French). Approximately 90% of the nation’s 100,000 inhabitants reside on the main island of Mahé. The Church’s assignment of Seychelles to the Africa Central Area—which encompasses hundreds of millions of people and many rapidly growing nations—underscores the country’s potential strategic importance. There are two other countries in Africa that are traditionally Christian that have no official Latter-day Saint congregation: Equatorial Guinea (population: approximately 1.8 million) and São Tomé and Príncipe (approximately 250,000). The African nations that have most recently had an official congregation of the Church established (or reestablished) are The Gambia (2022) and South Sudan (2024).

Other proselytizing Christian denominations have experienced slow or stagnant growth in Seychelles, suggesting that the Church’s expansion may likewise progress gradually, similar to its measured growth in nearby island nations such as Mauritius and Réunion.

31 comments:

David McFadden said...

When Areas were created in the 80's Africa was part of the Europe Area, and there was only a few countries in Africa with missionaries.

Downtownchrisbrown said...

This is great news. It's exciting whenever we hear of a new group of people gaining access to the gospel.

Today my Stake advanced 16 people to receive the Melchizedek Priesthood and be ordained Elders. This is significant as we normally vary from 0-3. I'm not certain if this is a statistical anomaly or part of a trend. I'll report back in 6 months to report if we go back to our 0-3 or continue with larger numbers.

randall said...

Two new wards in the Denton, Texas Stake created today (Grasslands, and Hickory Hills). This makes 13 wards in the Stake. Nearby Stakes are also 10 and 11 wards. The town I live in, with 25,000 population, has members in five different wards and two stakes. Mostly move-ins to the DFW metro, but we did have several baptisms in the ward over the last year.

Downtownchrisbrown said...

For those who have been following Stake/District Conference dates, has anyone noticed if there is any meaning to no future dates? For example, Kingston Ontario District had their conference today, but there are no future conference dates on the calendar

Caleb said...

The Alaminos Philippines District became the Alaminos Philippines Stake today!

Ryan Searcy said...

I imagine there is no specific schedule for a district to host a conference, while stakes generally have 2 per year. If you look across the border at the Potsdam NY District, it shows no dates either. I wonder if the case is either conferences just aren't as prominent in districts, or the dates for the next one just hasn't been planned or posted.

Chris D. said...

I wonder what the possibility of the Huánuco Perú Stake, with 10 Wards and 2 Branches, of being split at the end of the month on November 30th.

https://maps.churchofjesuschrist.org/stakes/520179

I'm guessing a slim chance, considering there are many more stake with 10+ Units assigned.

Anonymous said...

I’m surprised the missionary’s in Kenya haven’t been reassigned due to Christian persecution

Anonymous said...

I meant Nigeria

Jonathon F. said...

A noteworthy entry in today's list of reorganized stake presidencies: the new second counselor in the Provo YSA 18th Stake presidency is a YSA--he is 27 and unmarried. I had always thought that stake presidency counselors had to be married, and I have never heard of a YSA serving in a stake presidency, even over a YSA stake. Could this be the first time it's happened?

https://www.thechurchnews.com/leaders/2025/11/02/22-new-stake-presidencies-alaska-to-bolivia/

Caleb said...

I think the persecution in Nigeria is primarily happening in areas where there are no LDS missionaries.

Jonathon F. said...

While there is anti-Christian persecution in Nigeria, it's mostly localized in the north of the country. The areas of Nigeria where a stable Church presence exists are much less affected by those issues.

David McFadden said...

If five of the wards were distantly spaced, I could see a potential. On the other hand, they could split a couple of wards off to even the two stakes in Huánuco.

David McFadden said...

It's hard to say what mission Seychelles will be in. The easiest way to get there is by flying. There are nonstop flights from Nairobi, but they're few and far between. If you're flying from Nairobi you're likely transferring through Addis Ababa, Dubai, or Doha.

Addis Ababa is the only of the three that has a mission (Ethiopia Addis Ababa Mission).

Madagascar Antananarivo is another possibility with a single nonstop flight each day to Seychelles. It covers other island nations in the Indian Ocean.

Chris D. said...

I wonder if there are changes in Antofagasta Chile between November 23rd and 30th. The Antofagasta Chile Stake (513377) has Stake Conference 2 weeks in row (23rd and 30th). With 6 Wards + 1 Branch.

"Fechas de la conferencia
22–23 nov 2025
29–30 nov 2025
27–28 jun 2026
28–29 nov 2026"

https://maps.churchofjesuschrist.org/stakes/513377

and the Antofagasta Chile La Portada Stake (522392) has Stake Conference on the 23rd. with 9 Wards + 1 Branch

" Fechas de la conferencia

22–23 nov 2025
23–24 may 2026
24–25 oct 2026 "

https://maps.churchofjesuschrist.org/stakes/522392

Mark said...

It had been permitted and encouraged for over 4 years

https://www.deseret.com/faith/2021/4/6/22364033/latter-day-saint-young-single-adults-can-hold-new-callings-in-the-church-lds-mormon-ysa/

John Pack Lambert said...

Madagascar however is in the Africa South mission, so moving Seychelles to that mission would cause an area change. Which can happen, but it would be needed.

I did notice a previous stake with a,YSA in thd Presidency. I can see why it is not that common. YSAs bring the stake high council is the expected state now.

This means YSA stakes are basically self sustaining in leadership. You need bishops from outside, and 2-3 members of the stake Presidency. However the high council snd bishopric councilors are now internal.

I have been expecting Las Vegas to get a YSA stake. Maybe a metro area in California. Also I think Boston area would be doable. However in Boston area thry may draw on single grad students for leadership in ways that would be severely hurt by a YSA stake. I believe the Camvmbrige stake has YSA wards that cover well beyond its non-YSA boundaries.

Are any metro areas in Texas close to getting a YSA stake?

There are now 3 people from my branch serving in stake leadership positions. 1 is on the high council, 1 is in the stake relief society Presidency and 1 in the stake young men Presidency. I do not think we have ever had that many people from my branch with stake callings.

The 2021 change mainly affected the high council. It was followed by a 2022 change thst said "only bishops and stake presidents should be filled by those not YSAs". However it seems "stake presidents" gmhas been mainly read stake presidents. Even for bishoprics I know the YSA branch in my stake thry have lagged in releasing counselors when they marry.

Unknown said...

A new branch was recently formed in Rajam, Andhra Pradesh. (Rajam is sometimes also transliterated as Razam). A friend of mine in the Vishakhapatnam District, which the new branch pertains to, reports that over 100 investigators from that branch alone attended what I believe was a district conference held this Sunday. The growth of the Vizak District is great news, particularly as the church in some parts of India has stagnated or even regressed in recent years in terms of attendance and overall vitality.

One other thing of note in relation to the Rajam branch is that it appears to be a Telugu speaking branch. I have noticed that a few other branches in India are now designated as local language units rather than English-language units, though I have not been able to discern any particular pattern in which ones are vs which are not.

--Felix

Jonathon F. said...

Interesting. I was aware of that change (I served in a bishopric because of it), but I had only ever seen it implemented up to the high council level. Every YSA stake I have ever encountered or been a part of has had two married stake presidency counselors. It's cool to see the Church open even more leadership opportunities to YSAs.

Durham Cleere said...

Just now noticed while reviewing church maps that there is a Vineyard Utah YSA Stake. Any idea when this was formed?

James G. Stokes said...

Matt, thanks for another great report. It is humbling to see the various stages of growth of the Church occurring worldwide, and I appreciate your efforts to provide thorough and thoughtful analysis of these developments. If I may switch the topic to temples, today will mark the media day for the Burley Idaho Temple. So I anticipate a report on that will be released later this morning. But I also do not believe that it will be the only temple update we get. I believe we could also see an announcement of the opening arrangements for the Willamette Valley Oregon Temple, and the latest updates on the Lehi Utah and Jacksonville Florida Temples may point to likely groundbreakings either in the final months of this year or the first two months of next year. Additionally, I am hoping for more official information of some kind for at least one of the other temples, whether that is an exterior rendering, a site confirmation, or anything else. My thanks once again to you all.

Noah said...

A simplified and updated rendering has been released for the Brussels Belgium Temple as well. Available on the Dutch Facebook page and the church temples site. Not a fan of the changes, but I can see why it may have been altered, being so close to the Belgian Royal Palace.

EP said...

Question for the fellow temple nerds in here: the recent 2 story, 40,000 square foot floor plan the Church has been using…how are they getting four endowment rooms in there? I’ve been trying to figure out how, with the celestial room in the back center edge of the upstairs, all four rooms lay out to enter the celestial room. Any insights?

EP said...

Thanks for the notice, Noah. I hadn’t even realized they updated the rendering with a more…corporate looking building. Not my favorite either.

L. Chris Jones said...

I just looked at the two Brussels Belgium Temple renderings. Looks like some minor changes around the windows (the old one looked like it had a fin-like architecture.) Also the new spire appears that be a bit higher

L. Chris Jones said...

I just looked at the two Brussels Belgium Temple renderings. Looks like some minor changes around the windows (the old one looked like it had a fin-like architecture.) Also the new spire appears that be a bit higher

John Pack Lambert said...

With way the endowment is done now you do not need the veil in the sane room you finish the rest of the endowment ceremony in. I know with Salt Lake Temple they will have a seperate veil room. This also makes scheduling the short veil ceremony before a wedding or sealing involving a living husband a bit easier, which is a big issue with the number of sealing rooms in Salt Lake City. I am not sure if this effects design elsewhere, but it does give some flexibility.

Matt said...

Other Matt here...

@EP
You realize the new Brussels Temple is just a 10 minutes walk to the EU Parliament. I'm sure thought was given having a temple with meetinghouse so close to EU Parliament would help foster stronger ties with the Church and the EU. So they went with an urban design converting an existing building rather than building a new building out in the suburbs.

Caleb said...

Another new stake was formed in the Philippines yesterday! The Cubayao Philippines Stake was divided into the Calamba Philippines Stake and the Santa Rosa Philippines Stake. I'm not sure which of the two is technically the new stake, and which is the renamed Cubayao Philippines Stake.

John Pack Lambert said...

I have read that some felt that the Rome Italy Temple was too far from the core city to meet its intended purposes.

I wonder if there are other announced temples in Europe that will be built following the Brussels model.

There may even be temples that could be built on this model in the US.

It would probably cost more than building fiin a peripheral location but would be more accessible, would face less NIMBY opposition, although there could be a different type of that (at one point the city council in Philadelphia was considering taking the temple site from The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints to turn it over to someone who would create more jobs. So there are pluses and minuses to all locations.

Ryan Searcy said...

If I had to guess, the stake center of the Cabuyao Philippines Stake is much closer to Calamba than Santa Rosa. The stake center is within the boundaries of the Cabuyao 3rd Ward.

I imagine:
*Calamba Philippines Stake (5 wards, 1 branch): Cabuyao 3rd, Calamba 1st & 2nd, Canlubang, and Las Baños Wards and the Calamba 3rd Branch.
*Santa Rosa Philippines Stake (5 wards, 1 branch): Cabuyao 1st & 2nd and Santa Rosa 1st, 2nd, & 3rd Wards and the Santa Rosa 4th Branch.