Before I got through the country-by-country updates, I wanted to point out that there have been at least 28 stakes created in 2024 thus far which was four more stakes than were created during the first half of 2023. This is a significant accomplishment considering the increased standards for the creation of new stakes that went into effect January 1st, 2024. Moreover, there have been at least 14 new districts organized thus far in 2024 - approximately twice the number of districts created for the entire year for 2023 (7) as well as during previous years spanning 2020-2022. This development suggests that efforts to expand the Church's operations into previously unreached or lesser reached areas has returned to levels seen prior to the COVID-19 pandemic (there were 21 new districts organized in 2019).
Malawi
A new stake was created today in Malawi. The Blantyre Malawi Stake was organized from the Blantyre Malawi District. With six branches in the district, it is likely that all branches became wards in the new stake with perhaps just one exception (as new stakes usually have at least five wards). Information on which branches have become wards remains unavailable at this time. The original Blantyre Malawi District was organized in 2011 and has experienced modest growth over the decades. The new stake is the second stake to be organized in Malawi, and the first stake, which is in Lilongwe, was organized on June 2nd. This marks the second shortest time in Church history between the creation of the first and second stakes in a country (the shortest time was in Cambodia where the first two stakes were organized on the same day in 2014). With no more districts in the country and only one mission branch that was recently opened on Mzuzu, there appear good prospects for the expansion of the Church into additional cities now that there are more mission resources that can be repurposed from supporting the districts to national outreach expansion.
Mozambique
A new stake was created in Mozambique on June 16th. The Beira Mozambique Inhamízua Stake was organized from a division of the Beira Mozambique Manga Stake (which was also partially divided to create the Beira Mozambique Munhava Stake in May of 2023). The new stake includes the following five wards and one branch: the Cerâmica, the Dondo, the Inhamízua, the Rocha, and the Zona Verde Wards and the Mafarinha Branch. There are now four stakes in Beira - the first three of which were organized in 2015, 2017, and 2023.
There are now eight stakes and two districts in Mozambique.
Vanuatu
A new stake was created in Vanuatu on June 18th. The Tanna Vanuatu Stake was organized from the Tanna Vanuatu District. The meeting to create the new stake had 2,700 in attendance, suggesting that there may be enough active members in Tanna to create a second stake in the foreseeable future if there is sufficient leadership and sustained activity rates to merit one. Information on which of the eight branches in the district have become wards is unknown at this time. There also appear to be several member groups that function in Tanna. The new stake is the Church's second stake to be organized in Vanuatu following the Port Vila Vanuatu Stake which was created in 2015. Districts in Luganville and Malakula also appear close to becoming stakes in the near future - both have large numbers of branches and impressive district conference attendance.
There are now two stakes and two districts in Vanuatu.
Utah
The Lehi Utah 3rd Stake (Tongan) was created on June 9th from the Orem Utah 2nd Stake (Tongan) and . The new stake includes the following 10 wards: the American Fork 2nd (Tongan), the American Fork 46th (Samoan), the Eagle Mountain 13th (Tongan), the Eagle Mountain 14th (Samoan), the Lehi 31st (Tongan), the Lehi 32nd (Samoan), the Lehi 41st (Tongan), the Lehi 42nd (Samoan), the Saratoga Springs 9th (Tongan), and the Saratoga Springs 12th (Samoan) Wards.
There are now nine Tongan stakes in Utah. There are now 640 stakes and four districts in Utah.
Brazil
A new district was created in Brazil on June 23rd. The Ji-Paraná Brazil District was organized from branches in the Brazil Manaus Mission. The new district includes the following four branches: the Ariquemes, the Cacoal, the Ji-Paraná, and the Vilhena Branches. The Cacoal Branch is a newly organized branch in the district, whereas there used to be two branches in Vilhena that were consolidated into one branch. At one time, there was a district in Vilhena may years ago with at least three branches in Vilhena. Many member groups have historically functioning in cities nearby Ji-Paraná, such as in Jaru, Pimenta Bueno, and Rolim de Moura, although it is unclear whether these member groups still operate.
There are now 285 stakes and 41 districts in Brazil.
The Philippines
A new district was organized in the Philippines on June 16th. The Argao Philippines District was created from three branches that were previously assigned to the Talisay Philippines Stake, namely the Argao (organized in 2014), the Moalboal (organized in 2020), and the Sibonga Branches (organized in 1992). The new district compasses the southern third of Cebu Island which is almost entirely unreached in regard to the operation of official branches. The creation of the new district may signal efforts to expand into many small cities and towns in southern Cebu, especially since the creation of the Toledo Philippines Stake from the Toledo Philippines District in 2023.
There are now 130 stakes and 54 districts in the Philippines.
It appears we are on track to see twice as many districts organized in 2024 as 2019, but halfway through the year is not always halfway through things happening in the year.
ReplyDeleteHow is the balance of new stakes in the US and Canada to those outside this year as opposed to last? In some ways it is easier to create new stakes in the US and Canada now. However since Church growth in the US was higher in 2013 than in some previous years there are several possible factors.
Actually in Ghana the Cape Coast Stake and the Accra Stake were organized the same day as well.
ReplyDeleteAccra was slated to receive a stake in 199, but then the government of Ghana declared the Church illegal and froze all its operations. It was about 6 months after the Freeze ended that the two stakes were organized.
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteL. Chris JonesJune 30, 2024 at 12:34 PM
ReplyDeleteWhy are samoan and Tongan in the same stake? Do you think there are enough Samoan wards in Utah county to have their own stake? Would that be like putting a Portuguese ward in a Spanish stake?
Is there similar culture?
DeleteOther Matt here...
ReplyDeleteIn the San Francisco East Stake (Tongan), also includes a Samoan Ward and Fijian Branch. Perhaps relatability with a similar poly culture, is why they are in the same stake.
Technically Fiji is part of Melenesia, not Polynesia, but linguistically Fijian is very close to the Polynesian languages.
ReplyDeleteAll three stakes in Utah County have Tongan and Samoan units. I guess the question is, does it make more sense to mix languages to have stakes closer, or to leave them distinct with larger stakes.
My understanding is that in Salt Lake County the Samoan units are in the geographical English speaking state.
It is not just a similar culture. Samoan and Tongan are very similar languages. I believe at one point they did include Portugueae units in a Spanish-language stake in Florida. I also have the impression that at times Portuguese speakers have attended Spanish-language wards and branches in the US.
That is pretty common. Our Spanish ward is technically Spanish/Portuguese and there is a constant switching back and forth in their meetings. Hymns are also sung in both languages at a time, which sounds quite interesting.
DeleteIf these stakes got both languages, why not call it a Polynesian stake? That new stake seems to have an equal number of both languages
ReplyDeleteCraig Shuler says,
ReplyDeleteI thought it was interesting that both the Orem Utah 2nd Stake (Tongan) and the new Lehi Utah 3rd Stake (Tongan) are in the Utah Orem Mission. The Utah Saratoga Springs Mission has 18 Lehi stakes and the Utah Orem Mission has only 5, including the new Tongan stake. The stake center for the new stake must be in the Orem mission boundaries.
In May, before the division, there were 14 wards (8 Samoan and 6 Tongan) in the Orem Utah 2nd Stake (Tongan):
- Orem: 2 Samoan wards and 1 Tongan ward
- Pleasant Grove: 1 Samoan ward
- American Fork: 1 Samoan ward and 1 Tongan ward
- Lehi: 1 Samoan ward and 2 Tongan wards
- Saratoga Springs: 1 Samoan ward and 1 Tongan ward
- Eagle Mountain: 2 Samoan and 1 Tongan ward
The Provo Utah 1st Stake (Tongan) has 10 wards (5 Samoan and 5 Tongan) that apparently overlaps regular boundaries of the Utah Orem Mission, Utah Provo Mission, and the new Utah Spanish Fork Mission:
- Orem: 2 more Samoan wards and 1 Tongan ward,besides those in the Orem Utah 2nd Stake (Tongan).
- Provo: 2 Samoan wards and 2 Tongan wards
- Springville: 1 Tongan ward
- Spanish Fork: 1 Samoan ward and 1 Tongan ward
And why do any of them have numbers? The numbers seem superfluous since there is only one "Tongan" stakes in the cities where they are located. The Provo Utah 1st Stake has 5 Ton
Craig Shuler says,
ReplyDeleteThe last phrase of my last post should have been deleted.
There are now 7 "Tongan" stakes in Utah, 4 in Salt Lake County that do not have Samoan wards and 3 in Utah County that do.
In Salt Lake County the Samoan wards are part of English-speaking residential stakes.
Matt, just one clarification on your post. You mentioned the stricter requirements for stake creation, but really they are LESS strict than before for stakes in the United States. 15/28 new stakes coming from the states could actually be reflective of hitting the lower requirements whereas they wouldn't have hit the requirement a year ago. For sure, the other 13/28 outside of the US/Canada suggest very impressive growth.
ReplyDeleteI think it will be interesting going forward for the next year or two how many new stakes and wards are created in the areas that are harder than before to create (outside US/Canada) vs. areas that are now easier to create (US/Canada) compared to prior years.
Just sent to me by email.
ReplyDeleteDemocratic Republic of the Congo Kinshasa South Mission (2245698)
· Kinshasa Democratic Republic of the Congo Kimbanseke Stake (1069489)
· Kinshasa Democratic Republic of the Congo Mpasa Stake (2118645)
· Kinshasa Democratic Republic of the Congo N'Djili Stake (2118653)
· Kinshasa Democratic Republic of the Congo Ngaba Stake (2055554)
· Bandundu Branch (2159864) Branche de Bandundu
Democratic Republic of the Congo Kinshasa South Mission Branch (2246945)
· Disasi Branch (2236435) Branche de Disasi
· Kazamba Branch (2266539)
· Kikwit Branch (2178842) Branche de Kikwit
· Lukolela Branch (2266520)
Democratic Republic of the Congo Kolwezi Mission (2245744)
· Kikula Democratic Republic of the Congo Stake (2175045)
· Kolwezi Democratic Republic of the Congo Stake (613622)
· Likasi Democratic Republic of the Congo Stake (416061)
· Democratic Republic of the Congo Kolwezi Mission Branch (2247038)
· Kalemie Branch (2252635)
· Kamina Branch (2273039)
Madagascar Antananarivo North Mission (2245779)
· Antananarivo Madagascar Ivandry Stake (1495984)
· Toamasina Madagascar Stake (1403389)
· Mauritius District (2103885)
· St Denis Reunion District (609544)
· Madagascar Antananarivo North Mission Branch (2247046)
· Mahajanga Branch (1073281)
· Moramanga Branch (2045540)
Ghana Accra North Mission (2245787)
· Accra Ghana Adenta Stake (520470)
· Ashaiman Ghana Bethlehem Stake (2181177)
· Koforidua Ghana Stake (616729)
· Dzodze Ghana District (2231859)
· Ho Ghana District (2032228)
· Kpong Ghana District (1838377)
· Ghana Accra North Mission Branch (555819)
Ghana Takoradi Mission (2245809)
· Mpintsin Ghana Stake (2065347)
· Sofokrom Ghana Stake (2251299)
· Takoradi Ghana Stake (526800)
· Axim Ghana District (2136937)
· Tarkwa Ghana District (2070804)
· Ghana Takoradi Mission Branch (2246953)
Nevada Henderson Mission (2245892)
· Henderson Nevada Anthem Hills Stake (2089106)
· Henderson Nevada Black Mountain Stake (506656)
· Henderson Nevada Carnegie Stake (388033)
· Henderson Nevada Eldorado Stake (560022)
· Henderson Nevada Green Valley Stake (517437)
· Henderson Nevada Lake Mead Stake (502499)
· Henderson Nevada McCullough Hills Stake (2057298)
· Kingman Arizona Stake (516295)
· Lake Havasu City Arizona Stake (508306)
· Las Vegas Nevada Paradise Stake (504394)
· Las Vegas Nevada Warm Springs Stake (520373)
I don't if it is permanent but I can't pick a language on the meetinghouse locator. I also wished it would posts groups.
ReplyDeleteSo if i counted correctly, just one more 2024 Mission to update.
ReplyDeleteThe Nigeria Calabar Mission.
Today the Open House and Dedication dates announced for the Tallahassee Florida temple. And the plans for the Toronto Ontario Temple Renovation.
ReplyDeletehttps://newsroom.churchofjesuschrist.org/article/open-house-and-dedication-date-announced-for-the-tallahassee-florida-temple
https://news-ca.churchofjesuschrist.org/article/renovation-of-the-toronto-ontario-temple-announced
The Nevada Herderson Mission will end up with most of the Las Vegas strip since most of the strip is in the boundaries of the Las Vegas Nevada Paradise Stake.
ReplyDeleteI served in 3 stakes in that mission, although areas I served in are also in the Anthem Hills, El Dorado and McCullogh Hills Stakes. Those and the Catlenegie stakes did not exist when I was there. I served in the Warm Springs, Paradise and Black Mountain stakes. However most of my mission I was in the Las Vegas Nevada Sunrise Stake.
I am wondering of any stakes were moved from the Las Vegas West to what is the Las Vegas East Mission.
On the Tallahassee Temple, Elder Kearon will dedicate that temple. I think he will break Elder Soares current record of shortest time from a call as an apostle to dedicate a temple, but only by a few weeks.
It looks like we will close 2024 with 202 temples, although it might be possible to squeeze in 1 or 2 more at the end of the year.
JPL, Yes, there were a couple Stakes transferred from L.V. West to L.V. East to even the numbers a bit. Here are the other 3 missions in Nevada organized. With the East mission now having 11 Stakes and the West Mission having 10 Stakes.
ReplyDeleteNevada Las Vegas East Mission (2013800)
- Las Vegas Nevada Aliante Stake (382892)
- Las Vegas Nevada Central Stake (504955)
- Las Vegas Nevada East Stake (510734)
- Las Vegas Nevada Elkhorn Springs Stake (1014897)
- Las Vegas Nevada Shadow Mountain Stake (2062429)
- Las Vegas Nevada Sunrise Stake (518034)
- Las Vegas Nevada Tule Springs Stake (524603)
- Logandale Nevada East Stake (500658)
- Logandale Nevada West Stake (2254921)
- North Las Vegas Nevada Stake (503398)
- Panaca Nevada Stake (523038)
Nevada Las Vegas West
- Las Vegas Nevada Blue Diamond Stake (2081083)
- Las Vegas Nevada Desert Foothills Stake (2111861)
- Las Vegas Nevada Lakes Stake (517607)
- Las Vegas Nevada Lone Mountain Stake (520357)
- Las Vegas Nevada Meadows Stake (516074)
- Las Vegas Nevada Redrock Stake (509566)
- Las Vegas Nevada Skye Canyon Stake (2062240)
- Las Vegas Nevada South Stake (505609)
- Las Vegas Nevada Spring Mountain Stake (487090)
- Las Vegas Nevada Stake (502359)
Nevada Reno Mission (1480588)
- Carson City Nevada Stake (510637)
- Elko Nevada East Stake (501557)
- Elko Nevada West Stake (523429)
- Ely Nevada Stake (501026)
- Fallon Nevada South Stake (518905)
- Fallon Nevada Stake (505501)
- Quincy California Stake (512443)
- Reno Nevada Mount Rose Stake (2068451)
- Reno Nevada North Stake (507008)
- Reno Nevada Stake (501476)
- Sparks Nevada East Stake (503738)
- Sparks Nevada West Stake (2068443)
- Winnemucca Nevada Stake (514918)
And there were some minor reshuffling in Ghana and DRC also.
ReplyDeleteDemocratic Republic of the Congo Kananga Mission (2217457)
- Kananga Democratic Republic of the Congo Stake (416045)
- Katoka Democratic Republic of the Congo Stake (2052075)
- Malandji Democratic Republic of the Congo Stake (2150913)
- Democratic Republic of the Congo Kananga Mission Branch (2217481)
- Luiza Branch (2232200)
- Plaine Branch (2232219)
Democratic Republic of the Congo Kinshasa East Mission (2132761)
- Kinshasa Democratic Republic of the Congo Masina Stake (272167)
- Kinshasa Democratic Republic of the Congo Mokali Stake (1978721)
- Kinshasa Democratic Republic of the Congo Ngaliema Stake (435155)
- Kinshasa Democratic Republic of the Congo Stake (526002)
- Kisangani Democratic Republic of the Congo District (2221454)
- Democratic Republic of the Congo Kinshasa East Mission Branch (2149257)
- Maluku Branch (2253003)
- Menkao Branch (2272032)
Democratic Republic of the Congo Kinshasa West Mission (2012219)
- Kinshasa Democratic Republic of the Congo Binza Stake (1978705)
- Kinshasa Democratic Republic of the Congo Lukunga Stake (2130890)
- Kinshasa Democratic Republic of the Congo Mont Ngafula Stake (550965)
- Matadi Democratic Republic of the Congo District (2168448)
- Boma Branch (2119625)
- Democratic Republic of the Congo Kinshasa West Mission Branch (410705)
- Muanda 1st Branch (2151766)
- Muanda 2nd Branch (2236397)
Democratic Republic of the Congo Lubumbashi Mission (1183796)
- Katuba Democratic Republic of the Congo Stake (1009400)
- Kisanga Democratic Republic of the Congo Stake (1989049)
- Lubumbashi Democratic Republic of the Congo Stake (527475)
- Ruashi Democratic Republic of the Congo Stake (2106566)
- Kasumbalesa Democratic Republic of the Congo District (2156334)
- Democratic Republic of the Congo Lubumbashi Mission Branch (1183974)
Democratic Republic of the Congo Mbuji-Mayi Mission (2050722)
- Bondoyi Democratic Republic of the Congo Stake (2231875)
- Dibindi Democratic Republic of the Congo Stake (2186950)
- Kabusanga Democratic Republic of the Congo Stake (2185091)
- Luputa Democratic Republic of the Congo Stake (480266)
- Mbuji-Mayi Democratic Republic of the Congo Stake (1482785)
- Mwene-Ditu Democratic Republic of the Congo Stake (2028689)
- Ngandajika Democratic Republic of the Congo Stake (2086026)
- Democratic Republic of the Congo Mbuji-Mayi Mission Branch (2050730)
- Kamanda 1st Branch (2232189)
- Kamanda 2nd Branch (2232197)
*Ghana Accra East Mission (2011956)
ReplyDelete- Accra Ghana Christiansborg Stake (527858)
- Accra Ghana Laterbiokorshie Stake (2052571)
- Accra Ghana Madina Stake (2112485)
- Accra Ghana Tesano Stake (1837974)
- Ashaiman Ghana Stake (2038544)
- Tema Ghana Stake (488755)
- Teshie Ghana Stake (2080966)
- Africa West Area Branch (1634178)
Ghana Accra West Mission (1986252)
- Abomosu Ghana Stake (537195)
- Accra Ghana Kaneshie Stake (1838180)
- Accra Ghana Kasoa Stake (542040)
- Accra Ghana Ofankor Stake (2052644)
- Asamankese Ghana Stake (611212)
- Swedru Ghana Stake (2120453)
- Winneba Ghana Stake (612138)
- Ghana Accra West Mission Branch (1986260)
Ghana Cape Coast Mission (475807)
- Abura Ghana Stake (2178869)
- Assin Foso Ghana South Stake (2123908)
- Assin Foso Ghana Stake (611352)
- Cape Coast Ghana Stake (519545)
- Yamoransa Ghana Stake (2070332)
- Twifu Praso Ghana District (1997351)
- Ghana Cape Coast Mission Branch (555827)
Ghana Kumasi Mission (1802429)
- Ejisu Ghana Stake (2251248)
- Kumasi Ghana Bantama Stake (610267)
- Kumasi Ghana Dichemso Stake (2005166)
- Kumasi Ghana Konongo Stake (2017377)
- Kumasi Ghana Suame Stake (2052776)
- Kumasi Ghana University Stake (2078627)
- Bibiani Ghana District (2119390)
- Obuasi Ghana District (2009781)
- Sunyani Ghana District (1902822)
- Tamale Ghana District (2049880)
- Techiman Ghana District (2213672)
- Ghana Kumasi Mission Branch (1802577)
- Wa Branch (2100630)
*Madagascar Antananarivo South Mission (2010704)
- Antananarivo Madagascar Ampefiloha Stake (2237865)
- Antananarivo Madagascar Manakambahiny Stake (368407)
- Antsirabe Madagascar District (1403184)
- Tolagnaro Madagascar District (2116472)
- Ambositra Branch (1916238)
- Anjoma Branch (1803581)
- Fianarantsoa Branch (463388)
- Madagascar Antananarivo South Mission Branch (271896)
- Tsianolondroa Branch (1803786)
- Tulear Branch (1984241) Branche de Tulear
Here are some of the existing Missions that were split to create the last batch of new Missions i posted on friday.
ReplyDeleteAlabama Birmingham Mission (2011611)
- Birmingham Alabama Stake (507490)
- Gadsden Alabama Stake (2144123)
- Huntsville Alabama Stake (504963)
- Madison Alabama Stake (1578189)
- Mobile Alabama Stake (510815)
- Montgomery Alabama Stake (507946)
- Tuscaloosa Alabama Stake (515760)
Argentina Córdoba Mission (2017504)
- Bell Ville Argentina Stake (615137)
- Córdoba Argentina Chacabuco Stake (2117541)
- Córdoba Argentina East Stake (462616)
- Córdoba Argentina Patricios Stake (511722)
- Córdoba Argentina Sierras Stake (522503)
- Córdoba Argentina South Stake (506265)
- Córdoba Argentina West Stake (525421)
- Río Cuarto Argentina Stake (524905)
- Punilla Argentina District (2048388)
Argentina Salta Mission (2012316)
- Jujuy Argentina Stake (518786)
- Salta Argentina Stake (514543)
- Salta Argentina West Stake (524298)
- Metan Argentina District (615285)
- Oran Argentina District (614238)
- San Pedro Argentina Jujuy District (612073)
- Tartagal Argentina District (617210)
- Argentina Salta Mission Branch (1652001)
Cambodia Phnom Penh West Mission (2013452)
- Phnom Penh Cambodia North Stake (617059)
- Phnom Penh Cambodia South Stake (413003)
- Battambang Cambodia District (1293176)
- Cambodia Phnom Penh West Mission Branch (420379)
Florida Jacksonville Mission (2012197)
- Gainesville Florida Stake (508241)
- Jacksonville Florida East Stake (505110)
- Jacksonville Florida South Stake (1021095)
- Jacksonville Florida West Stake (501786)
- Kingsland Georgia Stake (518999)
- Lake City Florida Stake (518204)
Nigeria Port Harcourt South Mission (2012480)*
- Ikot Akpaden Nigeria Stake (272329)
- Ikot Akpatek Nigeria Stake (2065991)
- Onna Nigeria Stake (2253836)
- Port Harcourt Nigeria Central Stake (2181231)
- Port Harcourt Nigeria South Stake (2077841)
- Port Harcourt Nigeria Stake (520381)
- Bori Nigeria District (2144859)
- Okrika Nigeria District (1145185)
- Nigeria Port Harcourt South Mission Branch (410683)
Sierra Leone Freetown Mission (537233)
- Freetown Sierra Leone East Stake (2112493)
- Freetown Sierra Leone Hill Station Stake (2240254)
- Freetown Sierra Leone Stake (613673)
- Kissy Sierra Leone Stake (1711989)
- Kossoh Town Sierra Leone Stake (2023660)
- Wellington Sierra Leone Stake (2175762)
- Makeni Sierra Leone District (2096625)
- Sierra Leone Freetown Mission Branch (555924)
Thailand Bangkok West Mission (2019361)*
- Bangkok Thailand North Stake (278424)
- Bangkok Thailand West Stake (2029189)
- Chiang Mai Thailand District (605891)
- Huahin Branch (2215853)
- Phuket Branch (2113821)
- Thailand Bangkok West Mission Thailand Branch (495344)
And from the New missions i posted on thursday, split from these existing missions.
ReplyDeleteBolivia Cochabamba North Mission (2011441)
- Cochabamba Bolivia Blanco Galindo Stake (2105284)
- Cochabamba Bolivia Quillacollo Stake (522120)
- Cochabamba Bolivia Sacaba Stake (1920448)
- Cochabamba Bolivia Sarco Stake (516791)
- Cochabamba Bolivia Universidad Stake (512214)
Ecuador Quito South Mission (2015706)
- Ambato Ecuador Stake (524743)
- Los Chillos Ecuador San Rafael Stake (2104539)
- Los Chillos Ecuador Stake (1075888)
- Quito Ecuador Colón Stake (513830)
- Quito Ecuador Turubamba Stake (1997246)
- Riobamba Ecuador Stake (614157)
Ecuador Quito North Mission (1985930)
- Otavalo Ecuador Imbabura Stake (525987)
- Otavalo Ecuador Imbaya Stake (2060019)
- Otavalo Ecuador Stake (515116)
- Quito Ecuador Calderón Stake (528056)
- Ipiales Colombia District (606162)
- Ecuador Quito North Mission Branch (1987089)
- El Coca Branch (2225956)
- Lago Agrio Branch (2249529)
- Nueva Loja Branch (1896385)
- Orellana Branch (1075462)
- Shushufindi Branch (2225948)
Montana Billings Mission (2013703)
- Billings Montana East Stake (509337)
- Billings Montana South Stake (2100231)
- Billings Montana Stake (504068)
- Bozeman Montana Stake (512206)
- Cody Wyoming Stake (506532)
- Gillette Wyoming Stake (513423)
- Lovell Wyoming Stake (500461)
- Sheridan Wyoming Stake (2163349)
- Worland Wyoming Stake (513652)
Perú Lima Central Mission (2010429)
ReplyDelete- Lima Perú Callao Stake (512419)
- Lima Perú Condevilla Stake (1024876)
- Lima Perú El Trébol Stake (415863)
- Lima Perú Independencia Stake (509035)
- Lima Perú La Libertad Stake (1037676)
- Lima Perú Maranga Stake (519154)
- Lima Perú Palao Stake (517003)
- Lima Perú San Martín Stake (512125)
Perú Lima East Mission (2012359)
- Lima Perú Central Stake (509027)
- Lima Perú Chaclacayo Stake (1634771)
- Lima Perú Chosica Stake (520543)
- Lima Perú La Molina Stake (526460)
- Lima Perú Mayorazgo Stake (2124319)
- Lima Perú Santa Anita Stake (524549)
- Lima Perú Santa Clara Stake (2144646)
- Lima Perú Vitarte Stake (519111)
Perú Lima North Mission (2011387)
- Lima Perú Carabayllo Stake (524972)
- Lima Perú Comas Stake (519146)
- Lima Perú San Felipe Stake (516430)
- Lima Perú Santa Isabel Stake (526916)
- Lima Perú Tahuantinsuyo Stake (520632)
- Lima Perú Torre Blanca Stake (2120615)
Perú Lima South Mission (2014203)
- Ayacucho Perú Stake (525154)
- Chincha Perú Stake (521035)
- Ica Perú Stake (519944)
- Lima Perú La Campiña Stake (2130521)
- Lima Perú Pachacamac Stake (1993674)
- Lima Perú Villa María Stake (517526)
- Lima Perú Villa Salvador Stake (521264)
- Pisco Perú Stake (522112)
- Cañete Perú District (617741)
- Nazca Perú District (610453)
Perú Lima West Mission (1194380)
- Barranca Perú Stake (608092)
- Huacho Perú Stake (519588)
- Lima Perú El Olivar Stake (519162)
- Lima Perú Las Palmeras Stake (519138)
- Lima Perú Los Olivos Stake (1033468)
- Lima Perú Miramar Stake (2143275)
- Lima Perú Naranjal Stake (2138786)
- Lima Perú Prolima Stake (1033085)
- Lima Perú Puente Piedra Stake (415871)
- Ventanilla Perú Stake (525715)
- Huaral Peru District (2249170)
Perú Lima Limatambo Mission (2132206)
- Lima Perú Chorrillos Stake (519189)
- Lima Perú Limatambo Stake (505544)
- Lima Perú Magdalena Stake (507369)
- Lima Perú San Gabriel Stake (524980)
- Lima Perú San Juan Stake (512052)
- Lima Perú San Luis Stake (516422)
- Lima Perú Santa Patricia Stake (1993593)
- Lima Perú Surco Stake (525111)
Philippines Bacolod Mission (2018217)
ReplyDelete- Bacolod Philippines North Stake (515183)
- Bacolod Philippines South Stake (364827)
- Bacolod Philippines Stake (514632)
- Bago Philippines Stake (384550)
- Binalbagan Philippines Stake (520446)
- Cadiz Philippines Stake (517860)
- La Carlota Philippines District (451150)
Philippines Cauayan Mission (2010038)
- Alicia Philippines Stake (611123)
- Cauayan Philippines Stake (617350)
- Santiago Philippines North Stake (1738577)
- Santiago Philippines Stake (528099)
- Bambang Philippines District (418056)
- Roxas Philippines Isabela District (473510)
- Solano Philippines District (610011)
Philippines Cebu Mission (2012162)
- Cebu City Philippines Stake (513849)
- Cebu Philippines Central Stake (365009)
- Talisay Philippines Stake (515221)
- Toledo Philippines Stake (612928)
- Argao Philippines District (2260093)
- Bogo Philippines District (616486)
Philippines Cebu East Mission (1986368)
- Cebu Philippines Consolacion Stake (1990527)
- Cebu Philippines Liloan Stake (272442)
- Lapu-Lapu Philippines Stake (2213664)
- Mandaue Philippines Stake (519839)
- Tagbilaran Philippines Stake (609331)
- Calape Philippines District (616664)
Philippines Davao Mission (2011433)
- Davao Philippines Buhangin Stake (517690)
- Davao Philippines Stake (514888)
- Davao Philippines West Stake (2029014)
- Mati Philippines Stake (611611)
- Tagum Philippines Stake (614734)
- Zamboanga Philippines Stake (517895)
- Monkayo Philippines District (613959)
- Panabo Philippines District (614726)
Philippines Laoag Mission (463302)
- Ballesteros Philippines Stake (409812)
- Batac Philippines Stake (526568)
- Laoag Philippines Stake (519669)
- Vigan Philippines Stake (383813)
- Bangui Philippines District (409820)
Portugal Lisbon Mission (2018101)
- Almada Portugal Stake (2162539) Estaca Almada Portugal
- Lisbon Portugal Stake (514691) Estaca Lisboa Portugal
- Oeiras Portugal Stake (519804) Estaca Oeiras Portugal
- Setúbal Portugal Stake (518808) Estaca Setúbal Portugal
- Açores Portugal District (609501) Distrito Açores Portugal
Alpine German-Speaking Mission (2018705)
ReplyDeleteBern Switzerland Stake (514462)
Munich Germany Stake (510270)
Salzburg Austria Stake (526525)
St Gallen Switzerland Stake (539252)
Vienna Austria Stake (512389)
Zürich Switzerland Stake (503762)
California Roseville Mission (2010194)
- Anderson California Stake (511781)
- Auburn California Stake (511749)
- Chico California Stake (506222)
- Gridley California Stake (501131)
- Lincoln California Stake (1468588)
- Redding California Stake (503517)
- Rocklin California Stake (521493)
- Roseville California Stake (505676)
- Yuba City California Stake (512338)
Texas Fort Worth Mission (2012057)
- Alliance Texas Stake (2004089)
- Arlington Texas Stake (518190)
- Burleson Texas Stake (2066432)
- Colleyville Texas Stake (526274)
- Fort Worth Texas North Stake (2071207)
- Fort Worth Texas Stake (504874)
- Hurst Texas Stake (508594)
- Weatherford Texas Stake (487775)
México Hermosillo Mission (2019701)
- Ciudad Obregón México Nainari Stake (519553)
- Ciudad Obregón México Stake (508454)
- Guaymas México Stake (520314)
- Hermosillo México Pitic Stake (518719)
- Hermosillo México Stake (508721)
- Navojoa México District (611492)
- Nogales México District (613134)
- Sierra Madre México District (603856)
- México Hermosillo Mission Branch (430110)
Just found these 2 Stakes transferred from Mexico Pachuca Mission to Mexico Mexico City East.
ReplyDeleteMéxico City Los Heroes Tecamac
México City Tecamac
And these 2 Stakes from the Mexico Mexico City Northwest to Mexico City North Mission.
ReplyDelete- México City Coacalco Stake (1012274)
- México City Villa de las Flores Stake (508160)
And these 2 Stakes from the Mexico Mexico City East to Mexico City Northwest Mission.
- México City Industrial Stake (508101)
- México City Madero Stake (522740)
And from Mexico Mexico City West to Mexico City Northwest Mission.
- México City Camarones Stake (508063)
And from Mexico Mexico City North to Mexico City Mexico West Mission.
- México City Alamedas Stake (1989626)
And from Mexico Monterrey East to Monterrey West Mission.
- Apodaca México Stake (468444)
- Monterrey México Moderna Stake (513008)
James, I think you meant that the Tallahassee temple will likely be the last temple dedicated this year.
ReplyDeleteAlso, I find it insignificant that a major temple announcement was made on July 1st. It's the very first day of the month. I'd bet that the announcement was prepared last month anyway.
I did mean Tallahassee. Thanks for the correction. As far as your speculation about the news release goes, I happen to know that those are prepared for publication on the same day they are published, and that the First Presidency has the final sign-off on those before they are published on the same day they are released.
DeleteIt was also announced yesterday the Toronto Temple will reopen in December 2024. It is looking like it will not be rededicated, and they will not do an open house. At least nothing of that sort is mentioned.
ReplyDelete14 stakes and 3 districts organized in June?
ReplyDeleteNow that is a bumper-crop month!
Another couple mission realignments I found while reviewing my list.
ReplyDeleteOne difference I found, was the Reconquista Argentina District went from the Argentina Resistencia Mission to the Argentina Santa Fe Mission. At least according to my previous list.
Also, the Buín Chile Stake went from the Chile Rancagua Mission to Chile Santiago South Mission.
And the Santiago Chile Ochagavía Stake went from the Chile Santiago South Mission to the Chile Santiago West Mission.
And I missed, the Villarrica Chile District went from the Chile Puerto Montt Mission to the Chile Concepción South Mission.
ReplyDeleteAnd the Siniloan Philippines District from the Philippines San Pablo Mission to the Philippines Antipolo Mission.
ReplyDeleteAnd the Balayan Philippines District and Mindoro Oriental Philippines District from the Philippines San Pablo Mission to the Philippines Cavite Mission.
I wonder if the Brethren have decided to delay the organization of the new Nigeria Calabar Mission until a later date. Where President David Oryang and his wife were called in January from the Woodbridge Virginia Stake.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.thechurchnews.com/callings/2024/2/9/24064777/new-presidents-companions-of-16-missions-from-argentina-to-vietnam/
Jonathan, this May and June saw 14 new stakes and 3 new districts, a "bumper crop," as you pointed out.
ReplyDeleteChecking stake and district organizations for past years in the history provided by Matt, I see that 2016 showed 33 new stakes and 7 new districts in the same May/June period. It seems to be a time of year that has a lot of new stakes and districts created.
In the Covid year of 2020, there were no stakes and only one district formed in that time frame.
I have what I think is pretty exciting news from Egypt. Nothing too groundbreaking like a temple being announced or new branch being announced though. I spoke Arabic on my mission and I've stayed in pretty good contact with some of the native members over there. I taught an Egyptian guy virtually who lives in Russia right now and he just told me about his two friends that he just invited to church a few weeks ago have been coming to church consistently and progressing slowly towards baptism. Like I said, it's nothing too earth shattering but it's always great to hear about the church growing even in places that are pretty hostile to missionary work. There's now, as far as I know, about 70-80 active members by my estimates of talking to members over there, with just under half of those being native Arabic speakers in Egypt. Perhaps one day in my lifetime we will see a Cairo temple announced (so in the next 50 years or so). This isn't super relevant to the original topic of this post, but just wanted to share this with everyone
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing your story. The Church is growing everywhere. I was wondering how is the Church and how many members of the Church are in the other countries of the Middle East/North Africa Area in Africa. Do you have some more information?
DeleteChris thank you for the updates for the new missions and the realigned missions. I have some friends going to those realigned missions so its been helpful to see where they could be serving.
ReplyDeleteDo you know if the stakes/districts for the new Utah missions and realignments have been released?
Any help would be appreciated
Rocky, I posted the 3 new Utah Missions a week ago. I will repost here. They were the 1st to be updated.
ReplyDeleteThe new Utah missions have been published.
Utah Salt Lake City East Mission (2246384)
· Cottonwood Heights Utah Brighton Stake (506648)
· Cottonwood Heights Utah Wasatch Stake (512931)
· Draper Utah Corner Canyon Stake (527815)
· Draper Utah Crescent View Stake (526223)
· Draper Utah Eastridge Stake (514985)
· Draper Utah Meadows Stake (2047896)
· Draper Utah Mountain Point Stake (483338)
· Draper Utah River View Stake (427144)
· Draper Utah South Mountain Stake (417009)
· Draper Utah Stake (501549)
· Draper Utah Suncrest Stake (2027100)
· Draper Utah YSA Stake (1609173)
· Midvale Utah Stake (502707)
· Midvale Utah Union Fort Stake (501034)
· Midvale Utah Union Park Stake (618012)
· Murray Utah Little Cottonwood Stake (505986)
· Murray Utah North Stake (511668)
· Murray Utah Parkway Stake (521205)
· Murray Utah South Stake (502642)
· Murray Utah Stake (501999)
· Murray Utah West Stake (505129)
· Murray Utah YSA Stake (1629573)
· Salt Lake Big Cottonwood Stake (506346)
· Salt Lake Butler Stake (503975)
· Salt Lake Butler West Stake (504580)
· Salt Lake Canyon Rim Stake (502618)
· Salt Lake Cottonwood Stake (500690)
· Salt Lake East Mill Creek North Stake (511404)
· Salt Lake East Mill Creek Stake (501654)
· Salt Lake Holladay North Stake (510521)
· Salt Lake Holladay South Stake (505080)
· Salt Lake Holladay Stake (502480)
· Salt Lake Holladay YSA Stake (504769)
· Salt Lake Little Cottonwood Stake (526339)
· Salt Lake Millcreek Stake (501972)
· Salt Lake Mount Olympus Stake (504319)
· Salt Lake Olympus Stake (502952)
· Salt Lake South Cottonwood Stake (503800)
· Salt Lake Valley View Stake (502596)
· Salt Lake Wilford Stake (501980)
· Salt Lake Winder Stake (503029)
· Salt Lake Winder West Stake (507695)
· Sandy Utah Alta View Stake (517038)
· Sandy Utah Canyon View Stake (506680)
· Sandy Utah Central Stake (510912)
· Sandy Utah Cottonwood Creek Stake (510610)
· Sandy Utah Crescent Ridge Stake (508551)
· Sandy Utah Crescent South Stake (511145)
· Sandy Utah Crescent Stake (506907)
· Sandy Utah Dimple Dell Stake (512834)
· Sandy Utah East Stake (504017)
· Sandy Utah Granite South Stake (515531)
· Sandy Utah Granite Stake (511323)
· Sandy Utah Granite View Stake (518492)
· Sandy Utah Hidden Valley Stake (520799)
· Sandy Utah Hillcrest Stake (508810)
· Sandy Utah Lone Peak Stake (526649)
· Sandy Utah Midvalley Stake (514497)
· Sandy Utah Mount Jordan Stake (503045)
· Sandy Utah West Stake (506397)
· Sandy Utah Willow Creek Stake (506834)
Utah Saratoga Springs Mission (2245833)
ReplyDelete· Delta Utah Stake (500666)
· Delta Utah West Stake (512044)
· Eagle Mountain Utah Cedar Pass Stake (2022788)
· Eagle Mountain Utah Central Stake (1444182)
· Eagle Mountain Utah Eagle Valley Stake (2199599)
· Eagle Mountain Utah East Stake (471534)
· Eagle Mountain Utah Nolen Park Stake (2102013)
· Eagle Mountain Utah North Stake (1218778)
· Eagle Mountain Utah Porter's Crossing Stake (2221489)
· Eagle Mountain Utah Silver Lake Stake (2052024)
· Eagle Mountain Utah Stake (277223)
· Eagle Mountain Utah Sweetwater Stake (2255278)
· Eagle Mountain Utah West Stake (412570)
· Elk Ridge Utah Stake (387169)
· Goshen Utah Stake (272205)
· Highland Utah Central Stake (2000091)
· Highland Utah South Stake (465054)
· Highland Utah West Stake (380490)
· Lehi Utah Canyon Hills Stake (2187280)
· Lehi Utah Central Stake (2101823)
· Lehi Utah Cold Spring Ranch Stake (2224399)
· Lehi Utah Gateway Stake (481599)
· Lehi Utah Holbrook Farms Stake (2135280)
· Lehi Utah Jordan River Stake (422983)
· Lehi Utah Jordan River YSA Stake (2169371)
· Lehi Utah Jordan Willows Stake (1986627)
· Lehi Utah North Lake Stake (2240815)
· Lehi Utah Pheasant Pointe Stake (1979639)
· Lehi Utah Snow Springs Stake (2240823)
· Lehi Utah South Stake (525022)
· Lehi Utah Stake (501069)
· Lehi Utah Thanksgiving Stake (2055031)
· Lehi Utah Traverse Mountain Stake (486701)
· Lehi Utah West Stake (516414)
· Lehi Utah Willow Park Stake (557552)
· Lehi Utah YSA Stake (1575988)
· Nephi Utah North Stake (517585)
· Nephi Utah Stake (500097)
· Payson Utah Mount Nebo Stake (559598)
· Payson Utah Mountain View Stake (506990)
· Payson Utah South Stake (515027)
· Payson Utah Stake (500437)
· Payson Utah West Stake (515167)
· Salem Utah Stake (507598)
· Salem Utah West Stake (525294)
· Salem Utah Woodland Hills Stake (2172933)
· Santaquin Utah East Stake (2128233)
· Santaquin Utah North Stake (471658)
· Santaquin Utah Stake (501379)
· Saratoga Springs Utah Crossroads Stake (1733397)
· Saratoga Springs Utah Israel Canyon Stake (2022982)
· Saratoga Springs Utah Lake Mountain Stake (2184036)
· Saratoga Springs Utah Mount Saratoga Stake (2071037)
· Saratoga Springs Utah North Stake (461490)
· Saratoga Springs Utah Quailhill Stake (2227649)
· Saratoga Springs Utah Riverside Stake (2227657)
· Saratoga Springs Utah Saratoga Hills Stake (2108925)
· Saratoga Springs Utah South Stake (1042661)
· Saratoga Springs Utah Springside Stake (2157136)
· Saratoga Springs Utah Stake (379468)
Utah Spanish Fork Mission (2245841)
ReplyDelete· Beaver Utah Stake (500062)
· Castle Dale Utah Stake (500208)
· Central Valley Utah Stake (2139685)
· Ephraim Utah Stake (517402)
· Ephraim Utah YSA 1st Stake (517399)
· Ephraim Utah YSA 2nd Stake (525197)
· Escalante Utah Stake (500852)
· Ferron Utah Stake (515337)
· Fillmore Utah Stake (500054)
· Gunnison Utah Stake (500917)
· Helper Utah Stake (513458)
· Huntington Utah Stake (510157)
· Loa Utah Stake (500321)
· Manti Utah Stake (500410)
· Mapleton Utah East Stake (2245604)
· Mapleton Utah Maple Canyon Stake (2255367)
· Mapleton Utah North Stake (526983)
· Mapleton Utah Stake (507865)
· Mapleton Utah West Stake (2072688)
· Minersville Utah Stake (277657)
· Moab Utah Stake (506109)
· Monroe Utah Stake (500887)
· Moroni Utah Stake (501085)
· Mount Pleasant Utah North Stake (526509)
· Mount Pleasant Utah Stake (500402)
· Panguitch Utah Stake (500127)
· Price Utah North Stake (501662)
· Price Utah Stake (500615)
· Price Utah YSA Stake (525669)
· Richfield Utah East Stake (509345)
· Richfield Utah Stake (500100)
· Salina Utah Stake (500879)
· Spanish Fork Utah Canyon Ridge Stake (462470)
· Spanish Fork Utah Canyon View Stake (379190)
· Spanish Fork Utah East Stake (525014)
· Spanish Fork Utah Maple Mountain Stake (1385577)
· Spanish Fork Utah Palmyra Stake (500984)
· Spanish Fork Utah River Stake (1118188)
· Spanish Fork Utah South Stake (512907)
· Spanish Fork Utah Stake (502553)
· Spanish Fork Utah West Stake (510386)
· Spanish Fork Utah YSA Stake (504750)
· Springville Utah Dry Creek Stake (1325582)
· Springville Utah Hobble Creek Stake (516929)
· Springville Utah Hobble Creek West Stake (365815)
· Springville Utah Kolob Stake (500976)
· Springville Utah Spring Creek South Stake (526754)
· Springville Utah Spring Creek Stake (507792)
· Springville Utah Stake (502588)
· Springville Utah West Stake (462373)
· Wellington Utah Stake (513679)
The only new 2024 mission I am still waiting to hear news on is the Nigeria Calabar Mission. That has not been updated or added to the CDOL as of Wednesday July 3rd. I wonder if it will be delayed until July 2025 instead.
ReplyDeleteRocky, here are some more realignments I found in the remaining Missions located in Africa Central and Africa South Areas.
ReplyDeleteThe Bloemfontein South Africa Stake and the Maseru Lesotho District went from the South Africa Durban Mission to the South Africa Johannesburg Mission.
The Mbabane Eswatini District went from the South Africa Johannesburg Mission to the South Africa Durban Mission.
and finally, the Mombasa Kenya District, went from the Tanzania Dar es Salaam Mission to the Nairobi Kenya East Mission.
I hope this is useful.
My branch is down to only having 2 missionaries assigned to it. However the plan is to assign 2 more missionaries at the next transfer.
ReplyDeleteThanks Chris for your help. I must have missed those last week.
ReplyDeleteI forgot (or missed?) that the mission headquarters of the former Chile Osorno moved to Puerto Montt. This makes sense as Concepcion South goes further down into the country, and the newer missions in the center and the north keep expanding.
ReplyDeleteWhile the missions themselves get smaller, (although Puerto Montt could get infinitely larger because of Antarctica), now smaller and smaller towns and isolated regions can get more missionary exposure. Great to see.
I expect Puerto Montt to get a temple soon, and hopefully Punta Arenas and other far-off locales on the Argentine side. The extremes of the Earth are being reached, as commanded in scripture, the ones we covenant to uphold in the temple and elsewhere.
Exciting times, for sure.
The new Blantyre Malawi Stake has finally been updated on the Meetinghouse website.
ReplyDeletehttps://maps.churchofjesuschrist.org/stakes/1624970
Ground has been broken for the first stake center in the Czech Republic:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.thechurchnews.com/members/2024/07/06/groundbreaking-prague-czech-republic-stake-center/
And the Church News has introduced Elder Michael B. Strong:
https://www.thechurchnews.com/leaders/2024/07/06/elder-michael-strong-general-authority-seventy-bio-2024-faith-doctor-testimony-rays-of-light/
My thanks once again to you all.
Other Noah here.
ReplyDeleteBrothers and sisters who may be reading my post... I wanted to share something, since today is fast and testimony Sunday.
I was remembering some of the areas in which I served in northern Colombia during my mission, and I happened to check one of my most fondly remembered ones, in a little town south of Cartagena. I remembered how i interviewed a few people from another town further south, San Juan Nepomuceno, for their baptismal interview; and I dreamed about going over there to preach as well (it wasn't my area, so bad luck). And while they were baptized, they had to make the trip all the way to Arjona (the nearest ward) to actually attend church, since there were almost no members in their hometown (only them, actually).
Today, while checking on the meetinghouse locator, I found out that a branch has been in operation there since December 2023.
The Lord works in mysterious ways, i didn't expect there to be a branch in their Town in at least a couple of years. I am overjoyed to learn this, and wanted to share my joy with you again.
Other Noah: How long ago did you serve in Arjona? Sounds like the last few years, which is recent to me.
ReplyDeleteAgain, I am excited by another Chilean mission, based in La Serena. Haitians and Venezuelans will now make up parts of the Gospel in Chile, and we should see more temples there, as other parts of South America. Parts of Peru that I have seen could use more missionaries, for sure. Peru has some good-sized towns that need more members.
Southern Africa is growing well. Central Africa is doing really well. West Africa is growing and expanding. I think that Sao Tome e Principe and Gabon need more resources, but this is likely true of every African nation where the Church is located. The Gambia, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau seem to be slowly growing. Even Senegal.
Can we get a report of what countries have been updated on stats on Cumorah.com, or whichever site that is? Hit and miss is disappointing to me when it only goes to 2019.
Thanks. Everybody stay on top of the Work and the Glory.
Eduardo, Gabon.The Gambia, Guinea, and Senegal are all growing at double digit annual rates of increase and are updated through the end of 2023. Actually all the African nations have the current statistics on Cumorah.com.
ReplyDeleteOther nations are not yet current there, but if you go to "lds.org, news, newsroom, resources, facts and statistics," you will find this information as of Dec. 31, 2023 for all nations with reported statistics. A few countries are not included, such as China and Pakistan.
For those interested also, in reviewing the remaining Missions in the Africa West Area today. I have found the realignments of the following Stakes and Districts in neighboring Missions.
ReplyDeleteThe Koumassi Cote d'Ivoire Stake went from the Cote d'Ivoire Abidjan West Mission to Cote d'Ivoire Abidjan East Mission.
The Asaba Nigeria Stake and Agbor Nigeria, Nsukwa Nigeria and Ogwashi Nigeria Districts went from the Nigeria Benin City Mission to the Nigeria Owerri Mission.
The Awka Nigeria, Onitsha Nigeria, Umuahia Nigeria and Umuahia Nigeria South Stakes went from the Nigeria Enugu Mission to the Nigeria Owerri Mission.
Announced today, the groundbreaking ceremony for the Cagayan de Oro Philippines Temple. and Rendering released for the Joao Pessoa Brazil Temple.
ReplyDeletehttps://newsroom.churchofjesuschrist.org/article/news-for-temples-in-brazil-and-the-philippines
The rendering for the Cagayan de Oro Philippines Temple was also released in conjunction with the groundbreaking announcement.
DeleteSaw an extremely odd claim (not inclined to believe) that Kearns is going from 7 stakes to 2 stakes in the near future in a massive restructuring. Not sure how I would verify or combat this claim except to ask the knowledgeable people here.
ReplyDeleteI just took a look at the maps - firstly, there are only 5 Kearns stakes, not 7. Secondly, here are the number of wards and branches in each stake shown.
ReplyDeleteKearns Utah Central Stake - 8 wards
Kearns Utah East Stake - 4 wards
Kearns Utah South Stake - 3 wards
Kearns Utah Stake - 4 wards
Kearns Utah West Stake - 4 wards, 1 branch
As it stands, with only 2 stakes, they would have 11 wards and 12 wards respectively (assuming no further wards are discontinued and wards are not transferred to or from other stakes).
Seems plausible to me with four out of the five stakes having four wards or less, these stakes are barely functioning as they are and more ward consolidation is probably more likely than not.
DeleteI suppose I can also mention, upon further looking, among the 5 stakes, there are 4 Spanish-speaking wards and a Samoan-speaking ward. I feel certain it was said that there were going to be some more Spanish-speaking stakes created this year, so it seems that this consolidation is intended to at least prepare for another Spanish-speaking stake.
ReplyDeleteUntil very recently, all of the Kearns Stake had between 5-7 wards. Seems like the ward consolidation already took place, and the stake consolidation will be taking place shortly. I would guess 1-2 stakes are discontinued. Certainly 2 would be discontinued if the remaining Spanish units are used to create a new Spanish stake in the area, perhaps including Spanish units from the Taylorsville/Bennion area too. Hopefully the new wards will be larger and help strengthen the members in that area.
ReplyDeleteHaving lived in the SL Valley my entire life, it's certainly unfortunate to see the relative decline of active membership across the northern half of the valley, which has come with an accompanying decline in wards and stakes in the area. While the church is still certainly very strong in Salt Lake, West Valley, Millcreek, Kearns, Taylorsville and other cities near there, it's certainly declining as a percentage of the overall population, and declining somewhat in active membership. Anecdotally, it's not largely caused by people leaving the church, but rather by young families no longer being able to afford to live in those areas, and having more attractive options elsewhere. As a young person myself, I could only hope to be able to afford a home in cities such as Salt Lake or Millcreek, and cities like Kearns and West Valley don't necessarily have the reputation to being the most family friendly cities (and the housing there is still wildly overpriced). Still, it feels sad to watch as these areas become more and more populated by people who have never belonged to the church. Almost like we're losing the areas which hold so many stories of Latter-day Saints who have lived there faithfully in generations prior. Just my personal feelings, feel free to delete if inappropriate.
ReplyDeleteAll the kearns stakes did consolidate wards. With the changes each English ward should now have between 200-300 active members. So I don’t thank any other more wards are going to be consolidated anytime soon. As I understand at some point 2 or more stakes may be consolidated. But nothing official has been announced.
ReplyDeleteDo any of those stakes in Kearns have branches. Logistically the easiest would be to discontinue 1 stake, and then repurpose 1 stake to Spanish, so have 3 geographical stakes and 1 Spanish stake. I do wonder if there is other language outreach that would help.
ReplyDeleteI am very excited about Cagayan de Oro getting a ground breaking date. I hope we continue to have temple announcements in each Monday in July.
To me, this looks like discontinuing the South Stake would do the trick here. We also shouldn't forget that even that stake likely still is somewhere in the 700-900 active member range, which is sufficient to function for a small stake - especially if administrative burden is only focused on three wards instead of a much larger number of units. So I see no concern that the membership is getting neglected in any way. Depending on demographics, missionary work, the actual size of the three remaining wards, and any other insights the Church has, I would even say that it is not certain that the Church will discontinue any stake in Kearns.
ReplyDeleteWhile reviewing realignments in 2024 to the remaining Missions in the Asia and Asia North Areas. I found the following changes.
ReplyDeleteBoth the Rajamundry India Stake and the Visakhapatnam India District have been realigned from the India Bengaluru Mission to the India New Delhi Mission.
While reviewing the Mission realignments for the Caribbean Area today.
ReplyDeleteI found both the Cagua Venezuela Stake and Maracay Venezuela Stakes went from the Venezuela Valencia Mission to the Venezuela Caracas Mission.
And the Guadeloupe District went from the Puerto Rico San Juan Mission to the Barbados Bridgetown Mission.
And I have misplaced the Port of Spain Trinidad Stake. It was previously assigned to the Guyana Georgetown Mission (previously called the Trinidad Port of Spain Mission). I'm having it checked to verify still in the Guyana Mission boundaries.
Thanks, James Stokes, for the great update for the October 2024 Predicitions.
ReplyDeleteThat can be found on your blogspot.
https://stokessoundsoff.blogspot.com/search/label/Potential%20Future%20Temples
And more specifically your updated Potential Future Temples list.
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1xPCb9ndGGaYKbkZ83NlDz2CwMakk9rgvToM-ScZ-U6A
You are most welcome, Chris! In the coming days, I hope to also have a list of my top 20 contenders by area, since I fully believe that 20 new temples will be announced in October.
DeleteThanks for chiming in about the Kearns area, everyone. Looks to me like demographic trends do justify a lot of downsizing, especially with several stakes with low ward numbers after ward consolidations, but also that a reduction from 7 to 2 stakes was a major exaggeration, as I had expected.
ReplyDeleteSeparate issue: I am in the midwest, as some of you know. Southern Illinois (Cape Girardeau Missouri Stake) just created the Hubble Creek Ward as it split from the Lasalle Ward. Public details shared included that the Hubble Creek Ward now has exactly 100 participating adults (293 total members) and the Lasalle Ward 103 participating adults (263 total members).
This seems like a really aggressive unit creation. Both units barely meet the new minimum requirements for a new ward. Literally one person moving out or going inactive would put them below the minimum of participating adults. The area has seen a lot of baptisms, so quite a few of these participating adults are recent converts. Also, Illinois is experiencing plenty of out-migration, so this is completely plausible to see a family or two move out and not be replaced. So I have a couple of questions about this:
1. After a new ward has been created within the new requirements, if they drop below the minimum requirements, does anything happen? I know wards created before 2024 don't face restructuring (my old stake in Illinois only has one ward with the minimum 100 participating adults), but is that the case going forward?
2. Is it common for new wards to be created as soon as they hit the minimum requirements?
3. What is the typical number of participating adults that would trigger a consolidation? I didn't see any guidance from the church on consolidating - just creation of new units.
FYI, for those interested, the "San Pedro Honduras El Progreso Stake (525251)" has been recently renamed the "El Progreso Honduras Stake (525251)".
ReplyDeletehttps://maps.churchofjesuschrist.org/stakes/525251
Matt, while reviewing the Central America Area for possible Mission realignments in 2024. I am sad to inform the "Valle Verde Honduras District (1561588)" of the Honduras Tegucigalpa Mission, has now been consolidated. Unclear which nearby unit incorporated the branches. And no evidence when this now "Historical" unit happened. Maybe someone with access to Historical records in the CDOL can tell me.
ReplyDeletehttps://maps.churchofjesuschrist.org/stakes/1561588
Also, the only other realignment I found in the Central America Area, was the "Pueblo Nuevo Tiquisate Guatemala District (610119)" went form the Guatemala Guatemala City Center Mission to the Guatemala Retalhuleu Mission.
While reviewing the Meetinghouse website, It looks like the Morocelli, Ojo de Agua, Yuscaran and Zamorano Branches are now in the Tegucigalpa Honduras Uyuca Stake. Not sure how many of the 4 were previously part of the now defunct, Valle Verde District.
ReplyDeletehttps://maps.churchofjesuschrist.org/stakes/525243
Also, while reviewing today the remaining Missions of the Europe Central, North and Eurasian Areas. The following Mission realignments, I found :
ReplyDeleteThe Brussels Belgium Stake went from the Belgium/Netherlands Mission to the France Paris Mission. Which to me was odd, given that Brussels is the capital of Belgium and the previous mission includes both countries of Belgium and Netherlands.
And the Odessa Ukraine District went from the Ukraine Kyiv/Moldova Mission to the Ukraine Dnipro Mission.
I could be wrong, but I think that simplifies the language requirements for the Belgium/Netherlands mission as Belgium Brussels is the only French speaking stake in the country
DeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteFYI, I have just been informed also the following realignments of the Spokane Washington Temple District and the Helena Montana Temple District.
ReplyDelete"These three stakes have been moved from the Spokane Washington Temple district to the Helena Montana Temple district.
Missoula Montana
Ronan Montana
Stevensville Montana "
For those interested in such changes.
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteOther Noah here.
ReplyDeleteEduardo, answering your question, I served there between June 2021 and January 2022, so fairly recent. I got to know quite a bit about the culture and the people, and the biggest factor that withheld people from being baptized was definitely that many couples weren't married but lived together, and most of the time they just chose not to.
James, I can only answer your second question in part. I know of some cases where there are about two or three hundred participating adults in only one ward and the total number of members soars above six or seven hundred names, but they cannot split wards since there are not enough worthy priesthood holders to act as leaders of the new wards. This, among other things, is what keeps Districts like Santa Marta, Colombia, from becoming stakes.
Matt, please remove my comment if anything of what I've said is inappropiate in any way
Thanks Chris for your realignment updates.
ReplyDeleteI wasn't aware that Venezuela had moved from the South America Northwest Area to the Caribbean Area. Do you have any idea why that was the case?
Also do you know when the Trinidad Port of Spain Mission changed to the Guyana Georgetown Mission?
Rocky, the following article announced the area transfer of Venezuela:
Deletehttps://www.thechurchnews.com/leaders/2024/03/14/venezuela-caribbean-area-church-of-jesus-christ-first-presidency/
The purpose of the move is to add strength to the Caribbean Area, which will now have double the number of stakes.
FYI, while reviewing the remaining North America Central, Northeast, Southeast, Southwest and West Areas missions, I found the following realignments.
ReplyDeleteThe Parker Colorado South Stake went from the Colorado Colorado Springs Mission to the Colorado Denver North Mission.
The Boulder Colorado Stake went from the Colorado Fort Collins Mission to the Colorado Denver North Mission.
The Nashua New Hampshire, Springfield Massachusetts and Worcester Massachusetts Stakes, all 3 went from the Massachusetts Boston Mission the New Hampshire Manchester Mission.
ReplyDeleteThe Fort Wayne Indiana Stake and Muncie Indiana Stake went from the Ohio Cincinnati Mission to the Indiana Indianapolis Mission.
The Dayton Ohio East Stake went from the Ohio Columbus Mission to the Ohio Cincinnati Mission.
The Hagerstown Maryland and Lancaster Pennsylvania Stakes went from the Pennsylvania Pittsburgh Mission to the Maryland Baltimore Mission.
The Annapolis Maryland Stake went from the Maryland Baltimore Mission to the Washington DC North Mission.
The Woodbridge Virginia Stake went from the Virginia Richmond Mission to the Washington DC South Mission.
The Bartlesville Oklahoma, Broken Arrow Oklahoma and Tulsa Oklahoma Stakes went from the Arkansas Bentonville Mission to the Oklahoma Oklahoma City Mission.
ReplyDeleteThe Kyle Texas Stake went from the Texas San Antonio Mission to the Texas Austin Mission.
Chris D. last time I updated my records on Honduras was 06/11/2024. At that time the Valle Verde Honduras District was still showing active. It appears the Cantarramas Branch was discontinued. The Moroceli, Ojode Agua & Yuscaran Branches went to the Tegucigalpa Uyuca Stake and the Villa San Francisco Branch went to the Tegucigalpa La Esperanza Stake.
ReplyDeleteThe Apple Valley California and Victorville California Stakes went from the California Arcadia Mission to the California San Bernardino Mission.
ReplyDeleteThe Rancho Cucamonga California Stake went from the California San Bernardino Mission to the California Arcadia Mission.
The San Marcos California Stake went from the California San Diego Mission to the California Newport Beach Mission.
There are 5 Tongan Speaking Wards in the California San Jose Mission, that are not assigned to any Stake today. Maybe getting ready to organize a new (Tongan) Stake in the San Jose Mission?
- Highland Ward (Tongan) (2219611)
- Peninsula 3rd Ward (Tongan) (233447)
- Peninsula 5th Ward (Tongan) (1099167)
- San Jose 1st Ward (Tongan) (479330)
- Union City 2nd Ward (Tongan) (532347)
The Bothell Washington Stake went from the Washington Everett Mission to the Washington Seattle Mission.
And, finally, the Gresham Oregon and the Portland Oregon Stakes went from the Washington Vancouver Mission the Oregon Portland Mission.
That completes my review of all the North America Areas.
Just left to compare, the Pacific and South America Northwest and South Areas Missions.
Chris D., Actually all 5 of those wards are assigned to the two existing Bay Area Tongan Stakes--The Peninsula 3d and 5th Wards and the San Jose 1st Ward to the San Francisco California East Stake (Tongan), while the other two belong to the Oakland California East Stake (Tongan). But with 10 units in each stake, it's conceivable that a third Tongan stake could function in the area.
ReplyDeleteAlso I missed one last reassignment of the Fort Stockton Texas District from the Texas Lubbock Mission to the Texas El Paso Mission.
ReplyDelete@ Chris D,
ReplyDeleteAre there significantly more mission realignments than usual this year? I understand realignments are fairly normal when missions are created or discontinued, but it seems like there have been several realignments this year. Maybe I just haven't paid much attention to realignments in the past... If there are more this year, I'm guessing some would be partly attributable to young service missionaries joining traditional missions. Any insight you, Matt, or anyone else may have on this would be interesting to learn.
I had thought the Tulsa stake realignment happened a year ago, but I could have been wrong.
ReplyDeleteThe 36 missions formed this year were the 2nd highest ever. However some of these realignment such as from Boston Massachusetts to New Hampshire Manchester and the shuffling in Ohio and Indiana and maybe some others are not the results of new missions.
I am not sure if in years past anyone did an exhaustive listing of the changes beyong listing what was placed in new missions. I know at one point either a year or two years ago Cleveland Stake was shuffled from the Detroit to the Columbus Mission.
Some of these look like they are also in part driven by new stakes. With Columbus Mission getting the Zanesville Stake and having Cleveland Stake added it was up to I believe either 9 or 10 stakes. Dayton having 2 stakes in Cincinatti in 1 in Columbus Mission was also a little odd.
On the other hand with Indianapolis Mission just having gotten a new Stake, giving it 2 more stakes seems a bit odd, but those two Indiana stakes I think were always odd fits. It is far easier to travel from Fort Wayne to Indianaoolis than to Cincinatti.
I am wondering if there is a way to shuffle things around in Indiana, Michigan and Ohio to get a 6th mission from the existing 5. There used to be a Cleveland Mission, so that might be the most logical to recreate.
The other option would be to either create to Indianapolis Missions, to create a Fort Wayne or South Bend Mission, or 5o create a Grand Rapids Mission.
Grand Rapids seems unlikely because you would end up drawing weird boundaries around metro Detroit. A South Bend Mission taking in Kalamazoo Stake, South Bend, Fort Wayne, Lafayette and maybe either or both Toledo and Muncie, would leave I believe 6 stakes in Indianapolis, 4 stakes and a district in Lansing, 5 stakes in Detroit.
In the case of those Tongan wards in San Jose mission it seems they have decoded to assign wards to the mission that covers their area, and not insist a stake be all in 1 mission. My understanding is at one point the Santa Ana California Spanish language stake was assigned to more than one mission, I think maybe some Anaheim Mission and some Long Beach.
The number of total new missions this year may or may not be attributable to young service missionaries being assigned to missions. It seems it is more attributable to significant growth in number of missionaries serving, but there may be service missionary influence to.
ReplyDeleteIt just dawned on me to wonder if one reason the Cleveland and Rochester Missions are no more may be in part because the way visitor site missionaries are organized no longer puts then in the Mission that covers visitors sites as it did in the past.
My Stake president served in the Salt Lake Mission when it had temple square and all its missionaries under it.
The Utah realignment may in part be a result of service missionaries, but there are other factors, including significant population growth, and those alignments are basically all from creating 3 new missions.
The Massachusetts realignment really looks to be because over the last few years 3 or 4 new stakes were formed in Boston Mission boundaries while no new stakes were formed in Manchester Mission boundaries. Plus when they consolidated the New York City missions Boston got a stake from those. I believe Boston was to 13 stakes and Manchester had 5. I believe there was a time Boston had 5 stakes, Manchester had 5 stakes and Hartford had 3, then it went to 8 to 5, and has just been going up since. I am surprised the missions were not realigned earlier.
@Anonymous, as with my review and history, I thought i had checked all the Stakes and Districts last july also after mission changes. But possibly my information was outdated and going back a few years before they discontinued access to the "old" Classic Maps Site that showed us all assigned Missions and Temples and Areas for each unit. Which that information is no longer available to the general public. I had to ask a member with access to the current CDOL lists to send me the updated Mission lists for each Area.
ReplyDeleteI am still waiting for the last new 2024 Mission that was announced in January this year and a Mission President and companion called for the soon to be organized Nigeria Calabar Mission, split from the, at least, Nigeria Enugu Mission. Still has not been updated with assigned units in the CDOL as of today friday, July 12th, 2024.
I wonder if it will be delayed for Church Visa issues for the new President called from the Virginia Stake.
https://www.thechurchnews.com/callings/2024/2/9/24064777/new-presidents-companions-of-16-missions-from-argentina-to-vietnam/
"David Oryang, 64, and Christine Oryang, two children, Woodbridge 1st Ward, Woodbridge Virginia Stake: Nigeria Calabar Mission. Brother Oryang is a former stake president, stake presidency counselor, stake Young Men president, high councilor, bishop, bishopric counselor, branch president and Primary teacher. He was born in Gulu-Acholi, Uganda, to Edward Anthony Oryang and Eva Hellen Oryang.
Sister Oryang is a Primary teacher and former branch Primary president, ward Relief Society presidency counselor, ward Young Women presidency counselor and ward Relief Society secretary. She was born in Kumi, Uganda, to William Ibuyat Obore and Faith Asekenye Opolot."
Maybe Matt or others with access to the CDOL if they have noticed more realignments reassignments than previous years. And the possible cause if that is the case. I am open to listen to comments by anyone here.
Upon reviewing the Pacific Area Stakes and Districts, I discovered the "Raromatai Tahiti Stake (522481)" has been recently renamed the "Raiatea Tahiti Stake (522481)" FYI.
ReplyDeletehttps://maps.churchofjesuschrist.org/stakes/522481
Possibly, in memory of it's original name, when it was organized in December 1993, as the Uturoa Tahiti Raiatea Stake. Then changed names a month later in January 1994 to Raromatai Tahiti Stake.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.thechurchnews.com/2010/1/29/23229005/country-information-french-polynesia/
The Church News Almanac assigned it a Stake number "1962a".
And finally for the last 3 Areas (Pacific, South America Northwest and South America South), I found these realignments of Stakes to neighboring Missions.
ReplyDeleteThe Auckland New Zealand Redoubt Stake went from the New Zealand Auckland Mission to the New Zealand Hamilton Mission.
The Santa Cruz Bolivia La Pampa Stake went from the Bolivia Santa Cruz Mission to the Bolivia Santa Cruz North Mission.
The Asunción Paraguay Stake went from the Paraguay Asunción Mission to the Paraguay Asunción North Mission.
The Mercedes Uruguay Stake went from the Uruguay Montevideo Mission to the Uruguay Montevideo West Mission.
Also, sad to report, the Taiohae Marquesas Islands District (1986724), is in process today of being merged into the Papeete Tahiti Stake, as a single Taiohae Branch, and maybe the nearby Hiva Oa Branch on a neighboring island.
ReplyDeletehttps://maps.churchofjesuschrist.org/stakes/1986724
https://maps.churchofjesuschrist.org/stakes/506311
Districts being placed in stakes get better access to a patriarch. They also have a situation where the stake president instead of the often times less local mission president handles temple recommends, melchizedek priesthood ordination, mission calls and other matters. It can often be a net negative. Yes, I jnow we wish that all districts would advance to stakes, but sometimes expanding a stake to include more area is the best move at the current time.
ReplyDeleteI live in an area that used to be in a district that was merged into surrounding stakes. However I was not in the district when that happened, but in the stake.
I know in the realignment we got a stake president who was very focused on an effective at advancing people to getting their endowment. However since I was not in the district I cannot say how much the mission president focused on that.
On the Calabar Mission I could see visa issues delaying the arrival of the Uganda-born, US resident Oryangs. The other factor is thry do not create a mission until the mission leaders arrive. So that is why it is about July 1st. However we are at the point where visa issues are about the only thing that could explain it.
At times they appoint an acting mission president. Elder Kyungu, who will be Area President of the Africa West Area starting next month, was for a time the acting mission president of I think the DR Comgo Kinshasa East Mission. Earlier he was the inaugural president of the DR Congo Mbuji-Maye mission, which has 2 temples planned in what we're then it's boundaries. That mission was formed in 2016.
Come to think of it do we know that all these changes above just happened, or could some of them have occurred a few months ago and we are just finding out.
Are mission boundary changes only done in July, except when stake boundary changes or district boundary changes at other times of the year necessitate them?
Even asking the question makes me think the answer is mostly but not exclusively July. Besides what I listed above, opening new branches in areas not currently assigned to a mission is probably another time when changing mission boundaries would be done at other points in the year. I am guessing other changes occasionally happen at other times, but my sense is July is probably the most common time to formally shift borders.
While I was on my mission the Lake Havasu City Stake was moved from the Phonix Arizona Mission to our mission, the Las Vegas Nevada Mission. I think that occurred in July, but it has been so long, it might have been August.
I'm really excited to see growth in the Cape Girardeau Stake, even if it's possibly a tad ambitious. When I was serving in that stake back in 2017, they had just closed the Jackson Ward. They closed the Fredericktown Branch shortly thereafter, and they were down to five geographically unwieldy and weakly attended wards. And then on top of all that, their beautiful stake center was burned to the ground by a mentally ill ex-member. It's been a rough go for that stake, and it's encouraging to see some--any--growth.
ReplyDeleteChris D., in the original announcement of new missions, the First Presidency announced a Peru Lima Northeast Mission, but I don't see that listed by you above. Could you help me understand why that one seems to be missing? Was it perhaps renamed?
ReplyDeleteJames S., here is what Rick sent me on 06/27 among the new missions.
ReplyDelete"Perú Lima Northeast Mission (2246902)
· Lima Perú Begonias Stake (2134187)
· Lima Perú Campoy Stake (527025)
· Lima Perú Canto Grande Stake (519952)
· Lima Perú Las Flores Stake (519170)
· Lima Perú Magnolias Stake (1089145)
· Lima Perú Rímac Stake (525138)
· Lima Perú Wiesse Stake (522090)"
I thought I had posted the same day. I'm sorry. I hope this is useful.
Here is a recap of that day's update.
ReplyDelete" Chris D. said...
For all interested, here are 8 more of the new 2024 Missions. Recently organized.
Philippines Dumaguete Mission (2246341)
· Dumaguete Philippines Stake (609277)
· Escalante Philippines Stake (616249)
· Sagay Philippines Stake (1071238)
· San Carlos Philippines District (612235)
· Sipalay Philippines District (363820)
· Tanjay Philippines District (613002)
Philippines General Santos Mission (2246570)
· Digos Philippines Stake (521299)
· General Santos Philippines Stake (524042)
· Cotabato Philippines District (616559)
· Kidapawan Philippines District (616567)
· Marbel Philippines District (606006)
Philippines Tuguegarao Mission (2246376)
· Ilagan Philippines Stake (371351)
· Tuguegarao Philippines North Stake (519677)
· Tuguegarao Philippines South Stake (1684590)
· Aparri Philippines District (611875)
· Gonzaga Philippines District (481521)
Bolivia Cochabamba South Mission (2246473)
· Cochabamba Bolivia Aeropuerto Stake (2105276)
· Cochabamba Bolivia Alalay Stake (524476)
· Potosí Bolivia Stake (523658)
· Sucre Bolivia Stake (525146)
· Tupiza Bolivia District (610569)
Ecuador Quito West Mission (2246511)
· Esmeraldas Ecuador Stake (524301)
· Quito Ecuador Chillogallo Stake (523615)
· Quito Ecuador La Ofelia Stake (527963)
· Quito Ecuador Stake (512028)
· Santo Domingo Ecuador Stake (524131)
Perú Lima Northeast Mission (2246902)
· Lima Perú Begonias Stake (2134187)
· Lima Perú Campoy Stake (527025)
· Lima Perú Canto Grande Stake (519952)
· Lima Perú Las Flores Stake (519170)
· Lima Perú Magnolias Stake (1089145)
· Lima Perú Rímac Stake (525138)
· Lima Perú Wiesse Stake (522090)
Portugal Porto Mission (2011085)
· Coimbra Portugal Stake (385891) Estaca Coimbra Portugal
· Porto Portugal North Stake (519723) Estaca Porto Norte Portugal
· Porto Portugal Stake (518476) Estaca Porto Portugal
Montana Missoula Mission (2245701)
· Butte Montana Stake (502251)
· Great Falls Montana East Stake (511080)
· Great Falls Montana Stake (502685)
· Helena Montana Stake (505099)
· Kalispell Montana Stake (505927)
· Missoula Montana Stake (502677)
· Ronan Montana Stake (2089181)
· Stevensville Montana Stake (512362)
June 27, 2024 at 3:18 PM"
Looks like a new district was organized recently in Angola
ReplyDeleteLubango Angola District - https://maps.churchofjesuschrist.org/stakes/2263351
It's a small district only two branches listed
DeleteOther Noah here.
ReplyDeleteI didn't know there could be districts that small. @Downtownchrisbrown Are there any minimum requirements for districts? or are they merely a group of branches?
There has been one member group meeting in Lubango for some time in (Eiva). It is likely that the group has become a branch, or will soon become a branch, making three branches for the new district. Although rare, districts with two branches have operated in many areas of the world.
ReplyDeleteOther Noah here.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Matt, for the explanation. That's wonderful news for Angola
It is looking to me like the growth of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Angola would be greatly assisted by translating the Book of Mormon into Ovimbulu, Mbundu and Kongo. The last would also help in Church growth in places like Boma in the fat west of the DR Congo.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteSorry to bother here, I have been reading and watching this blog for a while now and found this interesting paper from the University of Utah talking about Religious Affiliation in Utah, it's from May of this year. I thought it could be of use or interesting for this blog. If this has already been viewed or is off topic please feel free to delete this comment.
ReplyDeletehttps://d36oiwf74r1rap.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/DivDataBook-Religion-May2024.pdf
I also want to thank you for your work on this blog, I am about to leave on my mission here and have a great interest in Church demographics.
The Ocala stake had some great congregational growth recently. The newly formed stake went from five to eight wards with many renamings. Every building in the stake gained a ward except for Williston ion the more rural part of the stake.
ReplyDeleteCraig Shuler says,
ReplyDeleteJake, congratulations on your mission and your interest in Church demographics. Which mission are you going to?
Thank you, I've been assigned to the Utah Salt Lake City West Mission. I'm very excited for it, I'm from the Midwest so I'm not very familiar with the west. Should be a great place with a lot happening.
DeleteCraig Shuler says,
ReplyDeleteI was already interested in Church growth (or Church geography as I call it) when I left on my mission in 1970 to the Brazil Central Mission, one of 3 missions then in Brazil. In June 1970 there were 2 stakes in Brazil when I arrived at the LTM in Provo (Language Training Mission), the predecessor of the MTC.
The mission had the following stakes and districts the end of September, the month I arrived in Brazil:
Sao Paulo Stake (first stake in South America organized 1966)
Sao Paulo East Stake (organized 1968)
Sao Paulo South Stake (organized that month)
Araraquara District
Aracatuba District
Campinas District
Curitiba District
Londrina District
My call had been to the Brazilian Mission, but all the names were changed the weekend in June 1970 when I was at the mission home in Salt Lake City. They were changed from nationality names to country names.
Brazilian Mission became the Brazil Central Mission
Brazilian North Mission in Rio de Janeiro became the Brazil North Mission
Brazilian South Mission in Porto Alegre became the Brazil South Mission
Curitiba Stake was organized in September 1972
In 1972 after I was released in June
Brazil Central Mission was split, replaced by 2 new missions
Brazil North Central Mission
Brazil South Central Mission
Rio de Janeiro Stake was organized in October 1972 a few months after I was released.
Porto Alegre Stakes were organized February 1973
In June 1973, 3 more stakes were organized from what had been the Brazil Central Mission:
Santos Stake, June 8
Campinas Stake, June 9
Sao Paulo West Stake, June 10
That made 7 stakes in in what had been the Brazil Central Mission and 9 in Brazil. It was an exciting time to serve.
No major temple construction announcement from the Church today. My thanks once again to you all.
ReplyDeleteMy branch the Belle Isle Branch on the east side of Detroit had 7 convert baptisms over the weekend. Our mission president was present for the 6 that occurred on Sunday.
ReplyDeleteI was told by a fellow branch member who served in the Tulsa Oklahoma/Bentonville Arkansas mission that the Tulsa stakes were moved to the Oklahoma City mission in 2017. They had been listed as switched this year, but this appears to not have been the case, unless they were switched back in the nean time.
My father served in the Brazil South Central mission from 1972-1974. It was called the Brazil Sao Paulo South mission by the end of his mission.
ReplyDeleteWow, James, no news is news, huh? Not trying to be critical, but I like it better when you talk about Church growth or attrition, but not a nothing burger. Or, maybe if you shared how many Mondays this year the Church of Jesus Christ has announced temple announcements, which seems to be your implied message. I am left wanting.
ReplyDeleteI always have questions about a lot of things. Could we ever figure out the former religions of all our converts? That would be some amazing statistics. My mom was both a Congregationalist and a Baptist growing up when she joined in 1968. My dad had been associated with the Methodists.
What if we had Church and other religious growth rates across all the nations?
Like, how do other churches grow in Tonga?
Any religious groups or growth in Antarctica? Anyway, just hungry for Church growth everywhere and anywhere.
In other non-news, I have not done much of my ministering visiting lately, but a few weeks I tried a little.
There is only a single civilian community in Antarctica, called Villa Las Estrellas. It is inhabited by Chileans, and exists to maintain their territorial claim, despite the 1961 Antarctic Treaty. It is the only place where children exist on the entire continent. There is a small school there, and also a church which, despite being Catholic, can be used for services in other communities. It is said to be the southernmost church in existence. I read somewhere that a small sacrament meeting once took place in McMurdo, but that may just be an anecdote.
DeleteWhile I no longer live in the US and therefore can't directly contribute to the conversation from a first-hand perspective, it seems like convert baptisms in some parts of the US have accelerated in the last year or so, especially in the Midwest and Northeast. I infer this from a few sources but I wonder if others onsite have the same impression.
ReplyDeleteIf anyone is interested, here is my list of the 163 Mission Presidents who will be replaced in next July 2025 changes. Including most of the Year 2013 New Missions created with that big single year new missions organized.
ReplyDeleteHIST. # MISSION (POST 07/1974) YEARS PRESIDENT
8 ITALY ROME 2022-2025 TIMOTHY D. MORRIS
21 GEORGIA ATLANTA 2022-2025 OZANI FARIAS
27 COLORADO DENVER SOUTH 2022-2025 BRADFORD C FLOYD
34 TONGA NUKU'ALOFA 2022-2025 RICHARD KAUFUSI
35 CANADA TORONTO 2022-2025 RULON F. STACEY
39 ARGENTINA BUENOS AIRES NORTH 2022-2025 DANIEL O. DUFFIN
41 CZECH/SLOVAK 2022-2025 DARRIN M. SKOUSEN
52 URUGUAY MONTEVIDEO 2022-2025 STUART T. ORGILL
54 VIRGINIA RICHMOND 2022-2025 MARK A. HUTCHISON
56 INDIANA INDIANAPOLIS 2022-2025 GARY M. RIDING
59 AUSTRALIA MELBOURNE 2022-2025 PAUL J. THOMAS
61 MÉXICO MONTERREY EAST 2022-2025 J. ALBERTO ESTRADA
68 ENGLAND LEEDS 2022-2025 DAVID V. CLARE
72 MÉXICO HERMOSILLO 2022-2025 LUIS G. ZAPATA
74 CANADA VANCOUVER 2022-2025 BRIAN D. GILL
83 CHILE RANCAGUA 2022-2025 SCOTT Y. DOXEY
90 ARGENTINA CÓRDOBA 2022-2025 MAURICIO ZANNI
97 BOLIVIA LA PAZ 2022-2025 FABIAN A. BOTTARI
101 TEXAS SAN ANTONIO 2022-2025 STEVEN H. FITZGERALD
102 WASHINGTON SEATTLE 2022-2025 RAYMOND L. HENDERSON
111 ARIZONA TEMPE 2022-2025 MICHAEL R. PHELPS
113 SINGAPORE 2022-2025 TAITAMA TOLMAN
122 ITALY MILAN 2022-2025 RITCH N WOOD
129 AUSTRALIA BRISBANE 2022-2025 C. TUM VONGSAWAD
135 IDAHO BOISE 2022-2025 CLARK B. MAXWELL
136 ARGENTINA BUENOS AIRES SOUTH 2022-2025 ALEJANDRO A. QUEIROLO
137 ALASKA ANCHORAGE 2022-2025 EVAN J. LARSEN
138 CALIFORNIA SAN DIEGO 2022-2025 NORMAN L. MERRITT
143 CHILE CONCEPCION 2022-2025 HELGI HUKDHS
148 KOREA BUSAN 2022-2025 SEUNGJIN LIM
150 MÉXICO MÉRIDA 2022-2025 ROBERTO ALEJANDRO OLGUIN
152 NEW MEXICO ALBUQUERQUE 2022-2025 JEFF EDWARDS
155 TENNESSEE NASHVILLE 2022-2025 YORK GALLAND
160 ENGLAND MANCHESTER 2022-2025 K. ROY TUNNICLIFFE
161 FLORIDA TAMPA 2022-2025 ROBERT T. GARDINER
162 IOWA IOWA CITY 2022-2025 DENNY BARNEY
171 PERÚ LIMA NORTH 2022-2025 NEAL T. MANLY
173 CHILE PUERTO MONTT 2022-2025 CRISTIAN J. GERVIC
175 MISSOURI ST LOUIS 2022-2025 BARRIE L. MCKAY
183 ECUADOR GUAYAQUIL SOUTH 2022-2025 RONALD A. BARKER
185 MÉXICO MÉXICO CITY NORTH 2022-2025 BROOKS HOLTOM
186 MICHIGAN DETROIT 2022-2025 JOSEPH E. JOHNSON
187 PERÚ AREQUIPA 2022-2025 DAVID S. CHIPMAN
189 WISCONSIN MILWAUKEE 2022-2025 DAVID HANSEN
190 ALABAMA BIRMINGHAM 2022-2025 JOEL B. CHIBOTA
196 PHILIPPINES BAGUIO 2022-2025 GORDON N. WILSON
201 MICRONESIA GUAM 2022-2025 MASARU OKUDA
202 NIGERIA LAGOS 2022-2025 MATHIAS N. NIAMBE
204 BRAZIL CURITIBA 2022-2025 SAMUEL G. BIKMAN
205 CALIFORNIA SAN BERNARDINO 2022-2025 MARCUS PINNOCK
206 ENGLAND BIRMINGHAM 2022-2025 ADAM WEST
210 WEST VIRGINIA CHARLESTON 2022-2025 DAVID G. LINDAHL
218 EL SALVADOR SAN SALVADOR WEST 2022-2025 C. LEROY BREINHOLT
220 PERÚ TRUJILLO NORTH 2022-2025 DAVID P. HIATT
224 WASHINGTON DC NORTH 2022-2025 TODD P. CLARKE
225 TEXAS FORT WORTH 2022-2025 JAROM L. JOHN
228 PHILIPPINES QUEZON CITY 2022-2025 BRYAN WILLETS
229 MÉXICO MÉXICO CITY EAST 2022-2025 GREGORY L. STAKER
231 NEW HAMPSHIRE MANCHESTER 2022-2025 STEVEN T. HAYDEN
233 FLORIDA JACKSONVILLE 2022-2025 KENNETH P. ELBERT
237 MÉXICO CULIACAN 2022-2025 V. MANUEL ALVAREZ
244 MÉXICO CHIHUAHUA 2022-2025 ROGELIO OSUNA
247 PHILIPPINES CAGAYAN DE ORO 2022-2025 STEPHEN F. NOTARTE
248 LIBERIA MONROVIA 2022-2025 JEFFREY K. THOMAS
250 CHILE ANTOFAGASTA 2022-2025 WAN-LIANG WU
251 COLOMBIA BARRANQUILLA 2022-2025 JUAN CARLOS MEDINA
ReplyDelete252 SOUTH AFRICA DURBAN 2022-2025 ANDREW DE KOCK
260 MÉXICO AGUASCALIENTES 2022-2025 RICHIE WEBBE
261 PHILIPPINES NAGA 2022-2025 PAUL S. HANSEN
262 TEXAS McALLEN 2022-2025 PEDRO X. LARREAL
263 PANAMÁ PANAMÁ CITY 2022-2025 KEITH FORSBERG
274 RUSSIA MOSCOW 2022-2025 ???
277 HONDURAS SAN PEDRO SULA EAST 2022-2025 RONALD J. OSTLER
282 OKLAHOMA OKLAHOMA CITY 2022-2025 ROSS N. HUGUES
290 PHILIPPINES CAUAYAN 2022-2025 RICARDO D. COBING
300 KENYA NAIROBI WEST 2022-2025 DAVID STURT
301 VENEZUELA VALENCIA 2022-2025 GUSTAVO R. LEON
309 NIGERIA ENUGU 2022-2025 HESBON USI
310 MÉXICO MONTERREY WEST 2022-2025 JORGE ERNESTO BLANCO SUAREZ
311 INDIA BENGALURU 2022-2025 PETER BUSHI
313 BRAZIL RIBEIRAO PRETO 2022-2025 RICHARD T. DENNING
330 BRAZIL BELEM 2022-2025 PAULO RIBOLLA
332 BRAZIL SALVADOR 2022-2025 CHARLES MARTINS
341 BRAZIL LONDRINA 2022-2025 ODILON ASEVEDO
342 CHILE SANTIAGO WEST 2022-2025 DAVID ERNESTO MOUHSEN
344 RUSSIA YEKATERINBURG 2022-2025 ROMAN NABATNIKOV
345 MONGOLIA ULAANBAATAR 2022-2025 NADMID B. NAMGUR
351 ILLINOIS CHICAGO 2022-2025 DAVID A. CHASE
352 NEVADA LAS VEGAS WEST 2022-2025 BRUCE T. NIELSEN
355 URUGUAY MONTEVIDEO WEST 2022-2025 FLINT D HOLLINGSWORTH
358 BOLIVIA SANTA CRUZ 2022-2025 VICTOR SPITALE
359 BRAZIL GOIANIA 2022-2025 BRIAN D. HANCOCK
360 BRAZIL JOAO PESSOA 2022-2025 STEVEN D. BOONE
361 BRAZIL SANTA MARIA 2022-2025 KEVIN WHITAKER
363 CANADA EDMONTON 2022-2025 JACK L. STOTT
367 PARAGUAY ASUNCION NORTH 2022-2025 WADE G. ALLEMAN
370 ARMENIA/GEORGIA 2022-2025 DAVID STIRLING
373 MÉXICO MÉXICO CITY WEST 2022-2025 DOUGLAS E. GRANT
374 WASHINGTON EVERETT 2022-2025 DAN OAKES
375 ARIZONA MESA 2022-2025 DAVID L. STAPLETON
379 WASHINGTON KENNEWICK 2022-2025 JOHN QUERETO
382 CHILE CONCEPCIÓN SOUTH 2022-2025 JAY T. JORGENSEN
386 GHANA CAPE COAST 2022-2025 CHRISTOPHER L. MORGAN
387 UGANDA KAMPALA 2022-2025 PHILIP MATHEMERA
389 MARSHALL ISLANDS/KIRIBATI 2022-2025 JOHN A. KENDALL
393 SIERRA LEONE FREETOWN 2022-2025 JAMES JARVIS
399 DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF THE CONGO LUBUMBASHI 2022-2025 PIERROT BOHIMANGA
400 GUATEMALA RETALHULEU 2022-2025 RULON S. MCKAY
401 MÉXICO VILLAHERMOSA 2022-2025 PABLO H. CHAVEZ
402 UTAH ST. GEORGE 2022-2025 KEVIN D. STAPLES
404 PERÚ CUSCO 2022-2025 J. STUART BUNDERSON
405 MÉXICO MÉXICO CITY NORTHWEST 2022-2025 LYNN W. BURNHAM
406 NICARAGUA MANAGUA NORTH 2022-2025 ROGER PEREZ
407 PERÚ LIMA WEST 2022-2025 DAVID FALABELLA SANCHEZ
412 ZAMBIA LUSAKA 2022-2025 NGQABUTHO F. MOYO
421 ANGOLA LUANDA 2022-2025 SCOTT SYKES
422 ARGENTINA COMODORO RIVADAVIA 2022-2025 KEVIN G. DICKEY
424 ARIZONA GILBERT 2022-2025 BRIAN J. HANSBROW
426 BOLIVIA SANTA CRUZ NORTH 2022-2025 FRANKLIN TORAL
427 BOTSWANA/NAMIBIA 2022-2025 CLINT WALKER
428 BRAZIL CURITIBA SOUTH 2022-2025 JAMES A. SNYDER
429 BRAZIL FORTALEZA EAST 2022-2025 NATHAN M. TANNER
431 BRAZIL NATAL 2022-2025 ALLEN C. OSTERGAR III
432 BRAZIL PIRACICABA 2022-2025 SCOTT P. CARD
433 BRAZIL SANTOS 2022-2025 DANIEL TEXEIRA
434 BRAZIL SAO PAULO WEST 2022-2025 DAVID L. HUNT
435 CALIFORNIA BAKERSFIELD 2022-2025 BLAIR H. BURTON
436 CALIFORNIA NEWPORT BEACH 2022-2025 MARK T. CARTER
438 CHILE SANTIAGO SOUTH 2022-2025 JEFFREY H. ROSENLUND
439 COLORADO FORT COLLINS 2022-2025 PAUL R. SANDSTROM
440 ECUADOR GUAYAQUIL WEST 2022-2025 ADAN SUÁREZ
442 GHANA ACCRA WEST 2022-2025 K. ERIK JACOBSEN
443 GUATEMALA COBAN/BELIZE 2022-2025 JORGE ALVARADO
444 HONDURAS SAN PEDRO SULA WEST 2022-2025 MITCHELL C. MCCLELLAN
446 IDAHO IDAHO FALLS 2022-2025 TODD E. BECKER
448 KANSAS WICHITA 2022-2025 JAYDEE BARR
449 KOREA SEOUL SOUTH 2022-2025 HASHICK HONG
450 MÉXICO CANCÚN 2022-2025 PAUL B. ANDERSON
451 MÉXICO CIUDAD JUAREZ 2022-2025 GASPAR AGUIRRE
ReplyDelete453 MÉXICO MÉXICO CITY CHALCO 2022-2025 LENIN CERÓN
454 MÉXICO PACHUCA 2022-2025 KRIS H. WRIGHT
455 MÉXICO QUERETARO 2022-2025 GREGORY K. STAPLEY
457 MÉXICO SALTILLO 2022-2025 JOAQUIN CABALLERO
458 NEW ZEALAND HAMILTON 2022-2025 JEFFERY NIKOIA
459 NIGERIA BENIN CITY 2022-2025 IGNATIUS BAIDOO
460 OREGON SALEM 2022-2025 DALE M. PHILLIPS
461 PAPUA NEW GUINEA LAE 2022-2025 CHARLES W. HOSEA
462 PÉRU HUANCAYO 2022-2025 PAUL E. HIGUEROS
463 PERÚ IQUITOS 2022-2025 MARK E HOPKIN
464 PHILIPPINES CAVITE 2022-2025 R. LIND STAPLEY
465 PHILIPPINES CEBU EAST 2022-2025 ERMELINDO CASINILLO
466 PHILIPPINES LEGAZPI 2022-2025 WILLIAM T. WHITWORTH
469 UTAH SALT LAKE CITY 2022-2025 CHRISTOPHER J. CONDIE
472 WASHINGTON VANCOUVER 2022-2025 GARY L. MANN
473 COTE D'IVOIRE ABIDJAN WEST 2022-2025 R. WADE LITCHFIELD
488 NIGERIA OWERRI 2022-2025 IKE AKE
489 DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF THE CONGO MBUJI-MAYI 2022-2025 AIMÉ GAMFINA
495 GUATEMALA ANTIGUA 2022-2025 MARC PROBST
496 PERÚ LIMATAMBO 2022-2025 WALTER PLUMB IV
497 PHILIPPINES ANTIPOLO 2022-2025 JAMES GILWELL O. FANTONE
508 HAWAII LAIE 2022-2025 SIDNEY J. BASSETT
509 RWANDA KIGALI 2022-2025 CHRISTIAN MAVINGA
510 SPAIN MADRID NORTH 2022-2025 CHRISTOPHER L. EASTLAND
Eduardo, sorry to disappoint you, but my wife and I have been under the weather with a minor illness for the last week, so a brief comment to note that no temple announcement was made was all I could manage at the time. Sorry if that's a "nothingburger". No offense taken, and I hope none is given.
ReplyDeleteChris, when it comes to the Russia Moscow Mission, I found the following article:
https://newsroom.churchofjesuschrist.org/article/first-presidency-calls-160-mission-presidents-to-begin-serving-in-2022
That article, from 2022, announces a new president of the Russia Moscow Mission, so the next change is only actually due in 2025, unless you have updated sources that indicate the president should have changed this year. It appears there were some "round robin" swaps of mission leaders assigned in 2022, but my present illness did not allow me to search further than that.
James S., Thank you for your clarification and research. From that link of the 160 called in 2022 that will be due to change next July 2025 (standard 3 year calling). It lists an Pres. Adam West was called to serve the Russia Moscow Mission (at that time under the "Europe East Area").
ReplyDeleteBut in this list, I had him listed as reassigned that same year, possibly due to the breakout of the current Russia-Ukraine conflict that started in February 2022, to the England Birmingham Mission to preside instead.
"206 ENGLAND BIRMINGHAM 2022-2025 ADAM WEST"
So still, I don't know if the Moscow Mission is temporarily under a local Russian Citizen Area General Authority or other, that for security was not announced publicly online.
Chris, I thought I had seen something at some point indicating that one of the counselors in the Eurasian Area Presidency was or would be overseeing one of the major missions in Russia. If that is correct, it's likely that the area presidency has assumed some degree of oversight for the other major missions in Russia until it's safe for a non-Russian native to enter that nation and assume oversight for those missions.
DeleteThis article from 2022 indicates that one man was overseeing three of the major missions in Russia, though he was only assigned to one of them originally:
Deletehttps://www.ldsdaily.com/world/an-update-on-russian-latter-day-saint-missionaries/
The man identified in that article has been in the Europe East/Eurasian Area Presidency since April of 2022:
https://newsroom.churchofjesuschrist.org/article/first-presidency-announces-2022-area-leadership-assignments
Therefore, my assumption is that the three missions named in the first article above are under the jurisdiction of the Eurasian Area Presidency until further notice.
https://www.thechurchnews.com/2022/4/7/23265819/2-new-missions-england-england-bristol-spain-madrid-presidents/
ReplyDelete"The England Bristol Mission will be reinstated from areas of the England Birmingham and England London missions, with the boundaries of the England Leeds Mission also impacted. England Birmingham Mission President Kevin E. Gallacher and Janine D. Gallacher, who have been serving since July 2021, will be reassigned to the Bristol mission.
Adam West and Heather West have been reassigned to lead the England Birmingham Mission."
Hi Pascal,
ReplyDeleteI have friends in various stakes in the midwest and talk about this kind of thing a lot (mostly Indiana, Illinois, and Ohio).
It's really hit and miss. A few areas have been seeing quite a few baptisms. Mattoon was doing well for a while. Southern IL this past year has seen quite the uptick in baptisms. But other areas are still struggling relative to the size of the area, particularly Champaign IL and both Bloomington IN and IL. Cincinnati was doing OK last I heard, but in areas that don't have as much support to retain membership as they need.
The real struggle is still retaining activity after baptism. The midwest has a lot of temporary membership coming in and out (more out than in in some areas, particularly Illinois), and from my experience, there is less than a 20% chance that any given convert is still attending after a year, so the lack of stability makes things difficult.
Mission presidents have served a standard 3 years, with most deviations being serving less than that since the 1930s. However some mission presidents have served longer in countries experiencing instability.
ReplyDeleteWallace Toronto served in Czechoslovakia both before and after World War II. He remained the mission president in absentia ammeter the government forced his removal I believe until the 1960s.
Fritzner Joseph was mission president in Haiti in the 1990s for almost 5 years. He has since been the 1st temple president there and is now an area seventy.
Another note is that just after the start of the War in Russia the 3 combined missions only had 10 volunteers and all 4 missions only had 15 in total. With this number of volunteers having one man be acting president over 3 missions is not as hard a task as it would be if these missions were anywhere near the level of volunteers seen in other missions.
The numbers might have gone up since then, but it would need to be a huge order of magnitude change. Also where you have such sensitive issues and a very antagonistic government, having the same leader in place for a longer period of time may help in many ways.
Eduardo, to make up for the "nothingburger" of my "no temple news is news", I am pleased to be able to share the latest updates on the Lone Mountain Nevada, Bakersfield California, and Cody Wyoming Temples that may be indicative of where things are heading for each of those temples:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.reviewjournal.com/news/politics-and-government/las-vegas/las-vegas-city-council-unanimously-approves-plans-for-lds-temple-3096604/
https://www.kget.com/news/local-news/neighbors-voice-concerns-for-potential-124-foot-tall-mormon-temple-tower-project/
https://www.wyomingnews.com/wyomingbusinessreport/industry_news/cody-lds-temple-opponents-continue-to-wait-for-records-from-city/article_28cdb242-43a4-11ef-9eac-3788ac1dd72f.html
I hope these updates are helpful to all who read them.
Rick, from the Temples site, just informed me of the great news of a new Stake in Kenya organized from the Kyulu Kenya District.
ReplyDeleteFrom this newsroom post.
https://news-africa.churchofjesuschrist.org/article/an-historic-event-in-historic-kyulu-kenya-as-new-stake-is-created
It hasn't been updated yet on the Maps site.
https://maps.churchofjesuschrist.org/stakes/614777
To add onto temple updates James provided on Lone Mountain, Bakersfield, and Cody, here is an update on Fairview:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.dallasnews.com/news/faith/2024/07/15/fairview-the-church-of-jesus-christ-of-latter-day-saints-unable-to-agree-on-temple-plan/
The church offered to shave 15 feet off the 16 story spire and rename the temple the Fairview temple, but Fairview council members didn't find that to be a serious concession. Looks like the vote is happening in early August, and the church may either have to make more concessions or get its legal team ready.
Couldn't read the above article without subscribing. The Church has another option: relocate the temple. They did it for Tampa, so they may have to do so for McKinney.
DeleteAlso of note, from the Newsroom site. Posted yesterday also this article about the recent groundbreaking ceremony for the new office building to be built in Nairobi Kenya for the Africa Central Area offices.
ReplyDeletehttps://news-africa.churchofjesuschrist.org/article/ground-is-broken-for-construction-of-new-africa-central-area-office-in-nairobi-kenya
Today the Church news site posted this about Elder Patrick Kearon's 63rd birthday today.
ReplyDelete"Today is Elder Patrick Kearon’s 63rd birthday. Here are 9 of his recent quotes
Born July 18, 1961, Elder Kearon has served as an Apostle since December 2023"
https://www.thechurchnews.com/leaders/2024/07/18/elder-patrick-kearon-63rd-birthday-9-recent-quotes/
The Church has announced an adjustment to YSA and SA age ranges. YSAs will now include those 18-35, and SAs will be those 36 and older. Additionally, the Church has indicated that, where desired, in YSA stakes with many YSAs, wards can be split between those 18-25 and those 26-35. This is per a July 18 letter from the Priesthood and Family Department. Large institute classes can also be split with the same divisions as needed. While this will start effective immediately in the US and Canada, it will be subsequently implemented in other parts of the world in the coming months. Chapters 14 and 37 of the General Handbook will be updated to reflect these adjustments. Area presidencies will work with stake presidencies to determine how best to implement this new directive. The letter also highlights the importance of institute for YSAs. My thanks once again to you all.
ReplyDelete35 is the new 30. So, we could have a presidential candidate in the U.S. in a YSA Ward. I bet there are some viable candidates. Let's start now. Word to the wise, any potential runners (see Romney family): it would be super helpful for your prospects to serve in the military. Just saying.
ReplyDeleteTo be fair to James and the word "news"... News tends to be bad, different, negative, a change from the status quo. So, no new temple news could be considered news. Gospel means "Good News" , so let us keep the Gospel stuff coming!
News on Turkey: they are getting more Farsi-speaking missionaries. Has anyone ever heard of Norfolk Island having missionaries? How is Saint Helena doing?
Any news on the Inuit in Canada or Alaska getting missionaries?
I wonder if we could access some of the native reservations in Chile or South America? How are the U.S. reservations doing? A friend who served in Navajo country in the 1980s is moving back to Utah; I encouraged him to visit the old grounds. We need to make many desert bloom and blossom as roses.
Just do it. Lengthen your stride.
While it may not be a reservation, the town of Otavalo Ecuador has an entire native speaking stake. And an additional Spanish speaking stake.
DeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteThe wording I saw seemed to say hold separate institute for those 36-plus unless you do not have enough attendance at all to f
ReplyDeleteDo so.
I believe here in Michigan at least in my stake they had been following the 35 rule for several months already.
In the case of Kenya, with 4 stakes there and 3 in Uganda, Kampala Uganda Temple now moves to the top of my list. To be fair It has been top of my list for the 3 conferences since the Chiclayo Peru Temple was announced, so this puts it top for 4 conferences. With the African continent having had no temples announced in April 2024 I am hoping we see several announced in October. Other than Kampala I will hold off on specific predictions until I come out with my full list. I am not sure when that will be.
I assume Michigan is in the North America Northeast Area? I’m in the New York New York YSA Stake, and this change went through for us around October of last year. We received instructions from the Area Presidency to institute it. I was under the impression that it was area wide, so that’s probably when it happened in Michigan.
DeleteI meant 26-plus on my last post. It seems to say do institute classes for 18-25 and separate ones for 26-35. I imagine in a situation like the Ann Arbor stake they will still have the Eastern Michigan University class open to all students and anyone else who wants to make it middle of a week day. The classes held at the institute building by Uof M will split by age.
ReplyDeleteI think this is a big plus.
So I have been trying to figure out if we can beat the 3 years and 4 months it took to go from 50 temples to 100 temples in going from 200 temples to 250 temples. We are ahead of the game. When the 50th Temple was dedicated there were only I think 13 more temples announced. We will have at least 150 more temples announced when the 200th Temple is dedicated in late October, but probably more like 170 to 175 more Temple announced. I believe we will be at 49 more temples at or past ground breaking then with no additional groundbreaking announced by then. We will probably have more announced do we will hopefully be to 55-60 in some stage. If we can have at least 202 temples operating with 58 more having had groundbreaking (including all those currently past groundbreaking) I think we should be on target to have 250 dedicated temples by the end of December 2027, and so we might go from 200 to 250 in a few months less than we went from 50 to 100.
It will really help if a temple like Tarawa Kiribati can move fairly quickly from groundbreaking to dedication.
I have some mixed feelings about the new age limits for YSA. On one hand, it is great that more opportunities are created for older singles. On the other hand, I am worried that this will further contribute to delayed onset of serious dating, courtship, and marriage. I have experienced that both young men and women who have served missions, finished college, and started out in their careers in their mid/late 20s are increasingly uneager to start families. In the process, they reject prospective partners at enormous rates; not because of poor hygiene, lack of life aspirations, or destructive habits, but because they are not the King (or Queen) of their dreams. Currently, these patterns often lead to regret in a period of life when there is still room to change - at least when the objective is also to have children. However, if you stay in the (admittedly very fun and fulfilling) YSA life and mindset until you turn 36, you might quite literally run out of time.
ReplyDeleteI know this is perhaps a bit blunt, but I started feeling detached from the YSA demographic by the time I was seriously dating my wife (at 25/26). I just can't imagine living a typical YSA lifestyle at 35. Ecclesiastes 3 comes to mind, there is a season for everything under the sun...including for spending all your weekends and all your PTO at YSA conventions.
The Tegucigalpa Honduras temple relocated after a formal groundbreaking.
ReplyDeletePascal,
ReplyDeleteI think alot of people are naïve. I talked to a guy recently who put off marriage until he was like 30 because of indecisiveness, partly because he was oblivious to the biological clock of men and women.
There is an ideal childbearing age. Sooner is generally better after you're in your early 20's. Overall, it's easier to get (and stay) pregnant, kids are more likely to be healthy, easier on mother's body, parents have more energy for their kids, etc. Marriage is easier before people get too set in their ways.
I think it would be wise if people where more deliberate about preparing themselves for marriage. Not rush it, but prepare for it. Emotionally, socially, spiritually, physically, financially, etc. One problem with preparing financially, is people think they need to already be set financially. This is false. Being financially ready includes budgeting, learning to spend wisely, delayed gratification, working consistently towards education & career, building credit history; reading contracts (i.e. credit card, bank account terms, housing leases, 401k paperwork, etc.; cooking/baking basic meals, learning how to maintain a home & vehicle, including appliances, yard equipment, sprinklers, etc.; learning how to enjoy inexpensive wholesome recreation (exercising like hiking, biking, jogging, walking, sports; nature like camping, playing in rivers, lakes, picnics). In other words, learning and building a foundation.
Too often singles subconsciously put off "grown-up" stuff until they have have the responsibility of marriage. Starting to take on that responsibility sooner prepares people for marriage and makes them a more attractive partner. I've seen alot of people not take their career seriously until they are about to get married, only to realize later that they wasted all that time and now they are married and broke.
This may not seem church growth related, but let me assert that having members of the Church who are more responsible and aware makes for better members, leaders, families, etc.
I heard an interesting rumour today that in our Stake or area they are going to be incorporating aspects of the Self-reliance courses in seminary. 3 days religious instruction and two days self-reliance. So maybe they are seeing the same needs you see
DeleteI personally think all members, particularly married members, need to stop being so judgmental about single members. It's not as if your life suddenly becomes perfect when you are married. Back when the Church more actively encouraged larger families it was not uncommon to see couples have kids in their 20s, 30s & 40s with huge age ranges between eldest to youngest. But back to this change, it is obvious to me that it is largely due to the inactivity levels soaring in singles once they hit 30 years old.
ReplyDeleteOhhappydane33,
ReplyDeleteI think I see where you are coming from. What I'm talking about isn't just about members of the Church. In the U.S. popular culture people seem to be maturing at a later age. I could be wrong.
All I know is that I have seen far too many couples that barely know each other get married, and the culture of the Church encourages it, and it doesn't always work, even when married in the temple.
DeleteThere has been at least one LDS meeting in the church on Ross Island. Obviously, the population is very small there, so it does not seem it was repeated but members stationed at Ross or the South Pole, and presumably other outposts can practice privately. But one thing to keep in mind is down there, work is long and it is hard. My understanding is that there has been at some point members in the Falklands. As to the religious backgrounds of converts, I can't speak for myself, I am reactivated but my ministering companion is from a family of converts in OR...decades ago. They were Methodist although not much engaged in religion. Before I found my way back to the church, I was briefly involved in a Unitarian church. That was quite a terrible experience, and I'm glad to be done with them.
ReplyDeleteThe Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints just released a website that makes it much easier to navigate the oral family histories gathered in Africa, mainly in DR Congo. From the DR Congo alone there are above 150,000 oral history interviews. They can be searched by tribe, village or mentioned name.
ReplyDeleteThe Church News just covered Elder Dieter F. Uchtdorf's ministry to Central Europe, where he not only met with Church members and missionaries, but also made several personal stops significant to him and/or his wife, Sister Harriet R. Uchtdorf. It occurred to me to wonder if Elder Uchtdorf may also have been sentt to minister in the Europe Central Area for the purpose of scouting out new temple locations, or to assess the readiness of Church-owned properties for the construction of temples in that area. My thanks once again to you all.
ReplyDeleteI remember someone asking why the Church News was not reporting on Elder Uchtdorf's visit to Europe as it was in progress. The details of the report were worth the wait. He seems to gave met with the Czech/Slovak missionaries and with all missionaries in German-speaking missions.
ReplyDeleteHas the site for the Hamburg Temple been announced?
No, the site for Hamburg has not yet been announced.
DeleteToday the Newsroom and Church News sites, posted a Groundbreaking Date and artist's rendering for September 7t, of the new Wichita Kansas Temple.
ReplyDeletehttps://newsroom.churchofjesuschrist.org/article/groundbreaking-date-released-for-wichita-kansas-temple
Today's big temple news: the groundbreaking for the Wichita Kansas Temple:
ReplyDeletehttps://newsroom.churchofjesuschrist.org/article/groundbreaking-date-released-for-wichita-kansas-temple
That temple will be the 11th one to have a groundbreaking this year, as opposed to last year, when ground was broken for only 8 temples:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1vytFI_N8bh1zRZRtn-A-uQC5FIwIuxbKM3e4P376yuA/edit?usp=sharing
And with the rest of September and the final quarter of the year to go, it seems likely that we might potentially see somewhere between 20-30 temple groundbreakings total this year. An exterior rendering was also released for Wichita's first temple.
Here is my coverage of this update:
https://stokessoundsoff.blogspot.com/2024/07/breaking-temple-news-next-major-temple_01169667805.html
My thanks once again to you all.
A September 7th ground breaking date has been announced for the Wichita Kansas Temple.
ReplyDeleteBishop Causse spoke at a fireside in Paris Sunday evening in preparation for the Olympics. Peter Vidmar, a member of the General Young Men Advisor Counsel who won two gold medals and a silver Medal at the 1984 Olympics spoke. As did Jimmer Fredette who will be a competitor in 3 on 3 basketball at this Olympics and Rudi Sourdes, who composed the music used in the opening of the Beijing winter Olympics. Sourdes and Bishop Causse gre up in the same branch.
"Elder Hélio da Rocha Camargo, first Brazilian general authority of the Church, dies at age 98
ReplyDeleteElder Camargo served as a mission leader, temple president and as a General Authority Seventy from 1985 to 1990
22 July 2024, 7:34 PM MDT"
https://www.thechurchnews.com/members/2024/07/22/elder-helio-da-rocha-camargo-obituary-dies-first-brazilian-general-authority/
The Church News just run an article on the ward in the Church that has operated as a church unit the longest. That is the Preston Ward in England. It pre-dates the formation of any ward in Salt Lake City by 12 years, and no ward or branch in the Eastern United States survived through the American Civil War.
ReplyDeleteIt is more encouraging that the Preston Ward foes not meet at the Preston stake center out in Chorley by the Preston England Temple. That is 7 miles from Central Preston, but the ward is one of two that meets at the chapel in Preston. The current bishop is from Botswana, came to England as a youth, joined the Church a few yeaes later and served his mission in the London South Mission.
The stake president also lives in the Preston Ward. His father is from Tanzania, thus his last name Haji, which seems yo suggest he has an ancestor somewhere who made the Hajj to Mecca. His mother is Irish. He lived most of his life in Ireland. He came to England to work as the Preston England Temple recorder.
I also learned that the Persian language branch that meets at the Chaple by the Newport Beach Temple gets about 70 or more people to sacrament meeting.
@John Pack Lambert
DeleteThanks for reporting on the Wards in Preston. I recently found out I have English ancestors who came from Chorley.
As far as the new age-range for single adult wards go, I'm glad we're taking steps to reach out to some of those singles who may have felt marginalized in the past. I hope we continue to take steps in this direction.
ReplyDeleteI think it's important to recognize that not all singles (along with not all married members and not all converts, etc.) in the church come from the same background.
My experience with single adults in the church over the past couple of decades is that many are struggling with burdens that aren't readily apparent at first.
Many are dealing with mental illnesses or developmental disorders, broken homes, the effects of divorce, recovering from addiction, are recent converts, have physical disabilities, poverty, are one of the only church members in their family, single parenthood, recovering from trauma, having a career that is necessary for survival but requires too much of your time, struggling to find steady work, the death of parents or loved ones, etc.
For many single members, marriage isn't their next step. Many of them have yet to develop the social skills to even build healthy friendships with members of their own sex, much less relationships with members of the opposite sex. Some don't even know yet how to have positive relationships with members of their own family. Plenty of them/us could use more guidance and skills as far as those next steps are concerned.
For some, just surviving and trying to make it out to church or activities is their priority.
One example is a single friend of mine who had a literal back-breaking car accident several years ago, and is from a broken home with difficult relationships with his family members. His focus has been on survival the last few years and just seeing him being able to make it out to activities and doing the best he can in his situation is inspiring to me.
ReplyDeleteAnother person I can think of in a special situation is a professional lady friend of mine who has dated proficiently and continually, and who has been very active in the Church and in her calling as a singles’ representative. She obtained a post-graduate degree, is a teacher, and is very strong-willed and spunky. Despite her best efforts, marriage eluded her for years.
She had a saying when people would ask her why she was still single, “Because in the pre-mortal life, when the Lord and I sat down and wrote out the story of my life, we decided the single chapter would be a long one.”
That's stuck with me, and reminds me of a talk by Elder Oaks about trusting in the Lord's timing (for when promised blessings will arrive).
I'm happy to report that she had the good fortune to get married (in her late thirties) just a couple of years ago to a good man who is also a friend of mine (another active member with challenges and a unique situation of his own). They're very compatible and I'm glad both of them were able to find each other after searching for so long.
Luckily, I've been able to see many of my single friends have the opportunity to get married in their 20s or 30s or 40s over the last couple of decades.
I have plenty of other friends who are still single, but I don't worry so much about their marital status (more than trying to be kind and understanding and supportive to them in each of their unique situations), particularly because I have strong assurances of my own that the Lord won't withhold any blessings from them that he has prepared in His own time and place (and that most of them are earnestly seeking those blessings, despite their unique challenges).
I hope we can come to an understanding some day of how useful and effective it is to approach each member as an individual who could use fellowship and understanding.
ReplyDelete“There is too much of a sameness in this community. . . . I am not a stereotyped Latter-day Saint and do not believe in the doctrine . . . away with stereotyped 'Mormons!’”
-(paraphrased from Brigham Young by Hugh Nibley - from Hugh Nibley's talk “Leaders to Managers: The Fatal Shift”)
Or my favorite quote on the matter:
“How think ye? If a man have a hundred sheep and one of them be gone astray, doth he not leave the ninety and nine, and goeth into the mountains and seeketh that which is gone astray?”
-Matthew 18:12
I hope for the day we see a complete end to the shaming, attacking, accusing, and harassing of single members that I and others experienced for years. It seems to me that we're coming out of that phase as a culture (at least I hope and pray that we are).
I'm glad we've seen positive changes in our cultural rhetoric towards singles in the last few years, particularly since a few conferences ago, when the topic of church membership being made up of about 50% single members was addressed. I hope to see more progress in that regard.
I'm grateful for the influence of Sister Wendy Nelson, and her perspectives from both being a single member for so long, and her background as a family therapist.
I'm glad to hear that the Church is going to be incorporating aspects of the self-reliance courses in seminary.
ReplyDeleteI hope we can also find ways to implement courses on social skills and relationships and courtship, healing from trauma, dealing with divorce and single parenthood, and any other course or instruction that might help struggling singles build confidence, social skills, friendships, or mental health.
(As far as the above is concerned, I've had to figure out most of those skills on my own over the years - from self-help books written by mostly nonmembers (and some members), or from scouring these principles here and there in obscure corners of manuals or talks by prophets and LDS scholars. I hope we can find ways to make these skills more mainstream and accessible.)
I'm happy to report that my personal experiences as a single member of the church (as far as my relationships with other members goes and the treatment I've received) have improved over the last few years.
My most recent local leaders have been great examples to me and have treated my family and me with respect and kindness and dignity (especially over the last few months during our temple trips and while extending a family history assignment to me). It's been a complete breath of fresh air. I hope I can learn from them and reciprocate their kindness.
Well said Johnathan. Too much judgment and too much ridicule in the culture of the Church for being different. These same things could be said for those that didn't serve missions or had to return home early. Is it any wonder why there are so many inactive members or those that leave the Church outright. I suppose one could call these folks weak or offended, but OTOH, why would they want to go to Church where you really aren't wanted?
Delete@Ohhappydane33
DeleteAgreed.
And thank you.
You reminded me of a phrase that's always stood out to me from one of our hymns: "In the quiet heart is hidden, sorrow that the eye can't see."
We have some wonderful friends, the Molens, who live nearby the Fort Worth temple and have been taking aerial pictures during its construction. They recently set up a Facebook page to follow the building process. https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61562275487227&mibextid=ZbWKwL
ReplyDeleteCraig Shuler says,
ReplyDeleteSince it was Utah’s Pioneer Day this week and no one has posted lately, I thought I’d write a post about Utah’s pioneer stakes:
1847 Salt Lake Stake
1851 Weber
1851 Provo
1851 Parowan
1851 Nephi
1869 Millard
1869 Beaver
1869 Bear Lake (in Idaho)
1869 St. George
1874 Sevier
In the last year of Brigham Young’s life, 1877, the number of stakes doubled from 10 to 20, generally one per county:
Kanab
Panguitch
Cache
Davis
Tooele
Morgan
Sanpete
Summit
Wasatch
and Box Elder
There were no counties with more than one stake until 1900, but there were more counties with stakes
1880 Emery
1883 San Juan
1887 Uintah
1893 Wayne
Craig Shuler says,
ReplyDeleteSince it was Utah’s Pioneer Day yesterday and no one has posted lately, I thought I’d write a post about Utah’s pioneer stakes:
1847 Salt Lake Stake
1851 Weber
1851 Provo (renamed Utah Stake in 1852)
1851 Parowan
1851 Nephi
1869 Millard
1869 Beaver
1869 Bear Lake (headquarters in Idaho)
1869 St. George
1874 Sevier
In the last year of Brigham Young’s life, 1877, the number of stakes doubled from 10 to 20, generally one per county:
Kanab
Panguitch
Cache
Davis
Tooele
Morgan
Sanpete
Summit
Wasatch
and Box Elder
There were no counties with more than one stake until 1900, but 4 more counties gained stakes:
1880 Emery
1883 San Juan
1887 Uintah
1893 Wayne
When Utah became a state in 1896, 23 of the 27 counties had their own stakes.
Rich County was still part of Bear Lake Stake.
Garlfield County was still part of Kane Stake
Grand County was part of Emery Stake
Piute County, was part of Sevier Stake.
The last two of Utah's 29 counties were Duchesne County in 1913 and Daggett County in 1917
I know that Otavalo Ecuador has recently come under the radar here on this blog as a next potential site selected for a new Temple.
ReplyDeleteHere today the Church News posted an article about Elder Rasbands recent ministry to the South America Northwest church Area. In his ministry trip, he included meetings in Otavalo Ecuador.
https://www.thechurchnews.com/leaders/2024/07/26/elder-ronald-rasband-part-of-church-family-colombia-ecuador-bolivia-peru-venezuela/
"While in Ecuador, Elder Rasband went to Otavalo to meet with Latter-day Saint leaders there.
“They are a pure and delightsome people,” Elder Rasband said of the Otavalan Saints. He had met with some of the members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints from that region previously, and going to meet with them was an important moment for Elder Rasband.
“I am one of those who very much feels that you should write them down and go back to them during your life to remember the Spirit that you felt on that occasion,” he said. “It will give you strength in your current environment and in your current situation when you refer to spiritual experiences of the past, and Otavalo is one of those for me.”
Thank you, Craig! That's really interesting information!
ReplyDeleteThe Church has just been registered in the Republic of Azerbaijan. In Asia or Europe, depending on who you ask.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/church-of-jesus-christ-of-latter-day-saints-officially-registered-in-azerbaijan/ar-BB1qHMz4?ocid=msedgntp&pc=HCTS&cvid=50b9962229d44005bf87ea8fedc6607b&ei=19
"SALT LAKE CITY (ABC4) — The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is now officially registered in the Republic of Azerbaijan after starting the registration process in the second half of 2023.
“This is a significant step for the Church in the country,” a press release from the church states. “It provides for a body that is officially recognized by the government of Azerbaijan to act for the Church in the Baku area. The Church currently has a small group of members meeting regularly in the city.”
Elder Rasband has gone to 10 countries in the last 90 days. His most recent trip took him to Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador and Colombia. He also met with church leaders from Venezuela.
ReplyDeleteOne place he went was Otavalo. I would not be surprised if a temple is announced gor that city. I know it is not super far from Quito, but I think it is far enough a temple there would make sense.
On note about Elder Camargo, he was Elder Soares first mission president.
https://news-europe.churchofjesuschrist.org/article/church-officially-registered-republic-of-azerbaijan
ReplyDeleteIt appears that the last of the 2024 new Missions has been organized on the 17th of July.
ReplyDelete"Nigeria Calabar Mission (2245795) - organized 17 July 2024
- Akamkpa Nigeria Stake (528978)
- Calabar Nigeria North Stake (2108658)
- Calabar Nigeria South Stake (2046415)
- Calabar Nigeria Stake (410888)
- Nigeria Calabar Mission Branch (2246961)"
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has been given recognition in Azaebaijan. Elder Bednar spoke at an international intercultural conference there back in May. Both he and Elder Girard who is now in the Europe Central Area Presidency, which currently oversees Azaetbaijan met with the president of Azerbaijan. Elder Girard was previously head of public relations for the Church from 2018-2023. I still do not know what general authority has that assignment currently, although I know one who would be a good fit and since he is in a North American Area Presidency might have the assignment.
ReplyDeleteElder Girard was head of the American Petroleum Institute before he became a general authority.
There evidently is a small group of the Church cuttently meeting in Baku. Azerbaijan has about 10 million residents. So slightly more than Michigan. I am not sure what government policies are on proselytizing. However the nature of the fights with the Armenians probably mean from a social and societal level getting people to convert to a Christian faith will be hard, even it is legal. In 1990 Azerbaijan had many Christian residents. A large portion of these were ethnic Armenians, most of whom left in what those displayed (I have known such people, I used to have one as someone I was what we would now call assigned to be a ministering brother to) call pogroms.
I believe Azerbaijan was under the administration of the old Central Eurasian Mission. However I seem to recall that last year Turkey was placed dire tly under the Europe Central Area. So I am not surewhat exactly the status is there.
Elder Bednar is interestingly enough the only apostle yo take to have visited I believe Senegal and Guinea, two other very Muslim countries that the Church has a presence in.
There are three temples planned gor Muslim majority countries. Sierra Leone is 77% Muslim. It also has the highest religious freedom ranking of any country in the world. Higher than the US and every other country. Since that temple is under construction it will probably be the first temple in a majority Muslim country. I guess Nogeria may be 53% Muslim, but the area of Nigeria where the temple exists is not very Muslim. Legos may be majority Muslim, but that temple has not yet had a ground breaking. Also there is a huge difference between 53% and the other numbers.
Indonesia is 87% Muslim, but with over 200 million people that means the 11% Chrsitians are over 20 million people.
UAE is actually the least Muslim of the 3 Mudlim countries getting a temple. It is only 76% Muslim, functionally the sane as Sierra Leone (although I have seen higher estimates for Sierra Leone). However only 20% of UAEs residents are citizens.
I looked it up. Azerbaijan is 97% Muslim.
Chris D.
ReplyDeleteDo you have a comprehensive list of units by mission? If you are open to sharing, I'd be interested in taking a look.
@Anonymous, here is a shared link to my excel spreadsheet database of all known Areas, Missions, Stakes and District Units. The Missions assigned to each Stake and District on both pages is "hidden" from view currently. You will need to copy the excel document and "unhide" the coll0om from view between the "potential Temples" column and the CDOL unit number column.
ReplyDeletehttps://1drv.ms/x/s!As_DA0WaWLkdheAjUMTmxLZWxZlRig?e=DmzTAn
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteI find it interesting that Duchesne and Daggett counties got their first stake just a few years apart- while now Duchesne County has 5 stakes and Daggett has none (I have been told that the units in Daggett are part of one of the Vernal stakes).
ReplyDeleteAre there any other counties in Utah, apart from Daggett, that do not currently have a stake?
With a population of barely a thousand, and only 38 percent of it being LDS, which is the second lowest percentage in Utah after Summit County, you are likely going to be waiting a very long time for a Daggett County stake.
DeleteOHHAPPYDANE33, I checked my only source for county membership and church unit information, which is thearda.com. That source states that Daggett County has 985 people and 2 Wards with 478 members. They are the Dutch John and Manila Wards of the Green River Wyoming Stake. Was that your source as well?
ReplyDeleteDutch John and Manila Wards of the Green River WY Stake, 478 members
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteNo stake but 2 wards (Manila and Dutch John). Green River WY Stake. 478 members of 995 county population.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the info, Ray and Ohhappydane33, apparently some of my information was incorrect.
ReplyDelete