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Latest from Mormon Land: 101 words about Russell Nelson; LDS mourn in Michigan and beyond

Also: Apostle visits a shaken Grand Blanc community; members prepare for a Dallin Oaks presidency; special section offers insights ranging from the family proclamation to a “rebel” apostle and Joseph Smith’s last conference sermon.

(Rick Egan | The Salt Lake Tribune) President Russell M. Nelson, with wife Wendy, waves to the audience at a General Conference in 2022. He died Sept. 27 at age 101.

The Mormon Land newsletter is The Salt Lake Tribune’s weekly highlight reel of news in and about The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Join us on Patreon to receive the full newsletter and access to all of our religion content.

A word or two — or 101 — about President Nelson

Russell M. Nelson, the oldest church president in Latter-day Saint history, died Sept. 27.

Here are 101 words that can be used to describe him — one for every year of his life:

Son. Husband. Widower. Father. Grandfather. Great-grandfather. Great-great-grandfather. Friend. Believer. Churchgoer. Convert. Worshipper. Graduate. Football player. Exerciser. Tennis player. Swimmer. Skier. Singer. Veteran. Pianist. Patient. Doctor. Transplanter. Helper. Healer. Learner. Teacher. Professor. Heart surgeon. Researcher. Scientist. Vaxxer. Vitamin advocate.

Stake president. Sunday school president. Regional representative. Elder. Minister. Sealer. Follower. Leader. Exemplar. Prize winner. Hard worker. High achiever. Witness. Disciple. Apostle. Speaker. Preacher. Reader. Writer. Lyricist. Optimist. Gentleman. Bridge builder. Unifier. Testifier. Anti-racist. Language lover. Globe-trotter. Vatican guest. Humanitarian.

Early riser. Templegoer. Temple builder. Organizer. Innovator. Motivator. Transformer. Refiner. Reformer. Persuader. Dynamo. Decider. Diplomat. History maker. Peacemaker. Centenarian. Prophet. Seer. Revelator. Christian.

(The Salt Lake Tribune; The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints) President Russell M. Nelson, center, surrounded by newly constructed temples in Utah, Wyoming, and Argentina. Nelson announced 200 new temples during his presidency.

Tribune stories related to Nelson’s death

• His long life and lasting legacy.

• An interactive look at his milestones.

• Reactions from political figures and Latter-day Saints.

• His funeral plans.

• His likely successor, Dallin Oaks, and whom Oaks might pick as his counselors in a new First Presidency.

• During a livestreamed tribute, Oaks recalls his last meeting with Nelson.

(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) Dallin H. Oaks at General Conference in April 2024. He is expected to become the church's 18th prophet-president.

Mourning in Michigan and beyond

The morning after Nelson’s death, a gunman rammed a truck into a Latter-day Saint meetinghouse during Sunday services in Grand Blanc, Michigan, opened fire and set the building ablaze.

The deadly shooting and flames sent shock waves across the nation.

(The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints) Apostle David A. Bednar and his wife, Susan, visit the remains of the meetinghouse in Grand Blanc, Michigan, on Tuesday, Sept. 30, 2025.

On Tuesday, apostle David Bednar visited the grieving community.

“This is no easy task to see beyond the immediate separation, the injury, the anguish — even the separation through death,” he said in a news release. “...In the midst of this horrible event, what I have seen are faithful Latter-day Saints following the admonition of President Nelson to be peacemakers in how they respond to this episode and how they support and serve each other.”

In a video, the lay bishop of the affected congregation said his flock is “quite shaken in body and spirit, and it hurts.”

You can also read this harrowing eyewitness account from the Deseret News.

(The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints) Members of the Grand Blanc, Michigan, congregation embrace after meeting with apostle David A. Bednar on Tuesday, Sept. 30, 2025.

The latest ‘Mormon Land’ podcast: Nelson, Oaks, the past and the future

Historian Ben Park looks back at Russell Nelson’s presidency, forward to an anticipated Dallin Oaks administration and who might be joining the First Presidency and the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles.

Listen to the podcast.

Special pre-General Conference section

Here are stories and commentaries from our preconference special section:

• The family proclamation is 30 years old. Is it relevant in the present or a relic of the past?

(Illustration by Christopher Cherrington | The Salt Lake Tribune)

• In an exclusive book excerpt, revisit Joseph Smith’s final General Conference address.

• See how a pious but progressive “rebel” apostle battled his fellow brethren over politics, social justice and civil rights.

(The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints) Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints apostle Hugh B. Brown.

• God wants married couples to have better sex, writes Tribune columnist Gordon Monson.

• A former Latter-day Saint proselytizer has a new mission — as a Lutheran pastor.

(Rick Egan | The Salt Lake Tribune) Katie Langston, pastor of mission and outreach at New Promise Lutheran Church in St. George.

• For Latter-day Saints, Tribune guest columnist Rebbie Brassfield argues, Lake Powell is heaven on Earth.

• Joseph vs. Brigham. Polygamy deniers. Historian Matthew Bowman examines why some insist on rewriting the Mormon past.

• Scholar Ben Park explains why policies from the Trump administration and the Utah Legislature threaten the study of church history.

• The pioneer legend of the Salt Lake Valley’s “Lone Cedar Tree” is, at its roots, about the value of preserving history, writes Tribune guest columnist Eli McCann.

Around the world

(The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints) Relief Society General President Camille Johnson embraces a young woman after a devotional for young single adults in Apia, Samoa, on Friday, Sept. 19, 2025.

• President Camille Johnson, worldwide leader of the women’s Relief Society, wrapped up her tour of Australia, Vanuatu, Samoa and New Zealand.

Johnson had been to Samoa before to pick up a son after his mission there.

“My heart has been in Samoa since 2009,” she said in a news release. “...The beauties of nature in Samoa are rivaled only by the beauty of these covenant-keeping Saints.”

(The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints) Students at Airag Secondary School in Airag, Mongolia, are excited to use their new Chromebook laptops on Monday, Sept. 15, 2025.

• The church is helping to supply thousands of laptop computers to hundreds of Mongolian schools that, in time, will boost the learning of 100,000 students.

“I dream of pursuing computer science when I grow up,” a student said in a news release. “Last year, I couldn’t study well because our school didn’t have a regular computer teacher. With this [laptop], I promise I will learn diligently this time.”

• The Center for Latter-day Saint Arts will stage a gathering of scholars and artists Oct. 10 at the Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley, California.

From The Tribune

Anti-Latter-day Saint chants break out again at a BYU football game, this time at the University of Colorado. The Big 12 fined the school $50,000.

• A pioneering Black Latter-day Saint, who co-founded the Genesis Group, has died.

(Courtesy Darius Gray) Eugene Orr, a member of the presidency of the Genesis Group, speaks in the 1970s.

• Residents say a mudslide that struck a Provo meetinghouse, displacing four congregations, could have been avoided.

• Plaintiffs aren’t giving up on their tithing lawsuit against the church.