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A video revealing a group of Camp Mystic campers evacuating Texas campgrounds on a bus has since gone viral.  The video, ...
Friends and family of the late Boniface Kariuki gathered today at the Kenyatta University Funeral Home to view his body ahead of his burial. At the mortuary, mourners stood in small groups, while ...
Surviving campers sang hymns as they drove past the damage left by the floods. Days earlier, they were having fun and playing ...
(RNS) — Memo from the newest LDS hymns: We're Christians, we're Christians, we're Christians. (RNS) — Many years ago, I was called to be my ward’s Primary chorister. Soon after, the Primary ...
The Yogoda Satsanga Society of India celebrated Guru Purnima with meditation and bhajan chanting at its Ranchi Ashram. The ...
Religion News Service columnist Jana Riess discusses how the new Latter-day Saint hymns emphasize that the church is Christian.
Anchor Hymns brought together a community of musicians that was still reeling from the isolation and uncertainty of the pandemic. Some were mourning the deaths of friends and loved ones.
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints said Tuesday it expects its new full hymnbook will be released in four languages in 2027, with about 375 hymns.
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints released 11 songs for its new hymnbook on Thursday, including a translation of a Spanish hymn and a new melody for a familiar hymn.
In a decree dated Oct. 24, Bishop W. Shawn McKnight listed a dozen commonly used but “doctrinally problematic” Catholic songs that will be “absolutely forbidden” in the diocese after Nov. 1.