Matters of Faith – Sunday, April 21, 2024

The oldest church building in Mexico, commonly known as La Iglesia de la Conchita, was built nearly 500 years ago in 1525 in what is today the Coyoacán neighborhood of Mexico City. This important building is part of Mexico’s cultural and artistic heritage. But it’s more than a historic landmark. Houses of faith like this one stand as a reminder of our basic human desire to connect with God.

All over the world and throughout history, people have always wanted to worship, and quite often, we want to do it together with other worshippers. So, we build churches, synagogues, mosques, and temples. We seek places and opportunities to gather, to create communities of believers, to share with each other our faith and convictions.

That’s why religious freedom is so vital as a fundamental human right. Religious faith is deeply personal, and yet it is also interpersonal, guiding how we interact with others and creating bonds of love. Religious freedom, then, is more than just letting people believe whatever they want. It includes respecting their right to both “hold their own religious beliefs and express them openly,”[1] as long as those beliefs and expressions are similarly respectful of others.

This right is expressed well in one of the Articles of Faith of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints: “We claim the privilege of worshiping Almighty God according to the dictates of our own conscience, and allow all [people] the same privilege, let them worship how, where, or what they may.”[2]

Go to most places in the world, and you will find worshippers like you do here in Mexico. The diversity of religious faiths and practices is part of what gives richness to our world. In matters of faith, there is much we can learn from each other. But at the heart of it all is a common desire to commune with the divine.

That spiritual connection with God has emotional and physical benefits too. Research has repeatedly shown that people of faith report feeling better and healthier, and those benefits increase the more actively they live their religion.[3]

In other words, when we open our hearts to diverse religious beliefs, when we respect the rights of all to “worship how, where, or what they may,” we are fostering the health and happiness of families and communities everywhere.

[1] Topics and Questions, “Religious Freedom,” Gospel Library.
[2] Articles of Faith 1:11.
[3] See Joey Marshall, “Are Religious People Happier, Healthier? Our New Global Study Explores This Question,” Pew Research Center, Jan. 31, 2019, pewresearch.org; Nicole F. Roberts, “Science Says: Religion Is Good for Your Health,” Forbes, Mar. 29, 2019, forbes.com; Sandra Feder, “Religious Faith Can Lead to Positive Mental Benefits, Writes Stanford Anthropologist,” Stanford News, Nov. 13, 2020, news.stanford.edu.


April 21, 2024
Broadcast Number 4936

The Tabernacle Choir
Orchestra at Temple Square

Conductor
Mack Wilberg

Organists
Richard Elliott
Brian Mathias

Host
Lloyd Newell

I Think the World Is Glorious
Alexander Schreiner; Arr. Mack Wilberg

If the Savior Stood beside Me
Sally Deford; Arr. Sam Cardon

Improvisation on “How Firm a Foundation”
J. Ellis; Arr. Richard Elliott

Hark, All Ye Nations!
George F. Root; Arr. Mack Wilberg

Come, Follow Me
Samuel Mcburney

May We Be More Like Thee
Mack Wilberg

Love Divine, All Loves Excelling
R. H. Prichard; Arr. Mack Wilberg