We Can Learn from Early British Latter-day Saints, Says Elder Ballard

Contributed By Sam Watson, Church News contributor, and Sarah Jane Weaver, Church News editor

  • 13 August 2017

Stephen Kerr, a member of the UK Parliament from Scotland, visits with Elder M. Russell Ballard of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles before a performance of the 2017 British Pageant in Chorley, England, on Thursday, August 3, 2017.  Photo by Simon D. Jones.

“We go and do as we’re prompted to do in serving the Master. It was true in their day, and it is true in our day.” —Elder M. Russell Ballard

CHORLEY, ENGLAND

In the late 1830s, early Church leaders opened missionary work in the British Isles and converted English and Scandinavian Latter-day Saints, who made a significant contribution to the restored gospel of Jesus Christ at a critical time.

Some 180 years later, Latter-day Saints in England celebrated this rich legacy during the British Pageant, said Elder M. Russell Ballard of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles.

The British Pageant was first produced in 2013; since then it has been performed in Nauvoo, Illinois. The pageant returned to England this summer as a cast, crew, and volunteer force of nearly 2,000 brought the history of the Church in the British Isles alive through music and dance.

Elder Ballard, who attended the pageant with other Church leaders on August 3, said Latter-day Saints today can learn from the example of those early, faithful, pioneering members. “We go and do as we’re prompted to do in serving the Master,” he said. “It was true in their day, and it is true in our day.”

Volunteer actors portray Margaret and Twizzleton Turley, who immigrated to America following their conversion to the LDS Church in the 1800s, during the 2017 British Pageant on Thursday, August 3, 2017. Photo by Simon D. Jones.

A Scottish piper welcomes visitors to the 2017 British Pageant in Chorley, England, on Thursday, August 3, 2017. Photo by Simon D. Jones.

Elder M. Russell Ballard of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles visits Chorley, England, to attend the 2017 British Pageant. Photo by Simon D. Jones.

Robin Dick performs as Arthur Ashton, one of the main characters in the 2017 British Pageant on Thursday, August 3, 2017. Photo by Simon D. Jones.

This year marks the 180th anniversary of Heber C. Kimball leading the LDS Church’s first mission to Great Britain in July 1837.

Elder Ballard has strong ties to the United Kingdom and surrounding countries. Elder Ballard’s family history roots are grounded in the British Isles, and he served as a young missionary in England from 1948 to 1950.

“When I come here, I’m coming home. I love this island. I love these people,” says Elder Ballard.

Elder Ballard was accompanied by other Church leaders, many of whose families originate from the United Kingdom. Elder Patrick Kearon, a member of the Presidency of the Seventy who was recently released as President of the Europe Area and was born in Cumberland, and Elder Donald L. Hallstrom and Elder Brent H. Nielson, both General Authority Seventies, attended the pageant. Elder Hallstrom is Executive Director of the Church’s Priesthood and Family Department; Elder Nielson is Executive Director of the Church’s Missionary Department. Sister Jennifer H. Kearon and Sister Diane C. Hallstrom also attended.

The pageant has a two-fold impact on members of the Church, Elder Kearon said. First, he said, is the impact on the cast and crew of around a thousand who experience “all of the growth and expansion of the spiritual dimension of being involved in something that’s spiritually guided.”

Second, he said, is the impact on the thousands of members and their friends who attend the event and feel the Spirit. They are reminded how the gospel “literally transforms lives,” he said.

Elder Hallstrom said he felt blessed to attend “this magnificent pageant” with Elder Ballard. “It was a fitting celebration of the 180th anniversary of the Church in the British Isles,” he said. “The Priesthood and Family and the Missionary Departments provided assistance from Church headquarters, but this was truly a heroic undertaking by the British Saints. Their efforts, from planning to performance, were extraordinary. … As one who was a young missionary in England and Wales, and a descendent of early Saints who were part of the gathering, I was deeply inspired by this experience.”

Elder Nielson said this was a great opportunity for the members to show a part of their history to their friends.

“I was particularly moved by the faith of the early Saints who left their homes in Great Britain and established the Church in the United States,” he said. “The night we attended [the pageant], there were many not of our faith in attendance, and it was evident that they were moved and impressed with the Church members who continue to carry the flame of faith in the Lord Jesus Christ that their ancestors had as they made their way across the Atlantic Ocean.”

Elder Ballard said the British Latter-day Saints appreciated the First Presidency and the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles supporting them in presenting the pageant. The audience felt something, he added.

“Conversion always begins with what people feel, and you can’t tell the story [of the Church in the British Isles] without feeling the power of heaven,” said Elder Ballard. “It caused the people to pack up their bags and go get on a ship in Liverpool, not knowing where they’re going except they’re going to Zion. They’re going to be obedient and do what the Spirit has prompted them to do. And so it is with us today.”

The first Mormon missionaries to Great Britain arrived during an election campaign and saw the slogan “Truth Will Prevail,” as portrayed in a scene from the 2017 British Pageant on Thursday, August 3, 2017. Photo by Simon D. Jones.

Actors portray the Ashton family, main characters in the 2017 British Pageant, in Chorley, England, on Thursday, August 3, 2017. Photo by Simon D. Jones.

Captain Dan Jones as portrayed in the British Pageant 2017 in Chorley, England, on Thursday, August 3, 2017. Photo by Simon D. Jones.

Amateur actors portray the heartrending story of the Cannon family in the 2017 British Pageant on Thursday, August 3, 2017. Photo by Simon D. Jones.

Dancing was a major element in this year’s British Pageant. Photo by Simon D. Jones.

Fun at the Country Fair prior to the British Pageant performance in Chorley, England, on Thursday, August 3, 2017. Photo by Simon D. Jones.

British Pageant cast members perform at a devotional for LDS Church leaders. Photo by Simon D. Jones.

Missionaries attend a special service during the visit of Elder M. Russell Ballard and other senior Church leaders. Photo by Simon D. Jones.

  Listen