MissionSite.net provides free web sites for LDS missionaries and their families giving them a great way to communicate and share the missionary experience. With a missionary website you will be able to make an online photo album, post letters and stories, keep track of mission events and news, post messages on a personal message board and provide links and other information to family and friends. Learn more about missionary website features. If you are interested in looking at others' LDS missionary sites, check out the missionary site of the month to the right or search for a missionary using the box on the left.
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Website News
We have just upgraded our web servers so you can upload even more pictures to your missionary sites! We have also added a missionary time feature that allows you to see what time it is where the missionary is. View a list of all updates.
LDS News
Genealogy Web Site Publishes Civil War Records, Adds Web 2.0 Enhancements - SALT LAKE CITY | 15 May 2008 | FamilySearch, a genealogy Web site maintained by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, announced yesterday its agreement with Footnote.com to publish two Civil War-era databases online — the 1860 U.S. Census and the Civil War Pensions Index. The two collections will provide free online access to millions of names of individuals from 1860 to 1865 in the United States.
How Mormons Deal With Fame - SALT LAKE CITY | 15 May 2008 | Seventeen-year-old Utah Mormon David Archuleta, one of two finalists in the singing contest American Idol, is experiencing what many other Latter-day Saint celebrities have faced before him. The Osmonds, golfing great Johnny Miller, singer Gladys Knight, Jeopardy! champion Ken Jennings, snowboarder Torah Bright, author Stephenie Meyer and other high-profile Mormons have all had to deal with questions about their faith and their fame. How do they reconcile the two? Novelist Stephenie Meyer, whom London's The Times newspaper called "a teetotal Mormon mother of three", told that publication that her style, informed by her faith, resonates with a lot of readers. "I know a lot of kids who relate to my books because they don't drink and they are not sexually active," she said. "There are a ton of them but they don't get a lot of representation in literature or television or movies."
Mormons Speak Up to Define Themselves, Their Faith - CHARLOTTE, North Carolina | 13 May 2008 | Members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, tiring of having their religion misunderstood and sometimes confused with other groups, are increasingly speaking up. Cydne Horrocks Watterson, who describes herself as "a Mormon transplant in the Bible Belt," today shared her experience as a Latter-day Saint living in North Carolina, on WFAE 90.7 FM, the National Public Radio affiliate station in Charlotte.