Bring Healing Light into Your Life
When we feel burdened or overwhelmed, we can find healing light by recognizing miracles, putting in effort, and serving others.
Becoming Our Best BYU Self
In this commencement address, Elder Gong invites us to be our best BYU selves, committing to a life of faith, service, and discipleship.
Comfort in Christ
Life can be uncomfortable, but prayer, service, and temple attendance can help us find true comfort in the Savior.
The Aims of a BYU Education
BYU offers education paired with spiritual experience, which enables—and obligates—us to love and serve those around us.
Making Something Out of You
The challenges and difficulties you face in your life are making something out of you through the effect you have on others.
Walking Each Other Home
"Walking each other home" means to reach out and serve those around us, whether we know them or not, in every way we can.
Deepening Discipleship
Scott D. Whiting teaches how to deepen discipleship through obedience, endurance, and service to God and our fellowmen and women.
Your Duty to God and Your Fellowmen
I hope that you, like Harvey Fletcher, engage in educational work while having instilled in your very being your duty to God and your fellowmen.
Loving Our Neighbors
The story of the good Samaritan teaches why loving our neighbors—the ones who are in proximity—should be a primary focus in our lives.
Where Your Heart Is
Brent H. Nielson asks graduates to evaluate the condition of their hearts, for "where your heart is, there will your treasure be also."
Enter to Learn; Go Forth to Serve
President Worthen invites BYU graduates to reflect on BYU's slogan, Enter to Learn; Go Forth to Serve, as they begin a lifetime of service.
Keeping the Spiritual Lifeblood Flowing
Like walking when your legs are frozen, sometimes what we least want to do is the very thing we need to keep our spiritual lifeblood flowing.
A Holier Approach to Ministering
Elder Neil L. Andersen explains how the shift from home and visiting teaching to ministering helps us rethink the way we love and serve.
Turning Enemies into Friends
Humanitarian aid is more than donating hygiene kits. Turning enemies into friends means looking for the "strangers" among us and providing relief.
Shape Your Life Through Service to Others
Elder Maynes warns us not to become selfish as we seek out our goals and dreams—our happiness will ultimately be found in the service of others.
Living a Life of Service and Love: What Goes Around Comes Around
The more service and love we give, the more we will find returned to us. Kirt Saville shares touching examples of this principle.
Joy at Graduation
Elder Oaks shares in the joy of August 2015 grads on graduation day and teaches them how to have continual joy through creativity, service, and the gospel.
Pure Religion
Pure religion is about helping, serving, and caring for others. Practicing pure religion brings happiness as we reach out to our brothers and sisters.
Lost and Found
God loves each of his children and, through charitable service, we can help find each of His lost sheep and bring them back to the fold.
How Will You Serve?
A BYU education is about more than academics; it is also about learning how to serve.
Lifelong Learning and Continuous Service
Terry R. Seamons invites students leaving the university to be lifelong learners and to provide continuous service wherever life takes them.
Convenient Service
Service is tightly related to sacrifice. Making service convenient can be a challenge, but serving will bless our lives.
Small Things
We can make a difference now by committing small and simple acts of service to those within our reach.
Receiving
It sometimes takes humility to accept love from others, but as we do, we are blessed with more opportunities to serve and be served.
Saving Lives
Many people become rescuers by saving lives. Jesus Christ is our most significant rescuer, our Savior and from death and sin.
Tenacious Faith and Selfless Service
If we show tenacious faith and are prepared to lose ourselves in service, our Father in Heaven will prepare the way for us to accomplish all that He asks of us. I pray that we can be instruments in our Father in Heaven’s hands in doing His will and that we will find great and eternal joy in His service.
As We Now Go Forth
Matthew N. Daley speaks as a representative of his graduating class at BYU in 2008. He encourages his peers to reflect on how they have been blessed.
Responding to the Savior’s Invitation: “Come”
When we respond to the Savior's invitation to "come," we can feel the cleansing power of Christ's Atonement in our lives.
Personal Ministry: Sacred and Precious
To emulate the Savior in our personal ministry, we should open our hearts and help, uplift, and encourage others in small, simple ways every day.
Three Gates to Open
To achieve exaltation, we must open the gate of preparation, the gate of performance, and the gate of service on our life's journey.
The Power of One: Selfless Service
Even one person can make a difference when they choose to serve, as the Savior has shown us through His own selfless service.
Go Forth and Serve
Elder Hales praises April 2007 BYU grads for their hard work and counsels them to focus now on service, giving back, and helping others succeed.
Prepare to Make a Difference
The examples of three former BYU swimmers who made a difference in their respective spheres can inspire us to do the same.
The Lord’s Goods
The Lord has given talents or "goods" to each of us, which we can use to bless those around us and in turn become more like Him.
Beggars
There are people all around us, in our classes in school, in our work, in our homes and families, who cry, like Bartimaeus, “Have mercy on me.” And we, in turn, reflect on the Savior’s answer to Bartimaeus: . . . "Go thy way; thy faith hath made thee whole." [Mark 10:51–52]
“Serve the Lord with Gladness” (Psalm 100:2)
The world's beauty is a gift to us just as everything else is. To repay Him for His goodness, we should serve Him.
“Serve the Lord with Gladness”
Our testimonies let us trust that we are part of a very important pattern in building the kingdom of God, even if we can’t see it in its entirety. Every skill, talent, and ability we have, whether inborn or developed in callings or other areas of our lives, helps us be more serviceable in the kingdom.
The Chance of Your Lifetime
Brent Romney, president of the BYU Alumni Association of the time, tells students of the chance of their lifetime to become involved by giving back to BYU.
Selflessness Versus Selfishness
The War in Heaven was the original case of selflessness versus selfishness. We fight the same battle today, making decisions that determine our priorities.
“When Ye Are in the Service of Your Fellow Beings Ye Are Only in the Service of Your God”
Today, when many pick and choose religious teachings as if they were a "salad bar," serving God and our fellow men is more important than ever.
This Ministry of Mobility
Elder Ballard, President Nadauld, President Bateman, faculty, ladies, gentlemen, and, most important, distinguished graduates, thank you very much for inviting me to be part of this special day. Since I didn’t go to college, this honorary degree is especially meaningful to me. Thank you. At a Senate hearing in Washington a few months ago, a senator and a cabinet secretary got into an argument over who was poorer growing up.…
In the Line of Service
"But charity is the pure love of Christ, and it endureth forever; and whoso is found possessed of it at the last day, it shall be well with him." [Moroni 7:47]
Our Opportunities for Service
Recognizing the divinity in each of our brothers and sisters helps us to see opportunities for service in our relationships.
Continue to Have a BYU Experience
BYU graduates are encouraged to stay connected, serve, and replenish in order to continue to have a BYU experience in their lives.
“Things Too Wonderful for Me”
These stories and testimonies highlight the wonderful blessings of the gospel, of living righteously, and of loving one another.
Give Something of Yourself
The text for this speech is unavailable. Please see our FAQ page for more information.
Service: The Essence of True Religion
Scriptures and modern prophets teach that service is the essence of "true religion." When doing good, we should be characterized by privacy and generosity.
Church Responds to Crisis
Alexander B. Morrison presents information about how the Church responds to crisis and humanitarian need, especially in recent efforts for refugees.
Why Do We Serve at BYU?
Serving at BYU is unique because of both contractual and covenant relationships. We can choose to serve for a multitude of reasons, but the best is charity.
Private Service
I enrolled at Yale University as a doctoral student in administrative sciences in September 1977. All kinds of changes were occurring around me. A new school, the School of Organization and Management (SOM), had been established the year previous to my arrival at Yale. The Administrative Sciences Program shared its faculty and even a few of its classes with the School of Organization and Management, which offered a master’s degree…
“Go Forth to Serve”
Ben B. Banks shares meaningful stories of missionary work and service and admonishes students to go forth and serve others in their path.
Enter to Learn—Go Forth to Serve
The challenge contained in the motto of this university, to learn and to serve, represents the purpose of our mortal life.
“Called to Serve”
Each of us has been called to serve in God’s kingdom. That service will require all that we have but will reward us with all that He has.
“To Everything There Is a Season”
The season of judgment will come to each of us. As we prepare to harvest a good and fulfilling life, let us store up knowledge, honesty, and service.
Lessons That Have Helped Me
Although everyone on earth has a different experience, the lessons that have helped people lead a good life are universal.
Them and Us
When we think of people in terms of "them and us," we fail to love individuals. The Savior shows us how to love His children rather than judge a label.
No Less Serviceable
The home teacher is no less serviceable than the bishop, and the unsung heroes are just as important as the acclaimed and popular.
Choose to Serve
Though we live in a morally conflicted world, we can choose to serve the Lord. We are promised revelation, a sure witness, and an anchor of faith.
Investing for Eternity
Never will our time or efforts be better rewarded than when they are spent in service and kindness. This kind of investing for eternity should be our aim.
Preparing to Make a Difference
We are often filled with the desire to make a difference in the world. In order to have the impact we want, however, we must prepare spiritually.
Pioneer Legacy: Our Brothers’ Keepers
Brigham Young's admonition to the Saints to bring in the pioneers suffering on the plains was a reminder to us all: we are our Brother’s Keeper.
Forget Yourself
People are happier when they lose themselves in the service of others. Forget yourself and reach out. You will be happier when you do.
Go Forth to Serve
In the Church, what's important is not where we serve, but how. Prepare for, accept, and give your best to the callings you will receive.
Be the Best of Whatever You Are
As you seek to serve the Lord, focus less on the position of your calling and more on becoming and offering your best self.
Prepare for Useful Service
Antoine R. Ivins gives students spiritual and practical advice to prepare them for useful service in their community and the Church.
Blessings from the Welfare Program
The text for this speech is unavailable. Please see our FAQ page for more information.
The Road to Tarshish
When God inevitably calls you to serve Him, will you respond as Samuel: "Speak, Lord, thy servant hearth?"—or as Jonah, taking the road to Tarshish?