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Primary (LDS Church)

The Primary (formerly the Primary Association) is the children's organization of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). It acts as a Sunday school organization for the church's children (ages 3–11).[2]

Primary
The official seal of the Primary adopted in 1940
FormationAugust 25, 1878
TypeNon-profit
PurposeReligious instruction; personal standards and development; child/family support
HeadquartersSalt Lake City, Utah, United States
Membership
1.1 million children aged 3–11[1]
General President
Camille N. Johnson
Main organ
General presidency and general board
Parent organization
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
AffiliationsMembers join the Young Men or Young Women at age 12
WebsitePrimary

Purpose, objectives, and theme edit

The official purpose of Primary is to help parents in teaching their children to learn and live the gospel of Jesus Christ.[3] The official objectives of Primary are to:

The Primary theme is "All thy children shall be taught of the Lord; and great shall be the peace of thy children" (Isaiah 54:13).[3][4]

Format edit

While Primary classes will differ slightly in different regions, most meetings are standardized. For the second half of primary, children are separated into age groups with names for each group (see below).

Where participants, classrooms or teachers are limited, multiple age-grouped classes may be taught together. In most congregations, Primary classes are co-ed.[5]

Primary begins with a prayer, scripture (or Article of Faith), and a short talk, all of these given by primary children. About 20 minutes are then spent on music, primarily from the Children's Songbook. After music time, children are then sent to their individual classes where they are taught lessons from Come, Follow Me - For Primary.

Class names edit

The names of the classes in Primary have varied over time. The following is a partial list of names that have been applied to different age groups in Primary. In January 2010, the names of the classes were changed to the age of children entering the class, i.e., 4-year-olds are in the class CTR 4. Previously, names were indicative of the age children would turn the coming year, (4-year-olds in CTR 5).[5]

Age (on January 1) Present Class Name Past Class Names Used
18 mos. Nursery Rainbows
3 Sunbeams Moonbeams
4 CTR 4 Sunbeams
Stars
CTR 5
5 CTR 5 Stars
CTR 6
6 CTR 6 Rainbows
CTR 7
7 CTR 7 Zion’s Boys
Zion’s Girls
CTR Pilots
Co-Pilots
Top Pilots
Targeteers
CTRs
CTR 8
8 Valiant 8 Zion’s Boys
Zion’s Girls
CTR Pilots
Co-Pilots
Beacons
Top Pilots
Targeteers
CTRs
Valiant 9
9 Valiant 9 Girls:

Larks
Gaynotes
Home Builders
Lihomas
Merry Miss
Valiant 10 Boys: Hatchets
Trail Builders
Blazers
Valiant 10

10 Valiant 10 Girls:

Bluebirds
Firelights
Hearths
Home Builders
Lihomas
Merry Miss
Valiant 11 Boys: Wagon Wheels
Trail Builders
Trekkers
Valiant 11

11 Valiant 11 Girls:

Bluebirds
Merrihands
Home Builders
Lihomas
Merry Miss
Valiant 12 Boys: Arrows
Guides
Trail Builders
Blazers
Valiant 12

12+ See Young Women Seagulls
Home Builders
Lihomas
Mi-kan-wees

Nursery edit

 
A typical Nursery classroom

A separate class, known as nursery, is held for children ages 18 months to 3. It is led under the direction of the Primary presidency by at least two people, a nursery leader and assistant nursery leader(s). Nursery leaders are required to be the same gender unless they are married.

Nursery classes have a lesson, free play time, snack time, and music time primarily using the Children's Songbook. Additionally, two prayers are given by children with help from the adult leaders. While no particular order is required, it is recommended that the order be the same every week.

Teachers use the "Behold Your Little Ones: Nursery Manual" for lesson plans and other resources.[6]

History edit

Primary was first organized in 1878 by Aurelia Spencer Rogers in Farmington, Utah, and adopted church-wide in 1880 under the direction of Louie B. Felt, who served as the president of the organization through 1925. Rogers was concerned because younger Latter-day Saint children had too much unsupervised time due to the long hours that fathers and older sons kept on the farms and mothers and older daughters in the home. In particular, Rogers felt that the younger boys in the community were becoming unruly and mischievous. With permission from church leaders and under the initial direction of General Relief Society President Eliza R. Snow, Rogers organized a Primary Association for her local Farmington congregation on August 11, 1878. Two weeks later, the first meeting was held on August 28, with 215 children in attendance. That day, boys were specifically taught not to steal fruit from orchards and girls were taught not to hang on wagons. In addition, they were given lessons on faith, manners, obedience, and other principles.

May Anderson, the second general president of the Primary Association from 1925 to 1939, initiated what became Primary Children's Hospital in Salt Lake City (now part of Intermountain Healthcare). Anderson also helped establish kindergartens in Utah. In the 1970s, as a result of the Priesthood Correlation Program, the Primary Association was renamed "Primary".

Beginning in April 2021, Camille N. Johnson was the Primary General President, with Susan H. Porter as First Counselor and Amy Wright as Second Counselor.[7]

In the church's April 2022 general conference, it was announced that Johnson would become the new Relief Society General President on August 1, 2022. As a result, on that date, Porter became the new Primary General President, with Wright serving as First Counselor and Tracy Y. Browning as Second Counselor.[8][9]

Chronology of the general presidency of the Primary edit

No. Dates General President First Counselor Second Counselor
1 1880–1925 Louie B. Felt   Matilda M. Barratt (1880–88)
Lillie T. Freeze (1888–1905)
May Anderson (1905–25)
Clara C. M. Cannon (1880–95)
Josephine R. West (1896–1905)
Clara W. Beebe (1906–25)
2 1925–39 May Anderson   Sadie Grant Pack (1925–29)
Isabelle S. Ross (1929–39)
Isabelle S. Ross (1925–29)
Edna Harker Thomas (1929–33)
Edith E. H. Lambert (1933–39)
3 1940–43 May Green Hinckley Adele C. Howells Janet M. Thompson (1940–42)
LaVern W. Parmley (1942–43)

Parmley
4 1943–51 Adele C. Howells LaVern W. Parmley Dessie G. Boyle
5 1951–74 LaVern W. Parmley Arta M. Hale (1951–62)
Leone W. Doxey (1962–69)
Lucile C. Reading (1970)
Naomi W. Randall (1970–74)
Florence H. Richards (1951–53)
Leone W. Doxey (1953–62)
Eileen R. Dunyon (1962–63)
Lucile C. Reading (1963–70)
Florence R. Lane (1970–74)
6 1974–80 Naomi M. Shumway Sarah B. Paulsen (1974–77)
Colleen B. Lemmon (1977–80)
Colleen B. Lemmon (1974–77)
Dorthea C. Murdock (1977–80)
7 1980–88 Dwan J. Young Virginia B. Cannon Michaelene P. Grassli
8 1988—94 Michaelene P. Grassli Betty Jo N. Jepsen Ruth B. Wright
9 1994–99 Patricia P. Pinegar Anne G. Wirthlin Susan L. Warner
10 1999–2005 Coleen K. Menlove Sydney S. Reynolds Gayle M. Clegg
11 2005–10 Cheryl C. Lant Margaret S. Lifferth Vicki F. Matsumori
12 2010–16 Rosemary M. Wixom Jean A. Stevens (2010–15)
Cheryl A. Esplin (2015–16)
Cheryl A. Esplin (2010–15)
Mary R. Durham (2015–16)
13 2016–2021 Joy D. Jones Jean B. Bingham (2016–17)
Bonnie H. Cordon (2017–18)
Lisa L. Harkness (2018-21)
Bonnie H. Cordon (2016–17)
Cristina B. Franco (2017-21)
14 2021–2022[10] Camille N. Johnson Susan H. Porter Amy A. Wright
15 2022- Susan H. Porter[11] Amy A. Wright Tracy Y. Browning

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Primary in the church today edit

Presently, the worldwide Primary provides Sunday school and church-related activities to approximately 1.1 million Latter-day Saint children.[1] In most congregations, optional nursery care and supervision is available for children from 18 months to age 3. Classroom instruction begins for three-year-olds and continues to age 12, with classes grouped by age. At the beginning of the year they turn 12, children begin to attend Sunday School and the Young Men or Young Women programs. The Primary has its own songbook, made up of original songs and hymns modified for children.

Child Safety edit

All members called to serve in a position that deals with youth or children are required to take the Church's "Protecting Children and Youth" training module which is available on the Church's website for free.[12]

Nursery and Primary leaders are required to release children only to members of their immediate families unless permission has been granted for someone else to pick the child up.[6]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Tad Walsh, "Preparing to split up, LDS General Primary Presidency looks back on 5 years of service together", Deseret News, March 27, 2015.
  2. ^ Although children had, by long-standing practice, participated in Primary until their 12th birthdays, on December 14, 2018, the First Presidency announced that children would advance from Primary as a group in January of the year in which they would turn 12.
  3. ^ a b c "Primary", Handbook 2: Administering the Church (Salt Lake City, Utah: LDS Church, 2010) § 11.1.
  4. ^ 3 Nephi 22:13; see also Isaiah 54:13.
  5. ^ a b "12. Primary". www.churchofjesuschrist.org. Retrieved December 12, 2023.
  6. ^ a b "Introduction". www.churchofjesuschrist.org. Retrieved December 12, 2023.
  7. ^ "The Primary Presidency Oversees Teaching of Children Worldwide". newsroom.churchofjesuschrist.org. April 3, 2021. Retrieved June 24, 2021.
  8. ^ "Meet the New Leaders Called at the April 2022 General Conference". newsroom.churchofjesuschrist.org. April 2, 2022. Retrieved May 15, 2022.
  9. ^ Sustaining of General Authorities, Area Seventies, and General Officers, Liahona, May 2022, pp.30-31.
  10. ^ Johnson's term of service ended on August 1, 2022
  11. ^ Porter's term of service began on August 1, 2022
  12. ^ "Protecting Children and Youth". www.churchofjesuschrist.org. Retrieved December 12, 2023.

External links edit

  • Primary: Official site

primary, church, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, relies, excessively, references, primary, sources, please, improve, this, article, addin. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article relies excessively on references to primary sources Please improve this article by adding secondary or tertiary sources Find sources Primary LDS Church news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Primary LDS Church news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message The Primary formerly the Primary Association is the children s organization of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints LDS Church It acts as a Sunday school organization for the church s children ages 3 11 2 PrimaryThe official seal of the Primary adopted in 1940FormationAugust 25 1878TypeNon profitPurposeReligious instruction personal standards and development child family supportHeadquartersSalt Lake City Utah United StatesMembership1 1 million children aged 3 11 1 General PresidentCamille N JohnsonMain organGeneral presidency and general boardParent organizationThe Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day SaintsAffiliationsMembers join the Young Men or Young Women at age 12WebsitePrimary Contents 1 Purpose objectives and theme 2 Format 2 1 Class names 3 Nursery 4 History 4 1 Chronology of the general presidency of the Primary 5 Primary in the church today 6 Child Safety 7 See also 8 Notes 9 External linksPurpose objectives and theme editThe official purpose of Primary is to help parents in teaching their children to learn and live the gospel of Jesus Christ 3 The official objectives of Primary are to Teach children that they are children of God and that Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ love them help children learn to love Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ help children prepare to be baptized to receive the Holy Ghost and to keep their baptismal covenants help children grow in their understanding of the gospel plan and provide opportunities for them to live gospel principles help boys prepare to receive the priesthood and be worthy to use this power to bless and serve others and help girls prepare to be righteous young women understand the blessings of the priesthood and the temple and serve others 3 The Primary theme is All thy children shall be taught of the Lord and great shall be the peace of thy children Isaiah 54 13 3 4 Format editWhile Primary classes will differ slightly in different regions most meetings are standardized For the second half of primary children are separated into age groups with names for each group see below Where participants classrooms or teachers are limited multiple age grouped classes may be taught together In most congregations Primary classes are co ed 5 Primary begins with a prayer scripture or Article of Faith and a short talk all of these given by primary children About 20 minutes are then spent on music primarily from the Children s Songbook After music time children are then sent to their individual classes where they are taught lessons from Come Follow Me For Primary Class names edit The names of the classes in Primary have varied over time The following is a partial list of names that have been applied to different age groups in Primary In January 2010 the names of the classes were changed to the age of children entering the class i e 4 year olds are in the class CTR 4 Previously names were indicative of the age children would turn the coming year 4 year olds in CTR 5 5 Age on January 1 Present Class Name Past Class Names Used18 mos Nursery Rainbows3 Sunbeams Moonbeams4 CTR 4 Sunbeams Stars CTR 55 CTR 5 Stars CTR 66 CTR 6 Rainbows CTR 77 CTR 7 Zion s Boys Zion s Girls CTR Pilots Co Pilots Top Pilots TargeteersCTRs CTR 88 Valiant 8 Zion s Boys Zion s Girls CTR Pilots Co Pilots BeaconsTop Pilots TargeteersCTRs Valiant 99 Valiant 9 Girls LarksGaynotesHome BuildersLihomasMerry Miss Valiant 10 Boys HatchetsTrail BuildersBlazers Valiant 1010 Valiant 10 Girls BluebirdsFirelightsHearths Home BuildersLihomasMerry Miss Valiant 11 Boys Wagon WheelsTrail BuildersTrekkers Valiant 1111 Valiant 11 Girls BluebirdsMerrihandsHome BuildersLihomasMerry Miss Valiant 12 Boys ArrowsGuidesTrail BuildersBlazers Valiant 1212 See Young Women Seagulls Home BuildersLihomasMi kan weesNursery edit nbsp A typical Nursery classroomA separate class known as nursery is held for children ages 18 months to 3 It is led under the direction of the Primary presidency by at least two people a nursery leader and assistant nursery leader s Nursery leaders are required to be the same gender unless they are married Nursery classes have a lesson free play time snack time and music time primarily using the Children s Songbook Additionally two prayers are given by children with help from the adult leaders While no particular order is required it is recommended that the order be the same every week Teachers use the Behold Your Little Ones Nursery Manual for lesson plans and other resources 6 History editPrimary was first organized in 1878 by Aurelia Spencer Rogers in Farmington Utah and adopted church wide in 1880 under the direction of Louie B Felt who served as the president of the organization through 1925 Rogers was concerned because younger Latter day Saint children had too much unsupervised time due to the long hours that fathers and older sons kept on the farms and mothers and older daughters in the home In particular Rogers felt that the younger boys in the community were becoming unruly and mischievous With permission from church leaders and under the initial direction of General Relief Society President Eliza R Snow Rogers organized a Primary Association for her local Farmington congregation on August 11 1878 Two weeks later the first meeting was held on August 28 with 215 children in attendance That day boys were specifically taught not to steal fruit from orchards and girls were taught not to hang on wagons In addition they were given lessons on faith manners obedience and other principles May Anderson the second general president of the Primary Association from 1925 to 1939 initiated what became Primary Children s Hospital in Salt Lake City now part of Intermountain Healthcare Anderson also helped establish kindergartens in Utah In the 1970s as a result of the Priesthood Correlation Program the Primary Association was renamed Primary Beginning in April 2021 Camille N Johnson was the Primary General President with Susan H Porter as First Counselor and Amy Wright as Second Counselor 7 In the church s April 2022 general conference it was announced that Johnson would become the new Relief Society General President on August 1 2022 As a result on that date Porter became the new Primary General President with Wright serving as First Counselor and Tracy Y Browning as Second Counselor 8 9 Chronology of the general presidency of the Primary edit No Dates General President First Counselor Second Counselor1 1880 1925 Louie B Felt nbsp Matilda M Barratt 1880 88 Lillie T Freeze 1888 1905 May Anderson 1905 25 nbsp Barratt nbsp Freeze nbsp Anderson Clara C M Cannon 1880 95 Josephine R West 1896 1905 Clara W Beebe 1906 25 nbsp Cannon nbsp West nbsp Beebe2 1925 39 May Anderson nbsp Sadie Grant Pack 1925 29 Isabelle S Ross 1929 39 nbsp Pack nbsp Ross Isabelle S Ross 1925 29 Edna Harker Thomas 1929 33 Edith E H Lambert 1933 39 nbsp Ross nbsp Thomas nbsp Lambert3 1940 43 May Green Hinckley Adele C Howells Janet M Thompson 1940 42 LaVern W Parmley 1942 43 Parmley4 1943 51 Adele C Howells LaVern W Parmley Dessie G Boyle5 1951 74 LaVern W Parmley Arta M Hale 1951 62 Leone W Doxey 1962 69 Lucile C Reading 1970 Naomi W Randall 1970 74 Florence H Richards 1951 53 Leone W Doxey 1953 62 Eileen R Dunyon 1962 63 Lucile C Reading 1963 70 Florence R Lane 1970 74 6 1974 80 Naomi M Shumway Sarah B Paulsen 1974 77 Colleen B Lemmon 1977 80 Colleen B Lemmon 1974 77 Dorthea C Murdock 1977 80 7 1980 88 Dwan J Young Virginia B Cannon Michaelene P Grassli8 1988 94 Michaelene P Grassli Betty Jo N Jepsen Ruth B Wright9 1994 99 Patricia P Pinegar Anne G Wirthlin Susan L Warner10 1999 2005 Coleen K Menlove Sydney S Reynolds Gayle M Clegg11 2005 10 Cheryl C Lant Margaret S Lifferth Vicki F Matsumori12 2010 16 Rosemary M Wixom Jean A Stevens 2010 15 Cheryl A Esplin 2015 16 Cheryl A Esplin 2010 15 Mary R Durham 2015 16 13 2016 2021 Joy D Jones Jean B Bingham 2016 17 Bonnie H Cordon 2017 18 Lisa L Harkness 2018 21 Bonnie H Cordon 2016 17 Cristina B Franco 2017 21 14 2021 2022 10 Camille N Johnson Susan H Porter Amy A Wright15 2022 Susan H Porter 11 Amy A Wright Tracy Y Browning Primary in the church today editPresently the worldwide Primary provides Sunday school and church related activities to approximately 1 1 million Latter day Saint children 1 In most congregations optional nursery care and supervision is available for children from 18 months to age 3 Classroom instruction begins for three year olds and continues to age 12 with classes grouped by age At the beginning of the year they turn 12 children begin to attend Sunday School and the Young Men or Young Women programs The Primary has its own songbook made up of original songs and hymns modified for children Child Safety editAll members called to serve in a position that deals with youth or children are required to take the Church s Protecting Children and Youth training module which is available on the Church s website for free 12 Nursery and Primary leaders are required to release children only to members of their immediate families unless permission has been granted for someone else to pick the child up 6 See also edit nbsp Latter Day Saint movement portalChildren s Songbook CTR ring I Am a Child of God The Friend LDS magazine Notes edit a b Tad Walsh Preparing to split up LDS General Primary Presidency looks back on 5 years of service together Deseret News March 27 2015 Although children had by long standing practice participated in Primary until their 12th birthdays on December 14 2018 the First Presidency announced that children would advance from Primary as a group in January of the year in which they would turn 12 a b c Primary Handbook 2 Administering the Church Salt Lake City Utah LDS Church 2010 11 1 3 Nephi 22 13 see also Isaiah 54 13 a b 12 Primary www churchofjesuschrist org Retrieved December 12 2023 a b Introduction www churchofjesuschrist org Retrieved December 12 2023 The Primary Presidency Oversees Teaching of Children Worldwide newsroom churchofjesuschrist org April 3 2021 Retrieved June 24 2021 Meet the New Leaders Called at the April 2022 General Conference newsroom churchofjesuschrist org April 2 2022 Retrieved May 15 2022 Sustaining of General Authorities Area Seventies and General Officers Liahona May 2022 pp 30 31 Johnson s term of service ended on August 1 2022 Porter s term of service began on August 1 2022 Protecting Children and Youth www churchofjesuschrist org Retrieved December 12 2023 External links editPrimary Official site Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Primary LDS Church amp oldid 1189925209, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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