Publication Announcement – Touchstone speeches in Latter-day Saint history, 1820-2020
Mormon Rhetoric from Across the Belief Spectrum, Covering Two Centuries
Oratory in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
By Richard Benjamin Crosby and Isaac James Richards
Latter-day Eloquence: Two Centuries of Mormon Oratory is available for pre-order here (use S26UIP for a 30% discount!).
Across its two-hundred-year history, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (and Mormon culture writ large) has developed an impressive tradition of public address, much of which has been recorded and collected, but relatively little of which has been studied academically, and none of which has attempted to capture the full range of the Latter-day Saint speaking voice. Our landmark new anthology, Latter-day Eloquence: Two Centuries of Mormon Oratory (University of Illinois Press - June 2, 2026), attempts to fill that gap by providing a vital sampling of sermons and speeches that offer primary works for students and scholars of Mormonism, of American culture, and of religious rhetoric, as well as for anyone interested in the faith’s rich and surprisingly diverse tradition of eloquent oratory.
Since the Church maintains no professionally trained or paid clergy at the local level, no schools of theology, and no separate priestly class, it has no concept of what other religions call homiletics, or the art and theory of preaching. So one might presume there is not a strong culture of preaching or public oratory in the Church, but we find precisely the opposite. The Church’s radically democratic structure, lay ministry, geographically bounded wards, and volunteer callings make it an entire universe of constant speechmaking by all kinds of orators, skilled and otherwise.
Almost as soon as they can walk and talk, young members of the Church enter Primary, where they are invited to prepare short talks for large groups of fellow children. They typically deliver these addresses into microphones while standing behind lecterns. At age eleven or twelve, they enter the youth program, where they are invited to prepare whole lessons and give more talks, sometimes to the adult congregation. Beginning as early as eighteen, active Latter-day Saints are encouraged to join a robust missionary force, leaving home to travel the world, two by two, to preach in homes, parks, and streets.
For the rest of their lives, members are frequently required to give talks or sermons in front of entire congregations, including prepared messages at assigned meetings, open-mic testimony meetings once a month, and frequent devotionals, firesides, conferences, camps, and other events—to say nothing of public prayers, ordinances, rituals, priesthood blessings, and other speech acts that play a central role in the maintenance of Latter-day Saint life.
All told, Latter-day Saints are expected to speak and preach frequently and publicly on topics of significance, often with little notice, from a young age and throughout their lives. It is not an overstatement to claim that members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints are likely to have spent far more time than the average person behind a lectern or pulpit delivering speeches, lessons, sermons, and prayers before large audiences.
As scholars of rhetoric--or the art, theory, and practice of communication--we find this phenomenon fascinating. Surely this abundance of public speaking opportunities accounts for part of the success of Latter-day Saints in the worlds of business, government, and education. We also understand that no number of fine examples of Mormon oratory have prevented an equal amount of boring, uninspiring, or cliche sacrament meeting talks.
Either way, however, Latter-day Saints exhibit a reverence for the spoken word and its centrality to their lived experience. They demonstrate a great love of eloquent orators, like the late Jeffrey R. Holland and the charismatic Dieter F. Uchtdorf. They also show a profound respect for more austere speaking styles, like that of Bruce R. McConckie or Spencer W. Kimball.
Then there’s the famous statement of Brigham Young, who declared: “When I saw a man without eloquence, or talents for public speaking, who could only say, ‘I know, by the power of the Holy Ghost, that the Book of Mormon is true, that Joseph Smith is a Prophet of the Lord,’ the Holy Ghost proceeding from that individual illuminate[d] my understanding, and light, glory, and immortality [were] before me.”
Finally, there is the prodigious spectrum of non-institutional Latter-day Saint voices that have contributed to this tradition. From women and minorities to intellectuals and non-conformists, Mormons are anything but monovocal, as our anthology seeks to demonstrate. Believers and critics alike seem to understand the importance of this Book of Mormon truth, that: “the preaching of the word . . . had [a] more powerful effect upon the minds of the people than the sword or anything else” (Alma 31:5).
This anthology aspires to be a foundational reference for the future study of Latter-day Saint rhetoric and oratory, as well as to illustrate the benefits of studying religion through the lens of public address and rhetorical criticism. Above all, it demonstrates the significance of public speaking in Latter-day Saint life, as well as its endless yearning for divine eloquence.
Latter-day Eloquence: Two Centuries of Mormon Oratory is available for pre-order here (use S26UIP for a 30% discount!).
Adapted from Latter-day Eloquence: Two Centuries of Mormon Oratory edited by Richard Benjamin Crosby and Isaac James Richards, to be published June 2, 2026, by University of Illinois Press. Copyright © 2026 by the Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois. All rights reserved.




