From Deseret News archives:

New LDS ad campaign touts the 'Truth Restored'

Published: Friday, April 4, 2008 12:41 a.m. MDT
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
A new advertising campaign for the LDS Church that has been test-marketed in selected areas looks to focus public attention on "Truth Restored" as an answer to life's greatest questions.

With the 178th Annual General Conference of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints set to begin Saturday, church leaders will focus on specific doctrinal issues for church members. But the new ad campaign is designed to reach those who know little or nothing about the faith.

Developed by the church in conjunction with Brigham Young University's advertising department, the ads — inside publications such as Time, Newsweek, U.S. News and World Report and Sports Illustrated, and targeted at specific geographic markets — are a departure from the faith's long-running "Homefront" series.

The new print ad campaign features people who identify themselves and their quest to find God, describing a life challenge that sent them looking for meaning in the divine. "I felt so destroyed by my addiction to alcohol and drugs," writes Jovanny Vasquez, of Bronx, N.Y., in a two-page ad that appeared in U.S. News in the Las Vegas area in August.

Story continues below
Appearing alongside the image of a man dancing with a woman and two children, he continues, "I prayed with all my heart to find a solution to my life. I was at the point of losing my wife and family. The God I was looking for was a merciful God. I wanted to know how to be forgiven."

At the bottom of the page, the church's logo appears in large lettering, with the phrase TRUTH RESTORED underneath in smaller type, followed by mormon.org beneath them both.

The campaign, which has adopted a slightly different format for TV, radio, billboard and Internet advertising, has been running for about eight months in four different areas of the country that correspond to designated LDS mission areas: Las Vegas; Las Vegas West; Independence, Mo., including Kansas City and Wichita; and New York Utica, which includes Albany, Syracuse and Utica.

Kevin Kelly, a former New York advertising executive and associate professor of advertising at BYU, told an overflowing auditorium at the school last week about developing the campaign with the church, with oversight from LDS general authorities on the Missionary Executive Council.

In surveys or pretesting done before the campaign began in those markets, results showed 63 percent of respondents didn't know the main claims of the LDS Church. So in an all-out media blitz, the team sought to "have people keep bumping into our message," Kelly said.

Recent comments

truth restored is a GOD send.it not only gave me answers in...

tree | April 15, 2008 at 10:18 p.m.

As members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day-Saints we...

Carol P. Warnick | April 10, 2008 at 7:17 p.m.

The "truth" is nothing more than what a person thinks is inside...

try meditation | April 8, 2008 at 4:56 p.m.

Image

Ads like this one placed in Time magazine and other publications by the LDS Church feature people who identify themselves and their quest to find God.

previousnext

Latest comments

To Bee Reasonable: So what if tithing is 10%? That's like saying because...

Letters: Trump card for believers

What you want is really YOUR religion to be recognized as the official...

Okla. Mormons win Catholic trivia night

going to private schools is not so much about money as prioritization. BYU...

I am so sorry about what has happened. I know the greater the sorrow the...

Mormon chaplain honored in North Dakota

Chaplains of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints wear crosses....

Protests against Phoenix LDS temple

Most of the concerns voiced here are not valid, and they are clearly voiced...

The "general welfare" clause applies to the daily functioning of the United...

Letters: Trump card for believers

There are far more athiest/agnostics than Mormons in America and the...

Shut it down. Plain and simple.

Please, please, please - GIVE IT A REST! Your whining and constant...

Advertisements