General Conference
No One Sits Alone
October 2025 general conference


14:2

No One Sits Alone

Living the gospel of Jesus Christ includes making room for all in His restored Church.

I.

For 50 years, I have studied culture, including gospel culture. I began with fortune cookies.

In San Francisco’s Chinatown, Gong family dinners concluded with a fortune cookie and a wise saying like “A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.”

The fortune in a fortune cookie

As a young adult, I made fortune cookies. Wearing white cotton gloves, I folded and tucked into shape the round cookies hot out of the oven.

Making fortune cookies
Folding a fortune cookie

To my surprise, I learned fortune cookies are not originally part of Chinese culture. To distinguish Chinese, American, and European fortune cookie culture, I looked for fortune cookies on multiple continents—just as one would use multiple locations to triangulate a forest fire. Chinese restaurants in San Francisco, Los Angeles, and New York serve fortune cookies, but not those in Beijing, London, or Sydney. Only Americans celebrate National Fortune Cookie Day. Only Chinese advertisements offer “Authentic American Fortune Cookies.”

Fortune cookies are a fun, simple example. But the same principle of comparing practices in different cultural settings can help us distinguish gospel culture. And now the Lord is opening new opportunities to learn gospel culture as Book of Mormon allegory and New Testament parable prophecies are fulfilled.

II.

Everywhere people are moving. The United Nations reports 281 million international migrants. This is 128 million more individuals than in 1990 and more than three times 1970 estimates. Everywhere, record numbers of converts are finding The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Every Sabbath, members and friends from 195 birth countries and territories gather in 31,916 Church congregations. We speak 125 languages.

Meeting with Saints in Albania
Meeting with Saints in North Macedonia
Meeting with Saints in Kosovo
Meeting with Saints in Switzerland
Meeting with Saints in Germany
Meeting with Saints in Germany

Recently, in Albania, North Macedonia, Kosovo, Switzerland, and Germany, I witnessed new members fulfilling the Book of Mormon allegory of the olive tree. In Jacob 5, the Lord of the vineyard and his servants strengthen both olive tree roots and branches by gathering and grafting together those from diverse locations. Today children of God gather as one in Jesus Christ; the Lord offers a remarkable natural means to expand our lived fulness of His restored gospel.

Preparing us for the kingdom of heaven, Jesus tells the parables of the great supper and wedding feast. In these parables, invited guests make excuses not to come. The master instructs his servants to “go out quickly into the streets and lanes of the city” and “the highways and hedges” to “bring in hither” the poor, maimed, halt, and blind. Spiritually speaking, that’s each of us.

Scripture declares:

“All nations shall be invited” unto “a supper of the house of the Lord.”

“Prepare ye the way of the Lord, … that his kingdom may go forth upon the earth, that the inhabitants thereof may receive it, and be prepared for the days to come.”

Today those invited to the supper of the Lord come from every place and culture. Old and young, rich and poor, local and global, we make our Church congregations look like our communities.

As chief Apostle, Peter saw heaven open a vision of “a great sheet knit at the four corners, … wherein were all manner of … beasts.” Taught Peter: “Of a truth I perceive that God is no respecter of persons. … In every nation he that feareth [the Lord], and worketh righteousness, is accepted with him.”

The good Samaritan

In the parable of the good Samaritan, Jesus invites us to come to each other and to Him in His inn—His Church. He invites us to be good neighbors. The good Samaritan promises to return and recompense the care of those in His inn. Living the gospel of Jesus Christ includes making room for all in His restored Church.

The spirit of “room in the inn” includes “no one sits alone.” When you come to church, if you see someone alone, will you please say hello and sit with him or her? This may not be your custom. The person may look or speak differently than you. And of course, as a fortune cookie might say, “A journey of gospel friendship and love begins with a first hello and no one sitting alone.”

“No one sits alone” also means no one sits alone emotionally or spiritually. I went with a brokenhearted father to visit his son. Years earlier, the son was excited to become a new deacon. The occasion included his family buying him his first pair of new shoes.

But at church, the deacons laughed at him. His shoes were new, but not fashionable. Embarrassed and hurt, the young deacon said he would never go again to church. My heart is still broken for him and his family.

On the dusty roads to Jericho, each of us has been laughed at, embarrassed and hurt, perhaps scorned or abused. And with varying degrees of intent, each of us has also disregarded, not seen or heard, perhaps deliberately hurt others. It is precisely because we have been hurt and have hurt others that Jesus Christ brings us all to His inn. In His Church and through His ordinances and covenants, we come to each other and to Jesus Christ. We love and are loved, serve and are served, forgive and are forgiven. Please remember, “earth has no sorrow that heav’n cannot heal”; earth burdens lighten—our Savior’s joy is real.

In 1 Nephi 19, we read: “Even the very God of Israel do [they] trample under their feet; … they set him at naught. … Wherefore they scourge him, and he suffereth it; and they smite him, and he suffereth it. Yea, they spit upon him, and he suffereth it.”

My friend Professor Terry Warner says the judging, scourging, smiting, and spitting were not occasional events that occurred only during Christ’s mortal life. How we treat each other—especially the hungry, the thirsty, those left out alone—is how we treat Him.

In His restored Church, we are all better when no one sits alone. Let us not simply accommodate or tolerate. Let us genuinely welcome, acknowledge, minister to, love. May each friend, sister, brother not be a foreigner or stranger but a child at home.

Woman alone at church

Today many feel lonely and isolated. Social media and artificial intelligence can leave us yearning for human closeness and human touch. We want to hear each other’s voices. We want authentic belonging and kindness.

Sitting with friends at church

There are many reasons we may feel we do not fit in at church—that, speaking figuratively, we sit alone. We may worry about our accent, clothes, family situation. Perhaps we feel inadequate, smell of smoke, yearn for moral cleanliness, have broken up with someone and feel hurt and embarrassed, are concerned about this or that Church policy. We may be single, divorced, widowed. Our children are noisy; we don’t have children. We didn’t serve a mission or came home early. The list goes on.

Mosiah 18:21 invites us to knit our hearts together in love. I invite us to worry less, judge less, be less demanding of others—and, when needed, be less hard on ourselves. We do not create Zion in a day. But each “hello,” each warm gesture, brings Zion closer. Let us trust the Lord more and choose joyfully to obey all His commandments.

III.

Doctrinally, in the household of faith and fellowship of the Saints, no one sits alone because of covenant belonging in Jesus Christ.

Taught the Prophet Joseph Smith: “It is left for us to see, participate in and help to roll forward the Latter-day glory, ‘the dispensation of the fullness of times … ,’ when the Saints of God will be gathered in one from every nation, and kindred, and people.”

God “doeth not anything save it be for the benefit of the world; … that he may draw all men [and women] unto him. …

“… He inviteth them all to come unto him and partake of his goodness; … and all are alike unto God.”

Conversion in Jesus Christ requires us to put off the natural man and worldly culture. As President Dallin H. Oaks teaches, we are to give up any tradition and cultural practice that is contrary to the commandments of God and to become Latter-day Saints. He explains, “There is a unique gospel culture, a set of values and expectations and practices common to all [the] members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.” Gospel culture includes chastity, weekly attendance at church, abstaining from alcohol, tobacco, tea, and coffee. It includes honesty and integrity, understanding we move forward, not upward or downward, in Church positions.

I learn from faithful members and friends in every land and culture. Scriptures studied in multiple languages and cultural perspectives deepen gospel understanding. Different expressions of Christlike attributes deepen my love and understanding of my Savior. All are blessed when we define our cultural identity, as President Russell M. Nelson taught, as a child of God, a child of the covenant, a disciple of Jesus Christ.

The peace of Jesus Christ is meant for us personally. Recently a young man earnestly asked, “Elder Gong, can I still go to heaven?” He wondered if he could ever be forgiven. I asked his name, listened carefully, invited him to talk with his bishop, gave him a big hug. He left with hope in Jesus Christ.

I mentioned the young man in another setting. Later I received an unsigned letter that began, “Elder Gong, my wife and I have raised nine kids … and served two missions.” But “I always felt I would not be allowed in the celestial kingdom … because my sins as a youth were so bad!”

The letter continued, “Elder Gong, when you told about the young man gaining hope of forgiveness, I was filled with joy, beginning to realize that maybe I [could be forgiven].” The letter concludes, “I even like myself now!”

Covenant belonging deepens as we come to each other and to the Lord in His inn. The Lord blesses us all when no one sits alone. And who knows? Maybe the person we sit next to may become our best fortune cookie friend. May we find and make place for Him and each other at the supper of the Lamb, I humbly pray in the holy name of Jesus Christ, amen.

Notes

  1. See “Fortune Cookies Didn’t Come from China,” Royal Examiner, Dec. 26, 2021, royalexaminer.com/fortune-cookies-didnt-come-from-china; “National Fortune Cookie Day,” Days of the Year, daysoftheyear.com/days/fortune-cookie-day.

  2. A process of cultural triangulation can also help distinguish what might be considered gospel culture, local national culture, and modern cosmopolitan culture.

  3. International Organization for Migration, World Migration Report 2024, 21, publications.iom.int/books/world-migration-report-2024. “In 2022, there were 117 million displaced people in the world, and 71.2 million internally displaced people” (World Migration Report 2024, xii).

  4. See Jacob 5.

  5. Every language and culture has words and terms that describe the tender things of the heart. Our lived fulness of His restored gospel expands as we learn from each other. Recently, Sisters Annalie (originally from Munich) and Suzy Myers, Elder Erich and Sister Christiane Kopischke, and Elder Jörg and Sister Julia Klebingat shared unique German words that speak to the heart. The feelings these words describe go beyond surface formality. They go beyond routine or duty. These feelings speak of the heart, of warm, close relationships, of spiritual joy in our divine souls. These special words in German include Gemütlichkeit and gemütlich, Heimat, Heimweh, Geborgenheit, Zuflucht, Herzensangelegenheit, Herzensmensch, and Schummerstunde (a rare and poetic term from the north).

  6. Luke 14:21, 23. Similarly, in the parable of the wedding feast, when the invited guests do not come, the king instructs his servants to go gather “as many as [they] shall find” in the “highways” (Matthew 22:9).

  7. Doctrine and Covenants 58:9; see also Doctrine and Covenants 58:6–8, 10–12.

  8. Doctrine and Covenants 65:3, 5; see also Doctrine and Covenants 33:17.

  9. Acts 10:11–12, 34–35; see also Acts 10:9–10, 13–18, 24–33, 44–48; 11:1–18; 15:6–11.

  10. The image of us coming together to each other and Him in His inn is expressed in 3 Nephi 18:32. “No one sitting alone” in our places of worship, and our continued warm ministering to each other, indeed may be the means by which we and they “return and repent, and come unto [Him] with full purpose of heart, and [He] shall heal them; and [we] shall be the means of bringing salvation unto them.”

  11. Doctrine and Covenants 104:15, 17 reminds us, “All things are [the Lord’s]” and “the earth is full, and there is enough and to spare.” Accordingly, the poor and the rich are each to help all be exalted and be made low. Likewise, King Benjamin asks, “Are we not all beggars?” Thereby the rich and poor are each obligated willingly to “impart of the substance that ye have one to another” (Mosiah 4:19, 21; see also Mosiah 4:25–27).

  12. In “Come, Ye Disconsolate” (Hymns, no. 115), Thomas Moore writes: “Come to the mercy seat, fervently kneel. Here bring your wounded hearts; here tell your anguish. Earth has no sorrow that heav’n cannot heal.”

  13. 1 Nephi 19:7, 9. In the Sermon on the Mount, the Lord says, “And unto him that smiteth thee on the one cheek offer also the other; and him that taketh away thy cloak forbid not to take thy coat also” (Luke 6:29).

  14. See Matthew 25:35–40.

  15. “No more a stranger nor a guest, but like a child at home” (“My Shepherd Will Supply My Need,” Hymns—For Home and Church, Gospel Library).

  16. The gospel of Jesus Christ transcends time and culture. It is a remarkable testimony for me that the Book of Mormon teaches the fulness of the gospel of Jesus Christ in the context of an ancient cultural setting in the Americas.

  17. As taught by the Prophet Joseph Smith and his counselors in the First Presidency in Teachings of Presidents of the Church: Joseph Smith (2007), 513; see also Ephesians 1:10.

    Today Church members live in a wide variety of political, social, and economic conditions. Our wards and branches vary in size and leadership resources. Principles of “uniformity and adaptation” can help strengthen family and His restored Church in gospel ways wherever we live (see Handbook 2: Administering the Church [2010], 17.0).

  18. 2 Nephi 26:24, 33, emphasis added; see also 2 Nephi 29; Alma 29:8. Doctrine and Covenants 90:11 promises “that every man shall hear the fulness of the gospel in his own tongue, and in his own language.” This promise is fulfilled as we bring together linguistic tongues and gospel cultural language in our homes and Church.

  19. See Dallin H. Oaks, “Repentance and Change,” Ensign or Liahona, Nov. 2003, 37–40.

  20. Dallin H. Oaks, “Repentance and Change,” 39.

  21. See Dallin H. Oaks, “Repentance and Change,” 38–39.

  22. See Articles of Faith 1:13. As diverse branches and roots intertwine as one in Jesus Christ, we find more that is “virtuous, lovely, or of good report or praiseworthy.” We see the first last and the last first. We rejoice as learners teach and teachers learn. All understand, are edified, and rejoice together (see Doctrine and Covenants 50:22).

  23. See Russell M. Nelson, “Choices for Eternity” (worldwide devotional for young adults, May 15, 2022), Gospel Library.

  24. Jedediah M. Grant, who served in the First Presidency with Brigham Young, reported a vision of the spirit world that included numerous kinds of beautiful flowers thriving together, perhaps as a metaphor for unity and beauty in diversity. “I have seen good gardens on this earth, but I never saw any to compare with those that were there,” he said. “I saw flowers of numerous kinds, and some with from fifty to a hundred different colored flowers growing upon one stalk.” He experienced “the beauty and glory of the spirit world, where the righteous spirits are gathered together” (“Remarks, at the Funeral of President Jedediah M. Grant, by President Heber C. Kimball,” Deseret News, Dec. 10, 1856, 317).

    President David O. McKay also recorded a dream or vision of the eternal city of God, where he saw trees, fruit, shrubbery, and flowers in perfect bloom. “I seemed to realize that trees with luscious fruit, shrubbery with gorgeously tinted leaves, and flowers in perfect bloom abounded everywhere” (Teachings of Presidents of the Church: David O. McKay [2003], 1).