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"We are not bound by tradition, nor are we limited to our own understanding or to the wisdom of men. In short, this is a very unusual university."
- President Kim B. Clark
BYU-Idaho Sign
December 21, 2006  

BYU-Idaho holds fall commencement, apostle urges graduates to cherish their university experience

 

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The newest graduates of Brigham Young University-Idaho were encouraged to embrace and enhance their school's unique legacy and mission during fall commencement exercises held Wednesday, December 20.  Elder Jeffrey R. Holland, a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, was the featured speaker. 

 

Elder Holland was joined by Elder W. Rolfe Kerr, commissioner of the Church Educational System, and Kim B. Clark, president of BYU-Idaho.  Other state and local dignitaries were also in attendance.

 

Elder Holland began his remarks by examining the establishment of BYU-Idaho within the larger context of Church history.  He referred to the Prophet Joseph Smith's plans for a City of Zion, which included a temple and a university in close proximity.  Such a community is found at the Rexburg campus, Elder Holland noted.

 

"With this institution rising in its mature stature as a four-year university, even as the construction of that temple on the hill rises with it, BYU-Idaho and its host environment here in southeastern Idaho becomes the newest of the Lord's experiments in attempting to create yet again a kind of Zion," Elder Holland said.  "In short, you graduates have had-and those students who follow you still have-a chance to continue the quest for part of the Prophet Joseph's dream."

 

Even with a BYU-Idaho education as their foundation, Elder Holland cautioned the graduates they would experience difficulties, pointing to the trials of early Church members as an illustration.  He spoke of the struggles the Saints faced as they labored to build the Kirtland and Nauvoo temples-only to leave them behind as they fled persecution.  Still, they moved ahead in faith, eventually answering President Brigham Young's call to build yet another temple in the Salt Lake Valley.

 

"That history of faith and that spirit of determination and courage seem very much the moment you are experiencing at BYU-Idaho right now," Elder Holland said. "Not every aspect of the future goal is clear; for that matter not every aspect of the present challenge about how to get there is clear.  But everything about the BYU-Idaho experiment in education, just as with everything about that temple rising on the edge of campus, is a declaration of faith, a declaration of sacrifice, a declaration of prophecy and purity and miracles."

 

Elder Holland concluded by issuing the graduates a challenge to take BYU-Idaho with them into the world. "I charge you to tell your story wherever you go," he said. "Declare that what you did at BYU-Idaho mattered in the quest for a unique way to teach and learn and ultimately live, that wherever you are you are still trying to be ‘right before your Father in Heaven, doing the things God requires at your hands, standing precisely where he wants you to be,' at least in part because of what you saw and felt and experienced here.  Think of Joseph, think of Brigham, and think of Brigham Young University-Idaho."

 

In his remarks, President Clark encouraged the graduates to let their light shine before the world, as taught by the Savior in the Sermon on the Mount.  They can do this, President Clark explained, by renewing baptismal covenants each Sunday as they partake of the sacrament, attending the temple regularly, serving faithfully in their wards, and engaging in missionary work.

 

"Wherever you go in life, treat other people as children of God, with kindness and love," President Clark said.  "Be a man or woman of integrity.  Live the truth and stand up for truth, no matter where you are.  Be the same faithful person at home, at Church, at work, in the neighborhood.  Live your life whole.  These choices will illuminate the lives of people who see you in action because the light of truth will shine in your life.  Those with eyes to see will come, and they will see."

 

A total of 1,019 BYU-Idaho students received diplomas at fall commencement.  The university awarded 784 bachelor's degrees and 251 associate degrees.  About half the graduates, 514, are married, and 489 have served as missionaries for the Church.  

News Media Contact

Marc Stevens
University Communications
(208) 496-1150
E-mail: stevensm@byui.edu


General Public Contact

(208) 496-2411

E-mail: infodesk@byui.edu

 

Brigham Young University-Idaho is a four-year private university located in Rexburg, Idaho. The university, which is affiliated with The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, offers both baccalaureate and associate degrees; integrated degrees and internships that are tailored to fit students' interests; a year-round track system allowing more students to attend; and an extensive student activities program that provides leadership and growth experiences. It is the largest private university in Idaho, with over 11,000 students enrolled for winter 2006.

 

Style Note: When reporting about Brigham Young University-Idaho, please use the complete name of the university in the first reference.