"We need to strengthen our sacrament meetings and make them hours of worship in very deed. Cultivate a spirit of reverence, an attitude in which people come into the chapel and are quiet and reverent and thoughtful. There is too much noise. We are a social people, but I wish we would not keep it up so
loudly in the chapel."
Gordon B. Hinckley, Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania, regional conference, 27 Apr. 1996
Topic: Important Covenants: The Sacrament
"We are a covenant people. I have had the feeling that if we could just encourage our people to live by three or four covenants everything else would take care of itself; we would not have to have anything else except to go forward with our program.
"The first of these is the covenant of the sacrament, in which we take upon ourselves the name of the Savior and agree to keep His commandments with the promise in His covenant that He will bless us with His spirit. If our people would go to sacrament meeting every week and reflect as they partake of the sacrament on the meaning of the prayers which are offered, . . . if they would listen to the language of those prayers, which were given by revelation, and live by them, we would be a better people, all of us would be. That is the
importance of the sacrament meeting. The speakers are incidental. The great thing is that we gather together and partake of the sacrament together...."
Gordon B. Hinckley,
"Teachings of Gordon B. Hinckley" [Salt Lake City: Deseret Book Co.,
1997], p. 146
"The solemn moments of thought while the
sacrament is being served have
great significance. They are moments of self-examination,
introspection, self-discernment--a time to reflect and to resolve. "

Howard W. Hunter - Ensign, May 1977, p. 25