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First Presidency proclaims changes to Presidency of the Seventy

The First Presidency announced Wednesday, Jan. 17, two changes to the Presidency of the Seventy: Elder Carl B. Cook, a General Authority Seventy who has served within the presidency since 2018, will now serve because the senior president, and Elder Marcus B. Nash, a General Authority Seventy and executive director of the Church’s Missionary Department, has been appointed to the presidency.

The latest assignments fill the emptiness created by the decision of Elder Patrick Kearon to the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles in December 2023. Elder Kearon had served as senior president of the Presidency of the Seventy since 2020.

The Presidency of the Seventy oversees the work of the General Authority Seventies and assists the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles in its work throughout the world, including traveling to show the gospel of Jesus Christ; administering missionary, temple, family history, humanitarian and other efforts; meeting with members and missionaries of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints; organizing Church units; and dealing and counseling with local Church leaders.

Learn more about Elder Carl B. Cook

Elder Carl B. Cook of the Presidency of the Seventy gives his address through the priesthood session of the 189th Annual General Conference on April 6, 2019.

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints

Carl B. Cook was born in Ogden, Utah, to Bert E. Cook and Ramona Cook Barker. When Elder Cook was 6 years old, his mother was left to boost him and his 4 siblings, the youngest just 3 months old. 

Watching his mother go to work, go to nighttime school, juggle the demands of raising a family and faithfully fulfill her Church calling had a definite impact on him. Now when he’s faced with a challenge or daunting task, he thinks about her example, he said.

Besides teaching him find out how to mow the lawn, saddle the horses and make home repairs, his mother taught him to “trust the Lord, work hard and serve others” — a lesson he’s applied in lots of Church callings through the years, including as a bishop, stake president, mission leader and general authority.

Sister Lynette Cook and Elder Carl B. Cook pose for a portrait in Salt Lake City, Utah, Monday, April 4, 2011.

Elder Carl B. Cook and his wife, Sister Lynette Cook, dated while students at Weber State College. Together they’ve raised five children.

After serving a full-time mission to Germany, Elder Cook attended Weber State College, where he obtained a level in business marketing. While there, he applied principles he learned on his mission to assist him discover a date.

Asking for a referral from a past mission companion, he arrange a date with Lynette Hansen. The two dated for the equivalent of 1 transfer and were married in 1979 within the Ogden Utah Temple. They have five children.

He graduated from Utah State University along with his Master of Business Administration and in 1985 became a partner with the Boyer Co., an actual estate development firm within the Western United States, where he worked for 26 years.

He and his wife served as leaders of the New Zealand Auckland Mission from 2005 to 2008 and he became an Area Seventy within the Utah North Area until called as a General Authority Seventy in 2011. In 2014, he was assigned to preside over the Africa Southeast Area. He was named to the Presidency of the Seventy on March 31, 2018. 

In lots of his addresses as a general authority, Elder Cook has referenced his rural upbringing. In October 2016 general conference, he spoke of his Aunt Dorothy driving the old Dodge truck and “putting it in compound” to assist his Uncle Lyman on their farm, which he likened to Church members serving together in ward, branches, quorums and classes. 

“Just as gears mix to offer greater power in compound, we now have greater power after we join together. As we unite to serve each other, we accomplish way more together than we could on our own.”

In 2017, Elder Cook spoke during a Brigham Young University devotional of pushing aside the natural man. Drawing from his experiences of reworking his horse Stubby from a wild horse to a trusted companion, Elder Cook encouraged listeners to submit their will to God’s.

Learn more about Elder Marcus B. Nash

Elder Marcus B. Nash, a General Authority Seventy and executive director of the Missionary Department, talks in the halls of the Provo Missionary Training Center.

Elder Marcus B. Nash, a General Authority Seventy and executive director of the Missionary Department, talks concerning the updated version of “Preach My Gospel,” the guide for sharing the gospel of Jesus Christ, on the Provo Missionary Training Center in Provo, Utah, on Thursday, June 22, 2023.

Kristin Murphy, Deseret News

Elder Nash has used his skills in diverse ways to serve within the Church. A General Authority Seventy since 2006, he has served within the South America West, South America Northwest, Africa West, North America Northeast and North America Southeast areas. He has also served within the Church History and Correlation departments and as a member of the Boundary and Leadership Change Committee. 

At the time of his call to the Presidency of the Seventy, he was serving as the manager director of the Missionary Department. In that role, he oversaw the announcement in November 2023 that the Church is creating 36 latest missions, in addition to the discharge of the updated “Preach My Gospel” missionary handbook in June 2023.

In his latest general conference address, in October 2021, he invited Latter-day Saints to share the gospel. “Be you and delay the sunshine. Pray for heaven’s help and follow spiritual promptings. Share your life normally and naturally; invite one other person to return and see, to return and help, and to return and belong. And then rejoice as you and people you like receive the promised blessings,” he said.

General Authority Seventy Elder Marcus B. Nash and his wife, Sister Shelley Nash, sit on a bench on Temple Square.

Elder Marcus B. Nash, a General Authority Seventy, and his wife, Sister Shelley Nash, in Salt Lake City on April 4, 2006.

Elder Nash was born to Brent and Beverly Bell Nash on March 26, 1957, in Seattle, Washington. While his father was in dental school in Washington, the Nashes met one other Latter-day Saint family from Utah, A. Lloyd and Melba Moffat Hatch, who had a daughter named Shelley concerning the same age as young Elder Nash.

The two grew up as neighbors and friends and started dating after Elder Nash’s full-time mission to the El Salvador San Salvador Mission. They were married on May 29, 1979, within the Salt Lake Temple and are the parents of 5 children.

Elder Nash graduated from Brigham Young University with a bachelor’s degree in diplomacy and earned a law degree from the J. Reuben Clark Law School at BYU. He was a partner in a serious Seattle law firm on the time of his call as a general authority.

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