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The ‘Pioneering’ Journey for First Senior Single Male Missionary Called

Meet Elder Paul Newton, whose journey includes his wife’s death, an application process requiring Missionary Department assistance and a call to Croatia

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Elder Paul Newton points to his photo on the assignment board of the Adriatic North Mission in Zagreb, Croatia, on March 21, 2025. Photo by Brian E. Cordray, courtesy of Church News.All rights reserved.

This story appears here courtesy of TheChurchNews.com. It is not for use by other media. 

By Scott Taylor, Church News

Elder Paul Newton has been called a pioneer and a guinea pig — appropriate for the first-called senior single male missionary since The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints recently expanded missionary opportunities for single men 40 and older.

And he is starting a pilot program as part of his 12-month service in the Adriatic North Mission.

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Elder Paul Newton, the first missionary called after The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints allowed senior single males 40 and older to serve beginning November 1, 2024, poses for a portrait at the Provo Missionary Training Center in Provo, Utah, on Tuesday, March 11, 2025. Photo by Kristin Murphy, courtesy of Church News.Copyright 2025 Deseret News Publishing Company.

Elder Newton’s pioneering journey spans more than just the physical distance from his Salem, Utah, residence to the nearby Provo Missionary Training Center and on to the mission office in Zagreb, Croatia.

The real journey has been the past half-dozen years, first when hopes and plans for a senior mission with his wife, Kathleen, were dashed by disease and death, followed by the November 1, 2024, announcement that single senior men could serve and then the nearly several weeks needed to complete his online application, which required Missionary Department assistance.

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Elder Paul Newton, right, meets with President Brian Cordray of the Adriatic North Mission in Zagreb, Croatia, on March 21, 2025. Photo by President Brian E. Cordray, Adriatic North Mission, courtesy of Church News.All rights reserved.

“I’ve wanted to go on a mission ever since I served the first one as a young man,” said Elder Newton, recalling feeling “clean and connected to Heavenly Father” as a missionary a half-century ago in South America. “And now, I get to do that again.”

He treasures this December 23 text from Tami Evans, a project coordinator in the Missionary Department’s senior missionary services division: “You may not know this, but you were the very first single senior elder called. I know it was a process and at times difficult, but you are paving the way for us to be able to fix things and make it better for years to come.”

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Elder Paul Newton stands outside a car in Uruguay during his service as a young full-time missionary in 1975. Photo by Paul and Daniel Newton, courtesy of Church News.All rights reserved.

Early Years, Mission and Marriage

Paul Newton was born in September 1954 in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, while his father attended the University of Alberta. The oldest of 14 children, he grew up in Monroe, Utah, and the then-unincorporated area west of Salt Lake City. Following high school graduation and a year of college, he served in the Uruguay Paraguay Mission from 1973 to 1975.

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Paul and Kathleen Newton on their wedding day outside the Salt Lake Temple on September 21, 1976 in Salt Lake City. Photo by Paul and Daniel Newton, courtesy of Church News.All rights reserved.

After returning home, Newton joined the Mormon Youth Chorus, soon meeting Kathleen Parker of Salt Lake City. They started dating in June 1976, became engaged the next month and were married September 21, 1976, by Elder Marion D. Hanks in the Salt Lake Temple. They raised their family in the Salt Lake Valley and are the parents of five children and 22 grandchildren, with two of the oldest grandsons currently serving full-time missions.

A real estate lawyer with an emphasis in title insurance, Paul Newton left full-time legal practice in 1992, working in-house with a title insurance company until 2015 and then working and consulting for a national insurance company.

Kathleen Newton sang in the Mormon Tabernacle Choir — now the Tabernacle Choir at Temple Square — for 18 years, retiring in 2014. The Newtons talked about serving a senior mission together after her retirement, but she had been called as a ward Relief Society president and wanted to finish her service.

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Kathleen and Paul Newton, standing center back, pose for a family portrait with children and grandchildren in Murray, Utah, in the summer of 2013. Photo by Paul and Daniel Newton2025 by Intellectual Reserve, Inc. All rights reserved.

In early 2019, with a pending mission assignment and a projected July 1 availability date, the Newtons completed their application and medical and dental forms. Ready to meet with their bishop in mid-March, the couple were overcoming an illness he had picked up traveling out-of-state.

On the morning of their appointment, Paul Newton was working downstairs and heard a loud crash. Rushing upstairs, he found wife on the floor, having fallen getting out of a hot bath and hurting her shoulder.

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Kathleen and Paul Newton are photographed together in West Valley City, Utah, in the summer of 2014. Photo by Paul and Daniel Newton, courtesy of Church News.All rights reserved.
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After resting in bed until midday, Kathleen Newton said she wasn’t feeling well and left for the doctor’s office, worried about the shoulder and the possibility of pneumonia. When she was sent to the emergency room for X-rays, her husband joined her to hear the ER doctor confirm a cracked shoulder — and add a diagnosis of a lung disease called pulmonary fibrosis.

“We didn’t know what that was, but once we figured it out, we knew Kathy wasn’t going on a mission, so we pulled the plug on that totally,” said Paul Newton. “But we didn’t know the journey we were going to go on.”

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Kathleen and Paul Newton, second and third from the right in the back row, are joined with extended family members for a photo outside the Kansas City Missouri Temple in July 2022. Photo by Paul and Daniel Newton, courtesy of Church News.All rights reserved.

Last Years Together, First Years Alone

A pulmonologist eventually gave Kathleen Newton heartbreaking news — he could do little beyond a lung transplant, a dangerous procedure at her age.

A move to the Kansas City-Liberty area of western Missouri helped her breathe easier. “We got three more years by moving away,” said Paul Newton, noting that lower-elevation air has a higher oxygen content. “She never used an oxygen tank in Missouri — not once.”

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Paul Newton, third from left, celebrates his 70th birthday with his children — from left, Daniel Newton, Jessica Pace, Amanda Halford, Sam Newton and Nicole Durtschi in South Jordan, Utah, on September 24, 2024. Photo by Paul and Daniel Newton, courtesy of Church News.All rights reserved.

Kathleen Newton died November 13, 2022, and Paul Newton returned to Utah, selling the family home and assets, purchasing a small residence and soon immersing himself into temple and family history work. He became an ordinance worker in the Payson Utah Temple, happy to pick up extra shifts as well as do ordinance work for the hundreds of deceased he found doing extensive family history research.

“What I did in title insurance was the same thing,” he said. “It’s just a history of land and stuff instead of the history of people.”

He added: “My mindset was that I needed to be anxiously engaged in good causes. You don’t have your sea legs under you when your spouse of 46 years passes away. You’re used to doing things together and making decisions together — and all of a sudden, she’s not there, and you’re like only half of yourself.”

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Elder Paul Newton, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints’ first single senior male missionary, gets emotional while telling other senior missionaries about his late wife during a breakout session at the Provo Missionary Training Center in Provo, Utah, on Tuesday, March 11, 2025. Photo by Kristin Murphy, courtesy of Church News.Copyright 2025 Deseret News Publishing Company.

A New Opportunity — and Adventure

On November 1, 2024, after more than 10 hours in the temple doing ordinance work for the deceased and substituting on a shift, Newton was greeted by texts from family and friends informing him of the Church’s new allowance for senior single male missionaries and the common question: “What are you going to do?”

By the next day, he had contacted a friend who used to work in the Missionary Department and learned of a possible opportunity. “I’m all in,” he told his friend.

Including all in for the adventure of simply applying.

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Elder Paul Newton, the first missionary called after The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints allowed senior single males 40 and older to serve beginning November 1, 2024, poses for a portrait at the Provo Missionary Training Center in Provo, Utah, on Tuesday, March 11, 2025. Photo by Kristin Murphy, courtesy of Church News.Copyright 2025 Deseret News Publishing Company.

Newton can rattle off a series of November and December dates, listing stops, stalls and restarts in his application process. He found encouraging and responsive Missionary Department advocates in Evans and Sister Suzanne Vause, a recently released full-time missionary assisting on the division’s support team.

The latter confided the online missionary systems were being updated, with senior single elder applicants being “guinea pigs” for the first updates.

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Elder Paul Newton, the first missionary called after The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints allowed senior single males 40 and older to serve beginning November 1, 2024, sits in a "Preach My Gospel" training session with other senior missionaries at the Provo Missionary Training Center in Provo, Utah, on Tuesday, March 11, 2025. Photo by Kristin Murphy, courtesy of Church News.Copyright 2025 Deseret News Publishing Company.

Newton mentioned that to Elder Lawrence Corbridge, an emeritus General Authority Seventy and former law partner. “Call yourself a ‘pioneer,’” Elder Corbridge told him. “‘Guinea pig’ doesn’t sound as nice.”

Evans told Newton the same thing later in a text: “You are a literal pioneer.”

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Samantha Worthington, left, teaches Elder Paul Newton, right — the first missionary called after The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints allowed senior single males 40 and older to serve beginning November 1, 2024 — and other senior missionaries during a "Preach My Gospel" training session at the Provo Missionary Training Center in Provo, Utah, on Tuesday, March 11, 2025. Photo by Kristin Murphy, courtesy of Church News.Copyright 2025 Deseret News Publishing Company.

Evans salutes Newton for his patience and kindness. “His unwavering desire to serve allowed us to identify and resolve many issues, ultimately improving the process for every single elder who has since submitted a recommendation,” she said, adding, “I believe the Lord knew we needed someone like him to walk through this experience first. … He remained optimistic, always expressing faith that the Lord would make things work in His timing.”

Newton finally hit “submit” on his online application on December 6. Just before Christmas came Evans’ text, his call and assignment and the formality of sending his acceptance letter to the First Presidency. He entered the Provo MTC on March 10 for five days of “Preach My Gospel” training and five days of instruction on working in a mission office before departing for Croatia.

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Elder Paul Newton stands outside the Zagreb Franjo Tuđman Airport in Zagreb, Croatia, on his March 21, 2025, arrival to the Adriatic North Mission. Photo by Brian E. Cordray, courtesy of Church News.Copyright 2025 Deseret News Publishing Company.

And now in Croatia

Adriatic North Mission President Brian E. Cordray’s first learnings about senior single elders were that they are to work in mission offices and not be assigned a companion. But he doesn’t see Elder Newton as serving alone.

“I don’t think he is coming ‘alone,’ in the spiritual sense,” said President Cordray, mindful of the late Kathleen Newton. “I feel that in a very tangible way, she will be with him in spirit, and he will feel her love and support from the other side of the veil.”

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Elder Paul Newton, left, meets with President Brian Cordray and Sister Angelika Cordray of the Adriatic North Mission in the mission office in Zagreb, Croatia, on March 21, 2025. Photo by Brian E. Cordray, courtesy of Church News.Copyright 2025 Deseret News Publishing Company.

With missionaries serving in and transferring across five southern European countries and crossing international borders for transfer assignments, the mission needs someone to navigate visa processes with a myriad of lawyers and government agencies.

“Elder Newton, with his unique background as a lawyer, is a godsend for us,” President Cordray said. “It’s a wonderful opportunity for good men to serve at a time when they might otherwise feel put out to pasture. The Lord needs these faithful sons — and frankly we do too here in the mission field.”

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Elder Paul Newton works in the office of the Adriatic North Mission in Zagreb, Croatia, on March 21, 2025. Photo by President Brian E. Cordray, Adriatic North Mission, courtesy of Church News.Copyright 2025 Deseret News Publishing Company.

Even before starting arriving at the Adriatic North Mission office in Zagreb, Croatia, on March 21, Elder Newton was apprised of a special responsibility, which he describes as “a pilot program for reactivating nonparticipating members” for both the mission and the Church’s Europe Central Area.

To hear President Cordray explain the opportunity, it’s an initiative that Elder Newton can understand and appreciate.

Said President Cordray: “We have many older, single male adults who feel like they have lost their usefulness and don’t know what they can offer the Lord and His Church by way of service. Elder Newton will surely be an inspiration to all those good brothers — the Savior has a use for each of us in this great work, no matter what our personal circumstance may be.”

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