After Thursday’s announcement that “Mormon” and “LDS” are no longer acceptable nicknames for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and its members — and that its formal title and other polysyllabic variants are preferred — the initial reaction on social media was one of surprise and amusement.

November 2017: Twitter increases limit to 280 characters

August 2018: The Prophet stresses the importance of the name The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

The ground was prepared brothers and sisters! — Ross (a Latter-day Saint Bishop) (@ldsbishop) August 16, 2018

By Friday, the joking posts and memes — of which there are many, many, examples online — were sharing space with questions about how best to follow the new guidance from church leadership.

Many practicing Latter-day Saints — the preferred moniker instead of “Mormons” for members — and faith-promoting accounts took to Twitter to parse the practical realities and effects of moving away from shorthand phrases that have come to define the Utah-based religion for generations.

(it's still a huge marketing mess) — BCC (@ByCommonConsent) August 17, 2018

“I believe in Mormonism” is now replaced by “I believe in the restored gospel of Jesus Christ.” I like it. It will be a bit of an adjustment but if it puts Jesus Christ in the sentence it is well worth it. 😀 — Michael Mower (@MikeLMower) August 17, 2018

While serving as a missionary in Italy, it could be a mouthful to say the name of the Church. In English, "The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints" has 11 syllables - in Italian there are 19. #twitterstake pic.twitter.com/85HMcFxPnc — Kurt Manwaring (@fromthedesk_) August 17, 2018

Jennifer Scott, a communications professional who previously worked on the staff of former Rep. Jason Chaffetz, R-Utah, suggested that the changes were meant for news organizations and other formal descriptions of the LDS Church, and not for use in the everyday, casual conversations of rank-and-file church members.

This is just a style guide change for media references though. I see no demand that people change the way they personally refer to the Church. — Jennifer Scott (@luv2db8) August 16, 2018

Perhaps supporting Scott’s argument is the official Twitter account for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, which continues to use the handle @LDSchurch despite this week’s changes to its style guide, which now discourages use of the LDS acronym.

The church’s announcement, attributed to President Russell M. Nelson, stated that additional information on the changes will be forthcoming. And church spokesman Eric Hawkins was unable to provide clarification or elaboration Thursday on some specific church-produced titles and groups — such as the Mormon Tabernacle Choir — that use the “LDS” and “Mormon” descriptors.

Dear Mormon Twitter: is it wrong that I will probably still refer to myself as a Mormon? I have always loved that title, it felt distinct and precious to me. #mormon #orldsiguess #TwitterStake — Kari Mathias (@SyrinxMyth) August 16, 2018

Doug Wilks, editor of the church-owned Deseret News, told The Tribune on Thursday that his staff will respect the church’s right to self-identify. And News reporter Tad Walch, who covers the faith, posted on Twitter that he will need to review the phrases he regularly uses to describe the faith.

No kidding! LOL. This will change some of the very basic phrases I use in writing about the church, too. — Tad Walch (@Tad_Walch) August 16, 2018

Other Twitter users emphasized the church’s request that, after being identified by its full name, it subsequently be described as “the church," “the Church of Jesus Christ” or “the restored Church of Jesus Christ.” A component of the faith’s doctrine is the belief that The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is the literal restored gospel of Jesus Christ.

The reason why Latter-day Saints should call it "the Church" is because we are the one and ONLY true Church. No longer to be called #Mormon, we are Christ's restored Church. No room for apostates/anti's. #twitterstake — Michael Crook (@TheMikeCrook) August 17, 2018