Hello again, everyone! I am pleased to be able to bring you several temple updates and an article from the Newsroom which was published earlier today relating to the missionary program. Let's get right into all of that. First, the temple updates. At the Durban South Africa Temple, in addition to what I noted in my last update on that temple, it has also been noted that ceiling tiles are being installed and that floors are being assessed currently for carpet installation. That temple appears to be on track to be one of the first dedicated following the annual July recess for the General Authorities, though it is not as clear whether that might occur before or after the September 1 dedication for the Port-au-Prince Haiti Temple.
At the Arequipa Peru Temple grounds, window frames are being installed, while the installation of exterior lighting on the grounds of the temple appears to be complete. While there is still an outside chance that this temple won't be dedicated until early 2020, if it stays on track, I can see it being dedicated prior to the end of this year. I have estimated that could occur in December of this year, but could see that being pushed back into the early months of 2020 depending on what happens between now and then.
Next, I had previously mentioned that the Pocatello Idaho Temple was likely to have a groundbreaking in spring of this year. New information received today indicates that plans have been submitted to the city to undergo a plan review process. I have mentioned a prospective timing of April or May for this temple's groundbreaking, and we will see how and if that theory holds.
The one other update I have is on the Lima Peru Los Olivos Temple. Since I last mentioned any information on it, it appears that the site President Nelson visited in October has been conclusively verified as the location for that temple. Last Sunday, the meetinghouse on the grounds of that temple (which housed the Habish and Cayetano Heredia wards) closed in preparation for demolition, which will clear the way for that temple's groundbreaking.
Until more is known about that, I am sticking with the general estimate I previously offered for the groundbreaking (mid-to-late 2019). As more information comes to light in this regard, I will update that estimate as needed. That said, I still anticipate 2019 will be a big year for temple groundbreakings, and I look forward to seeing what happens in that regard.
Shifting gears slightly to general Church news, a new planning tool has been made available for prospective missionaries which will enable them to more fully consider the timing of their service. Elder Brent H. Nielson, who continues to serve as Executive Director of the Missionary Department, noted that while most missionaries enter the MTC shortly after the end of each academic school year, those who feel they can defer that to sometime between November and May will find the opportunity to work with a more seasoned companion, and to have more one-on-one attention in the training process. The tool also allows prospective missionaries to approximate their release dates based on when they are thinking of commencing their service. It was good to hear of this development in the Church's missionary program.
One other item of Church news. At a Joseph Smith Memorial Devotional on January 27, Elder Gary E. Stevenson and his wife, Lesa, shared their testimonies of the life and mission of the Prophet Joseph Smith, the divine origin of the Book of Mormon, and how the truth of those two ideas lends support to the idea that we have a living prophet today. This devotional allowed Elder Stevenson a "home court" advantage, as it was held in Logan Utah, where he grew up.
I appreciated my opportunity to bring word of those developments to you all here. I continue to monitor all Church news and temple updates and will keep passing those along as I receive word of them. That does it for this post. Any and all comments are, as always, welcome and appreciated, on any post at any time, as long as such comments are made in accordance with the established guidelines. Thank you for the privilege of your time. If you enjoyed what you read here and would like to stay informed of newly-added content, please feel free to subscribe. Until my next post, I wish each one of you all the best and pray that the Lord will bless you all in everything you do.
On this blog, I, James Stokes, share insights and analysis covering the latest news and developments reported about The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. My specific emphasis and focus is on the ministry of our current apostles, General Conference, and up-to-date temple information. This site is neither officially owned, operated, or endorsed by the Church, and I, as the autthor thereof, am solely responsible for this content.
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Wednesday, January 30, 2019
Temple Updates Provided; Tool Created to Assist Prospective Missionaries
Labels:
Apostolic Ministry & Travels,
Estimated Time-frames for Future Temple Events,
General Church News,
Missionary Work
I have had a lifelong love for Church history, which has extended to ongoing reports of the ministry of our apostles and prophets, General Conference, and all temple developments. This blog enables me to share that love with all who read my thoughts on these developments, which are sometimes reported multiple times per day as needed.
Updated Future Estimates for Known Temple Events
Hello again, everyone! While any of you can feel free to continue to comment on any previous post, I wanted to pass along here some updates I have made to the list of future estimates I am keeping for known or anticipated temple events in the near future. That updated list follows below. So as not to disturb the flow of this information, I will end here and now as I always do:
That does it for this post. Any and all comments are, as always, welcome and appreciated, on any post at any time, as long as such comments are made in accordance with the established guidelines. Thank you for the privilege of your time. If you enjoyed what you read here and would like to stay informed of newly-added content, please feel free to subscribe. Until my next post, I wish each one of you all the best and pray that the Lord will bless you all in everything you do.
That does it for this post. Any and all comments are, as always, welcome and appreciated, on any post at any time, as long as such comments are made in accordance with the established guidelines. Thank you for the privilege of your time. If you enjoyed what you read here and would like to stay informed of newly-added content, please feel free to subscribe. Until my next post, I wish each one of you all the best and pray that the Lord will bless you all in everything you do.
Specific Estimates
for Known Temple Events in the Near Future
2019:
Sunday March
10-Tuesday March 12: Dedication of the Rome Italy Temple (162nd
operating temple; confirmed)
Note: The First Presidency announced the amended
dedication dates for this temple on November 8, 2018. Given that this
dedication will now be held over three days rather than the
previously-announced 8-day period, there may be only 2-3 of our 15 apostles
participating in this event. That said, it would not surprise me in any way if
this dedication was either the start or conclusion of another leg of President
Nelson’s ongoing Global Ministry Tour.
Saturday &
Sunday April 6 & 7: 189th General Conference
Note: Because 19 temples were announced in 2018
(which may have been President Nelson’s way of starting slowly), and because
one of his major focuses during his first year as Church President has been
highlighting the importance of temples, I’m sure we will see several new
temples announced during this General Conference.
Sunday April 14:
Dedication of the Kinshasa Democratic Republic of the Congo Temple (163rd
operating temple; confirmed)
Note: In view of the facts that the dedication of
this temple will occur after the April General Conference, and that following
the April 2018 General Conference, President Nelson began his Global Ministry
Tour, I could see President Nelson doing another leg of his tour in conjunction
with this temple’s dedication, whether that tour starts or ends with this
dedication, or whether this dedication is held sometime in the mid-point of
that tour.
April or May:
Groundbreaking for the Pocatello Idaho Temple
Note: In January 2019, many sources I had
available noted that this temple would have a groundbreaking in the spring.
That could occur at some point after General Conference (and thus be held
before the already-scheduled groundbreaking for the San Juan Temple), or it
could occur in May, either on the same day as that for the San Juan temple, or
at any other time during the month. Although an apostle (particularly any with
ties to Pocatello) could preside at this groundbreaking when it occurs, or that
could be done by any of the 3 members of the Idaho Area Presidency (Elders
Wilford W. Andersen, S. Gifford Nielsen, or Brian K. Taylor).
Saturday May 4:
Groundbreaking for the San Juan Puerto Rico Temple
Note: On January 12, 2019, the First Presidency
released the artist’s rendering for this temple (which was announced in October
2018). 5 days later (on January 17), the groundbreaking for this temple was
announced to occur on this day in May. Elder Walter F. Gonzalez, president of
the Church’s Caribbean Area, will preside at that ceremony.
Sunday May 5:
Private rededication of the Memphis Tennessee Temple (confirmed)
Note: On January 16, 2019, the First Presidency
announced the private rededication of this temple would take place in a single
session on this date, that Elder Jeffrey R. Holland would preside at the
rededication, and that no open house or youth devotional would be held prior to
this event.
Sunday May 19: Private
rededication of the Oklahoma City Oklahoma Temple (confirmed)
Note: On January 16, 2019, the private
rededication for the Oklahoma City Oklahoma Temple was announced. President
Henry B. Eyring will preside at the single-session rededication, which will not
be preceded by an open house or youth devotional.
Sunday June 2:
Dedication of the Fortaleza Brazil Temple (165th operating temple;
confirmed)
Note: On January 10, 2018, the First Presidency
announced this temple’s dedication. In an unusual (but not unexpected) move,
that dedication has been scheduled to occur two weeks prior to the rededication
of the Oakland California Temple. To the best of my knowledge, this is the
first time a dedication has been set to occur prior to a rededication which has
previously been announced. Usually, a temple’s rededication has been set to
occur prior to a previously-announced temple dedication. As noted on other
temples, President Nelson could preside at this event himself, or he could
delegate one of his counselors or a senior member of the Quorum of the Twelve
Apostles to do so.
Sunday June 16: Rededication
of the Oakland California Temple (confirmed)
Note: This temple’s rededication was announced on
December 18, 2018. As noted above, the dedication of the Fortaleza Brazil
Temple, announced almost a month later, has been set to occur before this
temple’s rededication.
Monday July 8:
Hong Kong China Temple Renovation Closure
Note: On January 30, 2019, the First Presidency
announced the renovation closure for this temple, with the plans to be detailed
more fully at a later time. I am anticipating that that process will take
between 2-4 years.
August: Private
rededications for the Raleigh North Carolina and Baton Rouge Louisiana Temples
Note: Given the unexpected announcement of the
private rededications for the Memphis Tennessee and Oklahoma City Oklahoma
Temples (and the fact that both will be operating again before the General
Authorities take their annual July recess), it is not hard to believe that both
of these temples, for which their renovation processes seem to be on track,
could have a rededication within the month following that recess.
Sunday September 1:
Dedication of the Port-au-Prince Haiti Temple (165th operating
temple; confirmed)
Note: On November 14, 2018, the First Presidency
announced the open house and dedication information for this temple. Then, on
January 18, 2019, the dedication was pushed back to this date in view of all
that still needed to be done on the construction process.
Mid-to-late September:
Dedication of the Durban South Africa Temple (166th operating
temple)
Note: If the construction of the Durban South
Africa Temple continues on schedule, then it is not hard to believe that a
dedication for it could occur before General Conference. In fact, if the
construction process continues uninterrupted, then this temple’s dedication
could occur sooner than suggested here.
Saturday &
Sunday October 5 & 6: 189th Semiannual General Conference:
Note: Depending on what is done by this time to
clear the existing backlog of announced temples, it seems more likely than not
that several new temples will be announced during this weekend.
Mid-to-late October:
Rededication of the Frankfurt Germany Temple
Monday November 4:
St. George Utah Temple Renovation Closure (confirmed)
Note: This temple’s renovation was announced on
January 25, 2019. Given the fact that seismic and systemic updates are
anticipated to occur, I have set a preliminary general completion estimate of mid-to-late
2022.
Mid-November: Dedication
of the Lisbon Portugal Temple (167th operating temple)
December:
Dedication of the Arequipa Peru Temple (168th operating temple)
Note: The Arequipa temple has progressed swiftly.
Given the earlier timing that has been announced or is anticipated for the
private rededications of Hinckley-era temples this year, that fact, combined
with the fact that construction may be ahead of schedule, has me confident
enough to conjecture that this temple could likely be dedicated during the last
month of this year. But I could also see the Church waiting to dedicate this
temple until after Christmas 2019 and New Year 2020.
Final note on
2019: Given what I have heard about 2019, it seems more likely than not
that several temples will have a groundbreaking at some point during that year.
As noted above, the groundbreaking has been set for the San Juan Puerto Rico Temple,
while the groundbreaking for the Pocatello Idaho is anticipated to occur during
spring of 2019. I am also anticipating that a groundbreaking for the Saratoga
Springs Utah (and perhaps also) Brasilia Brazil Temples will be held in mid-2019.
Additionally, based on what I know at the present time, I am keeping my eyes
open for information on the Nairobi Kenya, Lima Peru Los Olivos, Harare
Zimbabwe, and Greater Manila Philippines Temples, most (if not all) of which
could have a groundbreaking by the end of 2019. But given the fact that we
unexpectedly saw a groundbreaking set for the San Juan temple, then that opens
the prospect that other temples announced by President Nelson in 2018 could
also have a groundbreaking if their size expedites the approval process.
2020:
Mid-February:
Rededication of the Asuncion Paraguay Temple
Saturday &
Sunday April 4 & 5: 190th Annual General Conference
Note: Barring anything unexpected, I would
anticipate several new temples being announced during this weekend.
Mid-April:
Dedication of the Rio de Janeiro Brazil Temple (169th operating
temple)
Mid-to-late May:
Rededication of the Tokyo Japan Temple
June or
early-to-mid August: Dedication of the Winnipeg Manitoba Temple (170th
operating temple)
Saturday &
Sunday October 3 & 4: 190th Semiannual General Conference
Note: Temple announcements are always possible, so
it is not hard to believe that a few could be announced during this General
Conference.
Mid-October:
Rededication of the Mesa Arizona Temple
Mid-November:
Dedication of the Abidjan Ivory Coast Temple (171st operating
temple)
Note: At the groundbreaking for this temple (which
occurred on November 8, 2018), Elder Neil L. Andersen, who presided at this
event and gave his remarks in French, noted that construction of the temple was
anticipated to take around two years. For that reason, I am moving my previous
estimate for this temple’s dedication up to this point.
Mid-December:
Rededication of the Washington DC Temple
Final note on
2020: Some of the announced temples that will have a groundbreaking between
now and the end of 2019 could potentially be dedicated during this year. And
several other announced temples (I currently have 7 on my radar) could have a
groundbreaking during 2020 as well.
2021:
Saturday &
Sunday April 3 & 4: 191st Annual General Conference
Note: Depending on what happens between now (early
December 2018) and the dates for this General Conference, I could easily see
several new temples announced.
Mid-to-late April:
Dedication of the Urdaneta Philippines Temple (172nd operating
temple)
Early-to-mid June:
Rededication of the Hamilton New Zealand Temple
Mid-August:
Dedication of the San Juan Puerto Rico Temple (173rd operating
temple)
Saturday &
Sunday October 2 & 3: 191st Semiannual General Conference
Note: I am hoping that by the time this particular
General Conference weekend rolls around, the temple construction program of the
Church will have progressed to the point where some temples will continue to be
announced every six months.
Mid-November:
Rededication of the Hong Kong China Temple
Note: This is just a projected estimate, based on
what is currently known. As more information is revealed, this estimate could
be pushed forward or back as needed.
Mid-December:
Rededication of the St. George Utah Temple
Note: What I shared above about the probable
timing of the rededication for the Hong Kong China Temple also applies here: As
more information is made available, and as the renovation process proceeds, I will
be sure to make any adjustments to this estimate that might be needed.
Final note on
2021: If, as anticipated, several more temples are announced in 2019 and
2020, and any which have not yet had a groundbreaking have that occur within
that same time period, that in turn will multiply the number of known temple
events which will likely occur in 2021 and the years beyond. As more is learned
about future temple renovations, that will also have an impact on the number of
future events.
2022:
Saturday &
Sunday April 2 & 3: 192nd Annual General Conference
Note: Since the face of the Church’s temple
construction program will likely look entirely different by this time, I would
anticipate the announcement of several new temples.
Mid-August:
Dedication of the Bangkok Thailand Temple (173rd operating temple)
Note: Because this temple is significantly larger
than temples which have been built in recent years, delays in that construction
process are more likely than not. It is also worth noting that the official
number for this temple is almost certain to change as other temples have a
groundbreaking and construction and are potentially completed before this one
is.
Saturday & Sunday
October 1 & 2: 192nd Semiannual General Conference
Note: As
noted above (for the 2022 April General Conference), by this time, it is more
likely than not that the face of the Church’s temple construction program will
be looking entirely different. With that in mind, it seems more likely than not
that other temples could be announced during this General Conference.
Mid-to-late
November: Dedication of the Pocatello Idaho Temple (174th operating
temple)
Final note: As
noted a few different times here, within the 3.9 years or so between now and
the end of 2022, the face of the Church’s temple construction program will
likely look very different. We currently have a Church President who has
clearly prioritized bringing the temples to the people, and the fact that he
announced 19 new temples within his first year as such verifies that beyond
doubt. I also am equally certain he will do all he can to clear the existing
backlog of announced temples. With that in mind, there will likely be many more
temple events to add to this list in the future. I am committed to bringing
updates in that regard to you all as I receive them.
Labels:
Church President,
Estimated Time-frames for Future Temple Events,
First Presidency,
General Conference,
Potential Future Temples,
Scheduled Temple Event,
Temples Undergoing Renovation
I have had a lifelong love for Church history, which has extended to ongoing reports of the ministry of our apostles and prophets, General Conference, and all temple developments. This blog enables me to share that love with all who read my thoughts on these developments, which are sometimes reported multiple times per day as needed.
Updated List of Temples Which May Be Renovated in the Near Future
Hello again, everyone! Given the fact that the renovation closure for two temples has been announced within the last 7-10 days or so, and that there are many other temples which seem likely to have a renovation done in the near future, I thought I would provide an updated copy of the list I have assembled of temples which seem most likely to be renovated in the near future.
By this time last year, the First Presidency had announced several temples would close for renovation in 2018 (with some of those announcements even being made during 2017), so I would anticipate that more temple renovations are bound to be set for the near future, whether for temples on this list or others I have not considered. The updated list follows below. So as not to disturb the flow of that information, I will end here and now as I always do:
That does it for this post. Any and all comments are, as always, welcome and appreciated, on any post at any time, as long as such comments are made in accordance with the established guidelines. Thank you for the privilege of your time. If you enjoyed what you read here and would like to stay informed of newly-added content, please feel free to subscribe. Until my next post, I wish each one of you all the best and pray that the Lord will bless you all in everything you do.
By this time last year, the First Presidency had announced several temples would close for renovation in 2018 (with some of those announcements even being made during 2017), so I would anticipate that more temple renovations are bound to be set for the near future, whether for temples on this list or others I have not considered. The updated list follows below. So as not to disturb the flow of that information, I will end here and now as I always do:
That does it for this post. Any and all comments are, as always, welcome and appreciated, on any post at any time, as long as such comments are made in accordance with the established guidelines. Thank you for the privilege of your time. If you enjoyed what you read here and would like to stay informed of newly-added content, please feel free to subscribe. Until my next post, I wish each one of you all the best and pray that the Lord will bless you all in everything you do.
Preliminary Note: The list below is based on previous
statements by apostles and the Executive Directors of the Church’s Temple
Department to the effect that temples need to be renovated roughly every 30-40
years or so to keep them seismically and systemically up-to-date.
Temples which may be renovated in the near-future:
1.
Logan Utah (dedicated in 1884; first rededicated
in 1979)
2.
Manti Utah (dedicated in 1888; first rededicated
in 1985)
3.
Salt Lake (dedicated in 1893; is anticipated to
close for its’ first major renovation in the near future)
4.
Cardston Alberta (dedicated in 1923; addition
only rededicated in 1962; fully rededicated in 1991)
5.
Bern Switzerland (dedicated in 1955; first
rededicated in 1992)
6.
Los Angeles California (dedicated in 1956)
7.
London England (dedicated in 1958; first
rededicated in 1992)
8.
Provo Utah (dedicated in 1972)
9.
Seattle Washington (dedicated in 1980)
10. Sydney
Australia (dedicated in 1984; addition only rededicated in 1991)
11. Manila
Philippines (dedicated in 1984)
12. Dallas
Texas (dedicated in 1984; addition only rededicated in 1989)
13. Taipei
Taiwan (dedicated in 1984)
14. Guatemala
City Guatemala (dedicated in 1984)
15. Stockholm
Sweden (dedicated in 1985)
16. Chicago
Illinois (dedicated in 1985; addition only rededicated in 1989)
17. Johannesburg
South Africa (dedicated in 1985; renovation might be delayed until after the
Durban South Africa Temple is dedicated in mid-to-late 2019)
18. Seoul
Korea (dedicated in 1985)
19. Lima
Peru (dedicated in 1986)
20. Denver
Colorado (dedicated in 1986)
21. Portland
Oregon (dedicated in 1989)
22. Las
Vegas Nevada (dedicated in 1989)
23. Toronto
Ontario (dedicated in 1990)
Smaller temples built during the Hinckley-era boom (which
may be redesigned):
1.
Spokane Washington
2.
Columbus Ohio
3.
Bismarck North Dakota
4.
Columbia South Carolina
5.
Detroit Michigan
6.
Halifax Nova Scotia
7.
Regina Saskatchewan
8.
Edmonton Alberta
9.
St. Paul Minnesota
10. Kona
Hawaii
11. Ciudad
Juarez Mexico
12. Hermosillo
Sonora Mexico
13. Oaxaca
Mexico
14. Tuxtla
Gutierrez Mexico
15. Louisville
Kentucky
16. Palmyra
New York
17. Fresno
California
18. Medford
Oregon
19. Reno
Nevada
20. Tampico
Mexico
21. Nashville
Tennessee
22. Villahermosa
Mexico
23. San
Jose Costa Rica
24. Fukuoka
Japan
25. Adelaide
Australia
26. Melbourne
Australia
27. Merida
Mexico
28. Veracruz
Mexico
29. Birmingham
Alabama
30. Porto
Alegre Brazil
31. Montevideo
Uruguay
32. Guadalajara
Mexico
33. Perth
Australia
34. The
Hague Netherlands
35. Brisbane
Australia
I have had a lifelong love for Church history, which has extended to ongoing reports of the ministry of our apostles and prophets, General Conference, and all temple developments. This blog enables me to share that love with all who read my thoughts on these developments, which are sometimes reported multiple times per day as needed.
Tuesday, January 29, 2019
BREAKING TEMPLE NEWS: Hong Kong China Temple to Close for Renovation in July; Other Temple Updates Provided
Hello again, everyone! I have some breaking temple news to report. A short while ago, the First Presidency released this announcement to note that the Hong Kong China Temple will close for extensive renovation on July 8 of this year. It appears that further details on this renovation will be announced as plans are made. Given that this temple is medium-sized, and of a special design which came to President Hinckley by revelation as something that had never been done before, I would anticipate that this process will take between 2-4 years to complete.
The temple, originally dedicated in 1996, became the 48th in operation for the Church, and the last one announced before President Hinckley formally announced his smaller temple building plan that would more than double that number over a period of just 2-3 years. I imagine that the intent is to perform seismic and systemic updates, refresh furnishings and other interior decor, and fixing any exterior issues. So that is another temple closure set to occur later this year.
In the meantime, as I mentioned in the comments of my most recent post before this one, the open house for the Rome Italy Temple is now officially underway as of yesterday. Additionally, yet another update has been provided for the Port-au-Prince Haiti Temple. That report notes that the spire has been attached to the temple, and that stone cladding continues. It strikes me as an interesting coincidence that, following the rescheduling of that temple's dedication, progress on its' construction has picked up quite a bit lately.
There have not been any other changes reported in relation to the status of that temple's construction since my last update (which was also provided in the comments of a recent post), nor on any other temples under construction, undergoing renovation, or any announced temples. But I will continue to monitor all such developments, along with the latest Church news, and bring you word of those things here (through either new posts or comments on existing posts) as I receive word of them.
That does it for this post. Any and all comments are, as always, welcome and appreciated, on any post at any time, as long as such comments are made in accordance with the established guidelines. Thank you for the privilege of your time. If you enjoyed what you read here and would like to stay informed of newly-added content, please feel free to subscribe. Until my next post, I wish each one of you all the best and pray that the Lord will bless you all in everything you do.
The temple, originally dedicated in 1996, became the 48th in operation for the Church, and the last one announced before President Hinckley formally announced his smaller temple building plan that would more than double that number over a period of just 2-3 years. I imagine that the intent is to perform seismic and systemic updates, refresh furnishings and other interior decor, and fixing any exterior issues. So that is another temple closure set to occur later this year.
In the meantime, as I mentioned in the comments of my most recent post before this one, the open house for the Rome Italy Temple is now officially underway as of yesterday. Additionally, yet another update has been provided for the Port-au-Prince Haiti Temple. That report notes that the spire has been attached to the temple, and that stone cladding continues. It strikes me as an interesting coincidence that, following the rescheduling of that temple's dedication, progress on its' construction has picked up quite a bit lately.
There have not been any other changes reported in relation to the status of that temple's construction since my last update (which was also provided in the comments of a recent post), nor on any other temples under construction, undergoing renovation, or any announced temples. But I will continue to monitor all such developments, along with the latest Church news, and bring you word of those things here (through either new posts or comments on existing posts) as I receive word of them.
That does it for this post. Any and all comments are, as always, welcome and appreciated, on any post at any time, as long as such comments are made in accordance with the established guidelines. Thank you for the privilege of your time. If you enjoyed what you read here and would like to stay informed of newly-added content, please feel free to subscribe. Until my next post, I wish each one of you all the best and pray that the Lord will bless you all in everything you do.
Labels:
Breaking News,
Church Policies and Major Announcements,
First Presidency,
Scheduled Temple Event,
Temple Construction Update,
Temples Undergoing Renovation
I have had a lifelong love for Church history, which has extended to ongoing reports of the ministry of our apostles and prophets, General Conference, and all temple developments. This blog enables me to share that love with all who read my thoughts on these developments, which are sometimes reported multiple times per day as needed.
Sunday, January 27, 2019
Current Apostolic Statistics: Part Two—Updated Ages, Averages & Apostolic Nonagenarians
Hello again, everyone! I am back again now with the
second part of this apostolic update, in which we will move on to talk specifics
regarding the long-form and decimal ages of our current apostles, which will
also include updated information on the average ages of the First Presidency,
Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, and the 15 apostles as a group, and current and
future nonagenarians.
So let’s get right into all of that. Again, all data is
current as of today (Sunday January 27, 2019). Since my last update, Elder Gong
has celebrated his 65th birthday (which occurred one week after my
last update) and Elder Christofferson has marked his 74th (which, as
noted previously, happened 3 days ago). Elder Rasband’s 68th birthday
will occur 10 days from now, and the next apostolic birthday (President Henry
B. Eyring’s 86th) will not occur until the last day in May. By that
time, two more of these updates will have been posted on this blog, and another
such update will follow 2 days after President Eyring’s birthday.
With that noted, we now move on to some exact figures
about the ages (and average ages) of the First Presidency, Quorum of the Twelve
Apostles, and all 15 apostles as a group. In the Church’s leading Quorum, President
Nelson is, as noted towards the end of my previous post, 94 years, 4 months,
and 18 days old, which results in a decimal age of 94.38 years. His First
Counselor, President Oaks, is now 86 years, 5 months, and 15 days old, or 86.46
years. President Eyring is now 85 years, 7 months, and 27 days old, which is 85.66
in decimal years.
The First Presidency thus now has a combined 266.5 years
of life experience, which results in an average age for each man of 88.83 years.
President Nelson remains 5.55 years older than that average, with President Oaks
closest to it (as he remains 2.37 years younger than that average), which means
that President Eyring remains 3.17 years below it. Unless there is something of
which we are not aware in relation to the health of any of these Brethren, they
will continue to set new records for the oldest-serving First Presidency in
Church history for the foreseeable future.
Next, let’s turn our attention to the members of the Quorum
of the Twelve Apostles. President Ballard’s long-form age now sits at 90 years,
3 months, and 19 days, or 90.30 years. Elder Holland now has a long-form age of
78 years 1 months, and 24 days, with a resulting 78.15 decimal years. Elder
Uchtdorf (who is a mere 27 days older than his senior apostolic seatmate) age
now stands at 78 years, 2 month, and 21 days old, which works out to 78.22
years.
Elder Bednar has now reached the full age of 66 years, 7
months, and 12 days, which works out to 66.62 decimal years. Elder Cook, the
last and oldest of the 3 apostles born in 1940, has a long-form 78 years, 4 months,
and 19 days old, with a resulting decimal age of 78.39 years. Elder Christofferson,
whose birthday was, as previously noted, just 3 days ago, has now reached the
age of 74 years and 3 days old, making his decimal age 74.01 years.
Elder Andersen, who will be marking a decade in the
apostleship this April, is now 67 years, 5 months, and 18 days, and his decimal
age is 67.47 years. Elder Rasband, who will be observing his birthday in 10
days, as I previously mentioned, is now 67 years, 11 months, and 21 days, or 67.97
years. Elder Stevenson, at exactly 4.5 years younger than Elder Rasband (as
both were born on the 6th), has a long-form age of 63 years, 5
months, and 21 days old, or 63.48 in decimal years.
We move on now the final 3 apostles. Elder Renlund has
now reached the exact age of 66 years, 2 months, and 14 days old, with a
resulting decimal age of 66.21 years. Elder Gong, the one other apostle who has
had his birthday since my last update, has a long-form age of 65 years, 1
month, and 4 days, which works out to 65.09 in decimal years. As for Elder
Soares, he is now 60 years, 3 months, and 25 days old, which is a resulting
60.32 decimal years.
With those numbers in mind, the 12 Quorum members now have
a cumulative 856.24 years of life experience, which is a resulting average of 71.35
years per member. Elders Christofferson and Rasband are respectively above and
below that average, with the former now being 2.66 years older, and the latter
remaining 3.38 years younger. Based on the information I provided earlier about
the members of the First Presidency, the entire body of apostles now have a
combined 1,122.74 years of life experience, which is an average of 74.85 years.
Elder Holland is older than that average by 3.3 years, while Elder Christofferson
remains 0.84 years younger.
We now move on to the nonagenarians. President Nelson
remains the seventh oldest apostle in Church history, and is set to move up to
the seventh spot on July 5 of next year. In the meantime, President Ballard’s
next nonagenarian milestone will not be observed until after my next update.
The exact date on which that will occur is Wednesday February 20, 2019. For the
other apostles, President Oaks will join that list 3 years, 6 months, and 15
days from today, while Elder Soares will do so in 29 years, 8 months, and 5
days, with the other apostles doing so at other various intervals, which will
be detailed more fully as they approach.
I hope that many of you found this information to be
interesting, informative, and accurate. That does it for this post. Any and all
comments are, as always, welcome and appreciated, on any post at any time, as
long as such feedback is in accordance with the established guidelines. Thank
you for the privilege of your time. If you enjoyed what you read here and would
like to stay informed of newly-added content, please feel free to subscribe. Until
my next post, I wish each one of you all the best, and pray that the Lord will
bless you all in everything you do.
Labels:
Apostolic Age & Tenure Milestones,
Church President,
First Presidency,
Sustaining the Brethren
I have had a lifelong love for Church history, which has extended to ongoing reports of the ministry of our apostles and prophets, General Conference, and all temple developments. This blog enables me to share that love with all who read my thoughts on these developments, which are sometimes reported multiple times per day as needed.
Current Apostolic Statistics: Part One—Updated Data for President Oaks, President Nelson, and Longest-Serving Apostolic Groups
Hello again, everyone! While I continue to welcome
comments on any previous posts (particularly any feedback any of you have on my
April 2019 General Conference predictions or the latest posts on other subjects),
it is time once again to bring you all updated information on the latest
apostolic statistics. This data will again be published in two posts. While I
hope most of you will find this information interesting and enlightening, there
may be some of you who are not interested in the data I will present.
Consequently, I will not in any way be offended or bothered if any of you skip
over this post and the next one.
The last time I provided such an update was 6 weeks ago,
on Sunday December 16. Given that today is Sunday January 27, this will be my first
such update for this year. Just a quick side-note here: Sharing these updates
every 6 weeks has become somewhat of a tradition on this blog, one which I hope
to continue for the foreseeable future. With that in mind, I will plan to post
my next update relating to this data on Sunday March 10. As usual, all data is
current as of today. That said, there have been some very significant changes
relating to such information since my last such update, so let’s get right into
all of that.
We will first look at President Dallin H. Oaks’ tenure as
President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, then turn our attention to
where Church President Russell M. Nelson stands among the 16 previous Church
Presidents in terms of his age and tenure length. That will be followed by some
observations about the tenure lengths of our current First Presidency, Quorum
of the Twelve Apostles, and all currently-living ordained apostles as a group. The
more specific data about upcoming apostolic birthdays, the long-form and
decimal ages of our 15 current apostles, and details about nonagenarians will then
follow in a second post.
President Oaks has now served as President of the Quorum
of the Twelve Apostles for a period of 1 year and 13 days, and he has not moved
up among the other Quorum Presidents since my last update. As noted previously,
he will only be observing his next milestone on that list in April 2019. To put
that into perspective in terms of these updates, if I continue to provide them
every six weeks, there will be one more update of this kind before that
milestone is reached. He will then observe two additional milestones two days
apart in July, followed by one each in November and December of next year. More
specific details on those milestones will be forthcoming closer to the time.
As mentioned previously, the length of President Oaks’
service will depend not only on his health and life length, but, of course, the
health and life length of President Nelson will factor into that as well. Insofar
as I am aware, not one of our 15 current apostles is having any health-related
issues at the present time. That said, the health of our apostles is something else
I am monitoring, and I will be sure to bring updates about that to you all as I
become aware of them.
Shifting our focus now to President Nelson, since he was
ordained and set apart as Church President on the same day he set apart
President Oaks as Quorum President, his tenure has spanned 1 year and 13 days
as well. He is also now 94 years, 4 months, and 18 days old. He will observe
both his second tenure-length and his first age-length milestone two days apart
in July of 2019, with subsequent milestones more spread out in the years
following that. And again, I will be detailing those more specifically closer
to the time when they will be reached.
In the meantime, as also noted previously, the current
First Presidency will only be joining the list of longest continuously serving
First Presidencies in Church history on Saturday April 20, 2024, so I will be
outlining their future milestones on that list closer to the time. As for the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, the
current members will mark 3 years together on March 31, 2021, at which point
they will join the list of the longest-serving Quorums of the Twelve Apostles
in Church history. I will likewise be providing updates on those future
milestones closer to that time.
Interestingly enough, less than two months prior to that,
the 15 apostles will make the list of the longest-serving such group (the exact
date is February 8, 2021). With that said, I want to conclude this portion of
the update. That does it for this post. Any and all comments are, as always,
welcome and appreciated, on any post at any time, as long as such comments are
in accordance with the established guidelines. Thank you for the privilege of
your time.
If you enjoyed what you read here and would like to stay
informed of newly-added content, please feel free to subscribe. Until my next
post (which will be the second half of this update that published here within
the next few minutes), I wish each one of you all the best and pray that the
Lord will bless you all in everything you do.
Labels:
Apostolic Age & Tenure Milestones,
Church President,
First Presidency,
Sustaining the Brethren
I have had a lifelong love for Church history, which has extended to ongoing reports of the ministry of our apostles and prophets, General Conference, and all temple developments. This blog enables me to share that love with all who read my thoughts on these developments, which are sometimes reported multiple times per day as needed.
Friday, January 25, 2019
BREAKING TEMPLE NEWS: St. George Utah Temple to Close in November
Hello again, everyone! Breaking temple news was reported earlier this morning, but due to some ongoing health issues, I was not able to report it before now. The First Presidency has announced that the St. George Utah Temple will be closing for extensive renovations on November 4 of this year. These will mostly be seismic and systemic updates, with exterior and interior refreshments being planned. The renovation process is anticipated to conclude for that temple at some point in 2022, and, based on the fact that this is an older temple, I am estimating that process will take almost a full three years to complete, which puts that general estimate at mid-to-late 2022.
The St. George Temple, as I have mentioned previously, holds a place close to my heart. St. George is where my dad grew up, and both his parents and my parents were married there. There was a short period of time in my years growing up where I said that when I got married, I would want it to be in that temple as well, but that was before I had the opportunity to serve at the Mount Timpanogos Utah Temple, which truly became "my temple" when I met the woman I would later marry there.
The Church News has also produced this article about the anticipated process. I would just add that the St. George Utah Temple was originally privately dedicated in January 1877 by Wilford Woodruff, Erastus Snow, and Brigham Young, then publicly dedicated in April of that same year by Daniel H. Wells, who was a counselor to Brigham Young in the First Presidency by that time. The temple was subsequently rededicated in November 1975 by Spencer W. Kimball following its' first renovation.
Because it has been previously renovated, I am not ruling out the prospect that this temple could be completed sooner than I have estimated here. But I know that for older temples, even those previously renovated, new processes have almost always taken longer than anticipated, so I have felt it best to be more conservative in my estimates in this regard.
I am also anticipating that this is only the first temple renovation we will hear about this year, and that some of the temples closing for renovation later this year may have that scheduled to occur prior to the closure of the St. George Temple. This whole scenario will be something to watch for sure, and I will bring you word of any developments I hear of ASAP.
That does it for this post. Any and all comments are, as always, welcome and appreciated, on any post at any time, as long as such comments are made in accordance with the established guidelines. Thank you for the privilege of your time. If you enjoyed what you read here and would like to stay informed of newly added content, please feel free to subscribe. Until my next post, I wish each one oof you all the best and pray that the Lord will bless you all in everything you do.
The St. George Temple, as I have mentioned previously, holds a place close to my heart. St. George is where my dad grew up, and both his parents and my parents were married there. There was a short period of time in my years growing up where I said that when I got married, I would want it to be in that temple as well, but that was before I had the opportunity to serve at the Mount Timpanogos Utah Temple, which truly became "my temple" when I met the woman I would later marry there.
The Church News has also produced this article about the anticipated process. I would just add that the St. George Utah Temple was originally privately dedicated in January 1877 by Wilford Woodruff, Erastus Snow, and Brigham Young, then publicly dedicated in April of that same year by Daniel H. Wells, who was a counselor to Brigham Young in the First Presidency by that time. The temple was subsequently rededicated in November 1975 by Spencer W. Kimball following its' first renovation.
Because it has been previously renovated, I am not ruling out the prospect that this temple could be completed sooner than I have estimated here. But I know that for older temples, even those previously renovated, new processes have almost always taken longer than anticipated, so I have felt it best to be more conservative in my estimates in this regard.
I am also anticipating that this is only the first temple renovation we will hear about this year, and that some of the temples closing for renovation later this year may have that scheduled to occur prior to the closure of the St. George Temple. This whole scenario will be something to watch for sure, and I will bring you word of any developments I hear of ASAP.
That does it for this post. Any and all comments are, as always, welcome and appreciated, on any post at any time, as long as such comments are made in accordance with the established guidelines. Thank you for the privilege of your time. If you enjoyed what you read here and would like to stay informed of newly added content, please feel free to subscribe. Until my next post, I wish each one oof you all the best and pray that the Lord will bless you all in everything you do.
Labels:
Church Policies and Major Announcements,
Estimated Time-frames for Future Temple Events,
First Presidency,
Scheduled Temple Event,
Temple Construction Update,
Temples Undergoing Renovation
I have had a lifelong love for Church history, which has extended to ongoing reports of the ministry of our apostles and prophets, General Conference, and all temple developments. This blog enables me to share that love with all who read my thoughts on these developments, which are sometimes reported multiple times per day as needed.
List of Potential Locations Which Could Have a Temple Announced During the April 2019 General Conference
Hello again, everyone! I am back with the third (and final) post to try and generate more discussion on my April 2019 General Conference predictions. This post will share the list of potential locations I feel are most likely to have a temple announced during the upcoming April General Conference. I just want to reiterate something I have said here previously:
The 19 temples announced by President Nelson last year may have been his way of starting slowly. We have seen more statements of apostles and other leaders lately indicating that President Nelson's legacy as the foremost temple-building prophet may outpace and overshadow what we saw under President Hinckley's inspired smaller temple-building program, during which the number of temples more than doubled in the period of roughly 3-4 years.
If the most recent statements on President Nelson's plan are taken at face value, we will be looking at a tenfold increase of some kind. So it is likely that several new temples will be announced during this next General Conference. Africa has 2 areas of the Church in which the growth is steady or phenomenal in its' scope. And in Latin America, the Church has 5 areas, all of which are likewise strongholds for the Church. I am anticipating that these two regions of the world will see quite a few new temples announced over the next several years and beyond.
While only the Lord, as revealed to the Church President through the Spirit, can determine where temples are built, I hope that the data I have compiled about the prospects is illuminating and enlightening to all who read it. That list of locations follows below, along with extensive notes explaining my rationale behind each selection, including pertinent information regarding each of the Church's geographical areas which are listed.
In order to not disturb the flow of that information, I will end here and now as I always do. That does it for this post. Any and all comments are, as always, welcome and appreciated, on any post at any time, as long as such comments are made in accordance with the established guidelines. Thank you for the privilege of your time. If you enjoyed what you read here and would like to stay informed of newly-added content, please feel free to subscribe. Until my next post, I wish each one of you all the best and pray that the Lord will bless you all in everything you do.
The 19 temples announced by President Nelson last year may have been his way of starting slowly. We have seen more statements of apostles and other leaders lately indicating that President Nelson's legacy as the foremost temple-building prophet may outpace and overshadow what we saw under President Hinckley's inspired smaller temple-building program, during which the number of temples more than doubled in the period of roughly 3-4 years.
If the most recent statements on President Nelson's plan are taken at face value, we will be looking at a tenfold increase of some kind. So it is likely that several new temples will be announced during this next General Conference. Africa has 2 areas of the Church in which the growth is steady or phenomenal in its' scope. And in Latin America, the Church has 5 areas, all of which are likewise strongholds for the Church. I am anticipating that these two regions of the world will see quite a few new temples announced over the next several years and beyond.
While only the Lord, as revealed to the Church President through the Spirit, can determine where temples are built, I hope that the data I have compiled about the prospects is illuminating and enlightening to all who read it. That list of locations follows below, along with extensive notes explaining my rationale behind each selection, including pertinent information regarding each of the Church's geographical areas which are listed.
In order to not disturb the flow of that information, I will end here and now as I always do. That does it for this post. Any and all comments are, as always, welcome and appreciated, on any post at any time, as long as such comments are made in accordance with the established guidelines. Thank you for the privilege of your time. If you enjoyed what you read here and would like to stay informed of newly-added content, please feel free to subscribe. Until my next post, I wish each one of you all the best and pray that the Lord will bless you all in everything you do.
Africa Southeast[2]:
Antananarivo Madagascar[3];
Maputo Mozambique[4]; Lubumbashi DR Congo[5];
Cape Town South Africa[6];
Kampala Uganda[7]
Africa West[8]:
Freetown Sierra Leone[9];
Kumasi Ghana[10]; Monrovia Liberia[11];
Yamoussoukro Ivory Coast[12];
Benin City Nigeria[13]
Caribbean: Kingston
Jamaica[22]
Pacific: Port Moresby
Papua New Guinea[32]; Tarawa Kiribati[33];
Pago Pago American Samoa[34];
Neiafu Vava'u Tonga[35];
Savaii Samoa[36]
Philippines: Bacolod Philippines[37]
South America Northwest[38]: Santa
Cruz[39]/La
Paz[40]
Bolivia; Iquitos Peru[41];
Cali[42]/Medellin[43]
Colombia; Maracaibo Venezuela[44]
South America South[45]: Antofagasta[46]/Valparaiso[47]
Chile; Neuquen[48]/Rosario[49]
Argentina; Ciudad del Este Paraguay[50]
North America[51]
(including the United States and Canada):
Idaho: Preston Idaho[52]
North America Central:
Missoula Montana[53]; Lethbridge Alberta[54]; Wichita
Kansas[55];
Green Bay Wisconsin[56];
Des Moines Iowa[57]; Pueblo Colorado[58];
Rapid City South Dakota[59]
North America Northeast:
Augusta Maine[60]; Morristown/East
Brunswick New Jersey[61];
Concord New Hampshire[62]
Cincinnati Ohio[63]; Pittsburgh Pennsylvania[64]; Montpelier
Vermont[65]
North America Southeast:
Jackson Mississippi[68];
Shreveport Louisiana[69];
Jacksonville Florida[70];
Knoxville Tennessee[71];
Savannah Georgia[72]
North America Southwest:
Bentonville Arkansas[73];
Elko[74]/Ely[75]
Nevada; Fort Worth Texas[76];
Las Cruces New Mexico[77];
Flagstaff Arizona[78]
Utah[79]:
Herriman Utah[80]; Heber City Utah[81];
Tooele Utah[82]; Evanston Wyoming[83] Washington
County Utah (Third temple)[84]
Result:
[1]Preliminary note on this
section: With 19 new temples announced last year alone (which resulted in an
existing current backlog of 30 announced temples), many have felt that no new
temples might be announced during this General Conference. While I understand
the rationale behind that opinion, Church leaders have frequently referenced
President Nelson’s great enthusiasm for the topic of temples, and have noted
that President Nelson’s legacy as the foremost temple-building prophet is
likely to outpace and overshadow what we previously saw occur under President
Hinckley’s smaller temple design. Previous prophets have established a 200-mile
minimum distance within which every Church member should be from their assigned
temples. So if President Nelson’s plans involve halving or quartering that
distance, or doubling or tripling the number of operating temples in a few
years’ time, no location may be off the table. And while it used to be standard
for the Church not to announce other temples when there has either been a backlog
on temples under construction or announced, or when one or more temples are in
various phases of construction in any given area of the Church or nation in
which the Church is established, President Nelson has broken typical trends in
that regard too. After extensive personal research and requesting feedback from
the readers of my blog, the resulting list of locations was put together, with
potential temple locations first grouped by the geographical area under which
they fall, then by imminent likelihood within those areas.
[2]The entire African
continent has experienced significant growth, and that is also true of this
area. With only one temple currently operating to serve the Saints in
Southeastern Africa, a second (in Kinshasa DR Congo) will be dedicated the
Sunday following this General Conference, with another (in Durban South Africa)
anticipated to be dedicated before the end of 2019. In the meantime, the Saints
in Nairobi Kenya have been told that a site has been selected for their temple,
with a dedication anticipated to occur sometime during 2021 (as it will be a
smaller temple), and President Nelson spent some of his time in Harare Zimbabwe
looking at options for the temple site there. Within the next year or two (but
certainly less time than that, if all goes well), both of those temples could
be under construction. Therefore, it seems more likely than not that other
temples could be announced for this area during this General Conference.
[3]Madagascar currently
comes in as the 7th of the top 10 nations with the strongest Church
presence that do not have a temple in any phase, and it is an island nation not
connected to the rest of the African continent. For that reason alone,
Madagascar seems to me to be the second-most-likely African city to get a temple
(with the most likely location described below in note #16). Saints in the
capital city of Antananarivo currently travel 1,338 miles to worship at the
Johannesburg South Africa Temple. That distance will be cut to 1,282 miles once
the Durban South Africa Temple is dedicated, and will only be cut to 1,082
miles once the Harare Zimbabwe Temple is constructed and dedicated. Since no
other currently-announced temples will be any closer than that, it seems
logical to assume that a temple for this city will be announced sooner rather
than later.
[4]On the top ten list
of nations first referenced in note #10 above, Mozambique comes in as the 9th.
The Saints in that area currently do not have too arduous a journey (341.5
miles) to travel to Johannesburg, but since that distance is still above the
200-mile goal set by previous Church presidents, a temple in Maputo may just be
a matter of time, especially if the minimum mileage is halved or
quartered.
[5]Although the Church has,
for the most part, opted to ascertain how busy one temple might be in any given
nation or area before announcing a temple elsewhere in that nation or area,
that precedent was broken last year, when two temples were announced for
Argentina. With that in mind, given the growth of the Church in the DR Congo, a
second temple there may simply be a matter of time. As to the particular merits
of Lubumbashi, Saints in that city currently travel 1,332 miles to get to
Johannesburg, and they would travel even further to reach the Kinshasa temple.
The distance from Lubumbashi to Johannesburg will not be cut further until the
Harare Zimbabwe Temple is built and dedicated, at which point the Saints will
be 657.6 miles away. Since that is still well above the 200-mile distance
previously referenced, a second temple in DR Congo seems to be just a matter of
time. And although Elder Neil L. Andersen publicly proposed a temple for the
Kasai region, my research indicates that Lubumbashi is more likely to be chosen
for the location of the second temple in DR Congo.
[6]The Saints in Cape Town
currently travel 868.5 miles to get to their assigned temple in Johannesburg.
Since no other temple currently under construction or announced (including the
one in Durban, which will be dedicated at some point in 2019) will be closer
than that, a third temple in South Africa makes sense. While some have offered
their opinions that the city of George would be a better option for the third
South African temple, my research (and my mother’s personal knowledge of the
Church’s situation in that nation) has led me to conclude that a temple in Cape
Town is more likely and may simply be a matter of time.
[7]Uganda currently ranks as 5th
on the list of the top ten nations previously referenced. The Saints in that
nation currently travel a distance of roughly 2,456.5 miles to get to the
Johannesburg temple. That distance will have its’ most significant cut once the
temple in Nairobi Kenya is built and dedicated, at which point the Saints in
Kampala will only have to journey roughly 403 miles. But since that is still
twice as far as the 200-mile goal, it seems more likely than not that a temple
will be announced in Kampala sooner rather than later.
[8]The
Church in the Africa West Area has also experienced massive and rapid growth.
The Church Growth Blog recently reported that, if current growth trends in the
Africa West Area continue as they have been lately, the Church could go from
the 2 operating temples (with one more under construction) to 13 in operation
by sometime during 2030. With that in mind, several temples may dot this area
in the near future, and the locations in this section seem to me to be the most
imminently likely prospects.
[9]Sierra
Leone (to which I referred in note #10 above) is my top African pick for a
temple, and is now the second of the top ten nations that have the strongest
Church presence but do not yet have a temple in any phase. With the recent
expanded growth in Sierra Leone (particularly with so many districts that have
been upgraded to stakes), a temple there may simply be a matter of time. The
Saints in Freetown currently journey roughly 1,246 miles to the Accra Ghana
temple, a distance which will not be cut until the temple in Abidjan Ivory
Coast is built and dedicated, at which point the Freetown Saints will be
roughly 914 miles away from that temple. Since that is still far greater than
the 200-mile distance, whether or not that mileage goal is lowered, Sierra
Leone is very likely to get a temple soon.
[10]Since
the dedication of the Accra Ghana temple in January 2004, Ghana has seen
sufficient enough growth (in my opinion) to potentially get a second temple.
And Kumasi has emerged as the most likely city for such a temple. Although the
Saints in Kumasi currently only have to travel 154.4 miles to the Accra temple,
if the minimum mileage is lowered, then a temple in Kumasi may just be a matter
of time.
[11]Liberia
currently ranks sixth on the previously-mentioned list of the top ten nations
with the strongest Church presence that do not have a temple in any phase. The
Saints in Liberia currently travel 946.5 miles to worship in the Accra Ghana
Temple. Once the Abidjan Ivory Coast Temple is built and dedicated, that
distance will decrease to 616.5 miles. If, as observed in note 16 above, a
temple is built in Freetown, that distance gets almost cut in half to 338.8 miles,
which is still well above the current mileage goal. So if the minimum distance
is lowered at all, Monrovia is almost certain to be a prime candidate for a
temple in the near future.
[12]As mentioned in
note #12 above, the precedent of the Church only having one temple in any phase
of construction in any given area or nation seems to have been broken. With the
current growth trends in the Ivory Coast, a second (and even a potential third)
temple could be possible sooner rather than later. The Saints in Yamoussoukro
currently travel roughly 479 miles to the Accra Ghana Temple, and that distance
will be cut to 147 miles once the Abidjan Ivory Coast Temple is built and
dedicated. But if, as previously noted, the minimum distance is halved or
quartered, then a temple in Yamoussoukro may be a more imminent prospect for
the near future.
[13]Although a temple was just
announced for Lagos Nigeria last October, since 2018 saw two temples announced
for Argentina, a third temple for Nigeria may make sense, particularly in light
of the recent growth trends seen there. The Saints in Benin City currently
travel roughly 185 miles to the Aba Nigeria Temple, and the temple announced in
Lagos would be even further away than that. So if the goal is to halve or
quarter the 200-mile distance, Benin City is a prime prospect.
[14]It is somewhat difficult
to project what might occur for the Asia Area in terms of other temples. In
April 2018, President Nelson noted that he had not originally planned to
announce a temple for India, but did so following a direct prompting from the
Lord which came the day before his first General Conference as Church President
began. With a groundbreaking having been held for the Bangkok Thailand Temple
in January, and with President Nelson having looked at potential locations for
the Bengaluru India Temple, he subsequently announced during the October 2018
General Conference that a temple would be built in the capital city of
Cambodia. While it is unclear whether any other temples would be announced for
this area until the three in various phases are further along, the selected
cities which follow have a compelling case in their favor for a temple. Until
we know for sure, I have preferred to not limit my list this go-round.
[15]Mongolia
was one nation I had on my list of more distant prospects, primarily because
the Church presence in that nation is not as strong as it seems to be in other
Asian nations. There are two main factors in Mongolia’s favor in terms of
having a temple built. First of all, that nation now ranks as the eighth of the
top ten nations with the strongest Church presence which do not have a temple
in any phase. When we add that to the mileage metric (since the Saints in
Mongolia currently travel 1,805 miles to the Hong Kong China Temple), my
research also shows that no other operating or announced temple will cut that
distance at all. So a temple in Ulaanbaatar may simply be a matter of time, and
I would anticipate that sooner rather than later.
[16]As mentioned in note #21
above, it is difficult to tell how soon other Asian locations might have a
temple announced while the temples in Bangkok, Bengaluru and Phnom Penh are in
various stages of the construction process. At the same time, a temple in
Indonesia would cut down on the amount of travel involved for the Saints.
Currently, that journey is 2,034 miles to Hong Kong. Once the temple in Bangkok
is built and dedicated, that distance will be cut to 1,921 miles. Since neither
the Bengaluru nor Phnom Penh Temples would be closer, and since the distance
from Jakarta to Bangkok is still over 9.6 times further than the 200-mile goal
set by previous Church Presidents, a temple in Jakarta may simply be a matter
of time.
[17]The Saints in Taichung
currently only have to travel 106.4 miles to worship at the Taipei Temple.
Depending on how busy that temple is, and on whether the minimum 200-mile
distance set by other prophets is halved or quartered, a second temple in
Taiwan may just be a matter of time, and Taichung seems to be the best option
for such a temple.
[18]The
nation of Brazil has seen strong Church growth, perhaps the greatest amount
Church-wide outside of North America. With 6 temples in operation there
currently, there are two others under construction in Fortaleza (for which a
dedication is anticipated sometime in the middle part of next year) and Rio de
Janeiro (for which a dedication is anticipated in early 2020). There are three
others which have been announced in Belem, Brasilia, and Salvador. With these
five in different phases, it is difficult to know how soon other temples might
be announced for the nation. But the following locations, for the reasons I
will highlight below, have a strong case in favor of a temple.
[19]With
a temple having been announced last October for Salvador Brazil, I am fully
anticipating that Belo Horizonte will be one of the next Brazilian cities to
get a temple (if not the very next city). Saints in Belo Horizonte currently
travel 369 miles one-way to worship at the Campinas Brazil Temple (to which
they are currently assigned). The dedication of the Rio de Janeiro Brazil
Temple may result in those Saints being reassigned to that temple district, in
which case that distance would go down to 275.2 miles one-way. Either way,
having a temple built in Belo Horizonte makes sense according to the current
minimum mileage metric.
[20]While
I had seen Florianopolis as a feasible temple prospect at some point in the
future, it was not until I took the reports of President Nelson’s ambitious
temple-building plans into account that I felt comfortable including
Florianopolis on this list for the immediate future. Right now, the nearest
temples to the Saints in Florianopolis are the temple in Curitiba (to which
they are currently assigned, and for which a journey of 191.3 miles is
involved) and Porto Alegre (which is exactly 285 miles away). Because the
distances involved constitute undue hardship for the Saints in Florianopolis, a
temple there may just be a matter of time. That said, it may be some time
before we know how soon a temple might be announced there, if a temple in Belo
Horizonte is more imminently needed. For now though, I am confident enough to
put it on this list.
[21]Up
until 2016, the Church had not been widely-known to put a second temple in any
city outside the US. In 2016 and 2017, second temples were announced for Lima
Peru (which will be named for and built in the Los Olivos region), and Manila
Philippines (in the area of Muntinlupa City, which has yet to receive an
official name). Since Sao Paulo is a strong area in terms of Church membership,
a second temple there may be needed sooner rather than later, though that
prospect could potentially be delayed until temples rise in Belo Horizonte and
Florianopolis. But if the initial word on President Nelson’s temple building
plans are any indication, then a second Sao Paulo temple, along with the other
two locations, may be announced much sooner than anticipated
[22]Prior to the October 2018
General Conference, in the comments on the LDS Church Growth blog, someone
mentioned the prospect of a temple in Kingston Jamaica. The Jamaican Saints are
currently assigned to the Panama City Panama Temple, and have a one-way
overseas journey of 650 miles to get there, which means their assigned temple
currently takes them out of the geographical area of the Church in which they
live. Once the temple in Port-au-Prince Haiti is dedicated (in mid-May of next
year), the Jamaican Saints may be reassigned to that temple, which would then
cut that distance to 298 miles. But since that journey will still involve
overseas travel, and since the distance involved is still so great one-way, a
temple in Kingston makes a lot of sense. That is especially true given that a
few of the 19 locations for which President Nelson has announced temples so far
will be built to serve only one or two stakes or districts.
[23]On
my blog recently, someone who is familiar with the situation of the Church in
Guatemala informed me that a temple in Senahu may be delayed until the presence
of the Church increases there, but also noted that a second temple to serve the
Saints in the current Guatemala City Guatemala Temple district will likely be
more of a priority. It was also noted by the same person that that prospect was
the most imminent one for Central America. My personal research leads me to
disagree with one element of that comment, which was that no other Central
American candidates were likely to be announced in the near future, so I have
tentatively added one more location to my list of prospects for this area.
[24]The Tegucigalpa Honduras
Temple district currently covers the 43 stakes and 9 districts in Honduras and
Nicaragua. Once the temple announced last April for Managua is built and
dedicated, that will leave the Tegucigalpa Temple district with 31 stakes and 5
districts. Although that is more manageable, it seems likely that a second
temple will be needed to serve the Honduran Saints. And the general consensus
from previous comments seems to be that San Pedro Sula is the next most likely
location for such a temple.
[25]Europe,
particularly in the eastern countries of its’ continent, has seen some
stagnation in terms of the growth of the Church. With temples currently under
construction in Rome Italy and Lisbon Portugal (both of which will be dedicated
next year), and another announced for a major yet-to-be determined city in
Russia, the Church may opt to wait to construct other temples on the European
continent until those 3 are either dedicated or at least further along in the
process. That said, on the off-chance the Church does not so opt, the cities in
this section, for the reasons I will explain in the subsequent notes that will
follow this one, have the greatest chance of being announced in the near
future.
[26]When
I began sharing my thoughts on potential future temple locations, someone who
has knowledge of the growth of the Church in Europe indicated that Budapest
would likely be the next European city to get a temple. My study on the matter
confirms that opinion, so it has been on my list for a while. Right now, the
Saints in Budapest travel 418 miles to worship at the Freiberg Germany Temple.
And neither of the two European temples under construction will be closer than
that, so a temple in Budapest seems likely in the near future.
[27]When
expanding my list of temple prospects, I knew I had to look at another temple
in the UK. I had a temple for Scotland or Ireland on my list for the distant
future, but after numerous comments on my blog and some additional research on
my part, I determined that Scotland would be the more likely location for the
next temple in the UK. The Saints in Edinburgh are 185.4 miles from their
assigned temple in Preston England. If President Nelson’s temple-building plans
involve lowering the minimum mileage from which any Saint should be from their
assigned temple, then Edinburgh would indeed qualify for a temple, which would
likely also serve Ireland, in addition to some parts of England that are
nearest to the two countries.
[28]Although
the Saints in Austria have seen a slight consolidation in the number of Church
units in that nation recently, their currently assigned temple in Frankfurt
(which is closed for renovation) is 444.2 miles away. If a temple is built in
Budapest Hungary, the Austria Saints may be reassigned to that temple, which
would then be 150.8 miles away. Given what I observed in note #29 above (about
how some of President Nelson’s 19 temples announced last year would be built to
initially serve just 1 or 2 stakes or districts, the same could easily be true
for a temple built in Vienna, which is why that city made my list this time.
[29]The Norwegian Saints
currently travel 326.7 miles to get to the Stockholm Sweden Temple (to which
they are currently assigned). So Oslo would already qualify for a temple based
on the current mileage metric. If that 200-mile minimum distance set by
previous prophets is quartered or halved, then Oslo would be a prime candidate
for a temple. For that reason, Norway has made my list for the first time this
go-round.
[30]The
growth of the Church in Mexico has somewhat stagnated to the point where Church
leaders began last year to do a mass consolidation of the Church units there,
primarily for the purpose of strengthening the remaining units. With that in
mind, it may be difficult to gauge how soon other Mexican temples might be
needed, but for now, the one candidate on this list, as I will explain in note
#38 below, has a strong case in its’ favor for a future temple.
[31]The
Saints in Queretaro Mexico currently travel 135.8 miles to worship at the
Mexico City Mexico Temple, and would actually be further away than that from
the temple which was announced last October for Puebla. Again, the timing of
the announcement for the next temple will depend largely on whether or not more
temples in that nation would make sense, given the apparent lack of sufficient
activity within the Mexico City Temple. Until more is known about that, and
about President Nelson’s plans to expand the number of temples, I feel confident
in keeping this city on my list.
[32]Papua
New Guinea now ranks as the nation with the strongest Church presence that does
not yet have a temple. I also learned several years ago that land has been held
in reserve in Port Moresby for a temple for a while now. With that in mind, it
may simply be a matter of time before a temple is announced there.
[33]Kiribati
currently ranks as the third nation with the strongest LDS presence that does
not have a temple in any phase of construction. The Saints in Tarawa currently
travel 1,402 miles to worship at the Suva Fiji Temple, and no other
currently-operating temple is closer than that. With all of this in mind, a
temple in that nation may simply be a matter of time.
[34]American
Samoa ranks fifth on the list of nations with the strongest Church presence
that do not have a temple in any phase. The nearest temple to the Saints in the
capital city of Pago Pago is currently Apia Samoa, and the Pago Pago Saints
currently travel 76.2 miles, which is not long distance-wise, but involves
journeying over a body of water, which may be inconvenient. Also, if the
minimum mileage goal set by previous Church presidents is halved or quartered,
that will no doubt make this prospect more imminent.
[35]Tonga
has recently seen impressive Church growth, which leads me to believe that a
second temple may be needed to serve the Saints there. The city of Neiafu Vava’u
seems to be the most likely location for a second Tongan temple, since the
Saints in that city currently travel 189 miles to the temple in Nuku’alofa.
Although that is within the current minimum mileage, if that minimum is halved
or quartered, then that, combined with the extensive growth in Tonga, leads me
to believe that a Neiafu Vava’u temple will be announced sooner rather than
later.
[36]Although Savaii is 23
miles exactly from Apia, getting there involves an overseas flight, which may
constitute an undue hardship for the Saints assigned to the Apia Samoa Temple
district. With that in mind, it might make sense for the Church to announce a
second Samoan temple.
[37]The Church has two
operating temples in the Philippines (Manila and Cebu City). The temple
announced in October 2010 for Urdaneta had a groundbreaking ceremony in
January. And with the last 3 sets of temple announcements, the Philippines has
seen temples announced for the greater Manila area (which will be located in
Muntinlupa City), Cagayan de Oro, and Davao. If that is any indication of what
might happen in the future, then another temple for the Philippines may be
needed. The Saints in Bacolod currently travel 141.8 miles to reach the temple
in Cebu City, and part of that involves an overseas trip. For both of these
reasons, a temple in Bacolod seems likely to be announced sooner rather than
later.
[38]The
entire South American continent has experienced massive Church growth. Having
previously discussed Brazil, I will focus my comments about South America on
the two other areas of the Church within this continent. Starting with the
South America Northwest Area, I wanted to observe that there are 7 operating
temples there. 1 more is currently under construction in Arequipa Peru (for
which a dedication is anticipated in early 2020). Two others have been
announced (the Lima Peru Los Olivos Temple, which may have a groundbreaking
within the next year, if not sooner, and the Quito Ecuador Temple, which could
have a groundbreaking within the next 2-3 years, though hopefully sooner if all
goes well). With the South America Northwest Area having experienced somewhat
rapid growth, I have long been of the opinion that several prospects were
likely possibilities for this area in the near future, and I expanded the
number of those prospective locations again with the increased comments about
President Nelson’s ambitious temple-building plans. For the reasons mentioned
in the notes below, each of the locations on this list have a strong case in
their favor as prospects for the near future.
[39]It seems to be simply a
matter of time before Bolivia gets a second temple. While I personally favor
the city of La Paz (because the bishop of my parent’s ward during my late
teenage and early young adult years served there), I cannot deny that a temple
in Santa Cruz may be more imminently needed, since that city has seen more
Church growth in recent years than La Paz. The Santa Cruz Saints currently
travel 296.9 miles to worship at the Cochabamba Bolivia Temple, so that city
would qualify based on the current mileage metric alone. For that reason, we
will likely see a temple announced there sooner rather than later.
[40]As I mentioned in note #46
above, I personally favor La Paz over Santa Cruz as the location of Bolivia’s
second temple. However, because a temple may be more imminently needed for
Santa Cruz, that might delay the prospect of a temple for La Paz. That said,
since the La Paz Saints currently travel 236.5 miles to get to the temple in
Cochabamba, and since that distance is also above the current maximum mileage
goal, we might see a scenario where temples are announced for both cities at
once, or within a General Conference or two of each other.
[41]The Saints in Iquitos
currently travel 629 miles to worship at the Lima Peru Temple. The Trujillo
Peru Temple is actually closer in mileage, but perhaps Lima is easier for those
Saints to access. The Arequipa Peru Temple (which is anticipated to be
dedicated in early 2020) will be further away than either of the other two.
Once the Lima Peru Los Olivos Temple is dedicated, it will only be 4 miles
closer to the Saints in Iquitos than the first Lima Peru temple. Since the distance
involved is more than 3 times greater than the 200-mile goal set by previous
Church presidents, a temple in Iquitos may just be a matter of time.
[42]Colombia has two operating
temples currently in Bogota and Barranquilla (the latter of which was dedicated
near the end of 2018). If Church growth continues in that nation the way it has
lately, then a third and fourth temple will likely be needed before too much
longer, and Cali and Medellin seem to be the most likely locations. This note
will focus on the former, with the next note focusing on the latter. The Saints
in Cali currently travel 286.7 miles one-way to worship at the Bogota Colombia
Temple. So Cali already qualifies for a temple of its’ own based on only the
mileage metric, especially if the minimum distance set by previous Church
Presidents is lowered at all.
[43]If a temple is announced
for Cali, it is possible that a temple in Medellin might be delayed. That said,
the Saints in Medellin currently travel 260.9 miles to reach the Bogota temple,
and a temple in Cali would only be 0.5 miles closer. With that in mind, temples
could be announced for both cities at the same time, or within 1 or 2 General
Conferences of each other.
[44]The
temple in Caracas was announced during the October 1995 General Conference,
with a groundbreaking occurring in January 1999, and a dedication for it was
held the following year in August. One year prior to the dedication of the
temple in Caracas, President Hinckley publicly proposed another Venezuelan
temple for the city of Maracaibo, which is 433,2 miles from Caracas. Although
Venezuela has political turbulence at the moment, and although there has been
some Church unit consolidation there in recent years, when we combine the
distance factor with the fact that temples publicly proposed during the
administrations of Presidents Hinckley and Monson have gone on to be announced
during the subsequent administrations of Presidents Monson and Nelson, the case
in favor of a temple in Maracaibo is strong, so that prospect may be more
imminent than many (myself included) might anticipate, particularly given the
unexpected nature of many of the 19 locations which had a temple announced by
President Nelson in 2018.
[45]As
noted above relating to the South America Northwest Area, the South America
South Area has likewise seen very significant and rapidly expanding growth. So
again, with President Nelson’s extensive temple-building plans in mind, I have
considered the most imminent prospects for future temples in this area, which,
for the reasons outlined in the notes below, have a strong case in their favor.
[46]The Church has two
operating temples in Chile, one in Santiago, and the other in Concepcion (which
was dedicated in late October 2018). Given that the Santiago Chile Temple
district is still relatively large, a third (and perhaps even a fourth) temple
for this nation seems to make sense in the near future. As to the particular
merits of Antofagasta, the Saints in that city currently travel 829.8 miles to
worship at the temple in Santiago. Because that is over 4 times further than
the 200-mile minimum distance goal set by previous Church Presidents, a temple
in Antofagasta may simply be a matter of time.
[47]As I mentioned above (in
note 53), another temple or two to serve the Saints currently assigned to the Santiago
Chile Temple district may be needed. I have had Valparaiso on my list of
prospects for the near future for a while now. The prospect of a temple in
Antofagasta may be more imminent, since the Saints in Valparaiso are only 71.6
miles one-way from the temple in Santiago, but if the Church really wanted to
break up the current Santiago district, I could see both cities having a temple
announced within the next 1-3 General Conferences, whether that occurs
simultaneously, or if the announcement of one for Antofagasta is followed by
one for Valparaiso within 1-4 General Conferences.
[48]It is difficult to know
how soon another temple may be announced to serve the Saints in Argentina.
There are 2 operating temples in that nation currently (in Buenos Aires and
Cordoba), and two new temples were announced for that nation in 2018 (for Salta
and Mendoza). Since both temples will help break up the current Cordoba temple
district, it seems logical to assume that something similar will be done to
break up the current Buenos Aires temple district. If the Church announced
temples in Neuquen and Rosario, that would accomplish such a division. As to
the particular merits of Neuquen, it is a more isolated city, and we have seen
President Nelson announce temples in cities, nations, and areas where the
members are more isolated. But in addition to that, the Saints in Neuquen have
a one-way journey of 708.2 miles to get to the temple in Buenos Aires, which is
more than 3.5 times further away than the minimum distance set by previous
Church Presidents. With all of this in mind, a temple in Neuquen may be a more
imminent prospect than many might feel it will be.
[49]As mentioned in note #55
above, the two temples announced for Argentina in 2018 will break up the
current Cordoba temple district. If something similar is done for the current
district of the Buenos Aires Temple, then a temple in Rosario could help
accomplish that. Although the Saints in Rosario currently have a one-way
journey of less than 200 miles (the exact distance is 185.1 miles), that is
close enough to the 200-mile minimum distance set by previous Church
Presidents. If that minimum distance is halved or quartered, then a temple in
Rosario would make even more sense.
[50]If
what I have heard and read about the growth of the Church in Paraguay is any
indication, a second temple to serve the Saints in that nation may be needed
sooner rather than later. Ciudad del Este seems to be the most likely prospect
for such a temple in Paraguay. When the renovation process is complete for the
Asuncion Paraguay Temple, the Saints in Ciudad del Este will have a journey of
201.4 miles to worship there, which is already above the minimum goal other
prophets have set. If that minimum distance is lowered at all, then a temple in
Ciudad del Este may simply be a matter of time.
[51]Although
the North American continent (primarily in the United States) has seen somewhat
of a stagnating growth situation, in light of the recent increased mentions of
President Nelson’s ambitious temple-building plans, the likelihood is extremely
high that the US and Canada will be included in whatever the plans are to
expand the number of temples worldwide. The locations listed below represent
what I believe are the most imminent prospects for each of the 10 North
American areas of the Church.
[52]Preston
Idaho is a relatively new addition to this list. With the Church having
announced that the groundbreaking for the Pocatello Idaho Temple will take
place at some point in 2019, and because Idaho is part of the Mormon corridor,
that opens the prospect that both temples could be under construction at around
the same time. The main reason I added a temple for Preston this go-round is
because it would split the current district of the Logan Utah Temple. Right
now, the Saints in Preston travel 26.7 miles to worship at that temple.
Although that may not be an inordinate distance, at the same time, if the Logan
temple is as busy as the reports I have found seem to indicate, splitting the
district would make a lot of sense, and Preston seems to be the most effective
location to accomplish that.
[53]According
to reports I received through the comments on my blog, Elder David A. Bednar
publicly proposed a Missoula Montana Temple while on assignment to a stake
conference in that city. My subsequent research indicates that land has been
held in reserve for such a temple for several years now, and that an official
announcement will occur once the right conditions are met. For that reason,
Missoula has been on my list for a while now, and I could see an official
announcement of such a prospect in the very near future.
[54]I had been considering the
merits of adding Lethbridge Alberta to this list for a while now. The Saints in
that city currently travel 49.2 miles to get to their assigned temple in
Cardston. Although that is not an inordinately long trip, if the minimum
mileage goal set by previous Church Presidents is halved or quartered, a temple
for Lethbridge may simply be a matter of time.
[55]Since
Wichita Kansas was on one of my other two lists, I simply moved it up to this
one as a more imminent prospect. The 7 stakes in Kansas currently are split
between the Kansas City Missouri Temple, the Oklahoma City Oklahoma Temple, and
the Denver Colorado Temple, and almost all of those 7 have extensive distances
involved. So if the 200-mile goal set by previous Church presidents is lowered
to any degree, all of the distances may well be considered inordinate. For these
reason, a temple in Wichita seems likely to be announced sooner rather than
later
[56]When
I was first considering the most likely location for Wisconsin’s first temple,
I had prioritized Madison (the nation’s capital) or Milwaukee. But after a lot
of feedback and more research on my part, I determined Green Bay would be a
more preferable location. There are six stakes in Wisconsin, all of which are
assigned to the Chicago Illinois Temple District except one, which is assigned
to the St. Paul Minnesota Temple district. Because the Saints in Wisconsin have
a one way journey of 90-200 miles to their assigned temples, and because a
temple in Green Bay would cut that distance for most of those stakes, I am
reasonably confident that a temple could (and likely will) be announced for
Green Bay in the near future.
[57]
Although the Church has previously built temples in sites which have historical
significance, and although Council Bluffs in Iowa is one such location, given
that the Saints who live in that area are less than 15 miles away from the
temple in Winter Quarters Nebraska, a temple in Iowa is more likely to rise in
the capital city of Des Moines. The 8 stakes in Iowa are currently divided
between the Winter Quarters Nebraska and Nauvoo Illinois Temples. Of those 8
stakes, only the Saints in Council Bluffs are within 15 miles of their assigned
temple. All other established stakes in this state are 90-180 miles away from
their assigned temple. With all of this in mind, Iowa would qualify for a
temple, and if one rises in Des Moines, it would not surprise me at all if that
temple was named for Mount Pisgah, which is another historically-significant
site from early Church history, and for which the second Des Moines stake is
named.
[58]A
comment on my blog mentioned that the Saints in Pueblo and nearby Colorado
Springs typically deal with massive and significant traffic congestion to get
to their currently-assigned temple in Denver, which seems to be a very undue
hardship. Since that also involves a one-way journey of 115.8 miles, I can see
why a temple in Pueblo in the near future may be very likely.
[59]A temple in Rapid City
would serve the Saints in South Dakota who currently travel between 180-300
miles one way. The two temples which currently serve the 2 stakes and 1
district in South Dakota both have relatively small districts, but the mileage
involved may justify a temple in that capital city of this state. That said, I
would also not be shocked or surprised in any way if this prospect was delayed
until the Church has a stronger presence there, although President Nelson has,
as noted previously, announced temples which will have a comparatively smaller
district.
[60]In
view of all we have heard about President Nelson’s plans to expand the number
of temples, Maine seems to be a prime candidate for such a temple. Although
there are only two stakes in that state, the two are between 160 and 240 miles
away from their currently-assigned temple in Boston. Whether or not the minimum
mileage is lowered, Augusta surely qualifies for a temple of its’ own, simply
due to those involved distances.
[61]A temple for New Jersey
has been on one of my three lists of potential temple locations for the last
year or so at least. My research shows that the two most likely cities in which
a temple could be built to serve the state are Morristown or East Brunswick New
Jersey. A temple in either city would likely also serve the other city.
Currently, the stakes in New Jersey are split between two temple districts
(Manhattan New York and Philadelphia Pennsylvania). Although the distance for each
stake in New Jersey only involves a one-way journey of 16-42 miles (with one of
those stakes being closer to their currently assigned temple than either city
in New Jersey), I could see the Church announcing a temple in New Jersey to cut
travel for the other stakes. The question of whether Morristown or East
Brunswick would be the best location is something which I am still debating, so
for now, both cities are on my list.
[62]The Saints in New
Hampshire currently travel between 39-71 miles to get to their assigned temple
(Boston Massachusetts). While that is not an inordinate distance, if the
200-mile goal within which previous Church Presidents have said they want each
member to be from their assigned temple is halved or quartered by President
Nelson, then Concord would be a prime prospect for a temple in the
not-too-distant future, even if that prospect is not as imminent as it seems to
be.
[63]All but one of the stakes
in Ohio fall under the Columbus Ohio Temple district. While that district is
not particularly large, I could see the Church potentially splitting it, and a
temple in Cincinnati may be the best way to do that. Right now, the Saints in
Cincinnati have a one-way journey of around 107 miles to get to the Columbus
temple, so I would anticipate that the Church would announce a temple for
Cincinnati in the near future.
[64]Right now, the Saints in
Pittsburgh Pennsylvania travel 184.9 miles one way to worship at the Columbus
Ohio Temple. In my opinion, that distance is close enough to the 200-mile
minimum distance to which I have previously referred that a temple in
Pittsburgh makes sense.
[65]Vermont
is the 5th smallest of the 50 states, and has a Church presence that
matches its’ size. Members in Montpelier currently travel 183.1 miles one way
to worship at the Boston Massachusetts Temple. Although Vermont has only one
stake currently (in Montpelier), the state has a strong connection to Church
history (as the Prophet Joseph Smith was born in Sharon), so it seems likely
the Church would favor Vermont for a temple. The only question is whether the
Vermont temple would be announced for Montpelier, where a stake has been
established, or Sharon. The announcement last October of a temple for Guam
(where the only stake operates in Barrigada, but the temple was announced for
Yigo), makes it hard to know what might be done for a Vermont temple, but my
current research on the subject leads me to conclude that, unless a stake is
established in Sharon before this temple is announced, Montpelier may be more
of a priority for the moment, though I would anticipate a temple in Sharon as
well at some point.
[66]The
Saints residing in Fairbanks Alaska currently travel 360.3 miles to worship at
the temple in Anchorage. Although the Saints in Juneau do have a longer journey
to both Anchorage and Fairbanks, Fairbanks has emerged from my study as the
best prospect for Alaska’s second temple. That said, I can see a day when
Juneau gets one as well, which may happen sooner than expected, depending on
the extent of President Nelson’s temple-building plans.
[67]Victoria has made my list
for the first time this go-round. Based on a comment made on my blog by someone
living in that city, getting to the Vancouver British Columbia Temple (which is
located in the city of Langley) constitutes an undue hardship both in terms of
the cost of travel and the difficulty involved in that journey. For that
reason, a temple in Victoria makes sense, and it seems likely that an
announcement of that prospect will happen sooner rather than later.
[68]Mississippi
is another state that does not yet have a temple in any phase. The Saints in
Jackson currently travel 174.6 miles one way to worship at the Baton Rouge
Louisiana Temple, but with that temple closed for renovation, the trip is much
longer to get to the next nearest temple. That presents a compelling argument
for the idea that a temple in Jackson may simply be a matter of time.
[69]The
Saints in Shreveport currently travel 187.9 miles to their assigned temple in
Dallas, so that city would qualify for a temple of its’ own if the current
200-mile distance goal set by previous church presidents is halved or
quartered. Therefore, a temple in Shreveport may simply be a matter of time.
[70]With
temples operating in Orlando and Fort Lauderdale, a third temple may be needed
sooner rather than later. Several people have shared their feeling that
Tallahassee may be a more likely location for the third temple in that state,
but between my personal research on the subject and the opinions of others who
seem to know more about Florida than I do, Jacksonville has made my list. That
said, I can see a day within the next 5-10 years or less when both cities will
have a temple. The Jacksonville Saints currently travel 140.7 miles to the
temple in Orlando, so if the 200-mile distance is halved or quartered, then
this prospect may be a very high priority in the near future. The one deterrent
to that prospect may be the massive storms that regularly strike that region,
but I am confident enough to include Jacksonville on this list for now.
[71]The
Saints in Knoxville Tennessee currently travel 180.1 miles to worship at the
temple in Nashville. That may also be an inordinate distance if the minimum
mileage is lowered at all, and if we also take into account the fact that a
journey to Nashville may be arduous, then a temple in Knoxville seems imminent.
[72]The 17 current stakes in Georgia
are assigned to three different temple districts (Atlanta Georgia, Columbia
South Carolina and Orlando Florida). Savannah is located in the eastern part of
Georgia, and the Saints living within the boundaries of the stake in that city
currently travel 159.9 miles one way to worship at their assigned temple (in
Columbia). Because that journey may constitute an undue hardship for those
Saints, the idea of a temple in Savannah makes a lot of sense. And if such a
temple is announced, it may allow other stakes in Georgia and the surrounding
states to have a less arduous journey to the temple as well.
[73]A
good friend with connections to Arkansas told me a while ago that the Church
has held land in reserve for a temple in Bentonville for a while now, and that
an official announcement was likely once the right conditions were met. For
that reason, I believe we will see this temple announced sooner rather than
later. Some have opined that Rogers might be a more likely location for the
first temple in Arkansas, but my study confirms that a temple is likely in
Bentonville sooner rather than later. And as observed by someone on my blog,
when the first temple in Arkansas is built, it could potentially be named for
the Ozark Mountain range, which is a major landmark in Arkansas.
[74]The
Saints in Elko currently travel 229.6 miles one way to their assigned temple
(Salt Lake). So Elko already qualifies in terms of the within 200-mile
distance. And if that mileage goal is lowered, that prospect becomes more
imminently likely.
[75]The
note above applies to the Saints in Ely as well, as they commute 201.1 miles to
their assigned temple in Cedar City. A temple in Ely would cut the commute
substantially. And I fully believe that temples in both Elko and Ely are
possible in the near future, since the distance between the two is just under
200 miles.
[76]In
sharing my thoughts about potential future temple locations, I learned from
someone living in Texas that Fort Worth would likely be the best prospective
city to split the current Dallas district. In addition, although some have
offered their feedback that El Paso may be a more likely location for that
honor, and although I fully believe both cities will have temples of their own
at some future point, I have prioritized Fort Worth for this list.
[77]The
Saints in Las Cruces currently travel 224.6 miles to the temple in Albuquerque,
so a temple there may just be a matter of time. A temple in that city could
also likely serve the Saints in El Paso Texas, as the two cities are 46.2 miles
apart. The journey between the two cities would be a fairly easy distance if
for any reason the El Paso Saints are unable to get to their currently-assigned
temple in Ciudad Juarez Mexico.
[78]Although
Elder Larry Y. Wilson, the Executive Director of the Church’s Temple
Department, stated at last year’s dedication of the Tucson Arizona Temple that
Arizona was, for the moment, well-stocked with temples, my study indicates that
the next Arizona temple will be built in Flagstaff. Right now, the Saints in
that city currently travel 119 miles to worship at the Snowflake Arizona
Temple. If the 200-mile distance is decreased by President Nelson (either by
halving or quartering it), then Snowflake would be a prime candidate for a
temple, and that may even help to split some of the other temple districts in
Arizona as well.
[79]When the First Presidency
announced area leadership assignments in 2018, three-man area presidencies were
reestablished for the North American Areas. As part of those changes, the 3
areas in Utah, which had previously been separate, were consolidated into a
single “Utah Area”. The locations that follow are those within the Utah area
for which I have felt a temple is most likely.
[80]In
2005, President Gordon B. Hinckley noted that land was being held in reserve
for a temple in the Southwestern Salt Lake Valley, which would have an official
announcement when that became necessary. Subsequent study on my part in late
2017 and early 2018 pointed me to the conclusion that the land in question was
in Bluffdale, but that it has since been annexed into the city of Herriman,
although it has been the subject of more than a few border disputes. I am
confident enough to list it here, and since President Monson announced temples
publicly proposed during President Hinckley’s tenure, I feel that President
Nelson may likely do the same (announcing temples which were publicly proposed
during the tenures of his two prophetic predecessors). Thus, a temple in Herriman
may just be a matter of time.
[81]A
temple in Heber City (the prospect of which has been suggested a few times)
would help provide a closer option for Saints in the Heber Valley, and it would
likely split the district of the Provo Utah Temple, which, by all reports,
remains one of the busiest in the Church, if not the very busiest. Although the
Saints in Heber City only have to travel 28.1 miles one way to get to the Provo
temple, that is certainly an inordinate distance for a Utah County city. So the
case in favor of this prospect is a strong one.
[82]Tooele
has also been mentioned repeatedly as a potential prospective city for a
temple. The Saints in Tooele currently travel 34.1 miles to worship at the Salt
Lake Temple. Once that temple closes for the renovation mentioned by President
Nelson during the October 2018 General Conference, the journey will be longer.
So the more I thought about it, the more I felt that a temple in that city may
simply be a matter of time. And since a temple in Herriman would still create
an unduly difficult journey (along a U-shape) for those Saints, it seems safe
to assume that Tooele could (and likely will) get a temple of its’ own, and
that that could occur sooner rather than later.
[83]Although the city of
Evanston is, according to the 2013 Church Almanac, technically located within
the boundaries of the Utah Salt Lake City Area, the two stakes in that city are
part of the Ogden Utah Temple district (the city of Ogden is part of the Utah
North Area). The members in Evanston currently travel 77.4 miles to worship at
the Ogden temple. Despite the fact that that is not an inordinate distance,
Wyoming is part of the “Mormon corridor”, where Church growth has continued to
be somewhat steady and regular, and for that reason, if and when Wyoming gets a
second temple, it will likely be built in Evanston, and that could happen
sooner rather than later.
[84]In January 2019, I
received a report from someone living in Southern Utah that Elder Steven E.
Snow, during his address to a Washington County Stake Conference, mentioned
that the Temple Department had indicated to him that, because of how busy the
St. George Utah Temple has been kept in recent years, a third temple would be
needed in the near future to serve the Saints in Washington County. For that
reason, this prospect has been added to this list for the first time, though it
may be a few years down the line.
I have had a lifelong love for Church history, which has extended to ongoing reports of the ministry of our apostles and prophets, General Conference, and all temple developments. This blog enables me to share that love with all who read my thoughts on these developments, which are sometimes reported multiple times per day as needed.
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