Stokes Sounds Off: 2020

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Thursday, December 31, 2020

Review of Temple Construction Progress During 2020

Hello again, everyone! As the final minutes of 2020 draw closer to their inevitable conclusion, I am pleased to be able to provide you all now with a review of temple construction progress that occurred throghout 2020. Over the course of five reports that have been edited as progress has been noted, I have tracked the many wonderful upddates that have been provided through the Newsroom, the Church News, and via the Church Temples website throughout the year.  Perhaps the most impressive thing reflected in these reports has been the fact that, even in the midst of a global pandemic that resulted in all operating temples being closed for a period of roughly two months, temple construction has progressed unabated. 

As a particular result of this year's events, there are now more temples under construction than there are announced (not yet under construction).  That number now includes multiple temples under construction in Utah alone, in taddition to multiple others throughout the United States, in the Philippines, and in Latin America, for what I believe is the first time each of those regions have had multiple temples in the queue at the same time in the history of the Church. The developments largely speak for themselves. So here's a look at where temple construction stood as 2020 began, at the end of the first quarterhalfway through the year, just prior to the October 2020 General Conference, and where things stand at this year-ending hour

I have gradually restructured various portions of the report, and the content in the latest one is almost certain to change as we move into 2021. As I hope is evident by these reports and the information compiled therein, the temple construction program of the Church is one of many that has seen the promise of President Nelson come to fruition. Part of the way the work is moving forward at an accelerated pace is in the temple construction milestones we have seen since President Nelson's statement on that was made last year. 

To reiterate something I have previously noted, as many as 12 temples could have groundbreakings in the first part of 2021, with at least 6 of those almost certain to occur prior to the April 2021 General Conference, if all goes well. So I'm certain that we have just scratched the surface on what is to come in terms of temple construction. With that in mind, whatever occurs in that respect in the coming year, you can count on my tracking those developmnts and passing those along here as I becine aware of it. 

That does it for now. 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.

Monday, December 28, 2020

Looking Back on 2020 and Ahead to 2021.

Hello again, everyone! As 2020 draws closer to a conclusion, I have my year-end temple construction review ready for automatic publication during the final moments of this year. But in this post, I wanted to take a brief oportunity to note the Church News overview of the major developments covered in 2020. Aside from those developments, I myself on this blog have provided these scheduled updates this year, in addition to an untold number of breaking news developments which I could not have possibly anticipatede in advance. 

In a very direct and specific way, the prophecy uttered by President Nelson late last year has come to fruition. The work has indeed moved forward at an accelerated Even in the midst of a global pandemic and an untold number of other global crises, the voice of the Church and the consuel offered by the general leaders of the Church has remained constant, consisstent, and inspiring. As some of you may recall, I was skeptical when the potential effects of what would become the first major global pandemic in over 100 years were first mentioned to us here on the threads of this blog.

But the devastation caused by the pandemic, and by other natural disasters, pretty much speaks for itself. There have been very few parts of the world unaffected by it. And while many governments and religious leaders have struggled to adjust during the increased spread of COVID-19 around the world, the Church was able to quickly pivot whenever the need arose because of the adjustments that had been made in the years prior to that. Practically all normal functions of the Church have been impacted in some way, but the adjustments which were made as the need arose for them allowed much of the work of the Church to continue,  move forward, and even accelrate in so many miraculous ways.

Even though General Conferences held in April and October were virtual-only, the inspiration that attended those sssessions, even with then being held on a smaller scale, was inspiriing to see. In the meantime, numerous adjustments have enabled the Church to prepare long-term for the future. While a global pandemic raged, the Church held 21 temple groundbreakings, which led to multiple temples being under construction in Utah sapecifically, in the United States generally, and in a few South American nations, the Philippines, and Asia (although in the case of 10 of those 21 temples, full-scale construction is still pending as 2020 nears its' conclusion. 

The Church also took major steps to prepare for the future growth and expansion of the work, which involved greater utilization of technology at the general Church leadership level and in relation to global missionary work, and the announcement of the shift from 4 magazines (only 1 of which was specifically geared to members outside the United States) to 3 global magazines. And in preparation for a time when the needs of the Church, due to its' anticipated growth and expansion, will eventually require more area seventies serving worldwide to assist in that work, the Church created 4 new Quorums of the Seventy, marking the first time in nearly 15 years that new area seventies' Quorums were formed, and the first time that occurred for a reason other than geographical proximity or the size of the existing Quorums.

As the year winds to a close, the Church has been able to see a net increase in the number of stakes totaling at least 30, which is still an impressive 56% of the increase in the total number of stakes that occurred between the end of 2018 and the year-end figures from last year. In the meantime, likely because of the more complete embrace of technology in missionary work, many of the Church's missions have reported more overall success this year in finding and retaiining new coverts. And the growth seen this year is laying a clear foundation for what is anticipated to occur next year.

The way the Church has figured out a "new normal" relative to adjustments thave have been made up to this point could mean that the Church will keep many of those adjustments as the standard status quo going forward. And despite the wide-spread devastation caused this year, whether due to the pandemic, natural disasters, political, racial, societal, or systemic unrest, so many wonderful things have happened. The sheer number of new developments has had an impact on me personally due to the increased number of additional unanticipated reports I was able to provide on this blog throughout the year as those developments occurred.

This year alone, I began coverage on this blog with just over 1800 published posts. By mid-une, I'd hit the 1900th post milestone. And as of today, with one planned post left for the year (an overview of temple counstruction progress that has occurred throughout 2020), barring any additional unexpected breaking developments from the Church before the end of the year, 2020 will conclude with my having just under 2000 published posts here. 

With the current year set to end around 82-83 hours from now here in Utah, I am pleased in this post to also provide an advanced look ahead at the developments I can anticipate for next year, which are formally scheduled to occur as specified. But I fully anticipate having many currently-unknown breaking news updates to pass along as well. And I will do my level best to remain on top of all such developments in the days, weeks, month and year ahead.

That does it for now. 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.

BREAKING TEMPLE NEWS: Apia Samoa and Brisbane Australia Temples To Shift To Phase 3 Next Week

Hello again, everyone! The Newsroom and the Church News have announced this morning e the Apia Samoa and Brisbane Australia Temples will reopen under phase 3 next week, which will allow all ordinances for the living and some proxy work for the dead as arranged through scheduling.

This brings me total number of temples in phase 3 to 4. The Church continues to evaluate COVID-19 conditions worldwide and area-by-area and will continue to adjust accordingly. These latest updates are the only ones relating to COVID-19 conditions for today. For more information, please also consult the temple status tracker from the Church News.

That does it for now. 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.



Wednesday, December 23, 2020

Birthday Tribute to Elder Gerrit W. Gong, Who Marks His 67th Today

Hello again, everyone! I am back two days before Christmas to post a birthday tribute to Elder Gerrit W. Gong, who is celebrating his 67th today. As I mentioned earlier this month his is the last apostolic birthday to occur this year. The first apostle to observe his birthday in 2021 will be Elder D. Todd Christofferson, marking his 76th on January 24. Incidentally, for the first time ever on this blog, the next update I will provide on the latest apostolic data will be featured on the same day as my tribute to Elder Christofferson.

Having dropped that teaser, we turn our attention again to today's tribute to Elder Gong. Gerrit Walter Gong was born in Redwood City, California, on this day in 1953, to Walter and Jean Char Gong. While he was given his father's name for his middle name, his first name was given in honor of and out of respect to Gerrit de Jong, whose family his mother had lived with while studying at BYU-Provo. Both of Elder Gong's parents trace their ancestry back to China, although his father's family emigrated from China to the US during the late 19th century, and his mother's family are ethnic Chinese who lived in Hawaii.

After graduating from high school in Palo Alto, California, young Gerrit served as a missionary for the Church in Taiwan. He went on to earn a bachelor's degree at BYU, then continued his education at Oxford University, where, as a Rhodes Scholar, he earned a master's degree and a doctoral degree in philosophy. He first met Susan Lindsay, the woman he would later marry, while giving presentations at the MTC focused on the culture of Taiwan, to groups of missionaries assigned to serve in that nation (Sister Lindsay, at that time, was preparing to serve her mission in Taiwan).

At some point following her return from missionary service, while he was on summer break from Oxford, the two began dating. After Gerrit returned to Oxford, he and Susan (who was a BYU student) continued their courtship long-distance The couple was married in the Salt Lake Temple on January 2, 1980, and raised 4 sons. They spent most of their married lives in Virginia and Maryland. Brother Gong became a special assistant to the US Secretary of State in 1985. He went on to be a professor at Johns Hopkins University and Georgetown University.

He continued his career as a special assistant in the US State Department and as a special assistant to the US embassy in China. In 1989, he served as China Chair and Asia Director of the Center for Strategic and International Studies. He was also invited to participate in multiple education summits, in addition to serving on the United States Department of Education's National Advisory Committee on Institutional Quality and Integrity. Towards the end of his professional career, he served as an Assistant to the President of BYU for Planning and Assessment.

As impressive as his career may have been, the far more significant things he accomplished was in the course of Church service over several decades, during which he was a bishop, stake president, and area seventy. During his time in the latter assignment, he accompanied the presiding authority to my parent's Stake Conference. As he spoke, I was impressed by his warmth, knowledge of the scriptures, and ability to teach from them. While I may not remember any specifics of what he said, the power of the Spirit which I felt when he was speaking was unmistakable.

After that conference, I had the opportunity to greet and chat with him informally. What I had seen at the pulpit while he spoke was even more apparent in his personal interactions with me and other members of my parent's stake. This is a man who feels and teaches by the Spirit. During the April 2010 General Conference, Elder Gong was among those called as a General Authority Seventy. He filled various assignments at Church headquarters for the first year or so after his call. From August 2011-August 2013, he served in the Asia Area Presidency as a counselor. In 2013, he was called as president of that same area.

As a result of Elder Ronald A. Rasband's call to the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles during the October 2015 General Conference, Elder Gong was called to the Presidency of the Seventy on October 6, 2015. He transitioned out of his role as Asia Area President and into that new assignment effective January 4, 2016. During his two years of active service in the Presidency of the Seventy, he had responsibility for overseeing the work of the Church in the North America Northeast Area. He also served on the Church Board of Education and Boards of Trustees, and a member of the Executive Committee of the Boards.Following the October 2017 and January 2018 deaths of Elder Robert D. Hales and Church President Thomas S. Monson, new Church President Russell M. Nelson called both Elder Gong and Elder Ulisses Soares to serve as members of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, marking history as the first Asian American and Latin American apostles of the Church.. They were sustained as such on March 31, 2018, and both were ordained to the apostleship the following Thursday (April 5, 2018).

Consistent with the general practice of the Church, and for the first time since the October 2015 appointments of Elders Ronald A. Rasband, Gary E. Stevenson, and Dale G. Renlund, with the two apostles called, sustained, and ordained on the same day, Elder Gong, who is older, became the senior apostle to Elder Soares. In June 2018, Elders Gong and Soares met with representatives of the media for the first time as new apostles, at which time Elder Gong reported that he had been asked to chair the Scriptures Committee. He also serves as a member of the Priesthood and Family Executive Council, the Leadership and Training Committee, and the Outreach Committee, and had apostolic oversight for the Asia and Asia North Areas.

Elder Gong has given a total of 8 addresses in General Conference thus far, which includes 1 as a General Authority, 1 other given while he served in the Presidency of the Seventy, and the remaining 6 since beginning his service in the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles. Due to his potential exposure to COVID-19 (for which he tested positive a few days later), he had pre-recorded his remarks in the days leading up to the most recent General Conference. Having successfully completed his quarantine, he was able to preside at the groundbreaking for the Taylorsville Utah Temple later that month.

And because he had originally been assigned to preside at the dedication of the Winnipeg Manitoba Temple, even though that event has been postponed, hopefully 2021 will see Elder Gong able to preside at that event or another temple dedication. I am grateful to have been able to honor Elder Gong on this, his 67th birthday. Because of my previously-referenced personal interaction with him, I can testify that the Lord has prepared him for his present assignment, and I whole-heartedly sustain him and the other 14 apostles.

That does it for now. 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.

Monday, December 21, 2020

BREAKING TEMPLE NEWS: Nuku'alofa Tonga Temple To Reopen Under Phase 3 Next Week; Site Location Announced for the Lindon Utah Temple

Hello again, everyone! Two breaking temple developments have been announced by the Church wintin the last hour. First of all, a couple of weeks ago, the Church announced that some temples would soon reopen under phase 3 of the four-phase plan. Phase 3 allows the scheduling of limited proxy work, where local COVID-19 conditions and restrictions allow, and as scheduled. The first four temples set to reopen in that phase were based in the Pacific Islands and the Asia North Area of the Church. The Taipei Taiwan Temple became the first of those to reopen under phase 3, which became effective today.

Today, the Church announced that the Nuku'alofa Tonga Temple will be the second of the original four announced to reopen under phase 3, and that change will go into effect next week. That is the one and only change in the phased reopening of temples that will go into effect next week. As of today, 11 temples remain in a "paused" status in their reopening due to local COVID-19 conditions and restrictions. 23 others remain in phase 1 of the reopening process, whiich allows for limited living husband-to-wife sealings were both individuals have previously been endowed. 

The reamining 121 temples that are reeopened remain in phase 2, which allows for all living ordinances, with priority given first to previously-endowed couples to be sealed in the temple, then to those preparing to be married who have not yet received those ordinances, then to missionaries already out in the field who were not able to receive those ordinances before their departure, then to all missionaries preparing to go out into the mission field, then to anyone else who may need to receive their own ordiancnes for any other reason.

I am grateful that the phased reopening of temples continues relatively unabated, and if that were the only news to report today, I'd be happy enough. But the Newsroom also reported today on the announcement of the location and preliminary details for the Lindon Utah Temple. Utah County's newest temple had been announced in General Conference two months ago, and the confirmation of the first official initial details today makes sense in light of the fact that the Church has announced temple locations for many United States cities of late within 2-3 months of the original announcement for that temple.

So let's get to the details. The Lindon Utah Temple is planned to be a 3-story edifice of roughly 81,000 square feet and will be built on property near 800 East and Center Street in Lindon. In the coming days, project managers will beging working with city leaders through the approvals process for that temple. One the necessary approvals and permits are issued, the Church will then set a groundbreaking time-frame for the temple. An exterior rendering for that temple will also be released once the necessary approvals are given for that.

Today's announcement marks the first time in roughly two months since the Church last announced any offficial details for previously-announced temples. This is also the first time the Church has identified a temple site without releasing a temple rendering at the same time since the announcement of the temple for Syracuse Utah, for which the preliminary information was announced on August 28. We see from this announcement that the Church continues to work on the current queue of announced temples. It will be interesting to see if any other announcements related to temple construction are made before the end of this year.

I will keep tabs on all those developments, in addition to all Church news updates, and will provide information about all of that here as I become aware of it. That does it for now. 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

Thursday, December 17, 2020

BREAKING TEMPLE NEWS: Ground Broken for the Mendoza Argentina Temple

NOTE: This post was originally published to this blog on December 16, 2020, at 6:28 PM MST, but the third-to-last and second-to-last paragraphs were added  above that last paragraph of this post on December 17, with the updated post published just before 4:00 PM the following day.

Hello again, everyone! Breaking temple news has just been brought to my attention in these early evening hours of December 16. As confirmed by the Church of Jesus Christ Temples site, the groundbreaking ceremony for the Mendoza Argentina Temple is set to occur tomorrow, Thursday December 17, at an undisclosed time. That temple's groundbreaking had been set to occur in November, but due to COVID-19 conditions in the Argentine province of Mendoza, that had to be delayed 2.5 weeks into mid-December.I am grateful to have been able to learn of and pass along this update. 

I had been reasonably certain that the Church would try to hold al the remaining temple groundbreakings for this year by no later than one week before Christmas Day (which would be Friday December 18), and it's nice to have that confirmed. With the groundbreaking queue cleared that much in advance of Christmas Day, I'm also certain that, at some point after Christmas and leading up to the new year, the standard announcements might be made of any changes to missions around the world and also relative to any groundbreaking ceremonies that might occur in January-March. 

You can count on my coverage of these developments as they occur. In the meantime, once sources are available confirming that the groundbreaking for this temple has actually occurred, they will be added to this post in some way, which will eliminate the need to cover that in a new post, or in the comment threads of this once that has occurred. For now, my thanks once again to you all.

Hello again, everyone! At some point this afternoon (December 17), an official report from the Newsroom was provided to confirm that the groundbreaking for this temple has indeed taken place. The Church has thus broken ground for 21 temples this year alone, which is an increase of 10 from the number for which ground was broken last year. 

The queue of temples for which a groundbreaking was set to occur this year has been completely cleared. so hopefully the Church will soon be able to announce other groundbreakings.And again, I am not entirely sure how soon construction might begin on any of the now-10 temples for which that process is currently pending, I am hopeful that at least a couple of these temples might have that occur. I will be most interested to see what happens with respect to temple construction to close out the year. 

That does it for now. 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.

Tuesday, December 15, 2020

BREAKING NEWS: Further Adjustments Announced to More Fully Align Seminary and Institute with the "Come Follow Me" Curriculum

Hello again, everyone! As some of you might recall, in March of last year, Church leaders announced that  the seminary curriculum schedule would be adjusted to align with "Come Follow Me" starting this year. Fast forward to today. The Church just announced a short while ago that additional adjustments are on the way for seminary students in 2021. Previously, the seminary study involved a 9-month schedule aligned with corresponding reading assignments for other Church Sunday School classes and home study schedulee, with students essentially being placed on the honor system to continue their personal study of the applicable book of scripture when school was not in session during the summer months.

In order to ensure greater accountability in personal study with the seminary curriculum, Church leaders today unveiled new requirements that are consistent with standards that existed when I was in seminary 16-19 years ago (Has it really been that long? Apparently so.) During the period of time when school is not in session, seminary students will be responsible for reading through the curriculum and essentially learning the lessons personally when they are not being taught in class (that had only been optional wihen last year's announcement was made.)

Additionally, a new reading requirement will go into effect, In order to obtain seminary credit for any given academic semester, students will need to read in the relevant book of scripture 75% of the days in each semester. With a school year in the United States lasting roughly 180 days, each semester is roughly 90 days, which means that, in order to obtain seminary credit for any 90-day semester, students in the United States will be required to read from the relevant book of scripture 67-68 of those days.

Despite the relatively minor adjustments made to the seminary curriculum and requirements, this is another example of the Church taking action to place more responsibility for spirtual growth and progression on the shoulders of seminary students in this particular case, which is similar to individual and familial responsibility that has been put into place in conjunction with the "Come Follow Me" curriculum. Any additional details on this development can be found in the official notice that was released in conunction with this announcment. I am grateful to have been able to learn of and pass along this news.

I continue to monitor all other Church news and temple developments, and will be sure to pass word of those along to you all as they occur. That does it for now. 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.

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Monday, December 14, 2020

BREAKING NEWS: Taipei Taiwan Temple To Shift to Phase 3 of Reopening; Parents Can Now Manage an LDS Account for Their Children

Note: This post was originally published at 10:28 AM, with subsequent updates added at around 4:00 PM.

Hello again, everyone! The Newsroom and the Church News have noted that the Taipei Taiwan Temple will be the first to shift to phase 3 of reopening one week from today (Monday December 21). Phase .3 allows for limited proxy work and all living ordinances to be performed. The Asia North and Pacific Areas of the Church have seen specific success in controlling the conditions of the pandemic.

On that same date, the Tegucigalpa Honduras Temple will shift from phase 1 to phase 2. Phase 2 allows all living ordinances to be performed, with priority given to temple sealings for those previously endowed, then to living ordinances for those preparing for a temple sealing who have not received those ordinances, then to all misionaries currently out in the field who were not able to receive those ordinances prior to commencing that service, then to those who are preparing to depart for the mission field, and finally, to any others who may need to receive their own ordinances for any other reason.

Additional information on this can be found in the Church News' new temple tracker, with further information available through the Newsroom's official update. Consistent with the practices observed by the Church since the pandemic led to the closure of all temples, the general leaders of the Church are making decisions regarind the phased reopening of each temple based on information received from congregational leaders, and area, mission, and temple presidencies, in addition to monitoring any local or regional pandemic restrictions that has impacted and may yet continue to impact the phased reopening of all temples.

With numerous former physicians, surgeons, and other medical professionals in the leadership ranks of the Church, and bearing in mind how many governmental leaders are being cavalier in terms of their lack of support for recommendations provided by competent medical professionals, it is heartening to see the way the Church has been able to keep their adustments consistent with what is safest for all members of the Church wherever they may live.

The Newsroom also covered an additional breaking development, announcing that parents now have the option to manage an official Church account for their children. Technically, each member of the Church with a valid membership record is capable of setting up and managing their own accounts. But any Church member under 18 needs parental permission to set up their individual accounts, so this step of allowing parents to manage their children's accounts through their own accounts eliminates problems that previously existed in that respect.

Additionally, over time, Church leaders have noted that many children and youth who had managed their own accounts from the time they were set up have experienced problems remembering their login information over time. Adding parentral controls for Church accounts for those under 18 eliminates that particular problem as well. In conunction with this change, the Church has added a more flexible way to recover an account, which had not been enabled before now. The Account Recovery feature will particularly help in view of the fact that only one Church account can be established per member (since member accounts are tied to a specific and unique membership record number).

I am grateful to have been able to learn about and pass along this report of these developments. I continue to monitor all Church news and temple updates, and will be sure to pass those along to you all here as I become aware of such reports. That does it for now. 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.

Saturday, December 12, 2020

BREAKING TEMPLE NEWS: Groundbreaking Held for the Harare Zimbabwe Temple; Groundbreaking Likely to Occur for Mendoza Argentina Temple

Hello again, everyone! I have breaking temple news to report. Per information provided just over an hour ago by Nigel, my Church member contact living in Africa, ground has been broken for the Harare Zimbabwe Temple. Official Church confirmation of the particulars through a news release is still pending, but will likely be available through the Zimbabwe edition of the Church's official Newsroom within the next several hours or so. 

Update (added at 2:00 PM Utah time): An official confirmation of this temple's groundbreaking was provided by the Newsroom a short while ago. In addition to Zimbabwean native Elder Edward Dube, who presided at this temple's groundbreaking, Elder Ciro Schmiel, who serves as Second Counselor in the Africa South Area presidency, was also present, along with the president of the Republic of Zimbabwe. Official resources, including photos and videos, will be released at a later time.

Given the fact that it is past 4:00 AM here in Utah, this post will be updated later this afternoon or evening once I can find the report, analyze the information from it, and pass my observations along here. Based on what I can ascertain from the temple's rendering and planned size, I am setting an initial completion estimate of early-to-mid 2023 for that temple, assuming there is no inordiante delay in getting it under construction.

In the interim, as many of you may also be aware, although the Church had originally planned to break ground for the Mendoza Argentina Temple last month, insofar as I have been able to ascertain, that has not yet occurred. According to a few more official Church sources I have found in the interim, it appears that that temple groundbreaking is still anticipated to take place before the end of this year, which leaves the Church around a week or so to take care of that without detracting focus from the Christmas and New Year's celebrations worldwide.

So I will keep my eyes open for any word on that tegmple. I'm hoping we will have official resources noting that both groundbreakings have taken place before the end of the day today (Saturday December 12) here in Utah. I will be sure to bring you all word on the confirmation of these events as they are provided. 

Update (added at 2:00 PM Utah time): There has still been no word on the Mendoza Argentina Temple groundbreaking having taken place. Given the fact that it is now roughly 6:00 PM on Saturday evening in Mendoza, it appears that the groundbreaking for that temple might not have occurred today after all. I am still reasonably certain, however, that that will have occurred at some point within the next week, unless we hear anything otherwise.

That does it for now. 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.

Monday, December 7, 2020

BREAKING TEMPLE NEWS: First FourTemples Will Begin Phase 3 of Reopening In the Near Future

Hello again, everyone! A few weeks ago, material released by the Church News and the Newsroom on temple reopenings noted it might be a whionle before any temples are reopen under phase 3 of th Church's 4-phase plan. Phase 3 allows all proxy ordinances and limited work for the dead. Fast forward to this morrning. In prerecorded messages from each of the 3 apostles of the Church who serve on the Temple and Family History Executive Council (Elders David A. Bednar, Gary E. Stevenson, and Dale G. Renlund, the latter of whom would have recorded his message well before his recent positive COVID-19 diagnosis), announced that 3 temples in the Pacific (Apia Samoa, Brisbane Australia, and Nuku'alofa Tonga) and 1 in the Asia North Area (Taipei Taiwan) will be the first to reopen under phase 3 next week.

Correction (posted at 1:45 PM): Although it appeared that the release had noted that phase 3 reopenings will begin one week from today (Monday December 14), on closer reading, it appears that the reopenings are only being prepared to occur on Monday December 21 at earliest, if all goes well. I apologize for the unintentional misinformation in that respect.  Having noted that, we now return you to your previously-composeed content on this subect.

In each of the brief video segnments, the three apostles comp what was involved in making this decision, the prevailing protocols that will be in place for each temple thus reopening, and other details that will impact which temples enter phase 3 and under which time-frames that might occur. The Brethren continue to take COVID-19 protocols worldwide very seriously, and the latest developments are yet another manifestation of that caution on their part. In order to aid in the process of planning for thiese reopenings, the Brethren also announced a new online tool that will specficially be for patrons who want to schedule proxy work at a temple in a phase 3 reopening.

The First Presidnecy also released a letter, complete with FAQs, in conjunction with today's announcement. Aside from the temples moving into phase 3, other reopenings (phases 1 and 2 have been announced as well. Effective next week, the Panama City Panama Temple will open under phase 1, which allows for living husband-to-wife sealings where both have previously been endowed. This announcement means 26 of the Church's 168 temples are now simply in phase 1. Meanwhile, phase 2 reopenings, which allow living husband-to-wife sealings and all other living ordinances, have been announced for 4 other temples, including 3 in Mexico (Meridia, Tampico, and Villahermosa) and 1 in the Pacific (Melbourne Australia).

For phase 2, ordinances are prioritized in the following manner: first, living husband-to-wife sealings where both have previously been endowed; next, endowments for those preparing for temple sealings who have not been previously endowed; next. to missionaries currently out in the field who departed prior to being able to receive their own ordinances; then to all missionaries preparing to depart for a field of labor; and finally, to anyone else who has not received their own endowments for any other reason. With the latest reopenings in phase 2 that will take effect next week, 122 of the Church's temples will be in phase 2 by next week.

So, to recap, as of next week, 4 temples will be in phase 3, with 122 more in phase 2, and 26 more will be in phase 1, all to be effective next week. The Church News has also provided covreage on the phase 3 reopenings this morning, and has provided a new status tracker, complete with a different demographic focus, on their part. I am grateful to have learned of this news, and to have been able to pass it along to you all here at this time. Hopefully the process of reopening under phase 3 will go smoothly, particularly for areas of the Church in which COVID-19 conditions are sufficiently lessening to allow that to occur.

On my end, I also continue to monitor all Church news and any other temple updates, and will bring you word of those here as i become aware of those developments. That does it for now. 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.

Sunday, December 6, 2020

UPDATED: Current Apostolic Data

Hello again, everyone! As most of you are almost certainly aware, I have provided updates on the latest apostolic data (specifically relating to lifespan or tenure length milestones) roughly every seven weeks. Having last done so on Sunday October 18, I wanted to post that information again today. But I have overhauled that process. Let me explain what that means. There is a lot of data and information to update prior to publishing those updates on this blog. What I have been doing for a majority of the last two years has been updating three or more files, then compiling the relevant information and data into two other separate files, publishing only the latter two files on this blog.

But as I thought about the acceleration of the work of the Church, which will correspond to an increase in the amount of information reported here, I have come to the determination to streamline the process.  What I have done is consolidated the content in the three documents from which I compiled the data into two separate ones, and rather than publishing a report on the compiled data, I am posting the links to the two documents with the data in question. 

The new documents show tables with all the written information I previously shared. In being able to share updated versions of those new documents now every seven weeks, that wil simplify the process of preparing and publishing the data here. I'm a little surprised I didn't think of doing that sooner. Hopefully having the data in table form will make it easier to explore than the written-out reports on this data have been. 

As far as the new updates are concerned,the first part contains updated data about the age and tenure length records for all 17 Church Presidents, information on the tenure length records for each of the 28 Presidents of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, and information on the longest-serving First Presidencies, Quorums of the Twelve Apostles, and groups of all ordained apostles, which will be relevant for our current apostolic groups beginning next year.

And the second part shows the long-form and decimal ages for the members of the current First Presidency, Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, and the apostolic groups overall, in addition to the average ages of each group and apostolic nonagenarians (with 2 of the current 15 apostles being on that list, and the timing noted for when each of the other 13 apostles will join that list).

I am grateful for the inspiration I received today to streamline the process of getting this updated information to you all here. Hopefully this shared data will be of interest to you all, and again, I offer an open invitation to anyone who has any questions about those documents to ask them here. I will, of course, continue to monitor all Church news updates and temple developments, and will do my level best to bring word of those to you all as I become aware of all such reports.

That does it for now. 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. 

Saturday, December 5, 2020

BREAKING NEWS: Elder and Sister Renlund Diagnosed with COVID-19

Hello again, everyone! A short while ago, the Newsroom provided another COVID-19 update. Elder Dale G. Renlund and his wife, Ruth L. Renlund, have tested positive for the virus. According to the statement from Church spokesman Eric Hawkins, that diagnosis came despite the fact that Elder and Sister Renlund have been taking all of the necessary precautions.  Elder Renlund reportedly has mild symptoms, and Sister Renlund is presently asymptomatic. 

The release also notes that other Church leaders are being tested as a precautionary measure. The second paragraph of that statement notes that the Church and its' leaders are following all recommended guidelines related to COVID-19, including social distancing, wearing a mask, frequent handwashing, and all other recommendations of healthcare profressionals. Although it is not incidcated in the news release, I imagine that Elder and Sister Rnelund are also actively involved in contact tracing. 

So that now makes two apostles (who happen to be seatmates in the Quorum of the Twelve) who have tested positive for the virus. We now have three apostles this year alone (from what we know) who have had significant health challenges. I hope that is another clear indicator that the Brethren are not exempt from issues that afflict and affect so many. 

I also hope that this news is enough to convince any who may have any remaining questions or qualms about following COVID-19 protocols that this is something that needs to be taken seriously. During a time when there has been a spike in cases, hospitalizations, and even deaths here in Utah, it has troubled me deeply to hear so much about people that are cavalier, casual, or downright obstinante about following COVID-19 guidelines.

The leading Brethren of the Church have set the example right off the bat in following the guidances of local health professionals and governmental leaders, and so many still seem to think there is no danger in disregarding those receommendations, or that the offering of such recommendations is a medical or governmental overreach.  

There are even some leaders of governments in certain parts of the world that flat out aren't taking any of this seriously, and the results have been the devastation of their nations and extensive losss of life and widespread devastation in the wake of the effects of the virus. Let me be as frank as I can be: I am deeply disturbed to see the fulfillment of biblical prophecy happening. 

So many seem to be saying "All is well in Zion" when that is clearly not the case. And we know from scripture what the result of that attitude will be. Elsewhere in the scriptures, the Lord outlines the clear duty that we as His children have in terms of taking care of ourselves, looking after one another, and being good and responsible citizens who take wise advice from any of our leaders seriously. 

In a day where it seems that even the very elect are being deceived, I think it's high time we look at ourselves in the mirror, reevaluate our motives and actions, make any course corrections that are necessary, and do what we can to show how much we love our neighbors. The Lord always showed respect to the laws of the land, and it behooves us to follow His example and injunction: "Go and do thou likewise."

Since I am in the vulnerable demographic for COVID-19 due to longstanding respiratory issues, my wife and I have been tested, and my wife actually recently got a second test., all of which came back negative. Even so, we have made a concientious effort to stay at home where possible, and to always wear a mask if we are ever out in public and outside of our car. We feel we cannot afford not to take those precautions.

But as the community-at-large, I feel all citizens of the world need to recognize what we owe to each other as COVID-19 conntinues to be an issue. Part of loving God and loving our neighbors as we love ourselves involves recognizing that we need to stand with and take care of each other. And so, if any of the readers of my blog have not been taking the necessary precautions in accordance with recommendations from health experts, government leaders, and leaders of the Church, the time to start doing so is now.

That being said, I'll get off my soapbox now. I hope and pray that all who read my blog may remain healthy and well during this COVID-19 pandemic. I continue to monitor all Church news and temple updates and will be sure to bring word of those to you all as I become aware of such developments.

That does it for now. 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.

BREAKING TEMPLE NEWS: Groundbreaking Held for Okinawa Japan Temple

 Hello again, everyone! Yesterday, I reported on the December 2 groundbreaking for the Bengaluru India Temple, which had taken place on Tuesdayy December 2. On this Saturday morning, I am pleased to report that the groundbreaking for the Okinawa Japan Temple took place a short while ago. As had been previously announced, the Asia North Area President, Elder Taksashi Wada, presided thereat. The news release covering today's event reiterated the details on the temple: "The Okinawa Japan Temple will be located on a half-acre site at 7-11, Matsumoto, Okinawa Shi, in Okinawa-ken, Japan. Plans call for a two-story, 10,000-square-foot temple. A temple-patron waiting area will also be added to an adjacent existing meetinghouse that was completed in 2013."  

Given the relatively smaller size of this planned project, I'm going to assume that, if all goes well, the temple could be completed in mid-2023 at earliest or mid-to-late 2023 at latest. Of course, that will depend on how soon full-scale construction is able to begin, and a number of factors relative to any temple project. Between COVID-19 on the one hand, all kinds of natural disasters on the other, and any factors specific to Japan being added in, it will be interesting to see how all of that works out. Having noted that, we are barely 5 days into December, and reports have aloready been provided on two of the four remaining groundbreakings for 2020 already having taken place. 

This leaves just the Harare Ziimbabwe and Mendoza Argentina Temples in the queue, and with any luck, the next week will see both of those groundbreakings occur, unless either or both are postponed into early 2021. And with respect to those two groundbreakings, I have diligently checked the Argentina and Zimbabwe Newsroom pages, and have frequented the South America South Area page for any news on the specifics of either, and have not yet heard anything solid beyond what has been previously announced for the Mendoza Argentina and Harare Zimbabwe temples. 

As previously discussed on this blog, in some mentions of temple groundbreakings that were to take place this year, the Mendoza Argentina Temple was conspicuously absent, leading me to believe that it was possible that the groundbreaking might be delayed on that temple. Given that November specifically came and went without any word on that, and that there has been no subsequent information provided to suggest otherwise, I'm now going to assume that the Mendoza groundbreaking has merely been delayed, perhaps by local COVID-19 restrictions or some other reason. 

But as soon as I have anything solid to report on either temple, you can count on my bringing word of that to you all here. I also continue to monitor any other temple updates and all Church news and will be sure to pass along those updates here as well. That does it for now. 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.

Friday, December 4, 2020

BREAKING NEWS: Additional Information Provided About the 3 Global Church Magazines

Hello again, everyone! As I mentioned in the comment thread of my last post, more information has been provided on the 3 global magazines that the Church will start using next year: the Liahona (for adults), For the Strength of Youth (for youth), and the Friend. It appears that more content will be made available digitally, and that each printed magazine will be slimmed down somewhat in terms of the number of pages. 

With the exception of the May and November editions that cover General Conference, the Ensign for the other ten months of the year has been an 80-page volume. The number of pages in most editions of the Liahona (which will now be the standard magazine for adults) will be reduced to 48 pages, with digital supplementary content available as well. Not sure what that might mean for the General Conference editions in May and November, but those editions will likely be the exception to the new standard. 

Likewise, where the New Era has had between 48-50 pages a month, For the Strength of Youth will be reduced to 32 pages. A similar reduction in pages is also anticipated for the Friend magazine. It will be interesting to see how things work with the new magazines. As I previously mentioned, it appears that the Church has expanded the number of individuals assigned as advisers to the Church magazines, which makes sense due to the upcoming changes.

I am grateful that the Church has again made an effort to correlatte, streamline, and unify Church materials on a global basis. The new magazines will surely be a blessing to all who will utilize the content therein. That does it for now. 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.


BREAKING TEMPLE NEWS: Groundbreaking Held for Bengaluru India Temple

Note: This post was originally published at 10:00 AM, with subsequent updates added roughly 2 hours later.

Hello again, everyone! This morning, the Newsroom reports that ground was broken for the Bengaluru India Temple two days ago (December 2). As previously announced, Elder Robert K. William, an area seventy based in Bangalore, presided at the groundbreaking ceremony for this temple, marking the first temple groundbreaking held in the month of December since 2016.  It also might be of interest to some of you to know that, with the report of this temple's groundbreaking, the number of temples under counstruction (32) now exceeds the number of those announced temples left in the queue (31).  

But the count of those under construction also technically includes both the Rio de Janeiro Brazil and Winnipeg Manitoba Temples, both of which are awaiting the announcement of their revised opening dates. So if those temples are not considered, then there are 30 under construction and 31 announced, with 2 completed and awaiting dedications.  Getting back to the first temple in India, as many of you may recall, during President Nelson's first Global Ministry Tour in 2018, he visited the Saints in Bengaluru. 

During that visit, he provided insight into the impromptu impression he received the night before General Conference was to begin that led to the announcement of a temple in India. He also talked about how it is easier for the Church to build a temple than it is for the Church to build a people who are ready for the temple.  Subsequently, in January of this year, an exterior rendering for that temple was released. In that release, the location and design of that temple were first provided. The news release on the rendering and location noted: 

"The 38,670-square-foot temple will be built on a 1.62-acre site at 2-B, Garudachar Palya, Mahadevapura, Bengaluru, Karnataka, in India. The temple was announced in April 2018 by Church President Russell M. Nelson.

"In addition to construction of the temple, existing Church offices and a meetinghouse on the site will be removed. A new two-level meetinghouse will be built, along with new Church offices, a distribution center and housing for patrons. The site will also include new residences for the temple president, temple and service missionaries and the mission president."

With that verb Iatim quote in mind, based on the exterior rendering and the plans for the temple project, I'm anticipating that, once construction is underway, it could take anywhere from 2.75-3.75 years to complete. In the portion of the news release I quoted above, it mentioned that the temple had been announced in April 2018. So I wanted to also note that, of the 7 temples originally announced in April 2018, 4 of those 7 (Salta Argentina, Bengaluru India, Layton Utah, and Richmond Virginia) have had groundbreakings in 2020.

And although it may be anyone's guess how soon action could be taken on the Cagayan de Oro Philippines and Russia temples, it's worth noting that, if the information I have is correct, ground could be broken on  the temple in Managua within the first half of next year, if not sooner than that. It is also worth noting that the Church is now down to 3 temples that have groundbreakings scheduled to occur before the end of this year (Mendoza Argentina, which had been announced to occur last month, but which has not seen that occur), Harare Zimbabwe, and Okinawa Japan.

I have no idea what to expect in terms of how soon any annnouncement may be made about the first groundbreaking(s) that may occur next year, but hopefully that might occur soon. I continue to monitor all Church news and temple updates and will be sure to pass word of those along to you all as I become aware of all such developments. 

That does it for now. 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.


Thursday, December 3, 2020

Honoring Elder Jeffrey R. Holland on His 80th Birthday

Hello again, everyone! With today being December 3, Elder Jeffrey R. Holland is observing his 80th birthday. I know that the Lord is no respector of persons, and doesn't play favorites, but on a personal level, I wanted to reiterate again that Elder Holland is one of my favorite apostles. I have a couple of familial connections to him. My dad was born and raised in St. George, and his father (Dean Stokes), was Elder Holland's home teaching companion when "young Jeff" was an Aaronic Priesthood holder. According to my dad, his father often expressed his wonder that a boy like Elder Holland had been could become an apostle of the Lord.

I know that at times, it may seem that some members of the Church, to varying degrees, have put the leading Brethren of the Church on a pedestal, but I am reminded in accounts, such as that which was shared by my grandfather, that these men may have been foreordained to the apostleship, but they are no different than any other member of the Church; the Lord just ordered their lives based on their personal choices in such a way that when such calls came to them, they were qualified through years of service in the Church and living what they believe. That is important for all of us to remember.

My mom is a freelance proofreader, and in the early days of her marriage to my dad, she worked on many projects for the Church Educational System. Since that occurred at the time when Elder Holland was the Commissioner of the CES, he was essentially my mom's "boss." And she speaks warmly of the experiences she had working with him on such projects. Personal connections aside, I wanted to share a brief biographical sketch of Elder Holland.

Jeffrey Roy Holland was born in St. George, Utah to Frank D. and Alice Bentley Holland on December 3, 1940. He served a full-time mission in the British Isles. His mission president was Marion D. Hanks, (who at that time was a member of the now-defunct First Council of the Seventy and later served in the First Quorum and Presidency of the Seventy). One of young Elder Holland's missionary companions was Quentin L. Cook, alongside whom he would later serve in the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles.

Of Elder Holland, Elder Cook has remarked that it is interesting to him that he, as the previously-senior missionary companion to Elder Holland, is now the junior apostle to his former junior companion. Following the concusion of Elder Holland's missionary service, he attended BYU, where he earned a bachelor’s degree in English and a master’s degree in religious education.

Additionally, shortly after his release from missionary service, he married his high school sweetheart, Patricia Terry, in 1963. They are the parents of a daughter and two sons, one of whom, Matthew, has served as the President of Utah Valley University and as president of the North Carolina Raliegh Mission. During General Conference in April of this year, Matthew Holland was sustained as a General Authority Seventy, marking the first time a fahter-and-son duo have served together as general authorities since the July 2015 death of President Boyd K. Packer. 

Once Elder Holland earned his bachelor's and master's degrees, he went on to earn a doctorate degree in American studies from Yale. He then became a professor at BYU, serving as Dean of the College of Religion. He served as Commissioner of Church Education from 1976-1980. In 1980, President Dallin H. Oaks, who was then serving as President of BYU-Provo, announced his intention to move on to other opportunities. Commissioner Holland was put in charge of the committee to find the new BYU President. 

Two days later, he was stunned when the First Presidency appointment him to that assignment. He had reportedly been favored for the position by President N. Eldon Tanner, who was then serving as First Counselor in the First Presidency, and was the protege of then-Elder Gordon B. Hinckley, who at that time was the senior member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles asssigned to the Church Board of Education. Elder Holland would go on to serve as president of BYU for 9 years himself, until his April 1, 1989 call as a General Authority and member of the First Quorum of the Seventy. 

Prior to his call to general Church service, Elder Holland also served as a bishop, counselor in a stake presidency, and regional representative. After the First Presidency was reorganized following the death of President Ezra Taft Benson, President Howard W. Hunter took immediate action to fill the apostolic vacancy. In the space of a few short hours on Thursday June 23, President Hunter issued a call to the apostleship to Elder Holland, gave him his apostolic charge, set apart and ordained him to that calling,  and had him join the other 14 apostles in their weekly meeting at the temple. That action was sustained by Church membership during the Solemn Assembly that was held exactly 100 days later.

Elder Holland has given a total of 56 addresses in General Conference.  Of those, 3 were prior to his apostolic call. The first time he spoke during General Conference was in April 1983, while he was serving as the President of Brigham Young University. He spoke alongside his son during that session, and for unknown reasons, that talk is not listed with the others in the first link I shared at the start of this paragraph. He gave the remaining 53 General Conference addresses as a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles. 

To me, it always seems as though the talks given by Elder Holland are specifically focused on something I have been dealing with personally at the time. As a consequence, listening to him speak every six months is one of my favorite things about General Conference weekends. The last thing I want to mention about Elder Holland is that he is currently the second most-senior member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles and the fourth in seniority among all current apostles. 

He is also the fourth-oldest member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, and is the seventh-oldest among all living apostles. Interestingly enough, although he is the most senior of the three apostles born in 1940 (with Elders Uchtdorf and Cook being the other two), he is the youngest of the three. His apostolic seatmate, Elder Uchtdorf,  obsrved his 80th birthday just under one month ago, with Elder Cook having done the same two months prior to that.

Given his age and current apostolic seniority, some, myself included, have suggested that Elder Holland could one day serve as Church President. Right now, the only apostles senior to him are Presidents Nelson, Oaks, and Ballard. If President Nelson does indeed the lead the Church for the next decade or two, our current prophet may outlive a few more of the apostles junior to him. So it will be interesting to see what happens there. I am grateful for the life and ministry of Elder Holland, and for the chance I had to write this post in his honor today 

I continue to monitor any and all Church news and temple updates and will do my best to bring you all word on those developments as they occur  That does it for now. Any 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. 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.

Tuesday, December 1, 2020

Some Thoughts in Advance of the First Presidency's Christmas Devotional

Hello again, everyone! As many of you are no doubt aware, the First Presidency's 2020 Christmas Devotional is coming up on Sunday. Through 2012, the devotional featured addresses from the entire First Presidency. But in 2013, the Church announced that the format would change to allow other general Church leaders to participate. Beginning in 2014, and clear through last year, almost every year has seen 4 speakers: 1 member of the First Presidency, 1 member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, 1 member of the Presidency of the Seventy, and 1 of the 15 General Officers of the Church.

The one exception to that general pattern occurred in 2017. For that year's devotional, aside from a member of the First Presidency, only 1 General Officer of the Church and 1 of the Church's General Authority Seventies were selected to speak. But since that was the sole exception to the general format, I have a rough standard template to draw on when considering who might speak each year. What might the general pattern tell us about the potential speaking lineup for this year's devotional? That is a question I will attempt to answer in this post.

Firstly, since the new format and general template for the Christmas Devotional was introduced in 2013, only the counselors in the First Presidency have conducted the devotional, generally alternating each year. We also know that since President Nelson became Church President, he has only opted to conduct 1 session of General Conference (the Sunday Morning Session in April 2018). 

Since his almost three years as Church President, he's done an excellent job of delegating things, so I think it may safely be assumed that, for the most part, President Nelson will leave the task of conducting each year's Christmas Devotional to either of his counselors on an alternating basis. With President Oaks having conducted the 2018 devotional and President Eyring conducting the one held last year, I am predicting that President Oaks will be the one to conduct this year's devotional. And since President Nelson spoke during the 2018 deovotional and President Oaks did so last year, it seems safe to predict that President Eyring will be the representative speaking on behalf of the First Presidency.

In terms of the speakers from the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, we have heard from then-Elders Nelson and Oaks, along with Elders Bednar, Christofferson, Stevenson, and Soares. Based on which Quorum mebers have spoken, among those who have not done so are President Ballard and Elders Holland, Cook, Andersen, Renlund, and Gong. You may note the omissions of Elders Uchtdorf and Rasband. In listing the current Quorum members who have not spoken, I didn't include Elder Uchtdorf, since he previously spoke twice during that devotional while he was serving as President Monson's Second Counselor in the First Presidency. 

While it is also true that Elder Rasband has not yet been tapped to speak in the Devotional since his call to the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles in October 2015, he was the first member of the Presidency of the Seventy assigned to speak when the noew format first took effect in 2013, so I'm considering that in my analysis. Although any of the others I mentioned could speak, for some reason, the thought occurred to me that Elder Neil L. Andersen might do so this go-round. But any of those who have not yet done so would be great to hear from this weekend.

Meanwhile, the mmbers of the Presidency of the Seventy who have spoken to us have included Elders Ronald A. Rasband (as noted above), Richard J. Maynes, L. Whitney Clayton, Craig C. Christensen, Terence M. Vinson, and Patrick Kearon. Only two of those just mentioned remain in the Presidency of the Seventy. In 2017, General Authority Seventy Elder Kevin R. Duncan was asked to speak. From among the ranks of the General Authorities of the Church, only the Presiding Bishopric has not been represented in aan assignment to speak during the devotional. In view of that fact, I am predicting this go-round that Presiding Bishop Gerald Causse may be tapped to do so this go-round. 

As far as general officers of the Church are concerned, we have heard twice from the Primary General President (the current one and her immediate predecessor), and once each from the since-released Young Women and Relief Society General Presidents and the since-released First Counselor in the Young Men General Presidency, the current Second Counselor in the Primary General Presidency and First Counselor in the Relief Society General Presidency .

Although we have not yet heard from a member of the Sunday School General Presidency, the last time we heard from the Young Women General President in the Christmas Devotional was 6 years ago, so I'm predicting that Sister Bonnie H. Cordon may be tapped to speak this time around, though I would not in any way be shocked to see something else happen. 

In summary, I am predicting that, for this year's devotional, which will be held this Sunday, that President Oaks will conduct, and that the speakers will be Sister Bonnie H. Cordon, Young Women General President, Presiding Bishop Gerald Causse, Elder Neil L. Andersen of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, and President Henry B. Eyring, Second Counselor in the First Presidency.

Anyone interested in doing so is more than welcome to look over the history I have kept on these Christmas Devotionals, and if any of you have any thoughts on the predictions I've laid out for this year, I'd love to hear from you. I look forward to this Sunday's devotioynal regardless of whether or not I correctly predicted any or all aspects of this devotional. Whatever might happen in that respect, you can count on my passing along whatever is reported after that is made available.

That does it for now. 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.

Monday, November 30, 2020

BREAKING NEWS: First Presidency Announces 2021 Dates for Churchwide Events; Provides Phased Reopening Updates for Templesa

Hello again, everyone! In these early morning hours, I have two breaking news developments to report. Firstly, I have previously mentioned that the Church had not yet released a formal schedule of Churchwide events for next year, and as recently as within the last week, I had suggested that the scheduled events being added to the Newsroom events page apparently replaced the formal announcment of events for 2021. Any theories I previously offered in that respect are now incorrect and irrelevant.

This morning, the First Presidency authorized the release of the official list of Churchwide Events for 2021. The lsit of events inluce the following highlights:

January 10, May 2, and September 12: Worldwide Devotionals for Young Adults. Additionally, the speakers for the January 10 event have been announced as Elder Gerrit W. Gong of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles and his wife, Susanr, and that the September 12 event will be combined with a Face-to-Face Event.

February 21: New Event for the children of the Church entitled "Friend-to-Friend", the equivalent for Face-to-Face events for Youth and Young Adults of the Church. The event will feature Elder Ulisses Soares of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, alongside the Primary General Presidency (Sisters Joy D. Jones, Lisa L. Harkness, and Cristina B. Franco). 

Parenthetically, I should note that since Sister Jones will have served as Primary General President for five years in April, despite the changes to her First and Second Counselors in 2016 and 2017, some change may be made to the Primary General Presidency during the April 2021 General Conference. With that said, here are some other events that will occur in 2021:

February 25-27: RootsTech Connect (to be held virtually, with Temple and Family History Leadership Training set to occur on February 25, as previously detailed)

,March 17, 2021: Youth Music Festival

March 26-27: Handel's Messiah

April 3-4 and October 2-3, 2021: General Conference Weekend, with the Priesthood Session in April and the Women's Session in October as usual. The April General Conference will again coincide with Easter Sunday, as it did in 2018, so the speaking lineup may be altered from what has been typicl.

April 29-30: 2021 BYU Women's Conference

June 13, 2021: Face-to-Face Event for Single Adults, which is another new event for a specific group in the Church.

July 22 & 23: Music for a Summer Evening (Pioneer Day Commemoration)

November 14: Face-to-Face for Youth

December 5: First Presidency Christmas Devotional

So that is the overview of the 2021 Churchwide events, as provided today. But temple reopenings have been announced this week, with the Newsroom and the Church News have also provided this week's update on temple reopenings, which, given the substance thereof, I thought would be best mentioned in this new post as well rather than the commentsts. 2 more temples will reopen under phase 1 next Monday, which allows husband-to-wife sealings where both have been previously endowed, with limited guests in attendance. The two temples are Barranquilla Colombia and Caracas Venezuuela.

Additionally, one temple (Guatemala City Guatemala) is shifting from phase 1 to phase 2, which allows the performance of all living ordinances, in the following priority order: indviduals preparing to be married who have not yet received their own endowments, missionaries already out in the field who departed before receiving their own endowments, those preparing to enter the mission field who need to receive their own endowments, and then any others who may need that done for any other reason.

And finally, on a not-so-postivie front, the Church has reported thath four temples previously upgraded to phase 2 will be downgraded to phase 1: Calgary and Ednomton Alberta, Baton Rouge Louisiana, and Ceub City Philippines. Additionally, seven other temples have gone back into a "puased" status in their reopenings due to local COVID-19 conditions and govermental regulations. Those seven temples include the following: 3 in California (Fresno, Newport Beach, and Oakland); 2 in England (London and Preston), along with the Haifax Nova Scotia and Philadelphia Pennsylvania Temples.

So, it's a bit of a mixed bag of good news, interesting news, and some difficult news this morning. I continue to montitor all Church news and temple updates and will keep doing my level best to pass word of those along to you all as I become aware of it. That does it for now. 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.