Hello again, everyone! As I noted in a previous comment on this blog, on January 19, the First Presidency and those 5 apostles over 70 received the vaccine for COVID-19. When I shared that report on this blog, I failed to mention that two more of our apostles would turn 70 this year as well: Elder Ronald A. Rasband today (February 6), and his immediate senior apostolic seatmate, Elder Neil L. Andersen, will do so in roughly 6 months (on August 9). So I have no doubt that Elder Rasband will be in line for the vaccine himself soon. And perhaps by Elder Andersen’s birthday, the priority order for vaccinations may have expanded to allow all other apostles to get it as well.
While I am grateful for the example of top Church leaders in getting the vaccine as they are eligible to do so (especially given the fact that the three junior apostles of the Church have dealt with that virus, that’s a sidenote. My point in mentioning it is that this post is written in honor of Elder Rasband, who today becomes the second current septuagenarian apostle. I am pleased to share a biographical overview of his life with you all on his special day. Ronald Anderson Rasband was born to Rulon Hawkins Rasband and Verda Anderson in Salt Lake City, Utah, on February 6, 1951.
He served as a full-time missionary in the Eastern States Mission, which was headquartered in New York City and encompassed the whole New York Metro area, while also stretching into western New York and Pennsylvania. He met Melanie Twitchell in a class they both attended at BYU. At the time, both of them were dating other people, but they soon made arrangements to go on a date themselves, and once they started dating, that was it for both of them. They got engaged eight weeks later, were married in the Salt Lake Temple in 1973, and they raised five children.
Following their marriage, they continued their studies at the University of Utah. He later discontinued his college experience in order to begin his professional career in the Huntsman Container Company as a Sales Representative in 1976. Still in that employment 11 years later (in 1987), he was promoted to the position of president and chief operating officer of Huntsman Chemical Corporation, where he closely worked with Jon Huntsman Sr. and later served on the board of directors of that company. It was not until 1995 that, as a tribute to his success as a businessman, he received an honorary degree in business and commerce from Utah Valley State College (now Utah Valley University).
As prestigious as his professional career might have been, his life, in similarity to those of his fellow apostles, has been characterized by a variety of assignments in the Church. Elder Rasband has served as a bishop, Temple Square missionary guide, member of the Church’s Sesquicentennial Committee, and, from 1996-1999, as president of the New York New York North Mission. On April 1, 2000, he was sustained as a general authority and member of the First Quorum of the Seventy. Over the next 5 years, he served in the Europe North & Europe Central Areas from 2000-2003 (with both areas having since been consolidated). From 2003-2004, he presided over the Utah Salt Lake City Area. In August 2004, responsibility for oversight of the work of the Church in North America was transferred to the Presidency of the Sevent
He then served from 2004-2005 as Executive Director of the Temple Department. He was called to serve in the Presidency of the Seventy in August 2005, at which time he was assigned oversight for the North America Northwest and North America West Areas. Two years later, his assignment shifted to supervising the Utah North, Utah Salt Lake City, and Utah South Areas (from 2007-2009).
By August of 2008, he had become the second most senior member of the Presidency of the Seventy. The following April, as a result of Elder Neil L. Andersen's call to the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, Elder Rasband became the Senior President of the Seventy, and, as such, was given oversight for all areas in the United States and Canada.
He was still serving in that same assignment when, in October 2015, he was called to the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles. With Elders Gary E. Stevenson and Dale G. Renlund called at the same time (something that had not happened since 1906), the number of those who had served as members of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles reached a total of 100. He is currently the eighth in seniority among the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, the eleventh in overall apostolic seniority. He also ranks as the sixth oldest among the current members of the Quorum of the Twelve, and the ninth oldest among all 15 apostles.
As I’ve noted previously, I have an indirect personal connection to Elder Rasband. When my wife was initially involved in the institute program, Elder Rasband was one of her instructors. As a result of the three apostolic vacancies in 2015, my wife was one of many who felt Elder Rasband would be called to the apostleship to fill one of those, and she (and others who felt the same way) turned out to be right.
I will never forget praying in advance of the October 2015 General Conference for my own personal witness to know that whoever was called had indeed been chosen by the Lord. The moment President Eyring read the names of the three new apostles, I received the witness I had requested. For that reason, I gratefully sustain not just Elder Rasband. That experience is one that has been repeated for every apostle called since I entered my adult years. I gratefully sustain each of our 15 apostles in their divinely appointed roles.
Having served for nearly 21 years as a General Authority, Elder Rasband has had 17 opportunities to address us in General Conference: 1 as a General Authority Seventy, 5 more while in the Presidency of the Seventy, and the remaining 11 since his call to the apostleship almost 5.5 years ago. Any of those addresses, covering a wide variety of topics, is well worthy of review. I am grateful for this opportunity I have had, in my own small way, to pay tribute to and reflect on Elder Rasband’s life on this day, when he is celebrating his 70th birthday. I do continue to monitor all apostolic updates, general Church news, and any temple-related developments and will keep bringing you word of those as I receive it.
It is worth noting that I have another post set to publish two days from now, which will highlight one of several milestones one of our current apostolic groups will be observing on that date, so stay tuned for that.
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.
Hello again, everyone! The Church News has publied their own tribute to Elder Rasbband on his 70th birthday, highlighting 9 quotes given in the course of his ministry within the last year:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.thechurchnews.com/leaders-and-ministry/2021-02-06/elder-rasband-birthday-70-quotes-devotionals-general-conference-203478
A day later than has been typical, the Church News also published the latest edition of "This Week on Social":
https://www.thechurchnews.com/living-faith/2021-02-06/this-week-on-social-holland-jones-primary-apostles-god-hear-him-family-history-rootstech-young-women-scripture-enterprise-utah-203552
In this week's shorter edition of that ongoing series, posts were shared from Elders Jeffrey R. Holland and Gerrit W. Gong of the Quorum of the Twelve Apsotles and the following female general officers of the Church: the entire Young Women General Presidency (including Sisters Bonnie H. Cordon (General President), Michelle D. Craig, and Rebecca L. (Becky) Craven.
Acknowledging that there have been several individuals who have passed away in this last year, whether due to COVID-19 Church News staff writer Scott Taylor takes a look at Church teachings on death, drawing from remarks given in General Conference nearly 2 decades ago by then-Elder Russell M. Nelson of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles:
https://www.thechurchnews.com/living-faith/2021-02-06/scott-taylor-mourning-loss-loved-ones-spirits-russell-m-nelson-203123
And in preparation for tomorrow's hybrid broadcast of "Music and the Spoken Word", the Church News has shared the text of the new message that will be given by Brother Lloyd Newell:
https://www.thechurchnews.com/living-faith/2021-02-06/scott-taylor-mourning-loss-loved-ones-spirits-russell-m-nelson-203123
If there are any additional Church news, or any temple developments to pass along, I will be doing so later today. In the meantime, my thanks once again to you all.
The Church of Jesus Christ Temples site has provided an update on the status of the Salt Lake Temple:
Deletehttps://churchofjesuschristtemples.org/salt-lake-temple/
My thanks once again to you all.
Hello again, everyone! The Church News has shared the latest edition of "In Case You Missed It", looking back at 9 developments which were covered within the last week:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.thechurchnews.com/leaders-and-ministry/2021-02-07/in-case-you-missed-it-how-college-devotionals-relaying-church-leaders-messages-video-president-oaks-jones-anxiety-podcast-203550
And with the Church News continuing to share groups of biographies for new mission leaders roughly every 7-8 days, 16 more of them were shared today:
https://www.thechurchnews.com/callings/2021-02-07/16-mission-presidents-companions-honduras-philippines-north-dakota-california-new-york-trinidad-colombia-new-mexico-peru-australia-venezuela-montana-203115
As I have previously noted, each new mission leadership couple has rendered extensive Church service in a wide variety of assignments, both separately and together, so each couple is very well qualified for their upcoming assignments.
But I wanted to specifically note the following information about the new mission presidents' prior or current Church callings: 1 is a current area seventy; 1 is a former area seventy; 3 are current mission presidency counselors; 1 recently served as a senior missionary; 3 are current stake presidents (1 of whom also serves as a temple ordinance worker); 1 is a former stake president; 1 is a current stake presidency counselor; 1 is a current stake patriarch*; 1 is a former district president; 1 is a current ward clerk; 1 is a current Elders' Quorum instructor; and 1 is a current Sunday School teacher.
*Sidenote: The current stake patriarch and his wife are replacing Elder Valeri V. Cordon, a current General Authority Seventy and his wife. Given that Elder Cordon will return to Church headquarters, and that he was born in Guatemala City Guatemala, I could see the Church assigning him to any of the area presidencies in Latin America or the United States, or to any other Church headquarters assignment.
My thanks once again to you all.
There have been several more updates reported on the status of temples currently under construction. First, it appears that the construction process for the Quito Ecuador Temple has accelerated to a point where that temple has now been placed ahead of the Pocatello Idaho Temple, and that both temples are anticipated to be completed in the mid-to-latter part of this year, putting the twoin the same completion window as the temple in Praia Cabo Verde. The three temples could be considered as somewhat interchangeable in terms of which of them might be completed first, second, and last within that time-frame.
DeleteNext, a new update has been provided on the status of the Belem Brazil Temple:
https://churchofjesuschristtemples.org/belem-brazil-temple/
In addition to the status update, the completion window for that temple has been shifted from early-to-mid 2022 to now being listed as early 2022. Also, an update has been noted on the Feather River California Temple:
https://churchofjesuschristtemples.org/feather-river-california-temple/
Following the Feather River Temple, there has been yet another reshuffling of the temples below it. The Orem Utah Temple now follows the Feather River temple on that list, then the temples in Auckland New Zealand, Brasilia Brazil, Bentonville Arkansas, and McAllen Texas (with the completion estimate for the latter four temples now all being listed as early 2023).
The estimate for the Puebla Mexico Temple has been shifted to early-to-mid 2023. A new update has been provided on the Taylosrsville Utah Temple as well:
https://churchofjesuschristtemples.org/taylorsville-utah-temple/
The estimates for the Taylorsville Utah and Moses Lake Washington Temples have been adjusted to mid-2023. And the Moses Lake Washington Temple is now ahead of the Alabang Philippines Temple. I am still hopeful that full-scale construction might soon be able to begin for any or all of the 8 temples that have not yet progressed beyond a groundbreaking.
As usual, the changes noted today, especially where the completion order or time-frames for any of these temples has shifted, will necessitate updates to my temple files which I have previously shared. More will be coming on that as I can figure it all out.
In the meantime, tomorrow marks the first of a few service length milestones for our current group of apostles, and I am also anticipating that there will be updates on the phased reopening of temples in the early morning hours of tomorrow as well. I will be sure to pass along word of those developments to you all here s I become aware of such reports. In the meantime, my thanks once again to you all.