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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Tuesday, March 15, 2016
Matthew Martinich's Predictions for the Most Likely Temples Soon to be Announced
Since I have Matthew Martinich's predictions to share his Church Growth Blog posts whenever I feel impressed to do so, I am posting today for a very exciting reason: earlier today, Matt posted his educated guesses as to temples that may be announced this next conference. To find that post, please click on this link. For those that aren't inclined to wade through the post and the discussion that follows, Matt has predicted as many as 10 potential temples: 3 in Brazil (Belem, Belo Horizonte, or Brasilia); two n the Pacific region (Davao Philippines and (if not in Guam) Tarawa Kiribati); a United States territory (Guam, (if not in Kiribati)); two in Africa (Harare Zimbabwe and Lagos Nigeria); and two others in South America (Managua Nicaragua or Pueblo Mexico) and one in the United States (Rogers Arkansas). Only time will tell how accurate that prediction is, but I always enjoy Brother Martinich's thoughts. Enjoy!
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.
Thursday, March 10, 2016
General Conference Predictions
It's that time of year again, friends, when I post my General Conference predictions. In an effort to make my General Conference predictions more accurate, I have done research back as far as 20 years and have looked at the patterns I've observed. These predictions are the fruits of that research. I have particularly looked this time for patterns as far as how often the general authority seventies speak. The predictions for April include for the first time my educated guess as to the end of the year Church statistics for 2015. Some of the numbers, such as those for stakes and districts, and the number of temples dedicated and rededicated last year were easy to find. For the numbers of full-time missionaries, Church-service missionaries, Church members, ad wards and branches, I used a different formula than I have in years past. I won't try to explain how I arrived at these numbers, but rest assured, it's all been researched. I have also included my list of potential temple sites that President Monson may announce in April. I had a list of 30, and then did some statistical research to fine-tune that list for this prediction.
There are only a few things I am not sure of: whether I've got the correct seventies in the correct slots, how many seventies will speak (which varies based on the length of talks of all other speakers), and who exactly will represent the Presiding Bishopric in speaking at General Conference. With the changes announced shortly after the October General Conference, we have one member of the Bishopric (Bishop Waddell, the second counselor) who has not had a chance to speak in General Conference since his first talk as a general authority several years ago. So he could be the one asked to speak this time. However, in checking on the patterns of Presiding Bishopric speakers, it has typically been (at least for the last few years) in this order: Presiding Bishop, Second Counselor, First Counselor. Since Bishop Causse as the first counselor spoke in April 2015, it would make sense if he, as the Presiding Bishop, spoke this go round, as Bishop Stevenson would have been the one in October had he not been called to the apostleship. But a new bishopric may mean a new pattern. The pattern seems to be for a PB member to speak in the priesthood session every other conference, and its been more than a year since we had a PB member speak in the Priesthood Session. Bishop Causse is the one I put in this time, but we'll see what happens. Just know that if it's not Bishop Causse, it will likely be Bishop Waddell, and that it is more than likely that the PB member will speak in the priesthood session.
I am excited about this general conference. It will mark the first time since they were called last conference that the newest apostles will be giving a full-length talk (15-20 minutes). There are likely to be several new temples, several new General Authorities, and a change in the Primary General Presidency. We will also get the chance to ratify by sustaining of the changes in the Presidency of the Seventy and the Presiding Bishopric. And while I don't know all of the Area Seventies that might be released this conference, we have quite a few that have been called to be mission presidents. So those changes are at least pretty definite.
That being said, here are my predictions for all of you that want to follow along.
There are only a few things I am not sure of: whether I've got the correct seventies in the correct slots, how many seventies will speak (which varies based on the length of talks of all other speakers), and who exactly will represent the Presiding Bishopric in speaking at General Conference. With the changes announced shortly after the October General Conference, we have one member of the Bishopric (Bishop Waddell, the second counselor) who has not had a chance to speak in General Conference since his first talk as a general authority several years ago. So he could be the one asked to speak this time. However, in checking on the patterns of Presiding Bishopric speakers, it has typically been (at least for the last few years) in this order: Presiding Bishop, Second Counselor, First Counselor. Since Bishop Causse as the first counselor spoke in April 2015, it would make sense if he, as the Presiding Bishop, spoke this go round, as Bishop Stevenson would have been the one in October had he not been called to the apostleship. But a new bishopric may mean a new pattern. The pattern seems to be for a PB member to speak in the priesthood session every other conference, and its been more than a year since we had a PB member speak in the Priesthood Session. Bishop Causse is the one I put in this time, but we'll see what happens. Just know that if it's not Bishop Causse, it will likely be Bishop Waddell, and that it is more than likely that the PB member will speak in the priesthood session.
I am excited about this general conference. It will mark the first time since they were called last conference that the newest apostles will be giving a full-length talk (15-20 minutes). There are likely to be several new temples, several new General Authorities, and a change in the Primary General Presidency. We will also get the chance to ratify by sustaining of the changes in the Presidency of the Seventy and the Presiding Bishopric. And while I don't know all of the Area Seventies that might be released this conference, we have quite a few that have been called to be mission presidents. So those changes are at least pretty definite.
That being said, here are my predictions for all of you that want to follow along.
April 2016 General Conference Predictions (Text in
brackets indicated what actually happened.)
Session
|
Conducting
|
Speaker
|
General Women’s
|
Rosemary M. Wixom
|
Linda K. Burton
|
Cheryl A. Esplin
|
||
Neill F. Marriott
|
||
President Henry B. Eyring
|
||
Saturday Morning
|
President Dieter F. Uchtdorf
|
President Henry B. Eyring
|
President Russell M. Nelson
|
||
Elder Gerrit W. Gong
|
||
Mary R. Durham
|
||
Elder Yoon Hwan Choi
|
||
Elder Per G. Malm
|
||
Elder Gary E. Stevenson
|
||
Saturday Afternoon
|
President Henry
B. Eyring
|
President Dieter F. Uchtdorf (Sustaining of Church
Officers)
|
Church Auditing
Department Report, 2015
|
Kevin R. Jergensen
|
|
Statistical Report, 2015
|
Brook P. Hales
|
|
Elder Ronald A. Rasband
|
||
Elder M. Russell Ballard
|
||
Elder Patrick Kearon
|
||
Elder Mervyn B. Arnold
|
||
Elder Neil L. Andersen
|
||
Elder David A. Bednar
|
||
Saturday Priesthood
|
President Dieter F. Uchtdorf
|
Elder Dale G. Renlund
|
Bishop Gerald Causse
|
||
Stephen W. Owen
|
||
President Dieter F. Uchtdorf
|
||
President Henry B. Eyring
|
||
President Thomas S. Monson
|
||
Sunday Morning
|
President Henry B. Eyring
|
President Thomas S. Monson
|
Elder Quentin L. Cook
|
||
Elder Donald L. Hallstrom
|
||
Bonnie L. Oscarson
|
||
Elder Jairo Mazzagardi
|
||
Elder D. Todd Christofferson
|
||
President Dieter F. Uchtdorf
|
||
Sunday Afternoon
|
President Dieter F. Uchtdorf
|
Elder Robert D. Hales
|
Elder Jeffrey R. Holland
|
||
Elder Juan A. Uceda
|
||
Elder Kent F. Richards
|
||
Elder Benjamin De Hoyos
|
||
Elder Steven E. Snow
|
||
Elder Dallin H. Oaks
|
April 2016 Predictions for changes in General Church
Leadership
Presidency of the Seventy: Elder Gerrit W. Gong sustained as a new
member to replace Elder Ronald A. Rasband, who became a member of the Quorum
of the Twelve Apostles in October 2015.
NOTE: Elder Rasband’s call to the apostleship in October 2015 left a
vacancy in the Presidency of the Seventy that was not filled during General
Conference but a couple of days later. Elder L. Whitney Clayton was named the
new senior president of the Seventy (a position previously held by Elder
Rasband), and Elder Gong was called to fill the vacancy. It makes sense that
Elder Gong’s call will be ratified by sustaining vote during this conference.
RESULT:
|
First Quorum of the Seventy: Elder W. Christopher Waddell released in
view of his new calling as Second Counselor in the Presiding Bishopric; new
members sustained from the Second Quorum of the Seventy, Area Seventies, or
the Church at large.
NOTE: Elder Waddell’s call as the new Second Counselor in the
Presiding Bishopric had been announced in October 2015, shortly after General
Conference. It makes sense that this change, along with any sustainings, will
be ratified by sustaining vote during this conference.
RESULT:
|
Second Quorum of the Seventy: New members sustained from Area
Seventies or Church at large.
NOTE: Members of the Second Quorum of the Seventy are usually
sustained in April and released in October, so it makes sense that any
sustainings would be presented in April.
RESULT:
|
Presiding Bishopric: Bishop Gary E. Stevenson released as Presiding
Bishop in view of his call to the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles; Bishop
Gerald Causse released as First Counselor and sustained as the new Presiding
Bishop; Bishop Dean M. Davies released as Second Counselor and sustained as
the new First Counselor; Bishop W. Christopher Waddell sustained as the new
Second Counselor.
NOTE: When Bishop Stevenson was called to the Twelve in October 2015,
he retained the calling of Presiding Bishop until the changes noted above
took place a few days after the conference, so these changes will need to be
ratified by sustaining vote during this conference.
RESULT:
|
Area Seventies: Releases and sustainings for several Area Seventies.
NOTE: It seems to be a common practice for most releases and/or
sustainings of Area Seventies to happen in April, when President Dieter F.
Uchtdorf leads out in the sustaining of Church officers, while only a few
releases and sustainings of Area Seventies happen in October, when President
Henry B. Eyring leads out in the sustaining.
ADDITIONAL NOTE: We know that, at the very least, the following
currently-serving Area Seventies, who have been called to be mission
presidents, will be released: Kent J. Allen, Jeffrey D. Cummings, Hernán D. Ferreira, Brent J. Hillier, Alfred
Kyungu, D. Zackary Smith, Wenceslao
H. Svec, and Fabian I. Vallejo.
RESULT:
|
Primary General Presidency: Rosemary M. Wixom released as President,
Cheryl A. Esplin released as First Counselor, and Mary R. Durham released as
Second Counselor. New Primary General Presidency sustained, perhaps with Mary
R. Durham being sustained as the new Primary General President or one of the
counselors.
NOTE: Rosemary M. Wixom, the Primary General President, and her First
Counselor Cheryl A. Esplin, have served since April 2010, a period spanning 6
years. In the earlier days of the Church, tenures of general auxiliary
presidencies were not set to any specific length of time. But for at least
the last 20 years, tenure lengths for general auxiliary presidencies are
generally set at 5 years (with a minimum of 6 years if new presidency members
are sustained without a total reorganization of the presidency). It makes
sense that Sisters Wixom and Esplin would be released. It has been a
relatively common practice for members of General Presidencies who have been
in a year, as Mary R. Durham has, to be retained in a newly called
presidency. So it would make sense if the changes above take place.
RESULT:
|
Prediction for Church Statistics at the end of 2015
Stakes
|
3,174
|
Missions
|
417
|
Districts
|
580
|
Wards and Branches
|
30,061
|
Total Church Membership
|
15,683,533
|
Children of Record Increase
|
114,655
|
Convert Baptisms
|
307,541
|
Full-Time Missionaries
|
84,091
|
Church Service Missionaries
|
32,102
|
Temples Dedicated
|
5 (Cordoba Argentina, Payson Utah, Trujillo Peru,
Indianapolis Indiana, Tijuana Mexico)
|
Temples Rededicated
|
2 (Mexico City Mexico, Montreal Quebec Canada)
|
Temples Operating
|
149
|
Temple Predictions: 3+ temples announced around the
world, with the most likely candidates being American Samoa (Pago Pago); Arkansas
(Bentonville); Paraguay (Ciudad del Este); Utah (Layton or Lehi); Brazil (Belo
Horizonte); Venezuela (Maracaibo; temple proposed by President Hinckley);
Philippines (Davao); Bolivia (La Paz); Texas (Fort Worth); Colorado (Colorado
Springs); Austria (Vienna); Arizona (Chandler); Mexico (Guadalajara); Guatemala
(Villa Nueva); Ecuador (Quito); New Zealand (Auckland); Texas (Katy); Idaho
(Pocatello); Zimbabwe (Harare); Uganda; Kenya (Nairobi (proposed by President
Hinckley); Nevada (Henderson); Peru (Iquitos);
California (Long Beach); Philippines (Quezon City); Mongolia
(Ulaanbaatar) and Mexico (Cuernavaca).
Well, what do you think?
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, March 1, 2016
My picks for the most likely temple sites that may be announced in the near future
Hello, everyone! I'm back, this time with a different type of post. As many of you know, I follow Matthew Martinich's LDS Church Growth Blog. I have his permission to share his posts on my blog. One thing he does regularly round about general conference time is give his top picks, be they ten or five or more or less, of cities around the world that may have a temple announced soon. Some comments on his latest blog post focus on potential temple sites that may be announced soon. Many of these sites are cities with a strong LDS presence. I had to get on board with that and give my top picks, based on the LDS presence and number of congregations reported in each city I picked. At the top of my list were temples that have been publicly proposed by apostles and Church presidents. I came up with a list of 30 that I think are the most likely ones, which I wanted to share with you in this post. Here's the list, provided with commentary about why I picked them:
I should mention that it would only take 27 of these being announced to make it to the 200 temple mark.With the possibility of having 154 temples by the end of this year, with 160 by the end of 2017, and considering that there may be 3-6 more under construction by then, if an average of 3 temples were completed a year, with an average of 5 temples announced every year, 200 temples by Apirl 6, 2030 could become a reality.
Well, what do you think?
1.
New Dehli India (proposed in 1992 by Elder Neal
A. Maxwell; this temple may be a long time in coming)
2.
Vilnius Lithuania Temple (proposed in 1993 by
Elder M. Russell Ballard: one of the newest ones listed on the LDS Church temples sites, though the proposal is more than 20 years old)
3.
Nairobi Kenya Temple (proposed in 1998 by
President Gordon B. Hinckley; this temple is very likely to be announced soon because of extensive and explosive Church growth)
4.
Maracaibo Venezuela Temple (proposed in 1999 by President
Gordon B. Hinckley; South America has been another region that has really grown in the Church, and I can foresee a day when every country in South America will have a temple.)
5.
Singapore Temple (proposed in 2000 by President
Gordon B. Hinckley; the promise of a temple here is prophetic and will happen soon.)
6.
Southwest Salt Lake Valley Temple (proposed in
2005 by President Gordon B. Hinckley; he stated at the time he mentioned it that a site had been purchased, but they were not ready for an announcement yet. Another temple in the Salt Lake Valley would help combat the heavy load of the temples currently there.)
7.
Managua Nicaragua Temple (proposed in 2012 by
Elder Russell M. Nelson; as noted above, the Church in South America has been growing quite a bit, and I foresee a day when every South American country will have a temple.)
8.
Kasai Region Democratic Republic of the Congo
(proposed in 2016 by Elder Neil L. Andersen; the Church in Africa has really grown, and another temple in the DR of the Congo may be needed very soon.)
9.
Lehi Utah (This is Amy's hometown. Not many cities "need" a temple. Lehi definitely does to combat everything that is going wrong there.)
10. Layton Utah (This city has really expanded. It may very well be the property President Hinckley alluded to above.)
11. Toole,
Utah (The Church membership is high there)
12. Pocatello,
Idaho (This is the only major Idaho city that doesn't currently have a temple, and having one here would be fabulous.)
13. Tacoma,
Washington (With a large number of LDS congregations and no temple within 200 miles, this city is a great candidate for a temple.)
14. Benin
City, Nigeria (The Church has grown a lot in Africa, and a second Nigerian temple would surely be a blessing to the Saints there.)
15. Maracaibo,
Venezuela (Again, I see a day when every South American country will have a temple.)
16. Brasilia,
Brazil (With a high Church presence, Brazil may be a good candidate for several more temples in the near future, especially since no progress has been made on the Fortaleza Brazil temple since its 2011 groundbreaking.)
17. Salvador
Brazil (see above)
18. Harare,
Zimbabwe (The Church has grown so much in Africa that a Zimbabwean temple makes sense.)
19. Puebla,
Mexico (Mexico Church membership has increased substantially.)
20. Queretaro,
Mexico (See above. Multiple new temples for Mexico makes sense.)
21. Cagayan
de Oro, Philippines (With the growth of the Church in the Philippines, another Filipino temple makes sense.)
22. Santa
Cruz, Bolivia (Again, I see a day when every South American nation will have at least one temple.)
23. Quito,
Ecuador (See above.)
24. Auckland,
New Zealand (The Church has grown a lot in the Pacific.)
25. Bentonville,
Arkansas (There's not a temple within 200 miles of this city, so having one there makes sense.)
26. Jacksonville,
Florida (Not sure how busy the other Florida temples are, but a third would surely be a blessing to the Saints there.)
27. San
Pedro Sula, Honduras (Honduras may be ready for a second temple.)
28. Salem,
Oregon (The one other temple in Oregon is busy enough, and the Church has grown enough in Oregon that another temple there makes sense.)
29. Belem,
Brazil (Brazil may be ready for several new temples, especially as no progress as been made on the Fortaleza Brazil temple.)
30. Budapest,
Hungary/Vienna, Austria (Of the two, I see a temple in Austria as the more likely possibility. In this, I am not affected by the fact that Amy served her mission there. It would be great to have a temple there.)
I should mention that it would only take 27 of these being announced to make it to the 200 temple mark.With the possibility of having 154 temples by the end of this year, with 160 by the end of 2017, and considering that there may be 3-6 more under construction by then, if an average of 3 temples were completed a year, with an average of 5 temples announced every year, 200 temples by Apirl 6, 2030 could become a reality.
Well, what do you think?
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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