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Thursday, June 10, 2021

BREAKING TEMPLE NEWS: Site Locations Announced and Preliminary Details Confirmed for Three Temples in the Western United Statles

Hello again, everyone! More breaking temple news has been reported by the Church this morning. The site locations and preliminary details have been confirmed for 3 temples in the Western United States. Each of the three were announced by President Nelson in last April's General Conference, and two of them will be a similar size to the Helena Montana Temple, so I'd anticipate on those two that the site announcements will be followed fairly shortly by released renderings and groundbreakings set to occur in coming months. Let's get to the details.

The Casper Wyoming and Elkn Nevada Temples are each planned to be 10,000 square foot edfices, which will be the sole buildings on the sites in question. The Casper temple will rise at a 9.5 acre site at the intersection of southwest Wyoming Boulevard and Eagle Drive. Meanwhile, the temple in Elko will be buillt adjacent to the southeast corner of Ruby View golf course.

Meanwhile, the tthird temple to have preliminary details unveiled is the Smithfield Utah Temple, which is planned to be a 3-story temple of roughly 81,000 square feet. It is planned to be built on a 13.3 acre site at the interxection of 800 West and 100 North. It appears that the Smithfield Temple will be around the same size as the Lindon Utah Temple, so the exterior rendering for Smithfield, when that is released, may look similar or identical to (or at least have some similar elementsx to) that temple.

Based on the timing of this announcement, it would not shock me in any way if all 3 temples were underway by the end of the year. And again, if swift approval can be obtained for the Casper Wyoming and Elko Nevada Temples, then theey might be likely to also use the modular design and be ready for dedication within 12-15 months of when those projects begin.

On my end, I continue to monitor all such updates and will be sure to bring word of those to you all here. 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, June 9, 2021

BREAKING TEMPLE NEWS: Groundbreaking Date Set for Helena Montana Temple

Hello again, everyone! In early May, when the Church announced an August groundbreaking for the Salvation Brazil Temple, I had theorized that other temple groundbreakings could be scheduled to occur. At the time, I was thinking about the Pago Pago, Neiafu, and Port Moresby Temples in the Pacific. However, I was open to the idea that others could be scheduledl as well.

I am pleased, therefore, to report this mroning that, two months after being announced in the last General Conference, and around 6 weeks after having its' site confirmed and rendering released, a groundbreaking date has been released for the Helena Montana Temple. By contrast to other temples which have had or will have a groundbreaking in the midst of COVID-19, an exact date has been announced for this event. It will take place before the end of this month, on  Saturday June 26.

Elder Vern P. Stanfill, a native of Montana, who is currently serving as First Counselor in the North America Southeast Area and will become the area president in August, will preside at this groundbreaking for the temple  Since he was born and raised in an area less than 35 miles from where the temple will be built, he has various personal connections to the area, which is why he will oversee this groundbreaking outside of his area assignment.

As noted previously, the Helena Montana Temple is anticipated to use modular parts that can be put together on-site and hasten construction on the temple. The construction process is anticipated to take 12-15 months, so a dedication for this temple could easily occur in mid-to-late 2022. As I previously noted, I anticipate that this temple will be a pilot test for how quickly temples of a similar size, design, and used materials can be built.

It will be interesting to see what happens there. 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, June 8, 2021

BREAKING TEMPLE NEWS: Reopening Status Changes Announced for 21 Additional Temples; Church Facilities to Reopen on Temple Square

Hello again, everyone! Within the last few minutes, the Church News and the Newsroom have provided this week's updates on temple reopenings, as further corroborated by the Church News status tracker. I will get to those details shortly, but also wanted to note that there has also been an announcement made this morning that facilities on Temple Square are likewise preparing to reopen to the public. There's a lkot to break down here, so let's get right into all of that.

First, the temple reopenings. The changes announced this week will impact a total of 21 temples in the United States and Mexico. So for starters, 11 templs (7 in the United States and 4 others in Mexico) have transitioned to phase 3, allowing ordinances for the living in the previously-established priority order, in addition to allowing those in the affected temple districts to schedule proxy work.

The phase 3 reopenings are now in effect for the following temples (with United States locations listed first, followed by Mexico's): Baton Rouge Louisiana; Lubbock Texas; Ogden Utah; Oklahoma City Oklahoma; Reno Nevada; St. Louis Missouri and Winter Quarters Nebraska in the United States, and the Guadalajara, Monterrey, Tampico, and Veracruz Temples in Mexico.

Additionally, less than two weeks from now, the following temples will move to phase 2-B: In the United States: Fort Lauderdale and Orlando Florida; St. Paul Minnesota; Manhattan New York; and Detroit Michigan. In Mexico: Ciudad Juarez, Colonia Juarez Chihuahua, and Villahermosa Mexico. In Europe: Freiberg Germany. And in South America: Lima Peru.

Meanwhile, it has been announced that the Port-au-Prince Haiti Temple has paused in its' reopening as the result of  COVID-19 conditions and resulting restrictions. With today's announcement, 14 of the 60 total temples for which a phase 3 reopening was previously announced have officially moved to that phase, leaving the remaining 46 that are anticipated to reopen at some point.

With these announced changes, as of Monday June 14, the Church's temple reopening process will stand as follows: 8 temples are currently closed for renovation ( of those 8 has been given a phase 1 designation, while 5 others have been granted a designation of phase 2-B. That allows those living in the affected districts to schedule the authorized living or proxy work at the temple closest to the one to which they are currently assigned. 

1 temple (Kyiv Ukraine) remains closed. 6 previously-reopened temples remain paused (3 had reached phase 3, 2 were in phase 2-B, and 1 had reached phase 1). As far as officially reopened temples, as of next Monday, there will be 2 remaining in phase 1; 30 in phase 2; 80 in phase 2-B; and the remaining 41 in phase 3. The information released today also notes that by the end of July, at least 139 of the Church's total 168 operating temples will be designated for proxy work.

That wraps up coverage of the temple reopenings. We now turn to the other breaking development, the reopening of several facilities on Temple Square to the public. The way that will work is by allowing limited in-person tours by small groups, with options for virtual tours online remaining available as well. The Conference Center will be the first to reopen, and that is set to occur on Monday. The fact that that facility is reopening for tours will not change the parameters announced yesterday for the October General Conference.

On July 8, the Assembly Hall and Tabernacle will reopen, as will the Family History and Church History Libraries.  Then on August 2, the Beehive House and Church History Museum will reopen.  Further specific details are available through the Newsroom and Church News releases, including information about the recommended health and safety protocols in play.

I am grateful to have been able to learn of these breaking news updates and to have passed them along to you all here. I continue to monitor all such developments (Church news and temple updates) and will be sure to pass those along as well when I come acorss them. I have also revised my predictions for the upcoming General Conference and hope to have those posted within the next 24 hours or less.


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.