Hello again, everyone! As indicated by the Church of Jesus Christ Temples webpage for the Abidjan Ivory Coast Temple, the groundbreaking for that temple has been confirmed. This confirmation has not yet been posted on the main English edition of the Newsroom on the Church's website, but was posted 4 days ago on the edition of the Newsroom for Ghana. I imagine therefore that the confirmation from the main newsroom will occur within the next few days. The ceremony is set to occur on November 8, 2018, at 10:00 AM Ivory Coast time (which is 4:00 AM on the same day here in Utah)..
It is nice to have this confirmed. From the image of this temple, it appears to be a smaller one, which may take between 18-24 months to construct. For that reason, I will be adding a potential initial completion estimate for that temple to my report, and I will set it to mid-to-late 2020.
I also wanted to note as well that I do not yet have any additional word on anything else upcoming in terms of future temple groundbreakings, but if President Nelson felt impressed to announce 19 temples this year, then I am sure he will likewise be putting into place something to enable temples to move more swiftly from announcement to groundbreaking to dedication.
And it would not surprise me if all of the temples currently announced (with the definite exception of Bangkok Thailand and Pocatello Idaho, and the possible exception of 2-3 others), were to be on that smaller side. Some will certainly need to be larger, but if the Church can do so, I believe that the most feasible option would be to rapidly build a bunch of smaller temples.
From what we also know (in view of recent developments) at least the Nairobi Kenya Temple, for which land has been selected but not yet publicly identified, that temple is anticipated to be dedicated at some point in 2021. So that one is almost sure to have a groundbreaking within the next 6-8 months if not sooner. I continue to monitor all such developments and will post word of them here as they are disclosed.
That does it for this post. Any and all comments are, as always, welcome and appreciated, on any post, at any time. Thank you for the privilege of your time. If you enjoyed what you read here and would like to stay informed of newly-added content, please feel free to subscribe. Until my next post, I wish each one of you all the best and pray that the Lord will bless you all in everything you do.
On this blog, I, James Stokes, share insights and analysis covering the latest news and developments reported about The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. My specific emphasis and focus is on the ministry of our current apostles, General Conference, and up-to-date temple information. This site is neither officially owned, operated, or endorsed by the Church, and I, as the autthor thereof, am solely responsible for this content.
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Monday, October 8, 2018
BREAKING NEWS: Groundbreaking Confirmed for Abidjan Ivory Coast Temple
Labels:
Breaking News,
Estimated Time-frames for Future Temple Events,
Scheduled Temple Event,
Temple Construction Update
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.
President M. Russell Ballard Celebrates His 90th Birthday; Lays His Wife to Rest
Hello again, everyone! With the stunning General Conference developments that occurred, I somehow spaced the fact that both President Ballard's 90th birthday would be observed and his wife's funeral would be held. There's a lot to discuss, so let's dive right in.
\
First of all, in relation to the funeral services for Barbara B. Ballard, as of the time this post was written, I could not find any coverage of it. I assume that will be provided later today, so I will pass word of that along to you all as I receive it.
In the meantime, as it is President Ballard's 90th birthday, he now joins the ranks of nonagenarian apostles, becoming the 19th man on that list. On Wednesday, November 14, 2018, he will assume the 18th spot currently held by J. Reuben Clark. His next milestone on that list will be observed on Thursday February 21, 2019, at which point he will have lived longer than President Thomas S. Monson. As far as I am aware, he (President Ballard) remains in fairly good health, and is actively directing the business before the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles.
That said, let's get to some biographical details. Melvin Russell Ballard Jr. was born in Salt Lake City Utah to Melvin Russell Sr. & Geraldine Smith Ballard, on this day in 1928. Both his paternal & maternal grandfathers (Melvin J. Ballard & Hyrum M. Smith) were apostles, and Elder Ballard is thus a direct descendant of the early leaders of the Church (Hyrum M. was the son of Joseph F., who was the son of Hyrum Smith, brother of the Prophet Joseph Smith).
As I previously mentioned, the Church has, by tradition, had at least one apostle currently serving who has ancestral ties to the Smith family. It is further interesting to note that Bruce R. McConkie, who was the last apostle indirectly related to the Smith family (being the son-in-law of Joseph Fielding Smith, who was the son of Joseph F. who was the son of Hyrum, who was the brother of the Prophet Joseph Smith), was the apostle whose death resulted in the apostolic vacancy that necessitated Elder Ballard's call.
He served as a missionary in England, as has been noted in previous blog posts. Upon his return, he served in the US Army Reserves, where he rose to the rank of First Lieutenant. As a result of obtaining his secondary education from the University of Utah, he met a young lady named Barbara Bowen, whom he married on August 8, 1951 in the Salt Lake Temple. As noted earlier, she died on October 1 of this year, and was laid to rest today.
They became the parents of 7 children, and one of their daughters, Brynn, married Peter Huntsman, whose mother, Karen Haight Huntsman, is the daughter of Elder David B. Haight, one of Elder Ballard's apostolic colleagues. It is interesting to see that additional relationship Elder Ballard has to other LDS apostles.
Brother Ballard worked professionally in auto sales. His Church service included serving as a counselor to his mission president, as a bishop twice, and as president of the Canada Toronto Mission. He completed the final year of that assignment as a General Authority Seventy, having received that call in April 1976.
Less than four years later, on February 20, 1980, he was called to the Presidency of the Seventy. In the August 1985 Ensign, Church leaders reported that they had created an international mission, which would be supervised from Salt Lake City for the purpose of ministering to members in outlying areas in which no formal Church units had been formed, and Elder Ballard was asked to preside over that mission in his capacity as a member of the Presidency of the Seventy. Within the next 5 years and 7 months or so, he had become the third most senior member of that Presidency. In the October 1985 General Conference, as a result of the death of Elder Bruce R. McConkie just over 5 months earlier, M. Russell Ballard was called to the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles.
Elder Ballard is known and respected for the emphasis he has placed on missionary work in his apostolic ministry. Since October 1985, he has moved from the position of the junior apostle to now being the 3rd in apostolic seniority. In his 33 years as an apostle, he has given 67 talks in General Conference: in addition to the 9 he gave in his previous capacities as a General Authority Seventy and in the Presidency of the Seventy, that brings his total number of General Conference talks to 76 (which includes the one he gave during this last General Conference, for which the transcript will be available later this week). All of these addresses are well worthy of review.
As I mentioned above, his wife's funeral was held today, and I will be bringing a report of those services to you as soon as such information becomes available. In the meantime, I am grateful for the life, ministry, and serve of President Melvin Russell Ballard and hope he will, in spite of his wife's funeral, be able to have a good day today.
That does it for this post. Any and all comments are, as always, welcome and appreciated, on any post at any time. 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.
\
First of all, in relation to the funeral services for Barbara B. Ballard, as of the time this post was written, I could not find any coverage of it. I assume that will be provided later today, so I will pass word of that along to you all as I receive it.
In the meantime, as it is President Ballard's 90th birthday, he now joins the ranks of nonagenarian apostles, becoming the 19th man on that list. On Wednesday, November 14, 2018, he will assume the 18th spot currently held by J. Reuben Clark. His next milestone on that list will be observed on Thursday February 21, 2019, at which point he will have lived longer than President Thomas S. Monson. As far as I am aware, he (President Ballard) remains in fairly good health, and is actively directing the business before the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles.
That said, let's get to some biographical details. Melvin Russell Ballard Jr. was born in Salt Lake City Utah to Melvin Russell Sr. & Geraldine Smith Ballard, on this day in 1928. Both his paternal & maternal grandfathers (Melvin J. Ballard & Hyrum M. Smith) were apostles, and Elder Ballard is thus a direct descendant of the early leaders of the Church (Hyrum M. was the son of Joseph F., who was the son of Hyrum Smith, brother of the Prophet Joseph Smith).
As I previously mentioned, the Church has, by tradition, had at least one apostle currently serving who has ancestral ties to the Smith family. It is further interesting to note that Bruce R. McConkie, who was the last apostle indirectly related to the Smith family (being the son-in-law of Joseph Fielding Smith, who was the son of Joseph F. who was the son of Hyrum, who was the brother of the Prophet Joseph Smith), was the apostle whose death resulted in the apostolic vacancy that necessitated Elder Ballard's call.
He served as a missionary in England, as has been noted in previous blog posts. Upon his return, he served in the US Army Reserves, where he rose to the rank of First Lieutenant. As a result of obtaining his secondary education from the University of Utah, he met a young lady named Barbara Bowen, whom he married on August 8, 1951 in the Salt Lake Temple. As noted earlier, she died on October 1 of this year, and was laid to rest today.
They became the parents of 7 children, and one of their daughters, Brynn, married Peter Huntsman, whose mother, Karen Haight Huntsman, is the daughter of Elder David B. Haight, one of Elder Ballard's apostolic colleagues. It is interesting to see that additional relationship Elder Ballard has to other LDS apostles.
Brother Ballard worked professionally in auto sales. His Church service included serving as a counselor to his mission president, as a bishop twice, and as president of the Canada Toronto Mission. He completed the final year of that assignment as a General Authority Seventy, having received that call in April 1976.
Less than four years later, on February 20, 1980, he was called to the Presidency of the Seventy. In the August 1985 Ensign, Church leaders reported that they had created an international mission, which would be supervised from Salt Lake City for the purpose of ministering to members in outlying areas in which no formal Church units had been formed, and Elder Ballard was asked to preside over that mission in his capacity as a member of the Presidency of the Seventy. Within the next 5 years and 7 months or so, he had become the third most senior member of that Presidency. In the October 1985 General Conference, as a result of the death of Elder Bruce R. McConkie just over 5 months earlier, M. Russell Ballard was called to the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles.
Elder Ballard is known and respected for the emphasis he has placed on missionary work in his apostolic ministry. Since October 1985, he has moved from the position of the junior apostle to now being the 3rd in apostolic seniority. In his 33 years as an apostle, he has given 67 talks in General Conference: in addition to the 9 he gave in his previous capacities as a General Authority Seventy and in the Presidency of the Seventy, that brings his total number of General Conference talks to 76 (which includes the one he gave during this last General Conference, for which the transcript will be available later this week). All of these addresses are well worthy of review.
As I mentioned above, his wife's funeral was held today, and I will be bringing a report of those services to you as soon as such information becomes available. In the meantime, I am grateful for the life, ministry, and serve of President Melvin Russell Ballard and hope he will, in spite of his wife's funeral, be able to have a good day today.
That does it for this post. Any and all comments are, as always, welcome and appreciated, on any post at any time. Thank you for the privilege of your time. If you enjoyed what you read here and would like to stay informed of newly-added content, please feel free to subscribe. Until my next post, I wish each one of you all the best and pray that the Lord will bless you all in everything you do.
Labels:
Apostolic Age & Tenure Milestones,
Apostolic Ministry & Travels,
General Church News,
General Conference,
Sustaining the Brethren
I have had a lifelong love for Church history, which has extended to ongoing reports of the ministry of our apostles and prophets, General Conference, and all temple developments. This blog enables me to share that love with all who read my thoughts on these developments, which are sometimes reported multiple times per day as needed.
Sunday, October 7, 2018
Some Thoughts About Temple Progress (and the Most Likely Location for the Washington County Temple)
Hello again, everyone! Given the announcement around 2.5 hours ago of 12 new temples, I thought I would provide some updated thoughts about temple progress. Among other things, I will be discussing the timing within which some of the 30 announced temples might have a groundbreaking, and also share some thoughts about the most likely location for the temple announced in Washington County.
Let's jump right in. First, the Church could (and likely will soon) confirm the November 8, 2018 groundbreaking for the Abidjan Ivory Coast Temple. If we do not soon hear an announcement on the groundbreaking fro the Urdaneta Philippines Temple, that temple could begin full-scale construction without a formal groundbreaking (although the last temple for which that happened was the Paris France Temple, the contractor and his equipment are already on site for the Urdaneta Philippines Temple, where a construction barrier has been erected. So either there is a lot of preliminary work to do before the temple has a formal groundbreaking, or there will be no groundbreaking, and construction will merely commence.
The Pocatello Idaho and Saratoga Springs Utah Temples both seem to be a lock to have groundbreakings occur within the first six months of next year, if not sooner. We may not hear anything about a groundbreaking for the Bangkok Thailand Temple for the next little while, unless and until the one building remaining on site is both vacated and razed.
I additionally am anticipating that, within the next 15 months, as we learn more, the Lima Peru Los Olivos, Nairobi Kenya, Brasilia Brazil, Greater Manila Philippines, Harare Zimbabwe, Layton Utah, and Richmond Virginia temples could each have a groundbreaking as well. If that occurs for each of these temples, that trims the list of those that have not had construction begin yet from 31 down to 19.
And if reports (which indicate that the Church has hired and will continue to hire additional personnel for the temple department), then the Church could very easily go from a current backlog of 31 down to 7 or less within the course of the next couple of years. Within that same time, I would also anticipate that other massive series of additional new temples could be announced as well.
As I observed in my previous post, there are now 201 temples of the Church in various stages of the construction process. If all but one of those were to be operating by that time (which would enable the Church to reach the milestone of 200 operating temples), since 159 are currently in operation, only 41 others would need to be completed in the 11.5 years between today and the bicentennial anniversary of the Church's reestablishment (which is set to occur on Saturday April 6, 2030).
Of those 41, 11 are currently under construction, and 1 soon will be (if the Church confirms the information about the planned groundbreaking for the Abidjan Ivory Coast Temple). So if we subtract that total of 12, only 19 more would need to begin and finish with the construction process during that 11.5 years.That means, as long as 2-3 temples begin construction each year, there is no scenario in which the Church would be unlikely to have 200 operating temples by that date. And I would personally anticipate that there will likely be far more than that around that time, if all continues to go well.
In the meantime, I also wanted to pass along some information I have drawn up about the most likely location for the Washington County Utah Temple, which is 1 of the 12 temples that were announced today. I am figuring that the Church would want to build it in a main city (rather than one of the more urban or rural locales). I first measured the distance from Cedar City to St. George, cut that distance roughly in half, and used the resulting mileage (26.1) to try and find the most likely prospect. Here's the information I compiled:
Let's jump right in. First, the Church could (and likely will soon) confirm the November 8, 2018 groundbreaking for the Abidjan Ivory Coast Temple. If we do not soon hear an announcement on the groundbreaking fro the Urdaneta Philippines Temple, that temple could begin full-scale construction without a formal groundbreaking (although the last temple for which that happened was the Paris France Temple, the contractor and his equipment are already on site for the Urdaneta Philippines Temple, where a construction barrier has been erected. So either there is a lot of preliminary work to do before the temple has a formal groundbreaking, or there will be no groundbreaking, and construction will merely commence.
The Pocatello Idaho and Saratoga Springs Utah Temples both seem to be a lock to have groundbreakings occur within the first six months of next year, if not sooner. We may not hear anything about a groundbreaking for the Bangkok Thailand Temple for the next little while, unless and until the one building remaining on site is both vacated and razed.
I additionally am anticipating that, within the next 15 months, as we learn more, the Lima Peru Los Olivos, Nairobi Kenya, Brasilia Brazil, Greater Manila Philippines, Harare Zimbabwe, Layton Utah, and Richmond Virginia temples could each have a groundbreaking as well. If that occurs for each of these temples, that trims the list of those that have not had construction begin yet from 31 down to 19.
And if reports (which indicate that the Church has hired and will continue to hire additional personnel for the temple department), then the Church could very easily go from a current backlog of 31 down to 7 or less within the course of the next couple of years. Within that same time, I would also anticipate that other massive series of additional new temples could be announced as well.
As I observed in my previous post, there are now 201 temples of the Church in various stages of the construction process. If all but one of those were to be operating by that time (which would enable the Church to reach the milestone of 200 operating temples), since 159 are currently in operation, only 41 others would need to be completed in the 11.5 years between today and the bicentennial anniversary of the Church's reestablishment (which is set to occur on Saturday April 6, 2030).
Of those 41, 11 are currently under construction, and 1 soon will be (if the Church confirms the information about the planned groundbreaking for the Abidjan Ivory Coast Temple). So if we subtract that total of 12, only 19 more would need to begin and finish with the construction process during that 11.5 years.That means, as long as 2-3 temples begin construction each year, there is no scenario in which the Church would be unlikely to have 200 operating temples by that date. And I would personally anticipate that there will likely be far more than that around that time, if all continues to go well.
In the meantime, I also wanted to pass along some information I have drawn up about the most likely location for the Washington County Utah Temple, which is 1 of the 12 temples that were announced today. I am figuring that the Church would want to build it in a main city (rather than one of the more urban or rural locales). I first measured the distance from Cedar City to St. George, cut that distance roughly in half, and used the resulting mileage (26.1) to try and find the most likely prospect. Here's the information I compiled:
Potential locations for Washington County Temple (optimal
goal is half-way between St. George and Cedar City, which would be a distance
of 26.1 miles)
Hurricane (18.4 miles from St. George; 36.9 miles from
Cedar City)
La Verkin (20.7 miles from St. George; 38.1 miles from
Cedar City)
Toquerville (23.2 miles from St. George; 34.6 miles from
Cedar City)
I can see each of these locations as a worthy prospect. The biggest merit of the first (Hurricane), in my mind, is that, if memory serves me correctly, some of my more-distant-but-still-extended family members live there. The Church has also periodically built a temple in places that are hard to pronounce (along the lines of Quetzeltenango Guatemala, a city of which President Monson, in talking of the planned dedication for that temple, quipped "Don't spell it!"
But of the three major cities, Toquerville comes in as nearest to the average mileage distance between the temples in Cedar City and St. George, which may make that city a shoo-in. Perhaps, however, the Church would look to a smaller or less prominent locality as the prospective place for this temple.
Either way, if the announcement of 19 temples during 2018 tells us anything, it is that President Nelson will get right down to business in terms of new temple announcements, and that if the currently-announced temples are, in a similar vein, able to have construction begin and progress swiftly, we are indeed in for a windfall or landslide of temple announcements, perhaps on more than one occasion, in the near future.
Whatever happens in that regard, you can certainly count on my passing such news along as I become aware of it. Stay tuned for those developments, which I continue to monitor on an ongoing basis. That does it for this post. Any and all comments are, as always, welcome and appreciated, on any post at any time.
Thank you for the privilege of your time. If you enjoyed what you read here and would like to stay informed of newly-added content, please feel free to subscribe. Until my next post, I wish each one of you all the best and pray that the Lord will bless you all in everything you do.
Labels:
Estimated Time-frames for Future Temple Events,
General Church News,
Potential Future Temples
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.
BREAKING NEWS: President Nelson Announces A Record 12 New Temples
Hello again, everyone! As was anticipated, President Russell M. Nelson closed the conference by announcing his plans to rapidly increase and expand the number of temples (which will be done by , and, that in order to do so, pioneer-generation temples would be renovated. 12 new temples were announced for Mendoza Argentina; Salvador Brazil; Yuba City, California; Phnom Pehn, Cambodia; Praia Cape Verde; Yigo Guam; Puebla Mexico; Auckland New Zealand; Lagos Nigeria; Davao Philippines; San Juan Puerto Rico; and Washington County Utah. This brings the total number of temples in any phase to a whopping 201.
Let me just interject a couple of personal observations here: I had Salvador Brazil, Phnom Pehn Cambodia, Praia Cape Verde, Puebla Mexico, Auckland New Zealand, Lagos Nigeria, Davao Philippines, and San Juan Puerto Rico as exact locations for temples on one of my three lists (Cambodia was my top pick for Asia before I replaced it with one for Mongolia, but I am glad the Lord confirmed my justification of the original choice). I had long felt that Lagos was the top pick for the second Nigerian temple, and I am grateful the Lord verified that. Similarly, Salvador Brazil, Praia Cape Verde, Puebla Mexico, Auckland New Zealand, and Davao Philippines have all been on my list for a while.
He also mentioned that many "Pioneer-generation temples", including the one in Salt Lake City, will be closing for significant upgrades, repairs, and renovations, with details to be announced soon. That means that the weekly Thursday meeting of the apostles will need to take place in another temple nearby. And we will hopefully learn more about which particular temples will be renovated soon, and about the specifics relating to But the announcement of the 12 temples was wonderful. It means that, unless something happens to stall any of these temples, each of them could be under construction within the next 4-5 years. And it also means that, unless there are massive delays in clearing the backlog of the now 31 announced temples, the Church will almost definitely have at least 200 temples in operation by April 6, 2030, as there are 201 in various phases as of today.
With all of that in mind, the next several years will surely be full of temple events. To the best of my ability, I will continue to monitor all such news and will pass word of it along to you all as I receive it. In the meantime, we are sure to hear more details about future temple renovations in the near future, including that for the Salt Lake Temple. I was likewise intrigued today by the fact that President Henry B. Eyring only addressed the general Church membership at the beginning of the Sunday Afternoon Session. This marked the first time (insofar as I am aware) in which a counselor in the First Presidency spoke during the Sunday Afternoon Session. Could that also be a new tradition? We will have to see.
I hope that these thoughts, such as they have been, are helpful to you. That does it for this post. Any and all comments are, as always, welcome and appreciated, on any post at any time. 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.
Let me just interject a couple of personal observations here: I had Salvador Brazil, Phnom Pehn Cambodia, Praia Cape Verde, Puebla Mexico, Auckland New Zealand, Lagos Nigeria, Davao Philippines, and San Juan Puerto Rico as exact locations for temples on one of my three lists (Cambodia was my top pick for Asia before I replaced it with one for Mongolia, but I am glad the Lord confirmed my justification of the original choice). I had long felt that Lagos was the top pick for the second Nigerian temple, and I am grateful the Lord verified that. Similarly, Salvador Brazil, Praia Cape Verde, Puebla Mexico, Auckland New Zealand, and Davao Philippines have all been on my list for a while.
He also mentioned that many "Pioneer-generation temples", including the one in Salt Lake City, will be closing for significant upgrades, repairs, and renovations, with details to be announced soon. That means that the weekly Thursday meeting of the apostles will need to take place in another temple nearby. And we will hopefully learn more about which particular temples will be renovated soon, and about the specifics relating to But the announcement of the 12 temples was wonderful. It means that, unless something happens to stall any of these temples, each of them could be under construction within the next 4-5 years. And it also means that, unless there are massive delays in clearing the backlog of the now 31 announced temples, the Church will almost definitely have at least 200 temples in operation by April 6, 2030, as there are 201 in various phases as of today.
With all of that in mind, the next several years will surely be full of temple events. To the best of my ability, I will continue to monitor all such news and will pass word of it along to you all as I receive it. In the meantime, we are sure to hear more details about future temple renovations in the near future, including that for the Salt Lake Temple. I was likewise intrigued today by the fact that President Henry B. Eyring only addressed the general Church membership at the beginning of the Sunday Afternoon Session. This marked the first time (insofar as I am aware) in which a counselor in the First Presidency spoke during the Sunday Afternoon Session. Could that also be a new tradition? We will have to see.
I hope that these thoughts, such as they have been, are helpful to you. That does it for this post. Any and all comments are, as always, welcome and appreciated, on any post at any time. Thank you for the privilege of your time. If you enjoyed what you read here and would like to stay informed of newly-added content, please feel free to subscribe. Until my next post, I wish each one of you all the best and pray that the Lord will bless you all in everything you do.
Labels:
Breaking News,
Church Policies and Major Announcements,
Church President,
General Conference,
Temple Construction Update,
Temples Undergoing Renovation
I have had a lifelong love for Church history, which has extended to ongoing reports of the ministry of our apostles and prophets, General Conference, and all temple developments. This blog enables me to share that love with all who read my thoughts on these developments, which are sometimes reported multiple times per day as needed.
General Conference Update: President Nelson Reemphasizes Accurate Usage of Church's Name
Hello again, everyone! While no major new announcements have been made since yesterday morning, President Nelson focused his remarks in the Sunday Morning Session of General Conference on providing more information about the statement he released a couple of months ago, in which he reemphasized proper usage of the name of the Church.
The Newsroom section on the Church's official website shared this article which highlighted some of the things he said. The article speaks for itself, so I won't add anything personally. But I did want to note that President Henry B. Eyring has not yet given an address to the Church during the general sessions of this General Conference. He did speak during the Women's Session, and was asked to present changes in Church leadership during the session before that, but has not spoken otherwise. With one session left, I imagine he will speak at some point during the final session.
In the meantime, while it is still unknown whether or not we will learn more about President Nelson's temple-building plans, it appears that at least a few temples may be announced. And at least one will be, as I confirmed through the Church of Jesus Christ Temples Site. Another unknown is if anything else will be announced, which is possible. We earlier heard rumors of something changing in terms of the Church's missionary efforts. But if such a change were in the works, then I imagine at least one member of the Missionary Executive Council would have been held in reserve to detail those changes. And all four apostles serving on that council (Elders Uchtdorf, Christofferson, Andersen, and Soares) have already spoken to us.
Either way, it will be interesting to see what unfolds over the course of the last session. If any breaking news occurs, I will be sure to pass word of it along to you all as I hear of it. That does it for this post. Any and all comments are, as always, welcome and appreciated, on any post at any time. Thank you for the privilege of your time. If you enjoyed what you read here and would like to stay informed of newly-added content, please feel free to subscribe. Until my next post, I wish each one of you all the best and pray that the Lord will bless you all in everything you do.
The Newsroom section on the Church's official website shared this article which highlighted some of the things he said. The article speaks for itself, so I won't add anything personally. But I did want to note that President Henry B. Eyring has not yet given an address to the Church during the general sessions of this General Conference. He did speak during the Women's Session, and was asked to present changes in Church leadership during the session before that, but has not spoken otherwise. With one session left, I imagine he will speak at some point during the final session.
In the meantime, while it is still unknown whether or not we will learn more about President Nelson's temple-building plans, it appears that at least a few temples may be announced. And at least one will be, as I confirmed through the Church of Jesus Christ Temples Site. Another unknown is if anything else will be announced, which is possible. We earlier heard rumors of something changing in terms of the Church's missionary efforts. But if such a change were in the works, then I imagine at least one member of the Missionary Executive Council would have been held in reserve to detail those changes. And all four apostles serving on that council (Elders Uchtdorf, Christofferson, Andersen, and Soares) have already spoken to us.
Either way, it will be interesting to see what unfolds over the course of the last session. If any breaking news occurs, I will be sure to pass word of it along to you all as I hear of it. That does it for this post. Any and all comments are, as always, welcome and appreciated, on any post at any time. Thank you for the privilege of your time. If you enjoyed what you read here and would like to stay informed of newly-added content, please feel free to subscribe. Until my next post, I wish each one of you all the best and pray that the Lord will bless you all in everything you do.
Labels:
Church Policies and Major Announcements,
Church President,
First Presidency,
General Conference,
Potential Future Temples
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.
Saturday, October 6, 2018
Updated Temple Construction Progress Report
Hello again, everyone! Having taken some time to analyze newly-reported developments within the last 12 hours in which the Church of Jesus Christ Temples site has again been operational, I am posting a fully updated copy of my temple construction progress report. The degree of the reported developments (including vast changes in the order and time-frames within which the Church may complete new temples and those undergoing renovation), it is necessary for me to publish my fully-updated report.
The updates follow below, and since there has been a dramatic and drastic shift in some of the general completion estimates, I will need to fully rethink my previously-offered and more specific time-frames for these events. And given the fact that all of that may largely depend on what we hear about temples this weekend, I have removed all notes except the most relevant ones.
That does it for this post. Any and all comments are, as always, welcome and appreciated, on any post at any time. Thank you for the privilege of your time. If you enjoyed what you read here and would like to stay informed of newly-added content, please feel free to subscribe. Until my next post, I wish each one of you all the best and pray that the Lord will bless you all in everything you do.
The updates follow below, and since there has been a dramatic and drastic shift in some of the general completion estimates, I will need to fully rethink my previously-offered and more specific time-frames for these events. And given the fact that all of that may largely depend on what we hear about temples this weekend, I have removed all notes except the most relevant ones.
That does it for this post. Any and all comments are, as always, welcome and appreciated, on any post at any time. 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.
Temple
Construction Progress (current as of 10/6/18)
Note about future temple construction: I have previously referenced the statement made by
Elder Larry Y. Wilson, who serves as the Temple Department Executive Director,
to the effect that 80 temples were on a list of locations that would be
considered for an official announcement within the 15 years following that
statement. And although we may not know whether or not those 80 locations have
been announced by late April 2032, it seems reasonable to believe that the
Church could (and likely will) have 200 operating temples by or before Saturday
April 6, 2030 (which will mark the Church’s bicentennial anniversary). In order
to do so, the Church would just need to complete the 30 temples in various
phases, and announce and complete 11 others in the 11.50
years between now and then, which could be done if 3.57
temples are dedicated each year. Although this year will see only 2 temple
dedications, there are 5 or 6 anticipated in 2019, and at least 3 that we know
of so far the following year. So I am confident the Church will have at least
200 in operation by that time, whether or not an official goal is made to do
so.
Current temple status: The Church has 189 temples in various phases. There are 159 in operation, while 1 other has an open house underway; 3 more have
a dedication scheduled; and 7 others are in various phases of
construction. In terms of temples undergoing renovations, 10 temples are currently closed for renovation (5 or 6 of which are anticipated to be
rededicated next year), and 1 other,
which closed for renovation in late 2017, is currently stalled in its’
renovation process. The remaining 19 are
announced, with at least 1 temple which is anticipated to have a
groundbreaking by the end of 2018, while several others are likely to have a
groundbreaking in 2019 and the years following that.
Public open
house underway:
160. Concepcion Chile Temple: Public open house underway
(will go through Saturday October 13, excluding the relevant Sundays); dedication
scheduled to occur on Sunday October 28,
2018.
Note:
On September 26, 2018, a published article shared on Facebook indicated that
President Nelson would preside at the dedication of this temple. Since Elder
Jeffrey R. Holland served for two years in what was then the Chile Area of the
Church, it would not surprise me if he were to accompany President Nelson to
this dedication.
Preparing
for public open house:
161. Barranquilla
Colombia Temple: Planting final flowers in flowerbeds;
preparing for public open house (which will begin in exactly 4 weeks); dedication
scheduled to occur on Sunday December 9,
2018.
Dedication
Scheduled:
162. Rome Italy Temple: Exterior
doors installed; sod laid; flower beds being planted; dedication
scheduled to occur from Sunday March 10-Sunday
March 17, 2019.
163. Kinshasa
Democratic Republic of the Congo Temple: Laying
driveway and walkway pavers; planting trees and shrubs; dedication
scheduled to occur on Sunday April 14,
2019.
Under construction, completion estimated
during 2019:
164. Fortaleza Brazil Temple: Exterior
lighting underway; completion estimated sometime during early-to-mid 2019.
165. Durban South Africa Temple: Finishing
the temple tower surfaces; tiling the roof, floors, and walls; finish work
continues on stairwells; completion estimated sometime during mid-to-late
2019.
166. Port-au-Prince Haiti Temple: Waterproofing
exterior walls; pouring street curbing and sidewalk; completion
estimated sometime during mid-to-late 2019.
167. Lisbon Portugal
Temple: Stone cladding exterior walls; installing
lamp-posts; planting trees and shrubs; completion estimated sometime
during mid-2019.
Temples estimated to be completed
sometime during 2020:
168. Arequipa Peru Temple: Stone
cladding being added to tower; completion estimated sometime during early
2020.
169. Rio de Janeiro Brazil Temple: Stone
cladding and waterproofing the exterior walls; completion estimated
sometime during early 2020.
170. Winnipeg Manitoba Temple: Plumbing
and foundation work underway for on-site chapel; completion estimated
sometime during mid-2020.
Groundbreaking scheduled (official confirmation
pending):
171. Abidjan Ivory Coast Temple: Preparing for groundbreaking;
groundbreaking scheduled for November 8,
2018.
Note: African members report that they were
advised by a letter from Church leaders that this temple would have a
groundbreaking on this date, and that Elder Neil L. Andersen would preside over
it. That has not yet been confirmed through an official Church announcement,
hence the date is listed in italics.
Undergoing Renovation (rededication estimated
sometime during 2019):
41. Frankfurt Germany Temple: Closed for renovation;
reattaching cladding to temple exterior; staircase to extended parking area
poured; completion estimated sometime during mid-2019.
13. Oakland California Temple: Closed for renovation;
cleaning and repairing exterior walls; water features
being upgraded; rededication estimated sometime during mid-2019.
95. Oklahoma City Oklahoma Temple: Closed for renovation; angel
Moroni statue reinstalled on September 10, 2018; rededication estimated
sometime during mid-to-late 2019.
80. Memphis Tennessee Temple: Closed for renovation; stone cladding continues on exterior walls; rededication
estimated sometime during mid-to-late 2019.
68. Raleigh North Carolina Temple: Closed for renovation; stone
cladding continues; rededication estimated sometime during late 2019.
94. Baton Rouge Louisiana Temple: Closed for renovation; waterproofing membrane applied to exterior; rededication
estimated sometime during late 2019.
Undergoing Renovation (rededication
estimated sometime during 2020):
18. Tokyo Japan Temple: Closed for renovation; scaffolding
and debris netting put up around exterior; rededication
estimated sometime during early-to-mid 2020.
16. Washington D. C. Temple: Closed for renovation; repairs
continue on temple spires; rededication may take
place sometime during mid-to-late 2020.
8. Mesa Arizona Temple: Closed for renovation; grounds
cleared; interior work underway; rededication may take place sometime
during mid-to-late 2020.
Undergoing Renovation (rededication
estimated sometime during 2021):
11. Hamilton New Zealand Temple: Closed for renovation; dismantling interior; rededication may take place
sometime during early-to-mid 2021.
Renovation process stalled; full-scale
work pending:
112. Asuncion Paraguay Temple: Closed for renovation; full-scale
construction pending.
Announced Temples:
172. Urdaneta Philippines Temple: Site preparation phase; construction barrier in place.
173. Pocatello Idaho Temple: Laying asphalt for streets; site confirmed and
artist’s rendering released on September 6, 2018; groundbreaking
anticipated in early 2019.
174. Saratoga Springs Utah
Temple: Government approval phase.
175. Bangkok Thailand Temple: Artist’s
rendering and site announcement released on
March 19, 2018; groundbreaking pending.
Note: Although the rendering and site location for
this temple was one of the first temple-related announcements of President
Nelson’s prophetic administration, unless and until verification is provided
that the on-site office building has been razed and that the site is cleared,
it does not appear likely that the Church will break ground on this temple this
year.
176. Lima Peru Los Olivos Temple: Planning and
preliminary construction phase; awaiting official site announcement.
177. Nairobi Kenya Temple: Planning and approval;
awaiting official site announcement; media event held June 14, 2017.
178. Brasilia Brazil Temple: Planning and
approval; site inspected by Church engineers on June 21, 2017.
179. Greater Manila Philippines Temple: Planning
and approval; awaiting official name announcement
180. Harare Zimbabwe Temple: Planning and
approval; awaiting official site announcement.
181. Layton Utah Temple: Announced April 1, 2018;
awaiting official site announcement.
182. Quito Ecuador Temple: Planning and approval;
awaiting official site announcement.
183. Richmond Virginia Temple: Announced April 1,
2018; awaiting official site announcement.
184. Belem Brazil Temple: Planning and approval;
awaiting official site announcement.
185. Managua Nicaragua Temple: Announced April 1,
2018; awaiting official site.
186. Salta Argentina Temple: Announced April 1,
2018; awaiting official site announcement.
187. Cagayan de Oro Philippines Temple: Announced
April 1, 2018; awaiting official site announcement.
188. Bengaluru India Temple: Announced April 1,
2018; awaiting official site announcement.
189. Russia: Announced April 1, 2018; awaiting
official location and site announcement.
Final note: If recent statements from Church leaders (regarding how
President Nelson’s legacy as a temple-building Church president will outpace
and overshadow the previous legacy set by President Hinckley) are any
indication, we may soon enter an era where the volume of temple-related
developments will be multiplied. As more is known in that regard, I will add
any needed elements to this report.
Key:
Bolded numbers and text denote temples whose numbers already exists (for
renovations), or is certain due to a scheduled dedication, as well as
information that is certain, such as dedication or groundbreaking dates.
Italicized
numbers and text denote
temples whose numbers may change based on the order in which future dedications
and groundbreakings are scheduled.
Underlined
numbers and text denote temples
whose numbers may change based on progress towards planning, approval, and
groundbreaking.
Changes
since last report are highlighted in red.
Labels:
Estimated Time-frames for Future Temple Events,
Scheduled Temple Event,
Temple Construction Update,
Temples Undergoing Renovation
I have had a lifelong love for Church history, which has extended to ongoing reports of the ministry of our apostles and prophets, General Conference, and all temple developments. This blog enables me to share that love with all who read my thoughts on these developments, which are sometimes reported multiple times per day as needed.
BREAKING NEWS: 2-Hour Block Announced
Hello again, everyone! Elder Quentin L. Cook, acting under the direction and invitation of President Nelson, just announced a 2-hour Church block, which will be home-centered and Church supported. This will be done by having a 60-minute Sacrament Meeting every Sunday. Following a 10-minute transition to classes, there will be a 50-minute second hour, where Primary will be held each week, but Sunday School and Priesthood/Relief Society will be held alternately, with Sunday School on the first and third Sundays, and Priesthood, Relief Society, and Young Men/Young Women on the second and fourth Sundays. Meetings on the fifth Sunday will be held under the direction of the bishop in each ward. effective January 1, 2019.
To that end, the home curriculum was released to place greater responsibility on each of us for what we get out of Church each week. I have to admit, while I did not see that coming, and while I once dismissed it as an impossibility, the minute Elder Cook announced it, I felt the confirmation I had been seeking that what was being announced is in harmony with the Lord's will.To paraphrase a scripture, "If ye are prepared, ye shall not [be surprised]." More details can be found on the Newsroom.
Let me be clear: These changes do not in any way mean any of us should feel comfortable with doing any less than being well prepared for Church each week. To the contrary, this places more of an onus on each of us to personally be responsible for what we get out of the 2-hour block each week. And this comes, according to President Nelson, because of the way the Church embraced the changes that were made in General Conference last April.
This demonstrates to me that the Lord wants to reveal more to his people, but that this will only be allowed to occur as each of us follow the prophet's counsel. We will learn much more about all of this in the days ahead, and I continue to monitor other developments of this General Conference weekend as they occur and will do my best to pass those along to you all as they occur.
That does it for this post. Any and all comments are, as always, welcome and appreciated, on any post at any time. 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.
To that end, the home curriculum was released to place greater responsibility on each of us for what we get out of Church each week. I have to admit, while I did not see that coming, and while I once dismissed it as an impossibility, the minute Elder Cook announced it, I felt the confirmation I had been seeking that what was being announced is in harmony with the Lord's will.To paraphrase a scripture, "If ye are prepared, ye shall not [be surprised]." More details can be found on the Newsroom.
Let me be clear: These changes do not in any way mean any of us should feel comfortable with doing any less than being well prepared for Church each week. To the contrary, this places more of an onus on each of us to personally be responsible for what we get out of the 2-hour block each week. And this comes, according to President Nelson, because of the way the Church embraced the changes that were made in General Conference last April.
This demonstrates to me that the Lord wants to reveal more to his people, but that this will only be allowed to occur as each of us follow the prophet's counsel. We will learn much more about all of this in the days ahead, and I continue to monitor other developments of this General Conference weekend as they occur and will do my best to pass those along to you all as they occur.
That does it for this post. Any and all comments are, as always, welcome and appreciated, on any post at any time. Thank you for the privilege of your time. If you enjoyed what you read here and would like to stay informed of newly-added content, please feel free to subscribe. Until my next post, I wish each one of you all the best and pray that the Lord will bless you all in everything you do.
Labels:
Apostolic Ministry & Travels,
Breaking News,
Church Policies and Major Announcements,
Church President,
General Conference
I have had a lifelong love for Church history, which has extended to ongoing reports of the ministry of our apostles and prophets, General Conference, and all temple developments. This blog enables me to share that love with all who read my thoughts on these developments, which are sometimes reported multiple times per day as needed.
Friday, October 5, 2018
BREAKING NEWS: Church of Jesus Christ Temples Site Accessible Again
Hello again, everyone! The breaking news about General Conference begins now, as I am pleased to share that the Church of Jesus Christ Temples site is officially back up and running again. I just discovered that a few moments ago, so I will spend some time navigating around it after publishing this post.
That does it for this post. Any and all comments are, as always, welcome and appreciated, on any post at any time. 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 (particularly in conjunction with General Conference weekend), please feel free to subscribe. Until my next post, I wish each one of you all the best and pray that the Lord will bless you all in everything you do.
That does it for this post. Any and all comments are, as always, welcome and appreciated, on any post at any time. 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 (particularly in conjunction with General Conference weekend), please feel free to subscribe. Until my next post, I wish each one of you all the best and pray that the Lord will bless you all in everything you do.
Labels:
Breaking News,
Estimated Time-frames for Future Temple Events,
Temple Construction Update,
Temples Undergoing Renovation
I have had a lifelong love for Church history, which has extended to ongoing reports of the ministry of our apostles and prophets, General Conference, and all temple developments. This blog enables me to share that love with all who read my thoughts on these developments, which are sometimes reported multiple times per day as needed.
October 2018 General Conference Predictions--Final Version
Hello again, everyone! With the first session of General Conference now just around 18.5 hours away, I wanted to post the final version of my predictions for that conference. Not a lot has changed; mainly some minor tweaks in the wording of the notes section, and the additional prediction that the new president who will serve in the Frankfurt Germany Temple once it is rededicated, and who is currently serving as an area seventy, will also be released from his current assignment to fill the new one.
The updated version of those predictions follows below, and you can depend on my carrying full coverage of all major General Conference developments, whatever they may be, on this blog over this weekend. That does it for this post. Any and all comments are, as always, welcome and appreciated, on any post at any time.
Thank you for the privilege of your time. If you enjoyed what you read here and would like to stay informed of newly-added content, please feel free to subscribe. Until my next post, I wish each one of you all the best and pray that the Lord will bless you all in everything you do.
The updated version of those predictions follows below, and you can depend on my carrying full coverage of all major General Conference developments, whatever they may be, on this blog over this weekend. That does it for this post. Any and all comments are, as always, welcome and appreciated, on any post at any time.
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.
October 2018 General Conference Predictions[1]
Session
|
Conducting
|
Speakers
|
Saturday Morning[2]
|
President Russell M. Nelson
|
President Russell M. Nelson
|
|
|
Elder Terence M. Vinson
|
|
|
Elder David A. Bednar
|
|
|
Elder Jack N. Gerard
|
|
|
Elder Gerrit W. Gong
|
|
|
Elder Walter F. Gonzalez
|
|
|
Elder Ronald A. Rasband
|
|
|
President Dallin H. Oaks
|
Saturday Afternoon
|
President Dallin H. Oaks
|
President Henry B. Eyring (Sustaining of Church
Officers)[3]
|
|
|
Elder D. Todd Christofferson
|
|
|
Bishop Dean M. Davies
|
|
|
Elder Ulisses Soares
|
|
|
Elder Craig A. Cardon
|
|
|
Elder Dieter F. Uchtdorf
|
|
|
Elder Juan Pablo Villar
|
|
|
Elder Jeffrey R. Holland
|
Women’s Session[4]
|
Joy D. Jones
|
Cristina B. Franco
|
|
|
Michelle D. Craig
|
|
|
Jean B. Bingham
|
|
|
President Henry B. Eyring
|
|
|
President Dallin H. Oaks
|
|
|
President Russell M. Nelson
|
Sunday Morning
|
President Russell M. Nelson
|
President Henry B. Eyring
|
|
|
Bonnie H. Cordon
|
|
|
Elder Neil L. Andersen
|
|
|
Elder Robert C. Gay
|
|
|
Elder Takashi Wada
|
|
|
Elder Quentin L. Cook
|
|
|
President Russell M. Nelson
|
Sunday Afternoon
|
President Henry B. Eyring
|
President M. Russell Ballard
|
|
|
Brian K. Ashton
|
|
|
Elder Mathias Held
|
|
|
Elder Dale G. Renlund
|
|
|
Elder Scott D. Whiting
|
|
|
Elder Paul B. Pieper
|
|
|
Elder Gary E. Stevenson
|
|
|
President Russell M. Nelson
|
Predictions for
Changes in General Church Leadership
General
Authority Seventies: Elder Brook P. Hales sustained as a new General
Authority Seventy and Elders Mervyn B. Arnold, Craig A. Cardon, Larry J. Echo
Hawk, C. Scott Grow, Allan F. Packer, Gregory A. Schwitzer, and Claudio D.
Zivic released and granted emeritus status.
Note: On May 18, 2018,
the Church News reported that Brook P. Hales, who has been serving as
Secretary to the First Presidency, will continue that role, but has been
called to additionally serve as a General Authority Seventy. His call will
likely be presented for sustaining vote. Each of the other seven GA Seventies
mentioned above were born in 1948, and will all have their 70th birthdays
before the end of 2018. While the Church has at times delayed the release of
some GA Seventies for 1-4 years after their 70th birthdays, the last time
something like that occurred was in the early 2000s. It is therefore my
belief that each of the other men listed above will most likely be released.
Result:
|
Area Seventies:
Some area seventies released, others called.
Note: In the
past, when some area seventies have been called as mission presidents, they
have retained their area seventy assignments for 1-3 General Conferences
after their assignments begin. In the meantime, those called as temple
presidents have almost always been released. And while area seventies have
been known to serve for longer periods, the general term of service for these
Brethren has been 5-8 years. With that in mind, the following area seventies
may or may not be released:
Newly-called mission presidents: Elders Daniel F. Dunnigan, Tasara Makasi,
Fred A. Parker, and Miguel A. Reyes.
Newly-called temple presidents: Elders B. Sergio Antunes, Joao R. Grahl,
Todd B. Hansen, Daniel W. Jones, Steven O. Laing, Katsuyuki Otahara, and
Wolfgang Pilz
Longest-tenured: Elders Sergio L. Krasnoselsky (who has
served since April 2009), Kevin J. Worthen* (who has served since April
2010), R. Randall Bluth, Hans T. Boom & David J. Thomson (who have served
since April 2011).
*With reference
to Kevin J. Worthen, he is currently serving as president of BYU-Provo, and
as such, may either serve as an area seventy until next April, then perhaps
be called as a General Authority Seventy while continuing his service at BYU,
or may remain an area seventy until the conclusion of his presidential
tenure, however long that may be.
Result:
|
Temple Predictions: 3+ temples announced, with the most likely
locations (in my opinion), on the list below (grouped first by the geographical
areas of the Church under which these locations fall, then by imminent
likelihood within those areas.
Preliminary note:
With seven temples having been announced last April (the second-highest number
of temples ever announced at once), some have offered their opinion that
perhaps no new temples may be announced during this General Conference. While I
understand the rationale behind that opinion, there have been an increasing
number of references to the fact that President Nelson’s plans to expand the
number of temples worldwide will outpace and overshadow what we previously saw
under President Hinckley’s inspired leadership, which may involve doubling or
tripling the number of temples in the near future. Previous Church Presidents
have indicated that each Church member should be within 200 miles of their
assigned temples. If the plans involve halving or quartering that distance, or
if they are going to unfold within the next 5-10 years or less, no location may
be off the table. With all of that in mind, based on my personal research and
on feedback provided through the comments on my blog, the locations that seem
most likely to have a temple announced in the near future are listed below,
first by the geographical area of the Church under which they fall, then by the
degree of potential likelihood within those areas.
Asia: Ulaanbaatar
Mongolia[13]
Caribbean: San
Juan Puerto Rico[19]
Central America: Guatemala
City (2nd temple)[20]
Pacific: Port
Moresby Papua New Guinea[29];
Auckland New Zealand[30]; Tarawa
Kiribati[31];
Pago Pago American Samoa[32]; Neiafu
Vava'u Tonga[33]
North America[41]
(including the United States and Canada):
Idaho: Preston
Idaho[42]
North America
Central: Missoula Montana[43];
Rapid City South Dakota[44];
Wichita Kansas[45]; Green Bay Wisconsin[46];
Des Moines Iowa[47]; Pueblo Colorado[48]
North America
Northwest: Fairbanks Alaska[51]
North America
Southeast: Jackson Mississippi[52];
Shreveport Louisiana[53]; Jacksonville
Florida[54];
Knoxville Tennessee[55]
North America
Southwest: Bentonville Arkansas[56];
Elko[57]/Ely[58]
Nevada; Fort Worth Texas[59];
Las Cruces New Mexico[60];
Flagstaff Arizona[61]
North America
West: Bakersfield California[62]
Utah Salt Lake
City: Herriman[63];
[1]While General Conferences
for the last decade and longer have typically conformed to a general pattern,
there have been at least half a dozen exceptions during that same time, with
the April 2018 General Conference being the most recent exception.
Additionally, last October, the Church announced that the Priesthood and
Women’s Sessions would each be held annually, with the former every April and
the latter every October. For that reason, for the next 2-4 General
Conferences, I will be giving myself a small margin of error while I try to get
a feel for what the new patterns might involve.
[2]As I will discuss in more
detail in “Note 4” below, an assumption is made with these predictions that no
members of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles will be speaking during the
Women’s Session. If that turns out to be the case, then the Quorum member that
would have otherwise spoken during the Saturday Evening Session will need to be
fit in somewhere else, and that could be done during either the Saturday
Morning or Sunday Afternoon Sessions. Since the previous two General
Conferences have seen 3 Quorum members speak during the Saturday Morning
Session, an assumption is made here that this will again be the case.
[3]Last April, in the first
two sessions of General Conference, President Nelson’s two counselors each led
a portion of what had traditionally been a one-session combined Solemn Assembly
and Sustaining of Church Officers, which makes it difficult to know which of
the two might lead the sustaining vote this go-round. An assumption is made here
that, since President Oaks did a tremendous job presenting the new area
seventies last April that he will continue to do so every April, which would,
by extension, mean that President Eyring will lead the sustaining vote each
October.
[4]It had been tradition for
one of the 3 presidents of the female-led auxiliaries to conduct the Women’s
Session when it rolled around every six months. I am assuming that will
continue to be the case. I am likewise assuming that, since that session is now
being held on General Conference weekend in October that the entire First
Presidency will speak, rather than just one member thereof, and that, aside
from the entire cvFirst Presidency and one representative from each of the
three female-led auxiliaries, no other Church leaders will speak during that
session.
[5]The Church has experienced
substantial growth throughout the African continent, and that applies to this
area of the Church as well. Right now, the only currently-operating temple is
in Johannesburg South Africa. There are 2 additional temples under construction
(in Kinshasa DR Congo and Durban South Africa, both of which will be dedicated
next year) and 2 others announced (in Harare Zimbabwe and Nairobi Kenya, both
of which may have a groundbreaking within the next 2-3 years or less). If the
growth in this area continues as it has, then several other temples may be
needed, with the most likely prospects (in my opinion) and the reasoning behind
each location following in the next several notes.
[6]Madagascar is currently the
last of the top ten nations with the strongest Church presence that does not
have a temple in any phase. Madagascar is separated by a body of water from the
rest of the African continent, which means that anywhere else an African temple
is now or will be built is difficult for the Madagascar Saints to get to.
Currently, the Saints in Madagascar have a journey of 1,338 miles from the
Johannesburg South Africa Temple. Once the Harare Zimbabwe Temple is built and
dedicated, that distance will be cut to 1,082 miles. Between the great distance
and the difficulty of travel, Madagascar is surely a top contender for a temple
of its’ own.
[7]Right now, the Saints in
Mozambique currently travel 341.5 miles to worship at the Johannesburg South
Africa Temple. No other temple under construction or announced will be any
closer than that. Mozambique already qualifies for a temple based on the
200-mile goal previously referenced. So if that goal is lowered at all, the
imminence of such a prospect may be just a matter of time.
[8]The Church in the Africa
West Area has also experienced massive and rapid growth. The LDS Church Growth
Blog recently reported that, if current growth trends in the Africa West Area
continue as they have been lately, the Church could go from the 2 operating and
1 announced temple to 13 in operation by sometime during 2030. With that in
mind, several temples may dot this area in the near future, and the locations
in this section seem to me to be the most imminently likely prospects.
[9]Sierra Leone is now the
fourth of the top ten nations that have the strongest Church presence but do
not yet have a temple in any phase. With the recent expanded growth in Sierra
Leone (particularly with so many districts that have been upgraded to stakes),
a temple there may simply be a matter of time. The Saints in Freetown currently
journey 1,243.2 miles to the Accra Ghana temple, a distance which will not be
cut until the temple in Abidjan Ivory Coast is built and dedicated, at which
point the Freetown Saints will be 911 miles away. Since that is still far
greater than the 200-mile distance, whether or not that mileage goal is
lowered, Sierra Leone is very likely to get a temple soon.
[10]Since the dedication of
the Accra Ghana temple in January 2004, Ghana has seen sufficient enough growth
(in my opinion) to potentially get a second temple. And Kumasi has emerged as
the most likely city for such a temple. Although the Saints in Kumasi currently
only have to travel 154.4 miles to the Accra temple, if the minimum mileage is
lowered, then a temple in Kumasi may just be a matter of time.
[11]Nigeria has likewise seen
extensive growth since the Aba temple was dedicated in August 2005. While many
have offered their opinions that Benin City would be the better prospect for
Nigeria’s second temple, the elements I have studied leads me to conclude that
Lagos, which is 291 miles away from Aba, is the more imminent prospect. That
said, I would fully anticipate that there will be temples in both Lagos and
Benin City at some point within the next 10-15 years or less.
[12]In the afore-mentioned
list on the LDS Church Growth Blog (which covered the 10 nations with the
strongest LDS presence that do not have a temple in any phase), Liberia comes
in at #9. The Saints in Liberia travel 946.5 miles to worship in the Accra
Ghana Temple. Once the Abidjan Ivory Coast Temple is built and dedicated, that
distance will decrease to 616.5 miles. If, as observed in note 12 above, a
temple is built in Freetown, that distance gets almost cut in half to 338.8 miles,
which is still well above the current mileage goal. So if the minimum distance
is lowered at all, Liberia may be a prime candidate for a temple in the near
future.
[13]Mongolia was one nation I
had on my list of more distant prospects, primarily because the Church presence
in that nation is not as strong as it seems to be in other Asian nations. The
main argument in favor of a temple being built in Mongolia seems to be the
mileage metric. The Saints in Mongolia currently travel 1,805 miles to the Hong
Kong China Temple. And my study shows that no other operating or announced
temple will cut that distance at all. With that in mind, a temple in
Ulaanbaatar seems to be just a matter of time.
[14]The nation of Brazil has
seen strong Church growth, perhaps the greatest amount Church-wide outside of
North America. With 6 temples in operation there currently, there are two
others under construction in Fortaleza (where a dedication is anticipated early
next year) and Rio de Janeiro (which is anticipated to be dedicated in early
2020). There are two others which have been announced in Belem and Brasilia.
With these four in different phases, it is difficult to know how soon other
temples might be announced for the nation. But the following locations, for the
reasons I will highlight below, have a strong case in favor of a temple.
[15]Up until recently, I had
had both Belo Horizonte and Salvador on my list for the immediate future, but
had prioritized them in the reverse order. But the Church News reported on June
14 of this year that Elder Cook, during a visit to Brazil, had spent some time
in Belo Horizonte. We have seen instances recently where members of the First
Presidency or Quorum of the Twelve will visit areas that have recently had a
temple announced, or where the Church is considering building a temple. Based
on Elder Cook’s visit to Belo Horizonte, I have prioritized that city for now.
If I see anything that would convince me to change the order of the two again,
I will do so.
[16]See note above on Belo
Horizonte. Although Elder Cook’s more recent visit to Belo Horizonte did lead
me to prioritize that city above Salvador, further digging on my part led me to
another Church News report (dated March 22, 2018) which highlighted an apostolic
visit by Elder Bednar to Recife, Sao Paulo, Salvador, and Brasilia. Two apostolic visits to the same nation within
a 3-month period is significant. Although there are temples in the first two
cities where Elder Bednar visited (and another temple has been announced for
Brasilia), there is no temple currently announced in Salvador. With that in
mind, a temple could be announced there shortly as well. What will be
interesting to see is whether either will be announced first, or both will be
announced simultaneously, or if one could be announced while the other is in
its’ construction phase.
[17]While I had seen
Florianopolis as a feasible temple prospect at some point in the future, it was
not until I took the reports of President Nelson’s ambitious temple-building
plans into account that I felt comfortable including Florianopolis on this list
for the immediate future. Right now, the nearest temples to the Saints in
Florianopolis are the temple in Curitiba (which is 191.3 miles away) and Porto
Alegre (which is exactly 285 miles away). Because the distances involved
constitute undue hardship for the Saints in Florianopolis, a temple there may
just be a matter of time. That said, it may be some time before we know how
soon a temple might be announced there, if the temples in Salvador and Belo
Horizonte are more imminently needed. For now though, I am confident enough to
put it on this list.
[18]Up until 2016, the Church
had not been known to put a second temple in any city outside the US. In 2016
and 2017, second temples were announced for Lima Peru (which will be named for
and built in the Los Olivos region), and Manila Philippines (in the area of
Muntinlupa City, which has yet to receive an official name). Since Sao Paulo is
a strong area in terms of Church membership, a second temple there may be
needed sooner rather than later, though that prospect could potentially be
delayed until temples rise in Belo Horizonte, Salvador, and Florianopolis. But
if the initial word on President Nelson’s temple building plans are any
indication, then a second Sao Paulo temple, along with the other three
locations, may be announced much sooner than anticipated
[19]Puerto Rico now ranks as
the second of the top ten nations with the strongest Church presence that do
not have a temple in any phase. With the construction of the Port-au-Prince
Haiti Temple underway (which will be a very small temple) it makes sense that
the Church might opt to announce a temple for San Juan in the near future, as
the Puerto Rican Saints currently travel 251 miles to the Santo Domingo
Dominican Republic, which is just about the current minimum mileage goal, but
if that is lowered at all, the prospect certainly will become more imminent. The
one unknown is whether or not the recent natural disasters that have struck
Puerto Rico will impact how soon a temple is built there.
[20]As noted above, someone
who is familiar with the situation of the Church in Guatemala mentioned that a
temple in Senahu may be delayed until the presence of the Church increases
there. In the meantime, that same individual noted that a second temple to
split the current Guatemala City Guatemala Temple district may be a more likely
prospect. At this point, given the reasons I outlined in the note above, Senahu
remains on my list. I have also included the prospect of a second temple for
Guatemala City, but could see the merits of removing either of the two as more
information comes to light.
[21]Europe, particularly in
the eastern countries of its’ continent, has seen some stagnation in terms of
the growth of the Church. With temples currently under construction in Rome
Italy and Lisbon Portugal (both of which will be dedicated next year), and
another announced for a major yet-to-be determined city in Russia, the Church may
opt to wait to construct other temples on the European continent until those 3
are either dedicated or at least further along in the process. That said, on
the off-chance the Church does not so opt, the cities in this section, for the
reasons I will explain in the subsequent notes that will follow this one, have
the greatest chance of being announced in the near future.
[22]When I began sharing my
thoughts on potential future temple locations, someone who has knowledge of the
growth of the Church in Europe indicated that Budapest would likely be the next
European city to get a temple. My study on the matter confirms that opinion, so
it has been on my list for a while. Right now, the Saints in Budapest travel
418 miles to worship at the Freiberg Germany Temple. And neither of the two
European temples under construction will be closer than that, so a temple in
Budapest seems likely.
[23]Although Cape Verde is
technically closer to the Africa North Area of the Church, it falls within the
boundaries of the Europe Area. The nation, which now ranks as the eighth of the
top ten nations with the strongest Church presence that does not have a temple,
will likely have a temple announced in its’ capital city of Praia in the near
future. This is because the Saints in Cape Verde currently travel 2,126 miles
to worship at the Madrid Spain Temple. Although that distance will be slightly
cut to 1,861 miles once the Lisbon Portugal Temple is dedicated, that is over 9
times further away than the mileage goal set by other prophets, and if that
goal is lowered at all, a Praia temple may simply be a matter of time.
[24]When expanding my list of
temple prospects, I knew I had to look at another temple in the UK. I had a
temple for Scotland or Ireland on my list for the distant future, but after
numerous comments on my blog and some additional research on my part, I
determined that Scotland would be the more likely location for the next temple
in the UK. The Saints in Edinburgh are 184.5 miles from their assigned temple
in Preston England. If President Nelson’s temple-building plans involve
lowering the minimum mileage from which any Saint should be from their assigned
temple, then Edinburgh would indeed qualify for a temple, which would likely
also serve Ireland, in addition to some parts of England that are nearest to
the two countries.
[25]Although the Saints in
Austria have seen a slight consolidation in the number of Church units in that
nation recently, their currently assigned temple in Frankfurt (which is closed
for renovation) is 444.3 miles away. If a temple is built in Budapest Hungary,
the Austria Saints may be reassigned to that temple, which would then be 151
miles away. But I would anticipate that a temple could be announced for Vienna
within the next few years, if not immediately, as long as all goes well.
[26]The growth of the Church
in Mexico has somewhat stagnated to the point where Church leaders began last
year to do a mass consolidation of the Church units there, primarily for the
purpose of strengthening the remaining units. With that in mind, it may be
difficult to gauge how soon other Mexican temples might be needed. But for the
locations in this section represent the most likely prospects I see for the
near future.
[27]One of the readers of my
blog (who lives in Mexico) shared feedback reiterating the idea that the next
temple in Mexico will likely be in Puebla, and that such a temple will likely
be announced sooner rather than later. This makes sense, because even though
Puebla is only 81.3 miles from the Mexico City temple, it may be the foremost
prospects to split the current district. The only question might be whether or
not that prospect is as imminent as it appears to be, since there is reportedly
an attendance problem in the Mexico City temple. If it has not been kept busy
enough, that prospect could potentially be delayed for a little while. That
said, I am confident enough to list it here for now, but will be watching for
anything that changes my mind.
[28]The Saints in Queretaro
Mexico currently travel 135.8 miles to worship at the Mexico City Mexico
Temple, and would actually be further away than that from a temple in Puebla,
unless the journey to Puebla would be less of a hardship to those Saints than
the journey to Mexico City. Again, the timing of the announcement(s) for the
next temple(s) will depend largely on whether or not a temple elsewhere would
make sense, given the apparent lack of sufficient activity within the Mexico
City temple. Until more is known about that, and about President Nelson’s plans
to expand the number of temples, I feel confident in keeping both cities on my
list.
[29]Papua New Guinea now ranks
as the nation with the strongest Church presence that does not yet have a
temple. I also learned several years ago that land has been held in reserve in
Port Moresby for a temple for a while now. With that in mind, it may simply be
a matter of time before a temple is announced there.
[30]As with Papua New Guinea,
I had heard years ago that land has been held in reserve in Auckland for a
temple. The Church has since announced and begun a renovation for the only
temple in that nation (which is located in Hamilton). Although the Auckland
Saints are merely 77.6 miles away from the Hamilton temple, if President
Nelson’s plans to expand the number of temples involves halving or quartering
the 200 mile maximum distance set by other Church presidents, Auckland would
certainly qualify for a temple by that metric as well.
[31]Kiribati currently ranks
as the third nation with the strongest LDS presence that does not have a temple
in any phase of construction. The Saints in Tarawa currently travel 1,402 miles
to worship at the Suva Fiji Temple, and no other currently-operating temple is
closer than that. With all of this in mind, a temple in that nation may simply
be a matter of time.
[32]American Samoa ranks fifth
on the list of nations with the strongest Church presence that do not have a
temple in any phase. The nearest temple to the Saints in the capital city of
Pago Pago is currently Apia Samoa, and the Pago Pago Saints currently travel
76.2 miles, which is not long distance-wise, but involves journeying over a
body of water, which may be inconvenient. Also, if the minimum mileage goal set
by previous Church presidents is halved or quartered, that will no doubt make
this prospect more imminent.
[33]Tonga has recently seen
impressive Church growth, which leads me to believe that a second temple may be
needed to serve the Saints there. The city of Neiafu Vava’u seems to be the
most likely location for a second Tongan temple, since the Saints in that city
currently travel 189 miles to the temple in Nuku’alofa. Although that is within
the current minimum mileage, if that minimum is halved or quartered, then that,
combined with the extensive growth in Tonga, leads me to believe that a Neiafu
Vava’u temple will be announced sooner rather than later.
[34]With two
currently-operating temples in Manila and Cebu, and three others announced for
Urdaneta, Muntinlupa City (which is the second for the Manila area) and Cagayan
de Oro, the Church could opt to wait to announce any other temples for the
Philippines until those 3 are further along. But I do see the imminent prospect
for one additional temple in this nation, for reasons I will explain in the
note below.
[35]Davao is currently
assigned to the Cebu City Temple District, from which it is 335.7 miles. That
distance will not decrease at all until the Cagayan de Oro Philippines Temple,
which was announced last April, is built and dedicated. But even then, the
Saints in Davao will still have a journey of 161.8 miles. If the minimum
distance set by previous Church presidents is halved or quartered, then Davao
will surely be the next city in the Philippines to get a temple. I have had
this city on lists like this for a long time, so I hope a temple will be
announced there sooner rather than later.
[36]The entire South American
continent has experienced massive Church growth. Having previously discussed
Brazil, I will focus my comments about South America on the two other areas of
the Church within this continent. Starting with the South America Northwest
Area, I wanted to observe that there are 6 operating temples there. 1 other (in
Barranquilla Colombia) is set to be dedicated in December of this year. 1 more
is currently under construction in Arequipa Peru (for which a dedication is
anticipated in early 2020). Two others have been announced (the Lima Peru Los
Olivos Temple, which may have a groundbreaking within the next year, if not
sooner, and the Quito Ecuador Temple, which could have a groundbreaking within
the next 2-3 years, though hopefully sooner if all goes well). With the South
America Northwest Area having experienced somewhat rapid growth, I have long
been of the opinion that several prospects were likely possibilities for this
area in the near future, and I expanded the number of those prospective
locations again with the increased comments about President Nelson’s ambitious
temple-building plans. For the reasons mentioned in the notes below, each of
the locations on this list have a strong case in their favor as prospects for
the near future.
[37]Since the dedication of
Bolivia’s first temple in Cochabamba, the Church in Bolivia has seen significant
growth and expansion. That has been especially true of regions that would be
served by temples in Santa Cruz or La Paz. Of the two, although I favor La Paz,,
my research indicates a Santa Cruz temple may be more imminent. But I fully
anticipate temples in both cities within the next 15 years or less, thus both
are on this list for now.
[38]The temple in Caracas was
announced during the October 1995 General Conference, with a groundbreaking
occurring in January 1999, and a dedication for it was held the following year
in August. One year prior to the dedication of the temple in Caracas, President
Hinckley publicly proposed another Venezuelan temple for the city of Maracaibo,
which is 432.5 miles from Caracas. Although Venezuela has political turbulence
at the moment, and although there has been some Church unit consolidation there
in recent years, when we combine the distance factor with the fact that temples
publicly proposed during the administrations of Presidents Hinckley and Monson
have gone on to be announced during the subsequent administrations of
Presidents Monson and Nelson, the case in favor of a temple in Maracaibo is
strong, so that prospect may be more imminent than many (myself included) might
anticipate.
[39]As noted above relating to
the South America Northwest Area, the South America South Area has likewise
seen extensive and significant growth. So again, with President Nelson’s
extensive temple-building plans in mind, I have considered the most imminent
prospects for future temples in this area, which, for the reasons outlined in
the notes below, have a strong case in their favor.
[40]In view of the need to
expand my list of prospects for this area, Ciudad del Este seems to be the most
likely prospect for a second temple in Paraguay, with the only question being
how imminently likely that might be. When the renovation process is complete
for the Asuncion temple, the Saints in Ciudad del Este will have a journey of
201.4 miles to worship there, which is already above the minimum goal other
prophets have set. If that minimum distance is lowered at all, then a temple in
that city may simply be a matter of time.
[41]Although the North
American continent (primarily in the United States) has seen somewhat of a
stagnating growth situation, in light of the recent increased mentions of
President Nelson’s ambitious temple-building plans, the likelihood is extremely
high that the US and Canada will be included in whatever the plans are to
expand the number of temples worldwide. The locations listed below represent
what I believe are the most imminent prospects for the US and Canada in the
near future.
[42]Preston Idaho is a
relatively new addition to this list. Although the Church has not yet begun
full-scale construction on the temple in Pocatello (which was announced in
April 2017), since Idaho is part of the Mormon corridor, that opens the
prospect that both temples could be under construction at around the same time.
The main reason I added a temple for Preston this go-round is because it would
split the current Logan Utah Temple district. Right now, the Saints in Preston
travel 26.7 miles to worship at that temple. Although that may not be an
inordinate distance, at the same time, if the Logan temple is as busy as the
reports I have found seem to indicate, splitting the district would make a lot
of sense, and Preston seems to be the most effective location to accomplish
that.
[43]According to reports I
received through the comments on my blog, Elder David A. Bednar publicly
proposed a Missoula Montana Temple while on assignment to a stake conference in
that city. My subsequent research indicates that land has been held in reserve
for such a temple for several years n. ow, and that an official announcement
will occur once the right conditions are met. For that reason, Missoula has
been on my list for a while now, and I could see an official announcement in
the near future.
[44]Although South Dakota only
has 2 stakes and 1 district, and although the districts of the Bismarck North
Dakota and Winter Quarters Nebraska Temples,, which cover South Dakota, may not
be inordinately large, the Saints in Rapid City travel almost 300 miles to
worship at the Bismarck temple, so it seems likely that the Church will opt to
build a temple there sooner rather than later.
[45]Since Wichita Kansas was
on one of my other two lists, I simply moved it up to this one as a more
imminent prospect. The 7 stakes in Kansas currently are split between the
Kansas City Missouri Temple, the Oklahoma City Oklahoma Temple, and the Denver
Colorado Temple, and almost all of those 7 have extensive distances involved.
So if the 200-mile goal set by previous Church presidents is lowered to any
degree, all of the distances may well be considered inordinate. For these
reason, a temple in Wichita seems likely to be announced sooner rather than
later
[46]When I was first
considering the most likely location for Wisconsin’s first temple, I had
prioritized Madison (the nation’s capital) or Milwaukee. But after a lot of
feedback and more research on my part, I determined Green Bay would be a more
preferable location. There are six stakes in Wisconsin, all of which are
assigned to the Chicago Illinois Temple District except one, which is assigned
to the St. Paul Minnesota Temple district. Each of these stakes involves a
journey between 90-200 miles to their assigned temple. So if the minimum
distance set by previous Church presidents is shortened at all, Wisconsin is a
prime candidate for a temple. And a temple in Green Bay would greatly shorten
the trip for most (if not all) of the stakes in Wisconsin.
[47] Although the Church has
previously built temples in sites which have historical significance, and
although Council Bluffs in Iowa is one such location, given that the Saints who
live in that area are less than 15 miles away from the temple in Winter Quarters
Nebraska, a temple in Iowa is more likely to rise in the capital city of Des
Moines. The 8 stakes in Iowa are currently divided between the Winter Quarters
Nebraska and Nauvoo Illinois Temples. Of those 8 stakes, only the Saints in
Council Bluffs are within 15 miles of their assigned temple. All other
established stakes in this state are between 90-180 miles away from their
assigned temple. With all of this in mind, Iowa would qualify for a temple, and
if one rises in Des Moines, it would not surprise me at all if that temple was
named for Mount Pisgah, which is another historically-significant site from
early Church history, and for which the second Des Moines stake is named.
[48]A comment on my blog
mentioned that the Saints in Pueblo and nearby Colorado Springs typically deal
with massive and significant traffic congestion to get to their
currently-assigned temple in Denver, which seems to be a very undue hardship.
Since that also involves a one-way journey of 115.8 miles, I can see why a
temple in Pueblo in the near future may be very likely.
[49]In view of all we have
heard about President Nelson’s plans to expand the number of temples, Maine
seems to be a prime candidate for such a temple. Although there are only two
stakes in that state, the two are between 160 and 240 miles away from their
currently-assigned temple in Boston. Whether or not the minimum mileage is
lowered, Augusta surely qualifies for a temple of its’ own.
[50]Vermont is the 5th
smallest of the 50 states, and has a Church presence that matches its’ size.
Members in Montpelier currently travel 180.4 miles one way to worship at the
Boston Massachusetts Temple. While New Hampshire may have a stronger Church
presence currently than Vermont does, Vermont has a connection to Church
history (as the Prophet Joseph Smith was born in Sharon), so it seems likely
the Church would favor Vermont for a temple. The temple could potentially be
built directly in Sharon (as the Church has a tradition of putting a temple in
historically-significant locations), but my current research on the subject
leads me to conclude that, unless a stake is established in Sharon before this
temple is announced, Montpelier may be a preferable location, as it would
provide such a temple with sufficient support from a nearby stake.
[51]The Saints residing in Fairbanks
Alaska currently travel 360.3 miles to worship at the temple in Anchorage.
Although the Saints in Juneau do have a longer journey to both Anchorage and
Fairbanks, the latter has emerged from my study as the best prospect for
Alaska’s second temple. That said, I can see a day when Juneau gets one as
well, which may happen sooner than expected, depending on the extent of
President Nelson’s temple-building plans.
[52]Mississippi is another
state that does not yet have a temple in any phase. The Saints in Jackson
currently travel 174.6 miles one way to worship at the Baton Rouge Louisiana
Temple, but with that temple closed for renovation, the trip is much longer to
get to the next nearest temple. That presents a compelling argument for the
idea that a temple in Jackson may simply be a matter of time.
[53]The Saints in Shreveport
currently travel 187.9 miles to their assigned temple in Dallas, so that city
would qualify for a temple of its’ own if the current 200-mile distance goal set
by previous church presidents is halved or quartered. Therefore, a temple in
Shreveport may simply be a matter of time.
[54]With temples operating in
Orlando and Fort Lauderdale, a third temple may be needed sooner rather than
later. Several people have shared their feeling that Tallahassee may be a more
likely location for the third temple in that state, but between my personal
research on the subject and the opinions of others who seem to know more about
Florida than I do, Jacksonville has made my list. That said, I can see a day
within the next 5-10 years or less when both cities will have a temple. The
Jacksonville Saints currently travel 140.7 miles to the temple in Orlando, so
if the 200-mile distance is halved or quartered, then this prospect may be a very
high priority in the near future.
[55]The Saints in Knoxville
Tennessee currently travel 180.1 miles to worship at the temple in Nashville.
That may also be an inordinate distance if the minimum mileage is lowered at
all, and if we also take into account the fact that a journey to Nashville may
be arduous, then a temple in Knoxville seems imminent.
[56]A good friend with
connections to Arkansas told me a while ago that the Church has held land in
reserve for a temple in Bentonville for a while now, and that an official
announcement was likely once the right conditions were met. For that reason, I
believe we will see this temple announced sooner rather than later. Some have
opined that Rogers might be a more likely location for the first temple in
Arkansas, but my study confirms that a temple is likely in Bentonville sooner
rather than later. And as observed by someone on my blog, when the first temple
in Arkansas is built, it could potentially be named for the Ozark Mountain
range, which is a major landmark in Arkansas
[57]The Saints in Elko
currently travel 229.6 miles to their assigned temple (Salt Lake). So Elko
already qualifies in terms of the within 200-mile distance. And if that mileage
goal is lowered, that prospect becomes more imminently likely.
[58]The note above applies to
the Saints in Ely as well, as they commute 201.1 miles to their assigned temple
in Cedar City. A temple in Ely would cut the commute substantially. And I fully
believe that temples in both Elko and Ely are possible in the near future,
since the distance between the two is just under 200 miles.
[59]In sharing my thoughts
about potential future temple locations, I learned from someone living in Texas
that Fort Worth would likely be the best prospective city to split the current
Dallas district. In addition, although some have offered their feedback that El
Paso may be a more likely location for that honor, and although I fully believe
both cities will have temples of their own at some future point, I have
prioritized Fort Worth for this list.
[60]The Saints in Las Cruces
currently travel 224.6 miles to the temple in Albuquerque, so a temple there
may just be a matter of time. A temple in that city could also likely serve the
Saints in El Paso Texas, as the two cities are 46.2 miles apart. The journey
between the two cities would be a fairly easy distance if for any reason the El
Paso Saints are unable to get to their currently-assigned temple in Ciudad
Juarez Mexico.
[61]Although Elder Larry Y.
Wilson, the Executive Director of the Church’s Temple Department, stated at
last year’s dedication of the Tucson Arizona Temple that Arizona was, for the
moment, well-stocked with temples. That said, my study indicates that the next Arizona
temple will be built in Flagstaff. Right now, the Saints in that city currently
travel 119 miles to worship at the Snowflake Arizona Temple. If the 200-mile
distance is decreased by President Nelson (either by halving or quartering it),
then Snowflake would be a prime candidate for a temple, and that may even help
to split some of the other temple districts in Arizona as well.
[62]Bakersfield California is
roughly halfway between Fresno (from which it is 109.1 miles away) and Los
Angeles (from which it is 113.3 miles away). Although there have been some
congregational consolidations in California in recent years, the distances
involved may be sufficient to warrant a temple in Bakersfield in the
not-too-distant future.
[63]In 2005, President Gordon
B. Hinckley noted that land was being held in reserve for a temple in the
Southwestern Salt Lake Valley, which would have an official announcement when
that became necessary. Subsequent study on my part in late 2017 and early 2018
pointed me to the conclusion that the land in question was in Bluffdale, but
that it has since been annexed into the city of Herriman, although it has been
the subject of more than a few border disputes. I am confident enough to list
it here, and since President Monson announced temples publicly proposed during
President Hinckley’s tenure, I feel that President Nelson may likely do the
same. Thus, a temple there may just be a matter of time.
[64]A temple in Heber City
(the prospect of which has been suggested a few times) would help provide a
closer option for Saints in the Heber Valley, and it would likely split the
district of the Provo Utah Temple, which, by all reports, is still one of the
busiest in the Church.
[65]Tooele has also been
mentioned repeatedly as a potential prospective city for a temple. While the
Saints in Tooele do not have to drive an inordinate distance to reach their
assigned temple in Salt Lake City, I feel a temple there may simply be a matter
of time. And since a temple in Herriman would still create a drive (along a
U-shape) for those Saints, it seems safe to assume that Tooele could (and
likely will) get a temple soon.
Labels:
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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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