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Tuesday, June 8, 2021

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


That does it for now. Any and all comments are, as always, welcome and appreciated, on any post at any time, as long as such comments are made in accordance with the established guidelines. Thank you for the privilege of your time. If you enjoyed what you read here and would like to stay informed of newly added content, please feel free to subscribe. Until my next post, I wish each one of you all the best and pray that the Lord will bless you all in everything you do.

Monday, June 7, 2021

BREAKING NEWS: First Presidency Announces Discontinuation of Saturday Evening Sessions of General Conference

Hello again, everyone!i Within the last couple of minutes, break ing news has been reported relating to General Conference. In an ongoing effort to reduce and simplify the work of the Church, and as a result of General Conference being more readily available worldwide, effective imeediately, Satuday Evening Sessions on General Conference will be discntinued. The change means no Women's Session each October, and no Priesthood session every April.

Additionally, the First Presidency has also noted that the October 2021 General Conference will again be closed to the public, following the same parameters as rhe previous 3 held during the pandemic. The four sessions will again originate from the Conference Center auditoruim, Although nothing in that respect has been noted as of yet, I imagne that prerecorded music is a given and that only the First Presidency, Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, and those speaking at or praying during each session.Since I am still in the process of updating my October General Conference predictions, it very well could be that this announcemnt will send me right back to thd drawing board again. I continue to monitor all other Church news updates and temple developments and will be sure to pass word of those along to you all as I become aware thereof,

That does it for now. Any and all comments are, as always, welcome and appreciated, on any post at any time, as long as such comments are made in accordance with the established guidelines. Thank you for the privilege of your time. If you enjoyed what you read here and would like to stay informed of newly added content, please feel free to subscribe. Until my next post, I wish each one of you all the best and pray that the Lord will bless you all in everything you do.

Tuesday, June 1, 2021

BREAKING TEMPLE NEWS: Additional Phased Temple Reopenings Announced

Note: This post was originally published as scheduled at 10:15 AM, with subsequent updates added between 11:45 AM and 12:45 PM.

Hello again, everyone! The Church News previously announced that the weekly announcements about temple reopenings were moving from Monday to Tuesday. That was followed by the major announcement last week that just over three quarters of temples worldwide will move into phases of proxy work by the end of July.

As a result of those announcements, this week, further details and updates have been shared. Let's get right into discussing all of that. First, for informational purposes, these updates are being pulled from official announcements from the Newsroom, with the details further confirmed by the Church News. The Church News also has a weekly status tracker, which shows the updated status of temples by area. So anyone with any questions on the changes laid out in this post is invited to go to any or all of these sources for additional context.That being said, let's take some time to break down the latest announced changes. 

Effective Monday June 7 (6 days from now), the temples in Atlanta Georgia, Brigham City Utah, and Nashville Tennessee will be the first of those mentioned in last week's announcement to transition to phase 3, offering all living ordinances in the previously-established priority order, along with limited proxy work as scheduled. For each of these temples, as June 7 draws closer, members in those districts will be able to schedule whichever appointments are needed through the Church's online temple page.  

The question might be asked: If a number of temples were announced to transition to phase 3 by the end of July, why is the Church only starting with 3 of them? The answer to that question was provided in advance of the changes announced last week. During his concluding remarks during General Conference, he said: "You may be wondering when you will be able to return to the temple. Answer: Your temple will be open when local government regulations allow it. When the incidence of COVID-19 in your area is within safe limits, your temple will be reopened. Do all you can to bring COVID numbers down in your area so that your temple opportunities can increase."

So, based on President Nelson's statement, the Church continues to encourage all of its' members wherever they live to follow governmnt regulations relative to the pandemic. As COVID-19 conditions improve, more temples will be able to safely transition more towards normal operations. But in addition to the phase 3 reopenings for the 3 temples in the United States, the Church also announced today that two other temples, Vancouver British Columbia and Mexico City Mexico, are now in phase 2, which allows the perofrmance of all living ordinances in the previously-noted priority order.

Both of the temples now transitioning to phase 2 following a roller-coaster for both. The Mexico City Mexico Temple was first reopened in phase 1 in late August of last year, and has seen multiple issues where phase upgrades were attempted, only to have that temple paused in its' reopening before attempting to resume any previous operational phase. The Vancouver British Columbia Temple had originally shifted to phase 2 in mid-to-late August of last year, moving back to  phase 1 in November, so that temple is now able to resume phase 2.

And perhaps the shifts described in the efforts to reopen the two temples provides further insight into the need for caution and prudence in the process of reopening temples more than anything else could. Although some areas may have low transmission rates for the virus for the time being, if too much complacency occurs too prematurely, then any shifts announced by the Church may have to be undone or reversed. In my opinion, one major benefit of having a former physician as the President of the Church at this time is that he understands the effects that any health issues can have on individuals, communities, and congregations.

I have previously shared my belief that President Nelson has been held in reserve and that his life has been spared up to now because the Lord knew that he would be best suited to help the Church deal with the present pandemic. I love and sustain President Nelson, his counselors, and the members of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, and am grateful for their measured and moderate approach to resuming normal operations in the Church.

Meanwhile, as previously announced, the following 13 temples in the following general regions will reopen under phase 2-B, also effective Monday June 7:

United States: Denver and Fort Collins Colorado; Boston Massachusetts, Hartford Connecticut; Philadelphia Pennsylvania; 

Latin America (including Mexico and Central and Soouth America): Hermosillo Sonora and Tijuana Mexico; Manaus Brazil; Caracas Venezuela; Quetzaltenango Guatemala; Trujillo Peru

Europe: Lisbon Portugal & Rome Italy

In view of these announced changes, effective June 7, 8 temples will remain closed for renovations, with 1 of those given phase 1 status and 5 others given 2-B status (which will allow individuals or small groups to schedule ordinances through the page for their assigned temple at the nearest open temples); the Kyiv Ukraine Temple still being the sole temple of the Church that has not open in any phase whatsoever since all temples were closed last year; 5 temples remaining paused (3 of which had reached phase 3, with 1 each in phase 2 and 2-B); only 2 remaining in phase 1; 30 in phase 2; 92 in phase 2-B; and the final 30 temples in phase 3.

The Church will continue to monitor COVID-19 conditions worldwide and will continue to announce temple reopenings as those arrangements can safely be made. I am grateful to have been able to hear about these updates and will be sure to pass any additional Church news or major temple developments as I become aware thereof.

That does it for now. Any and all comments are, as always, welcome and appreciated, on any post at any time, as long as such comments are made in accordance with the established guidelines. Thank you for the privilege of your time. If you enjoyed what you read here and would like to stay informed of newly added content, please feel free to subscribe. Until my next post, I wish each one of you all the best and pray that the Lord will bless you all in everything you do.

Monday, May 31, 2021

President Henry B. Eyring Observes His 88th Birthday Today

Hello again, everyone! On this last day in May, I am grateful for the opportunity I have to pay tribute to President Henry Bennion Eyring, who was born on this day in 1933, to well-known physicist Henry Eyring and Mildred Bennion. His father's sister, Camilla Eyring, married Spencer W. Kimball, while his father's first cousin was Marion G. Romney. Young "Hal", as he was known, was generally a very good student. He recounted an experiencHe asked his son what he thought about when he had nothing else to consider, and told him that he should pursue that subject.

This led young Hal to an eventual career as an educator and academic administrator. His family would later relocate from New Jersey to Salt Lake City, Utah. Although he did not serve a full-time mission, he was an active member of the U. S. Air Force, and was stationed in New Mexico, where he served as a liaison between military officers and scientists, where he was responsible for analyzing data from tests done on nuclear weapons. Prior to his military service, he had earned a degree in physics from the University of Utah. He also studied at Harvard, where he eventually earned both a masters' and doctoral degrees in Business Administration.

While he was highly sought after by business owners who admired his analytical work, he chose to continue to pursue his education. In the meantime, it was not until 1960 (when Hal was 26 or 27 and serving in a district presidency) that he met Kathleen Johnson at a YSA meeting in New Hampshire. She was born in Palo Alto California, and had studied at Stanford before coming to Harvard. She also spent some time studying at the Universities of Vienna and Paris.

Because Hal was serving as a counselor in the district presidency, his district president (Wilbur Cox) adjusted his assignments to accommodate his desire to date Kathleen. Much of their dating relationship was built through long-distance communication or travel, with Kathleen making several cross-country trips prior to their engagement in the early months of 1961.

They continued their courtship for the next year or so, and were married in the Logan Utah Temple on July 27, 1962, by which time Hal was 29 years old. Their marriage was solemnized by his uncle, then-Elder Spencer W. Kimball of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles. Their family would eventually include six children (four sons and two daughters).

Two of their sons are Henry J. Eyring (who current serves as president of BYU-Idaho and as an area seventy) and Matthew J. Eyring (who is a Chief Strategy Innovation Officer with Vivint, a company specializing in home automation, who served previously as an area seventy as well.). Hal eventually became a professor at Stanford University. He continued his career as an associate professor at the Stanford School of Business for 9 years (between 1972 and 1981), and went on to be a Sloan Visiting Faculty Fellow at MIT, during which time he also took courses in human behavior. Sometime between late 1970 and early 1971, his wife asked him if he shouldn't be studying with Neal A. Maxwell, who was serving at that time as Commissioner of Church Education. After considering her question and following a lot of reflection, Hal accepted an offer to become president of Ricks College. Although other job offers came his way during his 6 year tenure at the college, he continued to serve until his release in 1977. His previous Church callings included being a bishop, serving as a member of the Sunday School General Board, and as a regional representative.

In 1980, Hal was called to serve as the Commissioner of Church Education, succeeding Jeffrey R. Holland. He would continue to serve in that capacity until 1986. When the Church reorganized the Presiding Bishopric in April 1985, Robert D. Hales was called as the new Presiding Bishop, and he recommended that Hal serve as his First Counselor. After serving in that capacity for 7.5 years, he was called in October 1992 to serve as a member of the First Quorum of the Seventy.

When he began his new assignment, he was called for a second time to seerve as the Commissioner of Church Education, an assignment in which he would continue until 2004. Before that time, following the passing of Church president Howard W. Hunter and the subsequent reorganization of the First Presidency in March 1995, new Church president Gordon B. Hinckley called Elder Eyring to the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles.

12.5 years later, following the death of President James E. Faust, who had served as Second Counselor to President Hinckley, Elder Eyring was invited to join Presidents Hinckley and Thomas S. Monson in the First Presidency. The way that came about is an interesting story. Elder Eyring had taken the phone call from President Hinckley and had heard his invitation to join the First Presidency, but because he had occasionally taken calls on the Church's phone system that were meant for some of his apostolic colleagues, he asked President Hinckley if he was sure he was talking to the right person. "This is Hal Eyring." he said. President Hinckley quickly responded, "I know who this is." Thus it was that the first apostle appointed during President Hinckley's administration was called to serve in the First Presidency for an almost four-month period prior to President Hinckley's passing.

When the First Presidency was reorganized, new Church president Thomas S. Monson called President Eyring to continue serving in the First Presidency, this time as his First Counselor. While in that capacity, President Eyring has dedicated 8 temples (San Salvador El Salvador, Gilbert Arizona, Payson Utah, Indianapolis Indiana, Philadelphia Pennsylvania (for which he had also presided at the groundbreaking), Hartford Connecticut, Paris France, and Cedar City Utah). The dedication of the Gilbert Arizona Temple was an interesting anomaly. Although President Monson presided at all three sessions, he requested that President Eyring read the prayer during the first session, so that was one recent example of how the dedication duties were shared by two apostles.

President Eyring also rededicated seven temples (Ogden Utah, Buenos Aires Argentina Mexico City Mexico, Montreal Quebec, Suva Fiji, Idaho Falls Idaho, and Jordan River Utah Temple). The Ogden Utah Temple rededication is another interesting case. President Eyring conducted all three sessions and presided at the final two sessions, in which he also offered the dedicatory prayer, with President Monson having presided at and offering the dedicatory prayer in the first session. As we also know, around two years ago (on May 23, 2017), the Church announced that President Monson would be stepping back from an active role in the day-to-day administration of the Church.

Following the release of that statement, Presidents Eyring and Dieter F. Uchtdorf assumed oversight of all decisions except for those requiring the prophet's direct approval. Following President Monson's passing last year on January 2, the First Presidency was reorganized on January 14, at which time President Eyring was called to continue his service in the First Presidency, and is serving as Second Counselor a second time, working with Church President Russell M. Nelson and his First Counselor, President Dallin H. Oaks. For the last several years, President Eyring's wife has been in ill health, and he has done a wonderful job of balancing his responsibilities in the First Presidency with his role being his wife's caregiver. Because President Eyring has a familial connection to both Presidents Spencer W. Kimball and Marion G. Romney, who were involved in the 1981 dedication of the Jordan River Utah Temple, President Nelson asked President Eyring to preside over its' recent rededication on May 20, 2018. As noted in an earlier post, President Eyring drew heavily on the original dedicatory prayer in composing the dedicatory prayer for that temple. He went on just one after that (a year ago from today) to preside over the one-session private rededication for the Oklahoma City Oklahoma Temple, since he also has ancestral connections to that temple. Although he is now 87 years old, by all accounts, he continues to be in good health.

His lifelong devotion to education and his decades of committed Church service is an inspiration to all. I had the opportunity to attend a stake conference around 14 years ago, over which then-Elder Eyring presided. His message to us at that time focused on unity. It is a message he has since shared repeatedly in several General Conference addresses, a focus that has since been adopted by the current First Presidency, with multiple efforts underway to unify the Church on a global scale and to streamline and standardize policies and procedures. That message of unity was particularly poignant during the October 2017 General Conference, when he, as First Counselor to the ailing President Monson, served as the de facto presiding authority, since his talks highlighted the important concept that the Lord is at the helm of His work, and that, regardless of the health of His chosen prophet, He continues to move the work forward. To date, President Eyring has given a total of 108 addresses in General Conference.

Of those, 5 were given during his 7 years in the Presiding Bishopric (including his first which, for unknown reasons, is not in the main repository page where his other talks can be found), with 25 others given during his 12.5 years in the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, and the remaining 78 since he was first called to the First Presidency in October 2007. During his apostolic tenure thus far, he has served as a counselor to 3 Church Presidents. Aside from his being the junior and youngest member of the current First Presidency, he is the fifth-most senior apostle and the fourth oldest overall. Among his fellow apostles, President Eyring has been one who has clearly shown when the feeling behind the message he is giving during each General Conference has had a direct impact on him. We are blessed to see how deeply he wants to convey such ideas, thoughts, and feelings to each of us.

I am grateful for the life, ministry, and service of this amazing man, whom I sustain with all my heart, and for the opportunity I have had in this small way to pay tribute to him on this day as he celebrate his 87th birthday. That does if for now. Any and all comments are, as always, welcome and appreciated, on any post at any time, as long as such comments are made in accordance with the established guidelines. Thank you for the privilege of your time. If you enjoyed what you read here and would like to stay informed of newly-added content, please feel free to subscribe. Until my next post, I wish each one of you all the best and pray that the Lord will bless you all in everything you do.

Saturday, May 29, 2021

BREAKING NEWS: Elder Quentin L. Cook Dedicates Temple District of Nauvoo in First Apostolic Assignment Outside of Utah

Hello again, everyone! The Newsroom and the Church News have shared a similar report on the first major apostolic travel assignment to be filled since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. Elder Quentin L. Cook of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, who chairs the Priesthood and Fmaily Concil of the Church, visited Nauvoo to look over several prominent Church history sites in the city, and to dedicate those sites collectively to form what will be known as the Temple District of Nauvoo. That name is being applied to those historic locations because they are all fairly close the the Nauvoo Illinois Temple of the Church. 

Note the subtle difference in title there. The Nauvoo Illinois Temple District encompasses the specific stakes assigned to that temple. But the Temple District of Nauvoo refers not to those stakes that the temple serves, but the historic sites just west of the temple. Elder Cook was accompanied by his wife, Mary G. Cook, Elder LeGrand R. Curtis Jr., who serves as the Church Historian and Recorder, and his wife, Jane C. Curtis. Also in attendance at the dedication was Lachlan Mackay, a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Aposstles in the Community of Christ, who was accompanied by his wife, Christin Mackay, the latter of whom has an assigned role in the Community of Christ as the Joseph Smith Historic Site Director.

Elder Cook provided grateful acknowledgement of the efforts of Mackay and his wife in fulfilling their roles to maintain those sites, and noted that The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and the Community of Christ have a good partnership in place to ensure the preservation of those sites for years to come. The articles note the specific sites that were included in the dedicatory prayer offered by Elder Cook. And the Newsroom particularly provides more context into why each site is significant in Church history.

This is a wonderful development. And that's not just because of the dedication of the Temple District of Nauvoo, but also because it is the first time since the onset of COVID-19 that any apostle has traveled outside of Utah. I am hoping that means that the Church is able to cautiously transition back into having the apostles expand their ministry efforts through more regular travel.

Having said that, as President Ballard and other apostles have acknowledged, the COVID-19 pandemic has led the Church towards hopefully using a combination of in-person apostolic visits where practical in combination with virtual efforts where that option makes more sense. It will be interesting to see what happens in the coming months in that respect. I continue to monitor all Chruch news and temple updates and will be sure to bring word of those to you all as I become aware thereof.

That does it for now. Any and all comments are, as always, welcome and appreciated, on any post at any time, as long as such comments are made in accordance with the established guidelines. Thank you for the privilege of your time. If you enjoyed what you read here and would like to stay informed of newly added content, please feel free to subscribe. Until my next post, I wish each one of you all the best and pray that the Lord will bless you all in everything you do.

Friday, May 28, 2021

BREAKING TEMPLE NEWS: Official Rendering Released for the Lindon Utah Temple

Hello again, everyone! As some of you might recall, in December of last year, the site location and preliminary details were released for the Lindon Utah Temple, with the note that a rendering would be released and a groundbreaking set when that was feasible, with project manageers working through the approvals with city leaders. In the interim, the Church has had a few examples in the recent past where initial site announcements were updated with renderings. I believe that happened most recently with other Utah or US temples, but I have not been able to confirm that.

Anyways, in the latest news update on that temple from the Church Temples site, it has been noted that a rendering has been added to the initial news release on the Newsroom. The rendering shows two steeples, no angel Moroni statue, and similar elements of design to the Layton Utah Temple, in addition to similarities to perhaps a few other temples. I will leave it to others (particularly longtime reader and commenter Jim Anderson, if he is willing to do so) to provide further insight on the temple's rendering. The timing of the release of this rendering comes as the Church is moving closer to being able to set a formal groundbreaking for that temple. 

It seems likely that the grundbreaking for that temple could be set for July, August, or perhaps even September, and that the groundbreaking for the Lindon Utah Temple might be one of the next announced, if not the very next. Parenthetically, it is worth noting that I'm watching the following temples for potential groundbreaking announcements in the near future (listed in current order of likelihood, though that is subject to confirmation from the First Presidency through official announcements): Lindon Utah, Pittsburgh Pennsylvania, Helena Montana, Pago Pago American Samoa, and Neiafu Tonga. 

It would also not surprise me if, in the next several months, announcements came down the pike for temple groundbreakings in Port Moresby Papua New Guinea, Port Vila Vanuatu, Tarawa Kiribati, and Phnom Pehn Cambodia Temples. In addition, as previously mentioned, it would not surprise me if further action and official announcements were made regarding locations, renderings, or groundbreakings for any of the 9 other US temples which were announced most recently, or for 4-6 other temple cities outside the United States.

I won't list those particulars here for the time being, but will be happy to give the details to any of you who request them in the comments. I am grateful to have been able to hear about and pass along this news to you all here. I continue to monitor all Church news reports and temple developments, and will be sure to mention those as well as time and circumstances allow. 

That does it for now. Any and all comments are, as always, welcome and appreciated, on any post at any time, as long as such comments are made in accordance with the established guidelines. Thank you for the privilege of your time. If you enjoyed what you read here and would like to stay informed of newly added content, please feel free to subscribe. Until my next post, I wish each one of you all the best and pray that the Lord will bless you all in everything you do.

Tuesday, May 25, 2021

BREAKING TEMPLE NEWS: 76% of Churchwide Temples Will Open for Proxy Work by July; Reopenings Announced for the Next Week

Hello again, everyone! I do have some major breaking temple news regarding reopenings to get to, but before I do, I wanted to note something else: During the last couple of weeks especially, with elements of the temple reopenings sticking to a standard form, it was easier for me to copy each post from the previous reopening announcement, and leave room for new developments to be added before the post was scheduled to publish as pre-set.

Because I could not have possibly anticipated the news I needed to share with you all this morning, and due to the fact that I had another rough night last night, I didn't wake up to the announcement from today as I usually would for Church news alerts. Since I wasn't able to update the copied post before it was scheduled for publication around 1.5 hours ago, the incomplete post, which had not been updated, was published at the appointed time.

But today's announcement contained major news that needed to be properly focused on, so I determined that the best option would be to delete the post that had been published as scheduled and to start this one with the major developments in a fresh new post. So I apologize to any of you who read or were in the process of reading that preset post, because it was incomplete and did not have the relevant information. Hopefully the new post penned at this time will make up for that.

That being said, let's get to the huge news shared by the Church this morning:: With this week's update being published, it will be the last one published for May. The next update, likely coming next week, will be posted on June 1. So the last update for May indicated that, as part of the phased reopening of temples, if COVID-19 conditions permit, 76% of all temples will open for proxy work by the end of July. This is a huge step towards normalcy for the Church.

phLet's break down the details: 60 temples are planned to open in phase 3 between now and the end of July. Rather than list the individual temples, I will refer anyone interested to the link I shared above, which breaks down the individual temples by area. My personal focus will be on listing the number of temples by geographical area that will open in phas:e 3 by the end of July:

Caribbean Area: 1 temple

Central America Area: 2 temples

Mexico: 4 temples

North America Central: 10 temples

North America Northeast: 1 temple

North America Southeast: 4 temples

North America Southwest: 15 temples

North America West: 7 temples

Utah: 16 temples

As an important note, the Mesa Arizona, Salt Lake, and St. George Utah Temples are closed for renovation but will be given phase 3 designation, which will allow patrons in those districts to schedule proxy work at the nearest temple open in phase 3. Additionally, in the standard weekly update on temple reopenings from the Church News, two weeks from now (on June 7), 13 temples will move from phase 2 to phase 2-B, which allows the performance of all living ordinances, in priority order, in addition to offering youth the opportunity to participate in baptisms for the dead.

Those 13 temples include: 5 in the United States (Denver and Fort Collins Colorado; Boston Massachusetts; Hartford Connecticut; and Philadelphia Pennsylvania); 6 in Latin America (Hermosillo Sonora and Tijuana Mexico; Caracas Venezuela; Manaus Brazil; Quetzaltenango Guatemala; and Trujillo Peru); and 2 in Europe (Lisbon Portugal and Rome Italy). The information about the reopenings is further explored in the weekly temple status tracker, in addition to which all of these new updates and details are likewise confirmed through the official release on the Newsroom.

In view of these updates, effective Monday (May 31), the Church's temples will break down as follows: 8 remain closed for major renovation, 4 of which (Hamilton New Zealand, Mesa Arizona, Salt Lake, and St. George Utah) have been given reopening statuses, which will allow patrons in those districts to schedule appointments at nearby temples. The Hamilton temple went into phase 3 status as of yesterday, and the 3 US temples have been in phase 2-B and will all be granted phase 3 status between now and the end of July.

Meanwhile, 1 temple (Kyiv Ukraine) has not reopened in any phase whatsoever since all temples were closed last year, 5 temples have "paused" in their reopening (3 were in phase 3, with 1 each in phase 2 and 2-B when local COVID-19 conditions necessitated the pauses); 4 are in phase 1, 41 in phase 2, 82 in phase 2-B, and the remaining 27 in phase 3. I am grateful for the latest reopening announcements (demonstrating the caution and inspiration attending that process), and will watch with great interest for further information on the June and July reopenings in the coming weeks.

I also continue to monitor all other Church news reports and temple updates and will do my best to bring you all word of those here as I become aware of all such developments.

That does it for now. Any and all comments are, as always, welcome and appreciated, on any post at any time, as long as such comments are made in accordance with the established guidelines. Thank you for the privilege of your time. If you enjoyed what you read here and would like to stay informed of newly added content, please feel free to subscribe. Until my next post, I wish each one of you all the best and pray that the Lord will bless you all in everything you do.

Wednesday, May 19, 2021

BREAKING TEMPLE NEWS: Official Locations Confirmed and Renderings Released for Tarawa Kiribati and Port Vila Vanuatu Temples

Hello again, everyone! Less than an hour ago, the Newsroom shared an announcement from the First Presidency. The site locations have been confirmed and the renderings released for the Tarawa Kiribati and Port Vila Vanuatu Temples. which were both announced in October of last year. Although the Tarawa temple was the first of the two to be announced, the information about the Vanuatu Temple was provided first, probably because it is first alphabetically. Let's get to some details.

In Port Vila, the single-story temple, which will be roughly 10,00 square feet in area, is set to be a single-story edifice that will be built on a 1.62 acre site at the location where the Blacksands meetinghouse currently sits. Another building on the site will house an arrival and distribution center, in addition to patron housing. Meanwhile, the Tarawa Temple will be a single-story edifice roughly the same size as its' counterpart in Port Vila. A separate building 450 meters from the temple will be paired with a new meetinghouse and patron housing facility that will be part of the project. The temple portion of that project will rise on a 0.80 acre site at Ambo in Southern Tarawa.

This afternoon's announcement means that 3 of the 6 total temples announced last October have now had sites announced, with renderings released for two of those. And it also means we are nearly certain to have these two additional Pacific Area Temples have a groundbreaking later this year. With today's announcement, there are now a total of 3 temples with a groundbreaking scheduled (2 of which will happen within the next month), and 9 more for which a groundbreaking is anticipated at some point within the next 12 months (if not sooner).

But I am also moniotring developments for the 9 remaining temples in the United States which were announced since the beginning of last month, in addition to a minimum of 4 temples outside the United States for which, based on information I have found in various places, could soon see action taken. Any of those 13, and by extension, any the remaining 23 announced temples (particularly any of the 11 other temples outside the United States which were announced during last month's General Conference and might be on the smaller side) could also see anything more official announced in the near future.

Throughout the last several months, between the accounts from President Nelson, his apostolic colleagues, and many other general Church leaders who are involved in the planning of temples, and on information that has been released through such outlets as "This Week in Mormons", if the Church is able to use uew and innovative methods such as prefabricated modular temples or other processes that could accelerate temple construction going forward, the Church could be entering a new unprecedented, accelerated, and rapidly-expansive period of temple construction.

References in the past on this blog from myself and others have noted the idea of a ten-fold increase in the number of temples, or that "adding a zero" to the current number would put us closer to envisioning what President Nelson's plans for temple construction might be.  A recently-published article from LDS Living highlighted insights from Bishop W. Christopher Waddell, First Counselor in the Presiding Bishopric, who serves on the Temple and Family History Executive Council, and from Elder Kevin R. Duncan,. who serves as the Temple Department Executive Director. 

Those statements indicated that the modular design of the Helena Montana Temple would allow it to be built and dedicated within 12-15 months of whenever construction begins. That is a much quicker turnaround than the typical 2-4 year window we've seen for temples of a similar or slightly larger size in the past. I look forward to getting a clearer picture of what such advances might do for temple construction going forward. In the meantime, I continue to monitor all other Church news and temple developments, and will be sure to bring word of those to you all as I become aware thereof.

That does it for now. Any and all comments are, as always, welcome and appreciated, on any post at any time, as long as such comments are made in accordance with the established guidelines. Thank you for the privilege of your time. If you enjoyed what you read here and would like to stay informed of newly added content, please feel free to subscribe. Until my next post, I wish each one of you all the best and pray that the Lord will bless you all in everything you do.

Tuesday, May 18, 2021

BREAKING TEMPLE NEWS: First Presidency Announces Temple Reopenings for the Next Two Weeks

Hello again, everyone! The First Presidency has announced more temple reopenings that will be effective next  wek. Those updates have been shared by the  Newsroom and the Church News and outlined by the temple reopening status tracker. Let's get to those details.

First, the Manhattan New Yotk Temple is moving from phase 1 to phase 2, which will allow that temple to offer all living ordinances in priority order. 

Meanwhile, the Mexico City Mexico Temple will unpause and be pushed back to phase 1 (offering living husband-to-wife sealings where both are previously endowed). In addition, the Taipei Taiwant Temple, which had reached phase 3 recently, will pause due to local restrictions, while the Toronto Ontario Temple will resume phase 2-B after dropping back to phase 2 in recent weeks.  And although the Hamilton New Zeland Temple remains closed for renovation, it is being given a phase 3 designation so that patrons within its' district can schedule proxy or living ordinances for any of the temples open in nearby Austrailia.

In addition, I made reference last week to the changes that would be coming for 9 temples in Finland and North America. Those details have not changed, and remain in effect. Above and beyond that, the Columbus Ohio and Washington D.C. Temples are both being given phase 2-B designation, and those within those districts who want to schedule  baptisms for the dead can do so at the nearest temples with the same status.

As of next Monday (May 24), the Church's  temple reopenings will break down as follows: 8 remain closed for renoation, with a few of those granted phase 2-B or 3 status; 1 (Kyiv Ukraine) has not reopened in any phase; 4 remain paused (3 had reached phase 3; 1 had reached phase 2); 4 temples remianing in phase 1; 41 in phase 2; 83 in phase 2-B; and 27 which have reached phase 3. I am grateful that the Church continues a cautiously-coordinated reopening plan for temples around the world. I continue to monitor all major Church news updates and temple developments, and will be sure to bring you all word of those as I become aware thereof.

That does it for now. Any and all comments are, as always, welcome and appreciated, on any post at any time, as long as such comments are made in accordance with the established guidelines. Thank you for the privilege of your time. If you enjoyed what you read here and would like to stay informed of newly added content, please feel free to subscribe. Until my next post, I wish each one of you all the best and pray that the Lord will bless you all in everything you do.

Saturday, May 15, 2021

BREAKING TEMPLE NEWS: Groundbreaking Held for Deseret Peak Utah Temple Today

Hello again, everyone! As previously mentioned in the comment threads of another post on this blog, the groundbreaking for the Deseret Peak Utah Temple occurred as scheduled this morning. Elder Brook P. Hales, a General Authority Seventy who has served/is serving as the Secretary to the First Presidency, presided. Other leaders in attendance were Elder Berne S. Broadbent, an area seventy who resides in nearby South Jordan, and Brother Richard Droubray, who previously served as a stake president and who chaired the groundbreaking committee for the temple. Per the release, video of the groundbreaking ceremony will be made available later today. 

And although it was not explicitly stated, I anticipate that the plan remains to utilize an accelrated construction process for that project. Stay tuned for more on that as i learn about it. That does it for now. Any and all comments are, as always, welcome and appreciated, on any post at any time, as long as such comments are made in accordance with the established guidelines. Thank you for the privilege of your time. If you enjoyed what you read here and would like to stay informed of newly added content, please feel free to subscribe. Until my next post, I wish each one of you all the best and pray that the Lord will bless you all in everything you do.