• Idaho Falls Idaho Temple
    Mar 5 2025

    Built between 1937 and 1945, this temple is a special building for many Idaho Latter Day Saints. Because it is built on the banks of the Snake River it is called The Temple by the River, and is surrounded by some very scenic views.

    This temple has amazing murals - Janelle's favorite even. And the best looking oxen Toni has seen in a baptistry! please join us as we talk and learn about the Idaho Falls Idaho Temple!


    Announcement: 3 March 1937

    Dedication: 23–25 September 1945 by George Albert Smith

    Rededication: 4 June 2017 by Henry B. Eyring

    Ordinance Rooms: Four instruction rooms (four-stage progressive), seven sealing rooms, and one baptistry

    Total Floor Area: Originally 48,500, now 85,624 square feet | 7,955 square meters

    Height: 156 feet | 47.5 meters


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    40 mins
  • Mesa Arizona Temple
    Feb 26 2025

    This week we have another amazing guest! My friend Laurie Jayne loves the Mesa Arizona Temple and shares some great stories and history with us!

    The first donation toward a Latter-day Saint temple in Arizona came almost 33 years before its announcement. On Jan. 24, 1887, Helena Roseberry — a widow from Pima, Arizona — gave $5 to Elder Moses Thatcher of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles for a house of the Lord in her home state. That money was held dear in Salt Lake City until a temple was announced for Arizona on Oct. 3, 1919.


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    48 mins
  • Cardston Alberta Temple
    Feb 19 2025

    This is our eighth episode of our first season, so today we are talking about the impressive Cardston Alberta Temple! And I’m so glad I picked Janelle to be my cohost because she has some history with this temple! Listen until the end to hear the craziest baptism story I've heard!


    The Deseret Evening News reported that the inside design “would be similar to other temples in the Church, but outside it is totally unlike any of them.” The architects' goal was “to conform to the peculiar requirements of such a building rather than to imitate any [architectural] style.”

    Architects Harold Burton and Hyrum Pope drew their inspiration from famed American architect Frank Lloyd Wright, whose designs “were bold in form, original in their geometric decorative details, and carefully blended with their natural surroundings.”1 They were particularly influenced by Wright’s Unity Church in Oak Park, Illinois.

    "each of the ordinance rooms ... is decorated with different inlaid and panelled hardwoods, which include oak, birdseye maple, South American walnut, African mahogany, rosewood and ebony. There is a hierarchal order in the use of the woods, so that the decoration begins in the lower rooms with small panels of simply grained, light-coloured woods and culminates in the Celestial room with large and elaborate panels of the richest woods."

    Announcement: 27 June 1913

    Public Open House: Tours offered during the final years of construction (1920–1923)

    Dedication: 26–29 August 1923 by Heber J. Grant

    Rededication: 2 July 1962 by Hugh B. Brown (addition only)

    Re-re-dedication: 22–24 June 1991 by Gordon B. Hinckley

    Ordinance Rooms: Four instruction rooms (four-stage progressive), five sealing rooms, and one baptistry

    Total Floor Area: 88,562 square feet | 8,228 square meters

    Height: 85 feet | 25.9 meters


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    46 mins
  • Laie Hawaii Temple
    Feb 12 2025

    In December of 1850 the first missionaries arrived in Hawaii to preach the gospel. They organized a branch and built a meetinghouse, and in 1852 George Q Cannon began the hawaiian translation of the Book of Mormon, this process took two years. By that time there were thousands of baptized church members and a branch on each island.

    In 1865 land was purchased in Laie on the east coast of Oahu for a gathering place for the saints

    June 1915 The church in hawaii was 65 years old, the gathering in Laie was 50 years old

    President Joseph F Smith dedicated the site for the future construction of the temple as he was there on business. It was announced at October conference that year, and construction began in 1916

    Site Dedication: 1 June 1915 by Joseph F. Smith

    Announcement: 3 October 1915

    Dedication: 27–30 November 1919 by Heber J. Grant

    Rededication: 13–15 June 1978 by Spencer W. Kimball

    reRededication: 21 November 2010 by Thomas S. Monson

    Ordinance Rooms: Four instruction rooms (four-stage progressive), five sealing rooms, and one baptistry

    Total Floor Area: 42,100 square feet | 3,911 square meters

    Height: 50 feet | 15.2 meters

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    36 mins
  • Salt Lake Temple
    Feb 5 2025

    Today's temple is the beautiful and impressive and iconic Salt Lake Temple!

    And because it’s such a big deal, we have a guest for today’s Podcast! My friend Becky has joined us. I love talking to Becky about anything because she has unique perspectives, and a jaw dropping story to tell us!

    There is so much to talk about, there's no way we can hit every story or fact that I wish we could. In fact, to prepare I just read a 400 page book called “Forty Years: the saga of building the Salt Lake Temple” by Mark Henshaw, it came out in 2020.

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    1 hr and 3 mins
  • Manti Utah Temple
    Jan 29 2025

    The Manti temple site was dedicated as President Brigham Young traveled back to Salt Lake after dedicating the newly finished St George Temple. In the same month he also traveled to Cache Valley to dedicate the site for the Logan Utah Temple.

    The Manti Utah Temple was built on a rattlesnake-infested site, known as the Manti Stone Quarry. Once Brigham Young designated the site for a temple, it became known as Temple Hill. The quarry's stone, Manti oolite, is the same cream-colored stone used for the temple exterior.

    Announcement: 25 June 1875
    Groundbreaking and Site Dedication: 25 April 1877 by Brigham Young
    Public Dedication: 21–23 May 1888 by Lorenzo Snow
    Rededication: 14–16 June 1985 by Gordon B. Hinckley
    Rededication: 21 April 2024 by Russell M. Nelson
    Ordinance Rooms: Four instruction rooms, nine sealing rooms, and one baptistry
    Total Floor Area: 74,792 square feet | 6,948 square meters
    Height: 179 feet | 54.6 meters

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    42 mins
  • Logan Utah Temple
    Jan 22 2025

    On a visit to Cache valley in 1863 President Young told the youth “you will have the privilege of going into the towers of a glorious Temple built unto the name of the Most High (pointing in the direction of the bench), east of us upon the Logan bench; and while you stand in the towers of the Temple and your eyes survey this glorious valley filled with cities and villages, occupied by tens of thousands of Latter-day Saints, you will then call to mind this visitation of President Young and his company."


    Announcement: 6 October 1876

    Site Dedication: 18 May 1877 by Orson Pratt

    Groundbreaking: 18 May 1877 by John W. Young

    Dedication: 17–19 May 1884 by John Taylor

    Public Open House: 5 February–3 March 1979

    Rededication: 13–15 March 1979 by Spencer W. Kimball

    Ordinance Rooms: Four instruction rooms with separate veil room, eleven sealing rooms, and one baptistry

    Total Floor Area: Originally 59,000 sqft now: 119,619 square feet | 11,113 square meters

    Height: 170 feet | 51.8 meters



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    27 mins
  • St George Utah Temple
    Jan 15 2025

    A Temple in St George was announced in November 1871 - Salt Lake Temple has been going for 24 years at this point. Logan and Manti had not been announced yet. just 1100 people lived in the area who were sent down to try and grow cotton. They knew that had failed, but President Young saw the opportunity to build a community around the temple.


    Announcement: 31 January 1871

    Groundbreaking and Site Dedication: 9 November 1871 by Brigham Young

    Preliminary Dedication: 1 January 1877 by Wilford Woodruff, Erastus Snow, and Brigham Young

    Dedication: 6–8 April 1877 by Daniel H. Wells (with Brigham Young presiding)⁠

    Rededication: 11–12 November 1975 by Spencer W. Kimball

    Rededication: 10 December 2023 by Jeffrey R. Holland

    Total Floor Area: 143,969 square feet | 13,375 square meters
    Height: 175 feet | 53.3 meters


    I just want to give a shout out to the website churchofjesuschristtemples.org it is a great encyclopedia of information and pictures, if any listeners are curious about learning more about any of these temples. I use it a lot to prepare my part of the podcast, as well as the church sites. But shout out to the guy who just maintains this site as a labor of love, his name is Rick Satterfield.

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    41 mins