Monday, April 3, 2023

 During Jesus’s time in Jerusalem, He visited the temple. There, inside His father’s house, Jesus saw various merchants doing business. Jesus was appalled to see a place of worship being desecrated and turned into a “den of thieves” (Mark 11:17). Speaking with unmistakable authority, He commanded the merchants and moneychangers to leave.

I help clean the Palmyra Temple once a week and have found that I think about Him while dusting, vacuuming or other tasks. This cleaning is not drudgery, it is inspiring! I would not want this or any other temple desecrated. It is His House.

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 Even though it’s one day after the traditional Palm Sunday, I wanted to bear my witness of the Savior, Jesus Christ. His triumphal entry into Jerusalem began a week that changed the world. He has changed me for the better. Heavenly Father be praised for His divine gift of His only Begotten Son. Hosanna to God and the Lamb!

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Sunday, November 27, 2022

My Palmyra Temple sisters



There’s Marye Burris and Mary Barris, Sis. Wildey and Sis. Smiley,

Sisters Fife and Fink, Patterson, Peterson, and Pitts,

Sisters Clay, Cooper and Fitch.


Sisters from Horseheads and Freedom, Batavia and Endicott,

Hours on the road to get to Palmyra, they sacrifice a lot!


These are the sisters in my sphere, So blessed to know them, I’m so grateful to be here! 


We enjoyed Thanksgiving dinner with all the senior missionary couples in the basement of the Hill Cumorah Visitors Center!






Monday, October 24, 2022

A Frenzy of Fall Colors

  Upstate New York is so beautiful! I’m amazed that I didn’t know this from what I heard about it from Wade and my few brief trips here. I’ve been surprised at the great amount of rainfall here, which of course helps maintain the growth of large trees that line the streets and large yards with green trees and grass. The old homes that have been kept, preserved and beautified are some of the most beautiful I’ve ever seen.  There are villages and towns, not just cities. We live in the “village” of Palmyra. 

Autumn has always been our favorite season. We were married in October and football season is in autumn. We have traditionally taken drives up the canyons of Salt Lake to see the beautiful leaves on all the trees. This year, while not the perfect fall temperatures here in Palmyra, we’ve been blessed to see a frenzy of fall colors of leaves on the trees. It all happened about ten days ago, and is slowly muting as the days go by. So on our off hours from the temple, we drive along the country roads and stop and take pictures as we see some amazing beauty. I’m sure we’ve collectively taken at least 1,000 photos the last few weeks. The  Palmyra Temple, Sacred Grove and Hill Cumorah are accented with the colors of the leaves. It’s all more than enough to “please the eye and gladden the heart”. Makes us love this season more and all of God’s glorious creations.



Just outside the temple doors 

Paths of leaves in the Sacred Grove

View from the temple to the Sacred Grove











  

Sunday, October 2, 2022

From a Forest to a Stage to a Forest Again

We have hiked the Hill Cumorah several times since we’ve been here. There is always a special feeling here. Usually we have been alone on the Hill and wander the many trails that wind across and through the trees. The Hill Cumorah was a special place for Wade while he was here as a young missionary. He stayed in what they called the “wind tunnel” (a long tent-like structure) adjacent to the Hill with several other missionaries when he first arrived before he was assigned to his first area. Then during Pageant time, he was at the Hill continuously for two weeks, rehearsing for the Pageant, holding study groups with the elders and sisters, and then proselyting in the great crowds of people who would come to view the Pageant.  He gets quiet and thoughtful when we come here, probably remembering all that happened.  But, then I think we both remember that some very special events occurred here. I think about Joseph coming on that dark night, by himself, at an angel’s command. And then returning four more times each year to receive instruction, and finally to receive the sacred plates. It is a miracle to me. I am in awe and gratitude for all that happened. The Hill is under a reforestation project now with new trees, fields of wildflowers and regrowth  where stages used to fill with Book of Mormon re-enactments. It is a blessing to be here. We will always remember this special time and these special places. 

The actual Hill looks different than it did even 50 years ago. In the early 1800s, it was a forest. Later that century and into the 1900s, many trees were cleared for farmland. And almost every summer from 1937 to 2019, workers built a stage here. As many as 750 performers filled the stage to present a theatrical production that came to be known as the Hill Cumorah Pageant. They united in faith and devotion to share the broad sweep of Book of Mormon history through music, dancing, and the spoken word. Now this area is being reforested with native tree seeds. The young trees might look a bit messy, but over time this part of the hill will become a mature forest again, much like it was in the early 1800s.

Fields of wildflowers where rows and rows of chairs were set up for spectators at the Pageant.


This part of the Hill was where the stages of the Pageant were set. 

The incomparable statue of the Angel Moroni at the summit of the Hill.





Sunday, September 4, 2022

Cool Story

Old Stafford Road going between Smith frame home and Sacred Grove

For some years prior to 1996, the Church had made attempts to buy the land just north and west of the Joseph Smith home without success. This was the last remaining piece of the 100-acre Smith Homestead. Owning that property would enable the Church to have Stafford Road moved from in front of the home to behind it. This had become a major safety issue, because tourists walking to and from the Sacred Grove to the frame home had to cross that major road with traffic whizzing by at 60 miles per hour. That property belonged to Ted Bellefontaine, who was not interested in selling. 

 In 1995 Elder Charles Canfield was called as the Site Director. One of his hobbies was hunting and fishing. One of the site couples encouraged him to get acquainted with Ted Bellefontaine, who was known to hunt and fish, since Elder Canfield wanted to meet someone who knew the area and who might want a hunting and fishing companion. So introductions were made. Ted soon complained that the only reason Elder Canfield wanted to meet was to get him to sell his property. Elder Canfield told him he was not after Ted's property, but just wanted to do some hunting and fishing with him. Then shortly after, Elder Canfield was impressed to ask Ted under what conditions he would be willing to sell. Along with naming a price, Ted asked if the Church would be willing to build him a home on some other land he owned up in Nova Scotia. 

After some back and forth negotiations with the Church through Elder Canfield, it was agreed that Ted would sell his property for the price he asked, along with the Church building him a home on some property in the Palmyra area. Ted would live in this home rent- free for the duration of his life and upon his death, the home would revert to the Church. So, the home was built to Ted's specifications right up on the hill exactly where the Palmyra Temple now sits. Just before the home's completion, Ted went up to his Nova Scotia property to do some snowmobiling and was killed in an accident. 

 That was in 1996. So, the new Facilities Management Manager, Ruel Reeder, and his large family were moved into that home. Then, the Palmyra Temple was announced and in late May of 1999, ground was broken just a little south of where the Temple now sits. It was a wet and very cold day. I observed President Hinckley standing, looking out the kitchen window of that home toward the Sacred Grove, warming up with some hot chocolate in his hands, prior to going out for the ground breaking. I think that may have been the moment it was revealed to him that the Temple needed to be right where the house sat, so that patrons could stand inside the Temple and look out at another holy place, the Sacred Grove. Subsequently, this house had to be moved a little down the road to the east. In 2003, it became the Temple President's Home.
—As told by Sis. Ann Black, former Palmyra Temple matron

Sunday, August 21, 2022

The Palmyra Temple

We are one of six senior couples called to be temple missionaries. We worked five shifts this past week. A shift is about 5 hours long. We have great members who travel some distance just to be ordinance workers. They are so dedicated and inspire me not to complain at all about the 20-minute drive to our closest temples in Utah.  We've had patrons from as far away as Colombia and Brazil.  The baptistry is always busy, and the laundry, which is manned by the sister missionaries, plus a few dedicated sister ordinance workers, is constantly in use.  It is amazing to me that two washers and a dryer are strong enough to handle all the wet towels and jumpsuits that are used in a typical baptistry session, let alone in a single day.

The Palmyra Temple is small but beautiful. I love looking out the window that overlooks the Grove. Most everyone who comes to the Temple is taken to this transparent window and told the story about Pres. Hinckley specifically commissioning it, allowing patrons the view overlooking the Sacred Grove. It is the  first ever built into an LDS temple. 

Inside the temple, the stained glass windows help create a feeling of being in the Sacred Grove surrounded by beauty and light, as was the Prophet Joseph Smith. Bro.Tom Holdman, creator of the windows, remember when he sought the Lord’s help and inspiration. He said his mind was flooded with an image of all 108 windows of the temple filled with stained glass trees. In all, 12 employees worked full time on the 17,000-piece project. It includes more than 6,800 tiny hand-cut and hand-notched tree leaves. In four months, they were finished. I never tire of looking at these windows as they fill the temple with light and beauty, something all temples do for us when we attend.


Transparent center window 

Transparent center window looks west to the Sacred Grove.


These stained glass windows in the celestial room feature the tree of life in the center panel. 

 
In the foyer of the temple is also a framed stained-glass mural depicting the First Vision. 




I love the temples of the Church. Each one is beautiful in its own way. I love the feeling I get when I am participating in ordinances there. I feel the priesthood power that blesses us as we make covenants. We are so blessed to be here!