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Details on new LDS temples revealed
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Spring Street doesn't actually touch Broad St. It stops two blocks short blocks to the east at N Juniper and resumes a block to the west at N 15th St. Hahnemann Medical College sits on the west side of Broad St.
If the previous poster is correct about the 427 N Broad St location, then the Church will be building on a parking lot, which would also be the case at the corner of N Broad and Spring Garden.
In either case, the temple would be near or at the Spring Garden Station on SEPTA's Broad Street Line (subway), which is a very good decision, given Philadelphia's high mass transit use.
I am originally from PA and am SO EXCITED about the Philly Temple...YEAH!!! Eastern PA still had to travel quite a ways to attend either the DC Temple or the NYC Temple. This is great news for Central and Eastern PA as well as South New Jersey!!!!!
Arizona
After the temple is built, then the area will become more developed. Good people will want to live close to it, and keep the area clean and beautiful. "If you build it, they will come".
People need the spiritual and they need material things. Faith based groups and religious denominations/organizations do so much better than governments or secular groups when it comes to efficiently helping the poor. Religious buildings aren't just for the have's, they are for all the faithful including the poor.
This was deemed too expensive, and simple stained glass and a stucco like material are the exterior today.
Also, the Church quite frequently reuses the same design for it's temples with only minor changes, obviously for budgetary reasons.
In fact, modern temples are quite plain when compared to the earliest ones, as the cost of such craftsmanship these days would be excessive.
Do a Google map, satellite view (it's about 4 blocks north of the Vine Street Expressway).
So far nothing negative in the Philadelphia press. Keep praying that it stays that way. :)
Do not get too worked up about Missouri. The gospel still needs to be preached to ever nation, kindred, tongue and people. There are almost as many nations where missionaries are not than where they are. Even though there are missionaries in India, they mainly teach in English and so most languages of India have never had the gospel preached in them. One can travel from Morocco to Aghanistan without ever crossing a country where the gospel has been widely preached. Even if we count past preachings in Palestine and Lebanon and the very limited teaching of the gospel in Egypt (no open declaration, only non-Muslim, non-citizens can be taught) we still have a list of countries from Azerbaijan to Sudan to Yemen where the restored gospel has never been taught at all.
Even in sub-saharan Africa there are countries where the church has no presence. This is true of Senegal, Mali, Niger, Burkina Fasso, Somalia and several other nations.
If I lived in Clay County or actually anywhere in Missouri I would find your statements very, very insulting.
The site in question gives me hope that we may soon here anouncements for temples in both the Wichita Area and somewhere in the boundaries of the Oklahoma Tulsa Mission, most likely in the Rogers-Bentonville area in northwest Arkansas.
The other thing your statements bring to mind in the Phoenix and west Phoenix suburbs gripers about the temple in Gilbert. Shoartly afternward a temple was announced for Phoenix.
Temples are placed by revelation where the Lord wants them.
However, I am also reminded of when the business leaders in Boise tried to convince President Grant that the temple in Idaho should be built in that city. He told them that if they all joined the church and became temple worthy it would happen.
It is not merely a question of members, but of having temple worthy members. The biggest issue is having enough full tithe payers.
That said, I really wonder if the person griping about the location of the Kansas City Temple is a member. They sound more like a business man who was hoping for a boom from a temple in their area.
The Chile issue is an interesting one. However since so many of the members in Chile live in the ceter either in Santiago or nearby cities, while those who have the hardest time are those in the far north and far south where there are few members.
I would love to hear a temple announced for Puenta Arnas, but I do not know if there are enough temple worthy members to run a temple there.
I do not know for sure, but it would not surprise me if some of the best members have gone to Santiago for education. If this is true hopefully they will attend the temple often and soon return to the outer areas.
Therefore to sum up, we believe in only 2 future temples of the Lord on earth, and they will be built by the American Indians only and by the Jewish people only, respectively.
I am sure if people in Pocatello majorly increased temple attendance, a temple would be built there. With love of God and love of our fellow men great things can occur.
On the name issue, Pocatello is easier to spell than Oquirrh Mountain, the name of the new temple being built in South Jordan. Also if a temple was built out Portneuf way, it would put many of the saints in South-east Idaho closer to a temple. So encorage your friends and realtives who live in Idaho in the Logan Temple district to attend the temple more often. If Logan becomes overcrowded, than the church will look into building a temple to releave that overcrowding.
The Church does not build temples instead of helping the poor. It isn't an either or proposition. The Church does both and they do more humanitarian aid than most, if not all, other religions, even those with far more members. There are no strings attached to the aid given, other than giving those who are able an oportunity to volunteer at Bishops storhouses in return for help. This is not because the Church needs the help as much as it allows self-respecting people to give back what they can. Those who can not help are not required to. I am happy to belong to such a wonderful, divinely inspired Church.
Sure I would agree that the church does not build temples instead of helping the poor. But the mall kills me. How do you justify that!
Whether you give to Food for the Poor or Catholic Relief Services much of what their expenses are paid for with surplus aid packages from the government, coorporations, etc... (the charity covers the delivery costs). After delivery the goods are shared among multiple agencies on the ground when it comes to distribution.
You don't have to be a Catholic to give to Catholic Relief Services. There are also many organizations that are a formed from a cooperative of many religions. I hope they don't waste their resources counting how much they get from the Methodists, Baptists, Catholics and so on... I give to the Salvation Army at least at Christmas and I'm not of that faith, I'm Catholic.
How many bring food donations to the local food pantry weekly and don't even pick up a receipt for taxes on a regular basis? There is so much donated that just can't be tracked.
What people should focus on is sharing what they have with others, not who gives more.
They are right. Couer d'Alene only has 34,000 people to Pocatello's 51,000. Idaho Falls has 57,000 people and Nampa, the second largest city in Idaho but located in the Boise area has about 80,000 people.
More to the point there are ten stakes headquartered in Pocatello while there is but one headquartered in Couer d'Alene.
Beyond this the 30 miles from Couer d'Alene to Spokane is much more than the 65 miles from Pocatello to Idaho Falls.
There are only five stakes in the Idaho panhandle, half the number in Pocatello (and this is ignoring the McCammon Stake which is headquartered 20 miles south-east of Pocatello). Moscow, Idaho is 85 or so miles from both Spokane and Couer d'Alene and Lewiston is south of that.
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