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Laie Hawaii Temple

Laie Hawaii Temple is a temple of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints located on the northeast shore of the Hawaiian island of Oʻahu. The temple sits on a small hill, half a mile from the Pacific Ocean, in the town of Lāʻie, 35 miles (56 km) from Honolulu. Along with Brigham Young University–Hawaii and the Polynesian Cultural Center, the Laie Hawaii Temple plays an important role in the town of Lā'ie,[4] with the Visitors' Center attracting more than 100,000 people annually.[5]

Laie Hawaii Temple
Number5
DedicationNovember 27, 1919, by Heber J. Grant
Site11.4 acres (4.6 ha)
Floor area42,100 sq ft (3,910 m2)
Official website • News & images
Church chronology
Additional information
AnnouncedOctober 1, 1915, by Joseph F. Smith
GroundbreakingJune 1, 1915, by Joseph F. Smith
Open houseMay 2–27, 1978
October 22 – November 13, 2010
RededicatedJune 13, 1978, by Spencer W. Kimball[1]
November 21, 2010, by Thomas S. Monson
Designed byHyrum Pope and Harold Burton
LocationLaie, Hawaii, United States
Geographic coordinates21°38′49.6″N 157°55′50.1″W / 21.647111°N 157.930583°W / 21.647111; -157.930583
Exterior finishConcrete from native lava rock and coral
Temple designSolomon's Temple, no spire
Baptistries1
Ordinance rooms4 (four-stage progressive)
Sealing rooms6
Clothing rentalAvailable
Visitors' centerYes
NotesThomas S. Monson rededicated the Laie Hawaii Temple on November 20, 2010[2] following nearly 2 years of renovations that began December 29, 2008.[3] The remodel completed in 1978 expanded the temple from 10,500 square feet (980 m2) to over 47,000 square feet (4,400 m2).
(edit)

In addition to initial building and construction, the temple has been dedicated for use by several church presidents. The temple site was dedicated by Joseph F. Smith on June 1, 1915, with Heber J. Grant dedicating the completed structure on November 27, 1919. Spencer W. Kimball rededicated the temple after significant expansion on June 13, 1978. Following seismic upgrades and remodeling, Thomas S. Monson rededicated the temple on November 21, 2010.

The Laie Hawaii Temple was the first temple built by the church outside the contiguous United States. The temple is also the oldest to operate outside Utah, and the church's fifth-oldest temple still in operation. The Laie Hawaii Temple was formerly known as the Hawaiian Temple or the Hawaii Temple until the implementation of the standard naming convention for the church's temples.[6]

History edit

Sandwich Islands Mission edit

During the California Gold Rush, the first ten Mormon missionaries to Hawaii departed San Francisco on the ship Imaum of Muscat. After 20 days at sea, the ship arrived on December 12, 1850, in Honolulu Harbor at what was then known as the "Sandwich Islands" (Hawaiian Islands).[7] A week later, nine missionaries received their assignments; two headed to the island of Kaua'i, three to Lahaina on the island of Maui, two to the Big Island of Hawaii, and two stayed behind in Honolulu. These nine missionaries formed the basis of the Sandwich Islands Mission.[8] The church's first congregation in Hawaii was established on the island of Maui in 1851.[7] Missionaries settled on the island of Lānaʻi in 1854, and in Lāʻie on the island of Oʻahu in 1865.[7]

Lāʻie edit

In 1865, the church purchased a 6,000-acre (2,400 ha) sugarcane plantation for $14,000 as a gathering place for the Latter-day Saints in the area.[7] While on a mission to the Sandwich Islands, Joseph F. Smith first proposed building a temple in Hawaii during a meeting in Lāʻie on February 15, 1885.[9] George Q. Cannon, one of the original ten missionaries, visited Lāʻie in 1900 and became revered as a prophet for promoting the idea of a new Hawaiian temple among his congregations.[10]

 
The Laie Hawaii Temple in 1922, two years after it was dedicated.

In 1915, Joseph F. Smith, then sixth president of the church, announced plans for the first temple outside the contiguous United States and chose Lāʻie for its construction.[10] According to Mormon folklore, precious materials arrived just in time to complete the building of the temple: Temple builders ran out of wood (a scarce commodity on the islands) during initial construction, but local members received lumber when a ship ran aground and needed to unload some of its cargo of wood. The temple builders volunteered to help the ship and were given the lumber out of gratitude. The lumber taken from the ship proved to be just enough to finish the temple.[11]

 
The town of Lāie (red dot) located on the Island of Oahu

When news of the new Laie Hawaii Temple reached Native Hawaiian converts (and other Polynesians) living far from home in the town of Iosepa, Utah, many decided to emigrate back to Hawaii. Although the Hawaiians had lived in Iosepa since 1889, the closest temple, Salt Lake Temple, was 75 miles away from the colony. Moving to Laie gave the Hawaiians the ability to be closer to the new temple and allowed them to perform sacred ordinances without having to travel great distances. By January 1917, most of the Hawaiians returned home, leaving Iosepa a ghost town.[12]

Church president Heber J. Grant presided over the Hawaiian Temple's dedication on November 27, 1919. Grant called the Hawaiian people "descendants of Lehi" (a prophet in the Book of Mormon), and saw the future of the new temple in Lāʻie as a magnet for Polynesian converts.[10] After the temple was completed, more Polynesians moved to Lāʻie, to participate in temple ordinances.[10] Tourists were also drawn to the area, and guide books of the time compared the Lāʻie temple to the Taj Mahal.[10]

The 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor gave rise to another popular tale about the Laie Hawaii Temple in church folklore. According to variations on this story, Japanese aircraft pilots attempted to bomb or strafe the Hawaiian Temple just prior to, or just after, the attack, but were thwarted by mechanical failure or from an unseen protective force.[13] Some stories suggest that the Japanese pilot who attempted to attack the temple was converted to the church after he saw a picture of the temple in the possession of the faith's missionaries in Japan.[13] Although there is an eyewitness who believes he saw the attempted bombing and a former missionary who says he met the Japanese convert, historians have found little supporting evidence that would substantiate these stories.[13][14]

Renovation edit

Beginning in May 1976, the temple was closed for a two-year remodeling project, expanding from 10,500 square feet (980 m2) to over 47,000 square feet (4,400 m2). Church president Spencer W. Kimball rededicated the temple on June 13, 1978.

A $5.5 million renovation, renewal, and beautification project along Hale Laʻa Boulevard leading to the temple began in 2003, lasting 14 months:[15] Norfolk pines suffering from termite infestation were replaced with royal palms, new decorative lighting was added to the terraces, and landscaped roundabouts were put in place. At the same time, the Visitors' Center was upgraded with interactive kiosks and new displays.[5] There is now a cut-away model of the temple on display, which allows visitors to see its interior, because only members with an active recommend are allowed to enter after a temple is dedicated. It took the artisan team over eight months to build the temple model in the US and more than a week to reassemble the model for display after being shipped to Hawaii.[16]

In December 2008, the Laie Hawaii Temple closed again for structural and seismic upgrades and to restore the ordinance rooms to their original appearance and progressive-style presentation of the endowment (still using film). The baptistry was repaired and renovated. The temple was rededicated on November 21, 2010, by Thomas S. Monson.

In 2020, like all the church's other temples, the Laie Hawaii Temple was closed in response to the coronavirus pandemic.[17]

Architecture edit

 
View from the temple's descending pools looking towards Hale Laʻa Boulevard and the Pacific Ocean

Church president Joseph F. Smith wanted the architecture of the Laie Hawaii Temple to resemble Solomon's Temple referred to in the biblical canon. The temple is often compared to the Cardston Alberta Temple,[11] designed by young architects Hyrum Pope and Harold W. Burton. Pope and Burton's design was also used for Laie, and their work is rooted in the Prairie style architecture made popular by architect Frank Lloyd Wright in the early twentieth-century. The temples also evoke Mesoamerican architectural motifs,[18] a favored theme of Burton's.[19]

The temple sits on an 11-acre (4.5 ha) site that was once part of a large sugarcane plantation.[7] Construction of the temple first began in February 1916. Native materials consisting of crushed lava rock were used to build the temple, along with reinforced concrete.[7] The building's gleaming white finish was created using pneumatic stone-cutting techniques. The temple has the shape of a cross when seen from the air; the highest point of the temple is 50 ft (15.2 m), and it measures 102 ft (31.1 m) from east to west and 78 ft (23.8 m) from north to south.[7]

 
Looking up towards the temple from the reflecting pool and Visitors' Center

The exterior of the temple exhibits four large friezes planned by American sculptor J. Leo Fairbanks and built with the help of his brother Avard Fairbanks.[20] Modeled four-fifths lifesize and cast in concrete,[20] the bas-relief friezes depict God's dealings with Man. The north frieze depicts the story of the Book of Mormon. The west frieze shows the people of the Old Testament. The New Testament and the Apostasy are depicted on the southern frieze of the temple, and the restoration of the church through Joseph Smith is shown on the east frieze. On the grounds of the temple are statues also designed by the Fairbanks brothers,[21] including Joseph being blessed by his father and one of the Prophet Lehi in a scene from the Second Book of Nephi in the Book of Mormon.[7]

 
Maternity Fountain

As visitors approach the temple and pass a number of reflecting pools, a maternity fountain sits in front of the uppermost pool. Designed by the Fairbanks brothers, this bold relief honors Hawaiian Motherhood and depicts a Hawaiian mother holding a giant clam shell while pouring water over her children. The act is supposed to symbolize mothers pouring their love, hope and care onto their children.[22]

The landscaped temple grounds contain tropical gardens, with plants such as hibiscus, Brazilian plume, birds of paradise, lantana, red ginger, bougainvillea, plumeria, Ixora, and others.[23] At the base of the temple grounds is a fountain separating a Family History Center and a Visitors' Center, where a ten-foot sculpture replica of Bertel Thorvaldsen's Christus stands inside the entrance.[23]

The Laie Hawaii Temple is 47,224 square feet (4,387.3 m2) and houses four ordinance rooms and six sealing rooms. Landscape artist LeConte Stewart designed many of the murals found inside the temple.

Admittance edit

Laie Hawaii Temple is not used for regular Sunday worship. As temples require church approval to enter, only church members who are recommended by their local bishop are allowed to enter for the purpose of participating in ceremonies such as endowments, baptism for the dead and marriage.[24] Because of these guidelines, those without an active recommend are not allowed inside temples, but public tours of the grounds outside and of the visitors' centers are available.[5]

Temple presidents edit

Notable temple presidents include Edward L. Clissold (1936–38, 1943–44, 1963–65); D. Arthur Haycock (1986–89), and J. Richard Clarke (1998–2001).

See also edit

  •   = Operating
  •   = Under construction
  •   = Announced
  •   = Temporarily Closed

References edit

  1. ^ "Dedications at Seattle, Temple Square, Hawaii, and Nauvoo", Ensign (News of the Church), July 1978
  2. ^ "Laie Hawaii Temple Rededicated by President Monson", Newsroom (News Release), LDS Church, November 21, 2010
  3. ^ "Plans announced for renovation of Laie Hawaii Temple", Deseret News, October 7, 2008
  4. ^ Aikau, Hokulani K. (Winter 2008). "Resisting Exile in the Homeland: He Mo'olemo No Lā'ie". American Indian Quarterly. 32 (1). Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press: 70–95. doi:10.1353/aiq.2008.0003. ISSN 0095-182X. S2CID 161421626.
  5. ^ a b c Kayal, Michele (November 27, 2004). "Mormons Spruce Up Their Aging Hawaiian Outpost". The New York Times. Retrieved October 10, 2012.
  6. ^ "Temples renamed to uniform guidelines". Church News. Deseret News. October 16, 1999. Retrieved October 10, 2012.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h LDS Church (1964), The Mormon temple, Laie, Hawaii, Laie, Hawaii: Bureau of Information, Hawaii Temple, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, pp. 1–20, OCLC 367548072
  8. ^ Wallace III, William Kauaiwiulaokalani (January 30, 2000). . History. La'ie Community Association. Archived from the original on November 12, 2007. Retrieved November 17, 2007.
  9. ^ BYU–H (2006). "The Destiny of La'ie" (PDF). Office of Planning, Institutional Research, Assessment and Testing. Brigham Young University–Hawaii. Retrieved October 10, 2012.[permanent dead link]
  10. ^ a b c d e Webb, T. D. (1993). "Profit and Prophecy: The Polynesian Cultural Center and La'ie's Recurrent Colonialism" (PDF). The Hawaiian Journal of History. 27. Honolulu, Hawaii: Hawaiian Historical Society: 127–150. ISSN 0440-5145.
  11. ^ a b Burlingame, Burl (April 2, 2004). . Honolulu Star-Bulletin. Archived from the original on July 24, 2008. Retrieved October 10, 2012.
  12. ^ Poulsen, Richard (1999), , The Polynesian Gift to Utah, KUED, archived from the original on February 21, 2012, retrieved October 10, 2012
  13. ^ a b c Baldridge, Kenneth W.; Lance D. Chase (2000). "The Purported December 7, 1941, Attack on the Hawai'i Temple". In Grant Underwood (ed.). Voyages of Faith: Explorations in Mormon Pacific History. Provo, Utah: Brigham Young University Press. pp. 165–190. ISBN 0-8425-2480-0.
  14. ^ Cummings, Casey, "Japanese pilot unable to bomb temple – Unverified", HolyFetch.com – the Mormon Urban Legends Website
  15. ^ Adamski, Mary (December 11, 2004). . Honolulu Star-Bulletin. Archived from the original on April 8, 2008. Retrieved October 10, 2012.
  16. ^ "Take a look inside the classic 100-year-old Hawaii temple with this new model". Church News. November 18, 2019. Retrieved May 28, 2021.
  17. ^ Stack, Peggy Fletcher. "All Latter-day Saint temples to close due to coronavirus", The Salt Lake Tribune, 26 March 2020. Retrieved on 28 March 2020.
  18. ^ Arrington, Leonard J.; Davis, Bitton (1992). The Mormon Experience: A History of the Latter-day Saints (2nd ed.). Champaign, IL: University of Illinois Press. p. 266. ISBN 0-252-06236-1.
  19. ^ Anderson, Paul L. (July 1977). "First of the Modern Temples". Ensign. Salt Lake City, Utah: LDS Church. Retrieved October 10, 2012.
  20. ^ a b Fairbanks & Fairbanks 1998, p. 16
  21. ^ Fairbanks & Fairbanks 1998, p. 2
  22. ^ Fairbanks & Fairbanks 1998, p. 26
  23. ^ a b Sarafian, Michael; Don Colton (2001). . BYU-Hawaii Student Association. Archived from the original on November 30, 2007. Retrieved July 14, 2008. (New site)
  24. ^ "Temples", Newsroom, LDS Church, September 17, 2012, retrieved October 10, 2012

Further reading edit

  • Anderson, Paul L. (2000). "A Jewel in the Gardens of Paradise: The Art and Architecture of the Hawaii Temple". BYU Studies. 39 (4). Provo, Utah: Brigham Young University: 170.
  • Baldridge, Kenneth W., ed. (1988), "Proceedings, 9th Annual Conference, 21 May 1988", Mormon Pacific Historical Society, 9 (1)
  • Britsch, R. Lanier (1991). Moramona: The Mormons in Hawaii. Mormons in the Pacific series. Laie, Hawaii: Institute for Polynesian Studies. ISBN 0-939154-46-3.
  • Budnick, Rich (2005). Hawaii's Forgotten History: 1900-1999: The Good...The Bad...The Embarrassing. Honolulu, Hawaii: Aloha Press. p. 46. ISBN 0-944081-04-5.
  • Compton, Cynthia D. Woolley (December 2005). The Making of the Ahupuaʻa of Lāʻie into a Gathering Place and Plantation: The Creation of an Alternative Space to Capitalism (PDF) (Ph. D. dissertation). Brigham Young University. Retrieved October 10, 2012.
  • Dorrance, William H. (1998). Oʻahu's Hidden History: Tours Into the Past. Honolulu, HI: Mutual Publishing. ISBN 1-56647-211-3.
  • Fairbanks, Eugene F.; Fairbanks, Avard Tennyson (1998). A Sculptor's Testimony in Bronze and Stone: The Sacred Sculpture of Avard T. Fairbanks. Salt Lake City, Uta: Fairbanks Art and Books. ISBN 0-916095-58-4.
  • Garrett, John (1992). Footsteps in the Sea: Christianity in Oceania to World War II. Narrative History of Christianity in the Pacific Islands. Vol. 2. Suva and Geneva: Institute of Pacific Studies, University of the South Pacific. World Council of Churches. ISBN 982-02-0068-7.
  • Sterling, Elspeth P.; Summers, Catherine C. (1978). Sites of Oahu. Honolulu: Bishop Museum Press. pp. 155–160. ISBN 0-910240-73-6.
  • Webb, Terry D. (2001). "The Temple and the Theme Park". In Joy Hendry & C. W. Watson (ed.). An Anthropology of Indirect Communication. [Association of Social Anthropologists Monographs 37]. London and New York: Routledge. pp. 128–142. ISBN 0-415-24744-6.

External links edit

  • Laie Hawaii Temple Official site
  • Laie Hawaii Temple Visitors' Center
  • Laie Hawaii Temple at ChurchofJesusChristTemples.org

laie, hawaii, temple, temple, church, jesus, christ, latter, saints, located, northeast, shore, hawaiian, island, oʻahu, temple, sits, small, hill, half, mile, from, pacific, ocean, town, lāʻie, miles, from, honolulu, along, with, brigham, young, university, h. Laie Hawaii Temple is a temple of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints located on the northeast shore of the Hawaiian island of Oʻahu The temple sits on a small hill half a mile from the Pacific Ocean in the town of Laʻie 35 miles 56 km from Honolulu Along with Brigham Young University Hawaii and the Polynesian Cultural Center the Laie Hawaii Temple plays an important role in the town of La ie 4 with the Visitors Center attracting more than 100 000 people annually 5 Laie Hawaii TempleNumber5DedicationNovember 27 1919 by Heber J GrantSite11 4 acres 4 6 ha Floor area42 100 sq ft 3 910 m2 Official website News amp imagesChurch chronology Salt Lake Temple Laie Hawaii Temple Cardston Alberta TempleAdditional informationAnnouncedOctober 1 1915 by Joseph F SmithGroundbreakingJune 1 1915 by Joseph F SmithOpen houseMay 2 27 1978October 22 November 13 2010RededicatedJune 13 1978 by Spencer W Kimball 1 November 21 2010 by Thomas S MonsonDesigned byHyrum Pope and Harold BurtonLocationLaie Hawaii United StatesGeographic coordinates21 38 49 6 N 157 55 50 1 W 21 647111 N 157 930583 W 21 647111 157 930583Exterior finishConcrete from native lava rock and coralTemple designSolomon s Temple no spireBaptistries1Ordinance rooms4 four stage progressive Sealing rooms6Clothing rentalAvailableVisitors centerYesNotesThomas S Monson rededicated the Laie Hawaii Temple on November 20 2010 2 following nearly 2 years of renovations that began December 29 2008 3 The remodel completed in 1978 expanded the temple from 10 500 square feet 980 m2 to over 47 000 square feet 4 400 m2 edit In addition to initial building and construction the temple has been dedicated for use by several church presidents The temple site was dedicated by Joseph F Smith on June 1 1915 with Heber J Grant dedicating the completed structure on November 27 1919 Spencer W Kimball rededicated the temple after significant expansion on June 13 1978 Following seismic upgrades and remodeling Thomas S Monson rededicated the temple on November 21 2010 The Laie Hawaii Temple was the first temple built by the church outside the contiguous United States The temple is also the oldest to operate outside Utah and the church s fifth oldest temple still in operation The Laie Hawaii Temple was formerly known as the Hawaiian Temple or the Hawaii Temple until the implementation of the standard naming convention for the church s temples 6 Contents 1 History 1 1 Sandwich Islands Mission 1 2 Laʻie 1 3 Renovation 2 Architecture 3 Admittance 4 Temple presidents 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistory editSandwich Islands Mission edit See also Early missions of the LDS Church and The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints in Hawaii During the California Gold Rush the first ten Mormon missionaries to Hawaii departed San Francisco on the ship Imaum of Muscat After 20 days at sea the ship arrived on December 12 1850 in Honolulu Harbor at what was then known as the Sandwich Islands Hawaiian Islands 7 A week later nine missionaries received their assignments two headed to the island of Kaua i three to Lahaina on the island of Maui two to the Big Island of Hawaii and two stayed behind in Honolulu These nine missionaries formed the basis of the Sandwich Islands Mission 8 The church s first congregation in Hawaii was established on the island of Maui in 1851 7 Missionaries settled on the island of Lanaʻi in 1854 and in Laʻie on the island of Oʻahu in 1865 7 Laʻie edit See also History of La ie Hawai i In 1865 the church purchased a 6 000 acre 2 400 ha sugarcane plantation for 14 000 as a gathering place for the Latter day Saints in the area 7 While on a mission to the Sandwich Islands Joseph F Smith first proposed building a temple in Hawaii during a meeting in Laʻie on February 15 1885 9 George Q Cannon one of the original ten missionaries visited Laʻie in 1900 and became revered as a prophet for promoting the idea of a new Hawaiian temple among his congregations 10 nbsp The Laie Hawaii Temple in 1922 two years after it was dedicated In 1915 Joseph F Smith then sixth president of the church announced plans for the first temple outside the contiguous United States and chose Laʻie for its construction 10 According to Mormon folklore precious materials arrived just in time to complete the building of the temple Temple builders ran out of wood a scarce commodity on the islands during initial construction but local members received lumber when a ship ran aground and needed to unload some of its cargo of wood The temple builders volunteered to help the ship and were given the lumber out of gratitude The lumber taken from the ship proved to be just enough to finish the temple 11 nbsp The town of Laie red dot located on the Island of Oahu When news of the new Laie Hawaii Temple reached Native Hawaiian converts and other Polynesians living far from home in the town of Iosepa Utah many decided to emigrate back to Hawaii Although the Hawaiians had lived in Iosepa since 1889 the closest temple Salt Lake Temple was 75 miles away from the colony Moving to Laie gave the Hawaiians the ability to be closer to the new temple and allowed them to perform sacred ordinances without having to travel great distances By January 1917 most of the Hawaiians returned home leaving Iosepa a ghost town 12 Church president Heber J Grant presided over the Hawaiian Temple s dedication on November 27 1919 Grant called the Hawaiian people descendants of Lehi a prophet in the Book of Mormon and saw the future of the new temple in Laʻie as a magnet for Polynesian converts 10 After the temple was completed more Polynesians moved to Laʻie to participate in temple ordinances 10 Tourists were also drawn to the area and guide books of the time compared the Laʻie temple to the Taj Mahal 10 The 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor gave rise to another popular tale about the Laie Hawaii Temple in church folklore According to variations on this story Japanese aircraft pilots attempted to bomb or strafe the Hawaiian Temple just prior to or just after the attack but were thwarted by mechanical failure or from an unseen protective force 13 Some stories suggest that the Japanese pilot who attempted to attack the temple was converted to the church after he saw a picture of the temple in the possession of the faith s missionaries in Japan 13 Although there is an eyewitness who believes he saw the attempted bombing and a former missionary who says he met the Japanese convert historians have found little supporting evidence that would substantiate these stories 13 14 Renovation edit Beginning in May 1976 the temple was closed for a two year remodeling project expanding from 10 500 square feet 980 m2 to over 47 000 square feet 4 400 m2 Church president Spencer W Kimball rededicated the temple on June 13 1978 A 5 5 million renovation renewal and beautification project along Hale Laʻa Boulevard leading to the temple began in 2003 lasting 14 months 15 Norfolk pines suffering from termite infestation were replaced with royal palms new decorative lighting was added to the terraces and landscaped roundabouts were put in place At the same time the Visitors Center was upgraded with interactive kiosks and new displays 5 There is now a cut away model of the temple on display which allows visitors to see its interior because only members with an active recommend are allowed to enter after a temple is dedicated It took the artisan team over eight months to build the temple model in the US and more than a week to reassemble the model for display after being shipped to Hawaii 16 In December 2008 the Laie Hawaii Temple closed again for structural and seismic upgrades and to restore the ordinance rooms to their original appearance and progressive style presentation of the endowment still using film The baptistry was repaired and renovated The temple was rededicated on November 21 2010 by Thomas S Monson In 2020 like all the church s other temples the Laie Hawaii Temple was closed in response to the coronavirus pandemic 17 Architecture editSee also Temple architecture LDS Church nbsp View from the temple s descending pools looking towards Hale Laʻa Boulevard and the Pacific Ocean Church president Joseph F Smith wanted the architecture of the Laie Hawaii Temple to resemble Solomon s Temple referred to in the biblical canon The temple is often compared to the Cardston Alberta Temple 11 designed by young architects Hyrum Pope and Harold W Burton Pope and Burton s design was also used for Laie and their work is rooted in the Prairie style architecture made popular by architect Frank Lloyd Wright in the early twentieth century The temples also evoke Mesoamerican architectural motifs 18 a favored theme of Burton s 19 The temple sits on an 11 acre 4 5 ha site that was once part of a large sugarcane plantation 7 Construction of the temple first began in February 1916 Native materials consisting of crushed lava rock were used to build the temple along with reinforced concrete 7 The building s gleaming white finish was created using pneumatic stone cutting techniques The temple has the shape of a cross when seen from the air the highest point of the temple is 50 ft 15 2 m and it measures 102 ft 31 1 m from east to west and 78 ft 23 8 m from north to south 7 nbsp Looking up towards the temple from the reflecting pool and Visitors Center The exterior of the temple exhibits four large friezes planned by American sculptor J Leo Fairbanks and built with the help of his brother Avard Fairbanks 20 Modeled four fifths lifesize and cast in concrete 20 the bas relief friezes depict God s dealings with Man The north frieze depicts the story of the Book of Mormon The west frieze shows the people of the Old Testament The New Testament and the Apostasy are depicted on the southern frieze of the temple and the restoration of the church through Joseph Smith is shown on the east frieze On the grounds of the temple are statues also designed by the Fairbanks brothers 21 including Joseph being blessed by his father and one of the Prophet Lehi in a scene from the Second Book of Nephi in the Book of Mormon 7 nbsp Maternity Fountain As visitors approach the temple and pass a number of reflecting pools a maternity fountain sits in front of the uppermost pool Designed by the Fairbanks brothers this bold relief honors Hawaiian Motherhood and depicts a Hawaiian mother holding a giant clam shell while pouring water over her children The act is supposed to symbolize mothers pouring their love hope and care onto their children 22 The landscaped temple grounds contain tropical gardens with plants such as hibiscus Brazilian plume birds of paradise lantana red ginger bougainvillea plumeria Ixora and others 23 At the base of the temple grounds is a fountain separating a Family History Center and a Visitors Center where a ten foot sculpture replica of Bertel Thorvaldsen s Christus stands inside the entrance 23 The Laie Hawaii Temple is 47 224 square feet 4 387 3 m2 and houses four ordinance rooms and six sealing rooms Landscape artist LeConte Stewart designed many of the murals found inside the temple Admittance editMain article Temple recommend Laie Hawaii Temple is not used for regular Sunday worship As temples require church approval to enter only church members who are recommended by their local bishop are allowed to enter for the purpose of participating in ceremonies such as endowments baptism for the dead and marriage 24 Because of these guidelines those without an active recommend are not allowed inside temples but public tours of the grounds outside and of the visitors centers are available 5 Temple presidents editNotable temple presidents include Edward L Clissold 1936 38 1943 44 1963 65 D Arthur Haycock 1986 89 and J Richard Clarke 1998 2001 See also edit nbsp Latter Day Saint movement portal nbsp nbsp Honolulu nbsp Kahului nbsp Kona nbsp LaieTemples in Hawaii edit nbsp Operating nbsp Under construction nbsp Announced nbsp Temporarily Closed Comparison of temples of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints Kona Hawaii Temple List of temples of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints List of temples of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints by geographic region The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints in HawaiiReferences edit Dedications at Seattle Temple Square Hawaii and Nauvoo Ensign News of the Church July 1978 Laie Hawaii Temple Rededicated by President Monson Newsroom News Release LDS Church November 21 2010 Plans announced for renovation of Laie Hawaii Temple Deseret News October 7 2008 Aikau Hokulani K Winter 2008 Resisting Exile in the Homeland He Mo olemo No La ie American Indian Quarterly 32 1 Lincoln NE University of Nebraska Press 70 95 doi 10 1353 aiq 2008 0003 ISSN 0095 182X S2CID 161421626 a b c Kayal Michele November 27 2004 Mormons Spruce Up Their Aging Hawaiian Outpost The New York Times Retrieved October 10 2012 Temples renamed to uniform guidelines Church News Deseret News October 16 1999 Retrieved October 10 2012 a b c d e f g h LDS Church 1964 The Mormon temple Laie Hawaii Laie Hawaii Bureau of Information Hawaii Temple Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints pp 1 20 OCLC 367548072 Wallace III William Kauaiwiulaokalani January 30 2000 The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints in the Hawaiian Islands from 1850 1900 History La ie Community Association Archived from the original on November 12 2007 Retrieved November 17 2007 BYU H 2006 The Destiny of La ie PDF Office of Planning Institutional Research Assessment and Testing Brigham Young University Hawaii Retrieved October 10 2012 permanent dead link a b c d e Webb T D 1993 Profit and Prophecy The Polynesian Cultural Center and La ie s Recurrent Colonialism PDF The Hawaiian Journal of History 27 Honolulu Hawaii Hawaiian Historical Society 127 150 ISSN 0440 5145 a b Burlingame Burl April 2 2004 X Marks the Spot Mormon temple a Laie landmark since 1919 Honolulu Star Bulletin Archived from the original on July 24 2008 Retrieved October 10 2012 Poulsen Richard 1999 A History of Iosepa Utah The Polynesian Gift to Utah KUED archived from the original on February 21 2012 retrieved October 10 2012 a b c Baldridge Kenneth W Lance D Chase 2000 The Purported December 7 1941 Attack on the Hawai i Temple In Grant Underwood ed Voyages of Faith Explorations in Mormon Pacific History Provo Utah Brigham Young University Press pp 165 190 ISBN 0 8425 2480 0 Cummings Casey Japanese pilot unable to bomb temple Unverified HolyFetch com the Mormon Urban Legends Website Adamski Mary December 11 2004 Dedication is set for Laie project Honolulu Star Bulletin Archived from the original on April 8 2008 Retrieved October 10 2012 Take a look inside the classic 100 year old Hawaii temple with this new model Church News November 18 2019 Retrieved May 28 2021 Stack Peggy Fletcher All Latter day Saint temples to close due to coronavirus The Salt Lake Tribune 26 March 2020 Retrieved on 28 March 2020 Arrington Leonard J Davis Bitton 1992 The Mormon Experience A History of the Latter day Saints 2nd ed Champaign IL University of Illinois Press p 266 ISBN 0 252 06236 1 Anderson Paul L July 1977 First of the Modern Temples Ensign Salt Lake City Utah LDS Church Retrieved October 10 2012 a b Fairbanks amp Fairbanks 1998 p 16 Fairbanks amp Fairbanks 1998 p 2 Fairbanks amp Fairbanks 1998 p 26 a b Sarafian Michael Don Colton 2001 Laie Walking Tour BYU Hawaii Student Association Archived from the original on November 30 2007 Retrieved July 14 2008 New site Temples Newsroom LDS Church September 17 2012 retrieved October 10 2012Further reading editAnderson Paul L 2000 A Jewel in the Gardens of Paradise The Art and Architecture of the Hawaii Temple BYU Studies 39 4 Provo Utah Brigham Young University 170 Baldridge Kenneth W ed 1988 Proceedings 9th Annual Conference 21 May 1988 Mormon Pacific Historical Society 9 1 Britsch R Lanier 1991 Moramona The Mormons in Hawaii Mormons in the Pacific series Laie Hawaii Institute for Polynesian Studies ISBN 0 939154 46 3 Budnick Rich 2005 Hawaii s Forgotten History 1900 1999 The Good The Bad The Embarrassing Honolulu Hawaii Aloha Press p 46 ISBN 0 944081 04 5 Compton Cynthia D Woolley December 2005 The Making of the Ahupuaʻa of Laʻie into a Gathering Place and Plantation The Creation of an Alternative Space to Capitalism PDF Ph D dissertation Brigham Young University Retrieved October 10 2012 Dorrance William H 1998 Oʻahu s Hidden History Tours Into the Past Honolulu HI Mutual Publishing ISBN 1 56647 211 3 Fairbanks Eugene F Fairbanks Avard Tennyson 1998 A Sculptor s Testimony in Bronze and Stone The Sacred Sculpture of Avard T Fairbanks Salt Lake City Uta Fairbanks Art and Books ISBN 0 916095 58 4 Garrett John 1992 Footsteps in the Sea Christianity in Oceania to World War II Narrative History of Christianity in the Pacific Islands Vol 2 Suva and Geneva Institute of Pacific Studies University of the South Pacific World Council of Churches ISBN 982 02 0068 7 Sterling Elspeth P Summers Catherine C 1978 Sites of Oahu Honolulu Bishop Museum Press pp 155 160 ISBN 0 910240 73 6 Webb Terry D 2001 The Temple and the Theme Park In Joy Hendry amp C W Watson ed An Anthropology of Indirect Communication Association of Social Anthropologists Monographs 37 London and New York Routledge pp 128 142 ISBN 0 415 24744 6 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Laie Hawaii Temple Laie Hawaii Temple Official site Laie Hawaii Temple Visitors Center Laie Hawaii Temple at ChurchofJesusChristTemples org Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Laie Hawaii Temple amp oldid 1216784418, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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