However, in the latest change made by President Neilson, we are now discontinuing that connection and sacred ceremony. Apparently from the First Presidency's news release, the construction techniques of men are more advanced that we no longer need to symbolically align ourselves to the heavens and making that sacred connection that has been done for centuries with the Temple Cornerstone Ceremony.
Joseph Smith understood the importance of the cornerstone ceremony. Examples of past cornerstone ceremonies are as follows:
Kirtland Temple
Joseph Smith saw the building of the Kirtland Temple in vision in 1833. He presided over the laying of the temple cornerstone at a ceremony held on July 23, 1833. We do know that 24 priesthood holders met on the temple site July 23, 1833, to lay stones from the quarry. The First Presidency - Joseph Smith, Sidney Rigdon and Frederick G. Williams - and three others laid the southeast cornerstone. Six additional priesthood holders stood at and laid each of the remaining three cornerstones according to what some called `the order of the Holy Priesthood.'
Nauvoo Temple
Rebuilding of the Nauvoo Temple
The symbolic laying of cornerstones at the Nauvoo Temple took place on Sunday, Nov. 5, 2000, at noon in Nauvoo, Ill.
"We want to imitate, insofar as possible, what was done at the original cornerstone laying on April 6, 1841," said President Gordon B. Hinckley. This is particularly significant because the Nauvoo Temple will be constructed to appear almost as a replica of the original temple built on this same site in the early 1840's.
Participating in the ceremony will be General Authorities of the Church as well as local Church leaders and women of the Church's Relief Society. Four large stones will be set in place, one at each corner, beginning with the southeast corner of the temple. LINK
Here are a few other examples of the importance of the Temple Cornerstone Ceremony in the past couple of years given in talks by Quorum of the Twelve and the First Presidency.
"The importance of Christ as the head of the church and the cornerstone of members’ faith was also highlighted during Elder Quentin Cook Talk
At the time of the original dedication of the Suva Fiji Temple in 2000, members of that nation’s parliament were taken hostage by a group of rebels. Due to the potential danger of violence, President Gordon B. Hinckley was told it was safest to do a small dedication with no events outside the temple.
President Hinckley agreed to a small dedication with one condition. If the dedication was to occur, the cornerstone ceremony would as well. President Hinckley said, “‘If we do dedicate the temple, we will have the cornerstone ceremony because Jesus Christ is the chief cornerstone, and this is his church.'”
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"Just after the start of the first dedicatory session, the choir sang “The Morning Breaks" as President Oaks and the other Church leaders came outside for the symbolic cornerstone ceremony. President Oaks invited young children from Maryland, Virginia and Georgia to participate in placing mortar around the cornerstone.
“The most important idea about a cornerstone is that Jesus Christ Himself is the chief cornerstone, setting the direction for the building at the key position in the foundation,” President Oaks said. “So it is with this temple.” LDS CHURCH NEW LINKSo I find it so surprising that President Nelson has made the decision to discontinue this sacred and symbolic Temple ceremony. And the reason for doing so because of the "advancement of construction techniques."
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Another Temple Symbol has been changed. The Direction of Angel Moroni.
Historically, the Angel Moroni statue faces east, the direction that Christ is to come from when he returns to earth at His Second Coming, as a symbolic herald of that return. all but a few temples have Angel Moroni facing due east.
Some of the newer temples being built, the Angel Moroni no longer is facing east but actually facing west like the Saratoga Temple which will be dedicated next month. Or even more common now, the Angel Moroni is longer being placed on our temples.
Losing the symbolism of the importance of the East: the direction of the rising sun; a symbol of the resurrection as well as the coming of our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ; a sign of renewal and rebirth and new life. Facing West is symbolic of losing light, decline, death, and destruction.
Losing the symbolism of the importance of the East: the direction of the rising sun; a symbol of the resurrection as well as the coming of our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ; a sign of renewal and rebirth and new life. Facing West is symbolic of losing light, decline, death, and destruction.
Below are photos of the sun setting behind the new Saratoga Temple. Angel Moroni is facing the setting sun instead of the facing East towards the direction of rising Sun. Most people when that are buried placed in the ground facing East (not West) in the direction of Christ's Second Coming the hope of the resurrection
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New spires have been built and are starting to be placed back onto the top of the Salt Lake Temple. From the photos I took, I do not think they are the original ones. I wonder how much of the Salt Temple after is completed will be original. So much for preserving a historical building. It is quite possible that it might have cost less take it down and rebuild it, since it looks a lot of it is being rebuilt anyway.
Yea, modern construction doesn't have anything to do with real cornerstones. The ones they do in modern temples are just little facade pieces that they grout in for show. I'm a structural engineer; I wouldn't even know how to make a real cornerstone part of a modern foundation.
ReplyDeleteBut since you mentioned the Salt Lake Temple, an interesting comment that was made by the church engineer in a presentation about its renovation was that they are building an entirely new foundation. That the temple won't even know it is on a new foundation.
Man, You write the best stuff. I just updated my blog post RMN Behavioral Analysis and included this post. Most of my blog post on RMN came from YOU. Thank you!
ReplyDeletehttps://beonelds.blogspot.com/2023/02/observable-behavior-rmn-analysis.html
I'm sure Russ would argue that getting rid of the cornerstone ceremony was a cost saving issue, but like everything else, he overlooks the real symbolism involved and simply does what is best for the corporation.
ReplyDeleteThe lack and/or misplacement of Moroni could be something similar - it saves time to simply slap him up there in whatever direction. Or, it saves money and time to not put him there.
At a minimum, he is a disappointment. At worst, he's leading people to hell. I've got enough personal issues that I don't need this phony trying to leading me astray.
Whatever happened to all of the scriptural references to Christ being the chief cornerstone, the stone that the builders rejected, the rock of our salvation, the sure foundation, etc.? Obviously it's been a long time since a temple had an actual cornerstone that functioned as a reference for other measurements, but is the symbolic meaning of the cornerstone and the ceremony totally lost on these guys? I'm becoming more and more convinced that there's something worse going on here, because I don't believe that the top leadership are stupid.
ReplyDeleteThis salt hasn't just lost its savor. It has become an actively bad influence on the world. The symbolism of the Salt Lake temple being placed on a new foundation that yields and flexes to the movements of the world isn't lost on many of us, and even if the temple won't "know" it's on a new foundation, God always knows what we're built on. He'll tell us if we ask.
In response to this blog post, I shared the following in Fast Meeting, added to it, and posted this on YouTube: https://youtu.be/udZCIkFWgSo
ReplyDelete