Manti Utah Temple

From MormonWiki
Revision as of 10:03, 15 March 2021 by Kbrown (talk | contribs)
Jump to: navigation, search
Manti Utah Temple. Photo credit: Scott G Winterton, Deseret News

The Manti Utah Temple is the third operating temple of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

On June 25, 1875, the building of the Manti Temple was announced. It would become the third operating temple in the Utah area. The site for the temple was Manti Stone Quarry, a large hill in the area. It had been prophesied numerous times since the beginning of settlement in the area that this would be the site of the temple. When Brigham Young announced the building of the temple he also announced that the 27-acre plot would now be known as Temple Hill.

The temple was completed in 1888 and a private dedication was held on May 17, 1888, with the dedicatory prayer given by Wilford Woodruff. Three public dedications were held on May 21-23, 1888, and were directed by Lorenzo Snow.

Throughout the years, the temple underwent various re-modelings and renovations. There was once a tunnel that went under the east tower of the temple but it has now been closed off. A great stone stairway was started in 1907 that led to the doors of the temple. In 1935, the temple was fully lighted at night for the first time. In 1940 the stairs were removed and work began to beautify the grounds. Between 1944 and 1945 the annex, chapel, kitchen, Garden Room, and men’s and women’s areas were all remodeled.

In 1981 it was decided that the interior of the temple needed to be extensively remodeled. Renovation took four years; murals were restored, original furniture was also restored, offices were enlarged and remodeled, a separate door was made to the baptistery, water and weather damage were repaired, an elevator was installed, and locker rooms were improved among many other projects. Rededication ceremonies were held on the 14-16 of June 1985 with Gordon B. Hinckley directing.

William Harrison Folsom designed the Manti Temple. It combines the Gothic Revival, French Renaissance Revival, French Second Empire, and Colonial architectural styles. The temple has 100,373 square feet, eight sealing rooms four ordinance rooms and the exterior is made of fine-textured, cream colored oolite limestone from quarries on the hill the temple now stands on. The two towers of the temple are 179 feet tall, and the open center spiral staircases inside of the towers are a marvel of pioneer ingenuity.

Until 2019, the Manti Temple became the backdrop for the Mormon Miracle Pageant each June. The pageant told stories from the Book of Mormon as well as portrayed events in Church history and from the life of Joseph Smith. Admission to the pageant was free and approximately 100,000 visitors viewed it each year.

Renovation

In his April 2019 General Conference closing remarks, President Russell M. Nelson announced the renovation of the Manti Temple at a future date. "The earliest ones stand as monuments to the faith and vision of our beloved pioneers. Each temple constructed by them resulted from their great personal sacrifice and effort. Each one stands as a stunning jewel in the crown of pioneer achievement.

Ours is a sacred responsibility to care for them. Therefore, these pioneer temples will soon undergo a period of renewal and refreshing and, for some, a major restoration. Efforts will be made to preserve the unique historicity of each temple wherever possible, preserving the inspiring beauty and unique craftsmanship of generations long-since passed.[1]

In a message from the First Presidency on March 12, 2021, further information was announced about the renovation of the Manti Temple:

Beginning later this year, the Manti Temple will begin a multi-year renovation that will include mechanical updates and other changes to prepare the temple to serve for generations.
Similar to the changes in the Salt Lake Temple, the progressive room-to-room presentation by live actors will transition to single-room presentations by film. The murals will also be photographed, documented, and removed. Some elements of the temple’s structure will be updated to accommodate these changes and improve accessibility for patrons. The historic staircases in the Manti Temple (and Salt Lake Temple) are being preserved during the renovations.
With each of these temples, there is a desire to ensure that the learning and experience are similar for all who come to the temple from anywhere in the world. The same ordinances, covenants and authority are available in every temple, and will now be presented in the same way, and now in more than 80 languages.
The historic pioneer-era temples have been a blessing to the Latter-day Saints for more than 140 years, and we know that with the updates and renovations now announced or underway they will continue to serve their sacred purpose for generations to come.[2]

See Pioneer Temples.

First Presidency Announces Changes to the Manti Utah Temple

The First Presidency of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints announced on Friday, 12 March 2021, that the Church will end the practice of having ordinance workers make a live presentation of the endowment — a temple ceremony depicting the Creation, Fall, and Atonement of Jesus Christ — at Manti Utah Temple later this year. Afterward, endowment ceremonies in the Manti Temple will proceed with films, as is done in every other temple.

The Manti Temple closed in March 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. It has resumed live-presentation endowments for living persons but is not yet available for proxy endowment ceremonies performed on behalf of deceased ancestors. According to the Deseret News, it appears possible those could resume before the renovation begins, as Utah’s COVID-19 case numbers are dropping and all adults in the state are eligible for vaccines beginning April 1.

The First Presidency stated, "Beginning later this year, the Manti Temple will begin a multi-year renovation that will include mechanical updates and other changes to prepare the temple to serve for generations." No date has been given for the start of the renovation.

Murals in the Manti Temple ordinance rooms also will be photographed, documented and removed to make way for single-room endowment presentations by film. The historic staircases in the temple, however, will be preserved.

Videos of the Manti Utah Temple

External links

Temples in Utah