Visitors Tour Phoenix Temple during Open House

Contributed By Jill B. Adair, Church News contributor

  • 20 October 2014

Public tours of the Phoenix Arizona Temple run through Saturday, November 1.
  Photo by Dave Simonson.

Article Highlights

  • The temple will serve 60,000 members of 16 stakes in Phoenix.
  • The new Phoenix Arizona Temple is Arizona’s fifth temple. It will be dedicated in three sessions Sunday, November 16.
  • Free tours are open to the public through November 1, excluding Sundays.

“It is my personal priority to make sure members of the Church have access to the blessings of the temple. It is here where members learn of their divine origin and destiny, where they are strengthened spiritually as individuals and as families. Temples are sanctuaries from the storms of life.” —President Thomas S. Monson

PHOENIX, ARIZONA

In Arizona’s capital and largest city, visitors are touring the new Phoenix Arizona Temple during an open house that runs through Saturday, November 1.

At the northern edge of a 1,000-acre desert conservation park, Arizona’s fifth temple will serve 60,000 members of 16 stakes in the western part of the metro Phoenix area and several communities north of Phoenix.

Elder Kent F. Richards of the Seventy and Executive Director of the Temple Department conducted tours for the media and special guests prior to the public open house, which began October 10.

“We welcome the community and all interested parties to come and see the interior of the temple and learn about its function and purpose,” Elder Richards told local media October 8.

“It’s a beautiful building,” he said, explaining that temples “are the most sacred buildings” in the Church.

After the temple is dedicated November 16, it will become the Church’s 144th operating temple.

The Mesa Arizona Temple, which opened in 1927, served Latter-day Saints of Arizona and the Southwest for decades before the state’s second temple, in the small town of Snowflake in the northeastern part of the state, was dedicated in 2002.

According to Church leaders, there are about 400,000 Latter-day Saints in Arizona. During recent years the Mesa Temple was one of the busiest outside of Utah.

After Thomas S. Monson became President of the Church in February 2008, the first three temples he announced were to be built in Arizona.

“It is my personal priority to make sure members of the Church have access to the blessings of the temple,” President Monson said at that time. “It is here where members learn of their divine origin and destiny, where they are strengthened spiritually as individuals and as families. Temples are sanctuaries from the storms of life.”

U.S. Senator Jeff Flake (R-Ariz.) at left, and Arizona Governor Jan Brewer, at right, tour the Phoenix temple October 6 with Elder Kent F. Richards, center. Having grown up on the west side of the Phoenix Valley, Governor Brewer called the Phoenix Temple her “hometown temple.” Photo by Dave Simonson.

Elder Kent F. Richards of the Seventy and Executive Director of the Temple Department gives interviews for local news coverage during a media tour of the Phoenix Arizona Temple October 8. Photo by Dave Simonson.

The Richardson family of Mesa visits the Phoenix Arizona Temple on the first day of the public open house. Free parking is available at a nearby water park, and chartered shuttle buses transport visitors to and from the temple site. Photo by Dave Simonson.

President Monson dedicated The Gila Valley Arizona Temple in eastern Arizona in 2010 and the Gilbert Arizona Temple, southeast of Phoenix, in March of this year. He also announced a sixth temple for the state, in Tucson, to be built.

Phoenix is the sixth largest city in the United States, with a population topping 1.5 million, and is the country’s most populous state capital. The metro area’s population surpasses 4.3 million, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

The Phoenix Temple will serve about 60,000 members of the Church in Phoenix and the communities of Glendale, Goodyear, Peoria, Buckeye, and Surprise—areas west of Phoenix that experienced tremendous growth in the last decade. The cities of Prescott and Cottonwood, both of which are within a two-hour drive north of Phoenix, are also included within the temple district.

The Phoenix Temple is at 5220 W. Pinnacle Peak Road, adjacent to an LDS meetinghouse. Originally the proposed temple would be two stories, but after neighbors were upset about the height that required rezoning, the Church submitted plans for a 27,423-square-foot, single-story structure with a full basement. Additional parking spaces were also added to meet concerns about parking, according to local news reports.

Nearly 500 residents who live near the temple attended a special tour October 7, and Elder Richards said there were many positive comments.

Arizona Governor Jan Brewer and Senator Jeff Flake (R-Ariz.) toured the temple on October 6 with Elder Richards. Governor Brewer spoke to a group of local dignitaries at a luncheon afterward.

“The opening of the Phoenix Temple is especially exciting for me,” she said in prepared remarks. “No doubt, the other temples are wonderful. However, you see, I am a West Valley girl and you have to be loyal in life. So I am officially declaring today that the Phoenix Temple is my hometown temple!”

Nearly 5,000 youth are expected to participate in a cultural celebration, titled “Keepers of His Light,” Saturday, November 15, at Sunrise Mountain High School in Peoria. Event planners say the celebration commemorates the heritage of the Phoenix area through narration, song, and dance.

The temple will be open to the public through November 1, excluding Sundays. Reservations can be made at templeopenhouse.ChurchofJesusChrist.org/tickets.

The Yoshida family tours the Phoenix Arizona Temple during the first day of the public open house, Friday, October 10. Photo by Dave Simonson.

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