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Sacred
Stone: The Temple at Nauvoo
by
Heidi Swinton

Old
photograph of the Nauvoo Temple.
(Click for enlargement)
A Homeward
Journey
No other story in American religious history can match the drama
of the Mormon effort to build the kingdom of God on earth. The near
completion of the Nauvoo Temple in 1845 and the Saints' experiences
within its walls represented "the beginning of a new era. . . .
the beginning of a homeward journey.1
The story of
the Nauvoo Temple is so much more than the account of constructing
a building, its limestone walls, and distinctive carved stones of
the sun, moon, and stars. It is about a people and their commitment
to God, their willingness to gather together, leave homes and families,
face rancor and persecution, poverty, sickness, disappointment,
and even death to fulfill what was to them a divine command. Their
effort was shaped not day-to-day, but with an eye to "eternal glory."
Their hope was to build a house suitable for God, a house where
they could be taught and blessed by promises of salvation. Most
had little idea what that really meant, but they labored faithfully,
nevertheless.
Their use of
the temple for special religious rites was epoch in importance,
but only weeks as we measure time. Yet it was enough time for nearly
6,000 to receive all they had hoped at the hands of the Lord's anointed.
"December 20, 1845. Saturday . . . 564 Persons have passed through,
95 this day," wrote William Clayton in the official record of the
Nauvoo Temple.2 "Passed through" seems an odd term for the culmination
of a work that took an entire community five years of sacrifice
and grueling labor. Yet the term fits so well when we understand
that to these LDS faithful synonymous with opening "the gate of
heaven."
Said Sarah Rich
of that singular time, "Many were the blessings we had received
in the House of the Lord, which has caused joy and comfort in the
midst of all our sorrows, and enabled us to have faith in God, knowing
He would guide us and sustain us in the unknown journey that lay
before us."3
For them, the
journey ahead was much more than the forced exodus west; the journey
was going home to God. In the temple hung maps illustrating the
wilderness to be settled, part of the journey that lay ahead of
them. But the rites of the temple were so much more significant
than the decor. They, too, were directions for a journey so sacred
that Apostle George A. Smith admonished the Saints, "whatever transpires
here ought not to be mentioned any where else."4 The solemnity of
the temple experience for the LDS faithful has not changed. Hence,
the writing of this account of the building and rebuilding of the
Nauvoo Temple focuses on how they did it and why, without compromising
the essence of the experience inside. Suffice it to say that participants
shared the feelings of Joseph Kingsbury who wrote, "these blessings
I feel to be thankful for and I pray I may always remember the goodness
of the Lord to me."5
This book joins
with the television documentary Sacred Stone: Temple on the
Mississippi, produced by Lee B. Groberg, to tell the remarkable
story of the Nauvoo Temple. But the essence of the story is not
size, dimensions, timetables, and floor plans. Nor is it the story
of the town. For years, the Latter-day Saints have told of Nauvoo,
elaborating on its picturesque setting, the social, cultural, and
economic development of a boomtown on the river. Somewhere in the
chronicle, the temple is given a chapter. Then the commentary returns
to the brick buildings on the flat, and the accounts of growth and
business. Curious. For the real story of Nauvoo is the story of
building a temple. Saints gathered to Nauvoo by divine command to
build the temple. The economic structure of the town embraced the
practice of tithing one day in ten to temple labor. The visitors
who streamed into town came to view the enormous public works project
on the hill. Children ran about the walls until they reached a height
that was dangerous; patrols guarded the facility at night; distant
congregations as far away as England contributed to the building
coffers. And all who were engaged in the work of the temple were
promised entrance when it was finished. Nauvoo was a Mormon town;
and the centerpiece of Mormon worship elaborated by President Brigham
Young "a house of prayer . . . a house of order, a house of God"
( D&C 109:8).
The Saints who
built this temple were seeking God's presence on the fringes of
the frontier. They asked for peace; they did not get it in calm
or tranquility. But they received in the temple the jump-start for
their wilderness journey in His holy house. On the wall of the temple
they left a message in brilliant gold letters: "Come After Us."
The story of
the Nauvoo Temple is, for most people, but a footnote in America's
nineteenth-century march to the Pacific. To the Latter-day Saints,
the building of the Nauvoo Temple is a benchmark chapter in the
history of this religion raised on American soil. The temple took
five years to complete, yet was used by the faithful for only six
weeks. It is a curious saga.
Why build a
temple? Was not a church or meetinghouse sufficient for communion
with God? These faithful followers of Christ believed as did those
in ancient times that temples are houses of God where the Lord can
reveal to His people the glories of His kingdom and the special
ordinances and spiritual covenants necessary for their salvation.
It was in the temple that time and space came together, where barriers
collapsed between this life and the next, where past, present, and
future were framed as one. What was bound in the temple was bound
in eternity in what the Prophet Joseph Smith termed "sealings."

The
Nauvoo Temple under construction.
(Click for enlargement)
He called for
the Saints "to build unto the Lord a house whereby He could reveal
unto His people the ordinances of His house and the glories of His
kingdom, and teach the people the way of salvation; for there are
certain ordinances and principles that, when they are taught and
practiced, must be done in a place or house built for that purpose."2
He also taught that the whole of mankind stood at the gates of the
temple awaiting saving ordinances, and that these rites returned
to God's children in their purity and promise in the Nauvoo Temple.
Joseph Smith
drew upon the substance, funds, faith, and zeal of all to fashion
the temple. Construction began in the early 1840s when a crew of
these religious refugees started chipping away the limestone walls
of a Mississippi riverbank on the western edge of Illinois. Like
the Israelites of old, these Latter-day Saints were intent on building
a house for God one stone at a time. The builders had no power tools;
they did not fully understand the mathematics of structural engineering;
they were farmers and common laborers; they were poor. Through their
efforts, much of it volunteer labor and for the most part unskilled,
they completed the temple and then used it day and night for only
six weeks. Their efforts drew interest; visitors by the dozens streamed
into the city to view the grand structure.
A visitor to
Nauvoo described the completed temple as "a large and splendid edifice,
built on the Egyptian style of architecture," adding he was astonished
by "its grandeur and magnificence."36 The New York Sun credited
"the Mormon prophet" as being the man who "in the blaze of this
nineteenth century" founded a new religion and built "a city, with
new laws, institutions, and orders of architecture."37
By 1845 the
dramatic structure's walls could be seen for more than a mile. The
temple128 feet long, 88 feet wide, 65 feet to the roof, and
165 feet from the ground to the top of the tower's spire-created
a town center very different from any other community. It was a
curious blend of architectural styles, and a bold statement of a
community at odds with its neighbors in social, religious, and cultural
practices. Their dazzling white temple was an amazing accomplishment,
a phenomenon of their time; yet their efforts had never been intended
to make a statement to anyone but God.
Temple construction
became a community-bonding enterprise with doctrinal roots Joseph
Smith described as "gathering." For six years, thousands of religious
converts had steamed up the river, docked at one of the town's wharfs,
and stepped into a new life, one centered on gathering to give service
to God. That's why they had come. By 1846 they were gone, driven
out by neighbors and one-time believers who could not abide the
unfolding religion, its prophets, or its people.
Nauvoothe
town and its templestood silent on the banks of the Mississippias
the river ripples quietly lick the wounds of war.
On the heels
of the Mormons' forced exodus to the desert basins of the Rocky
Mountains, arsonists torched the abandoned Nauvoo Temple in 1848.
Two years later a tornado toppled the walls. The once-proud edifice
that spoke of a peculiar peopletheir faith and sacrificewas
gone.
More than 150
years later, in April of 1999, President Gordon B.Hinckley, thirteenth
president of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, made
a surprise announcement regarding the reconstruction of this revered
edifice. The rebuilding "says that we are aware and conscious and
grateful for a great history that lies behind us," President Hinckley
said, "and that we are aware and conscious of a great opportunity
and challenge that lies ahead of us. This restoration stands as
something of a monument to that maturity in the Church." The construction
immediately went on a fast track.
Though temple
building has a rich heritage in antiquity, it was an anomaly in
religious circles in the nineteenth century with the exception of
the Latter-day Saints. The Mormons began to build temples in the
Church's infancy; they continued that tradition when they went west
in 1847. The completion of the rebuilt Nauvoo Temple will bring
to 113 the number of functioning LDS Temples around the nation and
the world. Nauvoo was the first LDS temple where holy rites and
promises were administered to the faithful to prepare them for salvation.
And it will continue to fulfill these purposes today.
The rebuilt
Nauvoo Temple looks over a still-quiet Nauvoo. Its presence commemorates
the past and heralds the future. It stands on the same footprint
as it predecessor, replicates the original architectural design,
hosts a golden angel atop the tower, and bears a near-perfect match
to those original wallsof sacred stone.
©©
Covenant Communications 2002
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