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Joseph,
Joseph, Joseph
The Temple Has Returned To Nauvoo, Part 4
"Lift Up Thine Eyes"
Text
by Maurine Jensen Proctor
Photography by Scot Facer Proctor

How did the
people of Nauvoo see their magnificent temple? They had to lift
their eyes. For the temple was built on a hill, visible from a distance--and
most of them lived in the flats, their wooden and brick homes lining
roads on the square, not far from the river.

Life in the
flats is the essence of much of mortality. How kind of the Lord
to give us something for which to lift our gaze. In fact, temples
are built on heights wherever possible. They are the high ground,
a physical, very tangible symbol that we are not inherently flatlanders.

A temple is
a mountain, a place where the air and veil is thin, where yearning
souls climb to find God, and breathless, having paid the price,
they learn his knowledge. The brother of Jared took his 16 stones,
burdened under their weight, to the mountain and could not be kept
from without the veil, as the finger of God touched each stone and
made it light.

Fasting Moses
went to Mt. Sinai to meet God and talk to him face to face. Nephi
was caught up "into an exceedingly high mountain, which I never
had before seen, and upon which I never had before set my foot"
(1 Nephi 11:1). In each case they were having temple experiences.
Click
here to continue with "Lift Up Thine Eyes" and see more photographs
of the Nauvoo Temple 'from the flats.'
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© 2002 Meridian
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