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Text
by: Maurine Jensen Proctor
Photography
by: Scot Facer Proctor
Meridian
Magazine’s Senior editorial staff is in Ghana, West Africa,
this week for the landmark dedication of the first temple in
black Africa. Stay with us in the days to come for on-the-spot
reporting of the historical events surrounding the temple dedication.
West Africa is one of the Church’s most unique settings because
congregations who responded to the gospel message grew here
spontaneously long before missionaries arrived.
click
photos to enlarge

It
is early morning on Saturday, January 10, 2003, as a group gathers
in a large room in the LDS office building on Ghana’s temple square.
Their historic task for the next few minutes is to put documents,
pictures and books into a box that will be inserted into the
cornerstone of the temple to be dedicated the next day.


The
gathering itself is significant, but it is made more so by the
song that is wafting in through the window as the choir, who will
perform at the dedication, is practicing. “Now let us rejoice
in the day of salvation,” they sing, but here are the words which
are most poignant, “No longer as strangers on earth need we roam."

This
temple, built in a land where Church pioneers started their own
congregations in 1964 and begged for 14 years for the official
Church to come and organize them, is the culmination of the prayers
and hopes of a people who wanted eternal blessings. The revelation
extending the priesthood to all worthy males, received by President
Spencer W. Kimball in 1978, was the key to undoing their bondage,
and this temple which allows easier access for all of West Africa
to receive their own ordinances without prohibitively expensive
travel, throws open new eternal blessings for themselves and for
concourses of their ancestors waiting beyond the veil.

It
is truly a day of rejoicing, a day of celebration.

Click here to go to Part 2 of A Day of Celebration
© 2004 Meridian
Magazine. All Rights Reserved.
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| About
the Author: |
| 
After receiving
her education from University of Utah and Harvard, Maurine Jensen
Proctor, the Editor-in-Chief and co-founder of Meridian Magazine,
began her writing career with McGraw Hill Magazines and the Chicago
Sun-Times. She has created award-winning television documentaries,
has written a radio show for more than six years that played on
300 radio stations, and was a long-time writer of The Spoken Word
for the Mormon Tabernacle Choir.
She, and her
husband, Scot, have written several books together, including Witness
of the Light, Source of the Light, Light from the Dust and The Gathering.
They also edited a new version of Lucy Mack Smith’s biography
of her son called The Revised and Enhanced History of Joseph Smith
by His Mother and The Autobiography of Parley P. Pratt. They were
formerly the editors of This People magazine.
Maurine has
been a part-time Institute teacher for the past 13 years and is
the mother of eleven children and grandmother of three. |

Scot Facer
Proctor, Publisher of Meridian Magazine, is the author, co-author,
or editor of several books including History of the Prophet Joseph
Smith by His Mother. Scot is a photographer by trade, teaches
Institute part-time, is married to Maurine Jensen Proctor and
the father of eleven children grandfather of three. Scot and Maurine
reside in the Washington D.C. Metro area.
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