Through
the camera lens, we often saw how grimly set their faces can be.
When life is so grueling, ready smiles evaporate. That was why
a Day of Celebration was particularly appropriate. The gospel
should teach the youth joy as well a obedience.



Another
problem to solve quickly, in putting on a program, was costuming.
With a native sister for guidance, the wives of the Area Presidency
plunged into the local markets, scouring the stands for the vibrant,
multi-colored African prints to supply for each stake. If this
was a day of blossoming for the Saints in Africa, they were going
to look that way, like vibrant African flowers on the stage.

Cornerstone
Ceremony
On
the Day of Celebration, the early-morning cornerstone ceremony
was a small, but significant gathering, because in attendance
were the pioneers of Ghana—stake patriarch Joseph W.B. Johnson,
who had started several small congregations long before the missionaries
arrived; Elder Emmanuel Kissi, Area Authority Seventy, who had
joined the Church in England and returned to Ghana to help the
fledgling Church here, and Priscilla Sampson-Davis, who had been
baptized the first day the missionaries arrived and had kept a
steady stream of copies of the Book of Mormon coming to Ghana.

Elder
Michael Kirkpatrick, public affairs missionary, said of these
Saints, “I don’t know of anyplace else where the first pioneers
are still here to see the dedication of the temple in their land.”
It was as if Parley P. Pratt could have been at the dedication
of the Salt Lake temple, that is how significant these living,
breathing people are in Ghana.

Elder
Sheldon H. Child said to the small assembly, “You are no longer
members of another kingdom. You are now part of the household
of God.” He explained that the cornerstone had symbolic significance
for a temple. If the household of God is described in terms of
the building of a house, its foundation is built on prophets and
apostles and the chief cornerstone was Jesus Christ, Himself.
This temple in Ghana was a further invitation to come into the
kingdom and be nurtured in the house. “I bear my witness that
the dedication of this temple is the most historic thing that
has ever happened in Africa,” he said.

Member
Meeting
That
afternoon members filled a large auditorium to receive instructions
from Elder Child, Elder Russell M. Nelson, and President Gordon
B. Hinckley. At one point, President Hinckley told the audience
that there were four things they must do. At this, almost in
one united gesture, nearly everyone pulled a sheet of white paper
to take notes
