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Through the
Camera Lens:
Gordon B. Hinckley in Nauvoo, June 27, 2002 (Part Two)
Text by Maurine
Jensen Proctor
Photography by Scot Facer Proctor
Note: Click
on photos below for enlargements.

The Nauvoo Temple
is breathtakingly excellent and built to last. "No expense
has been spared," he said. "The Church has become a great
worldwide organization since those earlier days and we, through
the generosity of people, as well as the tithes of the Church have
been able to reconstruct this temple and built it according to the
most exacting standards."

Most of the
temples of the Church face east by design, with their inscribed
"Holiness to the Lord" lit first by morning light. Joseph
Smith designed the Nauvoo Temple to face west, standing on a bluff
with a magnificent view of the Mississippi River. "The Salt
Lake Temple faces east, and with the events of this day," said
President Hinckley, "I think of these two great structures
facing each other across a major part of the continent and bonded
together in a common purpose for the good and blessing of the work
of the Lord."
As he unfolds
his feelings and answers reporter's questions, he is clearly polished
in the role. After all, he has dodged Mike Wallace's bullets and
come out as a friend, and so, no matter what the reporters ask,
he tells them what he wants them to know about the breadth and depth
and power of God's works which we are about.
This may be
Joseph's temple, but more important still, the God that Joseph introduced
us to is God. His people have returned to rebuild their temple,
and this was the day of dedication.

Gordon B. Hinckley
with his firm grasp on history, his sense of how to capture the
symbolic moment, and the fired-up urgency of his drive has led a
people to rebuild their temple. He was particularly suited for the
privilege.
President Hinckley
doesn't live in Nauvoo, but it lives in him. When Wilford Woodruff
left Nauvoo, he said, "I looked upon the Temple and city as
they receded from view and asked the Lord to remember the sacrifices
of his Saints." President Hinckley remembers.

President Hinckley
said that the first time he toured the completed Nauvoo Temple,
he walked out of its arched front door, looked down on Nauvoo, across
the Mississippi River, and then into Iowa, and in his mind's eye,
he could see the wagons of our people in the winter of 1846 crossing
the ice of the Mississippi River. "It was an emotional experience
for me," he said.
President Hinckley's
sense of history is both acquired and gene deep. He reads history
and prizes books that bring it alive-like Thomas Ford's History
of Illinois. He has had undying interest in Martin's Cove and has
pushed its purchase by the Church. But about Nauvoo, "I really
marvel," he says.
Since the flat,
fertile plains of Illinois didn't offer lumber for building, they
had to go to Wisconsin 500 miles away to cut lumber in both summer
and winter and then float it down the Mississippi. Once anchored,
they took apart their rafts, unloaded the lumber, carried it to
the site. They brought the bell from England, quarried the limestone
along the Mississippi.
Click
here to continue with
Gordon B. Hinckley in Nauvoo, Part 3
(All
photographs Copyright 2002 Scot Facer Proctor)
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Magazine. All Rights Reserved.
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