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Through the
Camera Lens:
A Compensation for Their Tears
The Dedication of the Nauvoo Temple
Text by Maurine
Jensen Proctor
Photography by Scot Facer Proctor
Note: Click
on photos below for enlargements.

When the Nauvoo
Temple was dedicated June 27 at 6:00 PM, it was the very hour and
the very day that Joseph and Hyrum Smith were murdered in Carthage
Jail 158 years before. (We know the very hour because John Taylor's
watch was stopped by a bullet at 5:16:26, and it was before Daylight
Savings).

In that hour,
and the dedicatory services that would follow, over 3.5 million
Church members in 72 nations would join for the largest meeting
in the history of the Church. When the Mormon Tabernacle Choir sang,
"Millions shall know Brother Joseph again," it was a prophecy
fulfilled and rang with that kind of poignancy.
It was a day
never to be forgotten, to tell your children and your children's
children about. "I saw the Nauvoo Temple dedication. I was
there."

In the very
hour that the Saints were crossing the Mississippi in waves, like
an exiled nation on the roll, God saw this day and knew the temple
would not be ultimately lost. "We've built this temple with
materials to last 200 years," one of the construction managers
said. "Perhaps 500 years," said another. The Lord saw
this rebuilt Nauvoo Temple when the temple lot was a grassy square
with a sunken hole. He had not forgotten.
"My name
is Jehovah, and I know the end from the beginning; therefore my
hand shall be over thee" (Abraham 2:8).

When President
Hinckley was asked if he thought Joseph was satisfied and happy
about this new Nauvoo temple, he answered, "I hope so. I believe
so. I am satisfied that at the dedicatory services today, there
is an unseen audience. I feel confident that Joseph Smith and his
brother Hyrum are in that audience and many others who gave their
life and their time and energies for the construction of this temple."

Sister Barbara Winder, Temple Matron, shares her feelings at the
coverstone ceremony.
Those who have
been in Nauvoo in the days of dedication have felt the power of
that unseen audience and the profound sweetness of the Spirit which
has seemed to be in and through all things. How do you describe
that powerful Spirit which descends upon you with such happiness
and clarity that you want nothing else but to cry out, "What
can I do for thee, O Lord?"
Click
here to read Part Two of this article.
(All
photographs Copyright 2002 Scot Facer Proctor)
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© 2002 Meridian
Magazine. All Rights Reserved.
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