“In His Holy House,” Tambuli, Nov. 1993, 34
In His Holy House
In temples of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, instructions and ordinances detailing our Father in Heaven’s plan of salvation are provided. Also detailed is the commitment required by followers of the Lord to obtain the blessings promised to the faithful.
In the Salt Lake Temple, these instructions and ordinances are given in different areas of the building. Baptisms are performed in the baptistry. The endowment is given in rooms painted to represent the Creation, the Garden of Eden, this world, and terrestrial conditions. The celestial room, with its beautiful furnishings, suggests the noble and exalted conditions awaiting the faithful. There are more than a dozen sealing rooms for ordinances of marriage and of sealing children to parents. The Salt Lake Temple also has council rooms for the presiding priesthood quorums of the Lord’s church, and a large assembly room for meetings.
The creation room. (© LDS.)
The baptistry. (© LDS.) In the words of President David O. McKay, temples show the “step-by-step ascent into the eternal presence.” Through temple instruction, we receive an overview of the Christlike life.
The garden room. (© LDS.)
The lower grand hallway. (© LDS.) Temple instructions and ordinances are for the spiritual-minded, for mature disciples of the Lord “who know their hearts are honest, and are broken, and their spirits contrite, and are willing to observe their covenants by sacrifice—yea, every sacrifice which I, the Lord, shall command” (D&C 97:8).
The world room. (© LDS.)
The upper grand hallway (© LDS.)
The terrestrial room. (© LDS.) The temple is an ideal place for us to worship through quiet service, renewal, meditation, and prayer. When we enter the Lord’s holy house and center our thoughts on serving others, our own understandings are often clarified, and solutions to personal problems are often revealed. The Lord has described his house as “a house of prayer, a house of fasting, a house of faith, a house of learning, a house of glory, a house of order, a house of God” (D&C 88:119).
The celestial room. (© LDS.)
One of the temple sealing rooms. (© LDS.) As did ancient Israelites, we Latter-day Saints regard temples as places set apart, places to which we may go to draw close to God. Temple sites are revered as sacred ground. The spiritual atmosphere found in temples is further nurtured by the character of those who enter therein and by the nature of the instruction and ordinances presented.
The council room of the First Presidency and the Twelve Apostles. (© LDS.)
The council room of the Twelve Apostles. (© LDS.)
The council room of the Presidency of the Seventy. (© LDS.)
Another of the temple sealing rooms. (© LDS.)