The New Bangkok Thailand Temple’s Golden Glow: Three New Temples Nearing Completion, Dedication In February, presidents were named for three unfinished temples of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Since then, the church has announced open house and dedication dates for two of the three temples. The public is now welcome to drive onto the grounds of the third, the Orem Utah Temple, which appears mostly complete on the outside, with maturing landscaping. Fewer than 19 miles away, the general public can walk through the Saratoga Springs Utah Temple right now. The temple’s open house has been underway for nearly two months and runs through July 8. Each of the three temples is located in notably distinct places. Orem Utah Temple The pending completion, dedication and opening of the Orem and Saratoga Springs temples will clear the way for the church to close and begin an extensive renovation and dramatic redesign of the Provo Utah Temple. Orem alone is home to 26 stakes of the church. (A stake is a grouping of five to 12 wards, or congregations.) The Provo temple and Mount Timpanogos Utah Temple were at capacity before the Payson Utah Temple (2015) and Provo City Center Temple (2016) were dedicated. Workers have been building a seventh temple in Utah County, in Lindon, since April 2022. The Orem temple president is Kenneth Lee Sorber, who served in a BYU young single adult stake presidency with Robert Millet and Brent Top, who each served as dean of Religious Education at BYU. Sorber then was president of the Tennessee Nashville Mission. He has spent the past 11 years as vice president of strategic relations at Western Governors University. Bangkok Thailand Temple This temple will make history. It will be the first in mainland Southeast Asia. The open house is scheduled from Sept. 1-16. Elder Ronald A. Rasband of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles will dedicate the temple on Oct. 22. The Bangkok temple cuts a striking, golden glowing image at night nestled between buildings in the city’s business district. Wisan Wisanbannawit kindly granted permission for us to use one of his images of the temple. The Bangkok temple president is Wisit Khanakham, a patriarch and former Area Seventy, stake president and branch president. McAllen Texas Temple The open house is scheduled for Aug. 25 through Sept. 9. Elder Dieter F. Uchtdorf of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles will dedicate it on Oct. 8. I met the temple president and matron, Carlos Villarreal and Myrna Ann Garza Villarreal, exactly two years ago when he was assigned to be the director of the church’s new Family Transfer Center for immigrants in Houston, Texas. Sister Villarreal kindly helped translate a powerful interview for me with a young mother who carried her 5-month-old son through one of the world’s most dangerous places — the jungles of Panama’s perilous Darién Gap. The interview, along with photos from the border, became the centerpiece for one of my favorite stories of 2021: “Migrants march a deadly trail to find ‘God’s love in action’ along the border.” The Villarreals temporarily moved to Houston from their home near San Antonio to help at the Family Transfer Center. Now they will live in McAllen, a border city in the Rio Grande Valley with a population about 50% larger than Orem. It is lovely and still agricultural while being one of the most impoverished cities in America. I attended a kind, thriving, Spanish-speaking branch there — I don’t speak any Spanish — for church and a baptism one Sunday in 2014 for a story about how five basketball and football stars temporarily set aside their sports careers to serve Latter-day Saint missions. The story begins in a trailer park in Peñitas, Texas, a half-hour from McAllen. |