Why a Former Senator Is Giving Tours of the Washington, D.C. Temple KENSINGTON, Md. — When Latter-day Saint leaders decided to buy land for what would become a monumental temple in Washington, D.C., they sent a large check to Milan Smith in his name. The idea was that Smith, who was the president of the church’s Washington D.C. stake responsible for the area’s congregations, could approach the owners of the land without revealing who was interested in purchasing it and why. How Smith got to that point is a story worth reviewing now that the temple, a D.C. landmark, has been renovated and is opening to the public for the next six weeks. His son, former U.S. Sen. Gordon Smith, is leading tours for invited guests this week. Milan Smith replaced famed hotelier J. Willard Marriott as stake president. The two men and one of Smith’s counselors, Robert W. Barker, encouraged senior church leaders to consider construction of a temple east of the Mississippi River, where no temple existed. “In dad’s first meeting as stake president, he announced that his goal would be for the stake to prepare for a temple in Washington, D.C.,” Gordon Smith told me after leading a tour for a large coalition of LGBTQ allies who are working with the church to protect gay rights and religious rights. “That became something of a passion for him and really one of the great works of his life,” Gordon Smith said. “Those three brethren went repeatedly back and forth to Salt Lake to visit with President (David O.) McKay, (and his counselors,) President (Hugh B.) Brown, President (N. Eldon) Tanner and the Quorum of the Twelve about the timing for a temple here.” Smith remembers his father showing the family the church’s check at the dinner table. He was 10; he briefly thought the family was rich. You can read the story of how the land’s Jewish owners reversed their initial rejection of the church’s offer in this story. Gordon Smith prayed in the woods on the future temple grounds when he was deciding whether he would serve a church mission. When President Spencer W. Kimball invited Milan Smith to speak at the temple’s dedication in 1974, Gordon Smith took the opportunity to propose to his wife below the Angel Moroni. They were one of the first couples married in the temple after it was dedicated. He has seen the temple’s influence across the past five decades. It is both the House of the Lord for Latter-day Saints and a D.C. area feature 10 miles north of the White House that is mentioned in daily traffic reports about I-495, the Capitol Beltway that encircles the American capital. “It is a landmark in a city known for great architecture,” Gordon Smith said. “It has taken its place among those great structures, and it serves so many of the Lord’s purposes that it is a source of unending joy and satisfaction to the Latter-day Saints. I think it is a source of great appreciation by the larger community in Washington, D.C.” “It really adds to the stature of the church in the corridors of federal power,” he added. “It’s recognized as a significant religious community and one of influence, and that building is emblematic of all of that, and its influence is seen as a source of good.” Smith said that is seen in the list of guests who accepted invitations to tour the temple this week and next before the general public open house begins on April 28. “It has an enormous impact,” he said. “The evidence of that is that so many of my former Senate colleagues and members of Congress and their chiefs of staff are all coming to the open house in large numbers. So is the international community.” Smith feels his father’s presence is near as the temple’s rededication approaches after a four-year renovation. “It’s a structure that was my dad’s passion and a source of enormous pride that what he envisioned in dream was in his lifetime a reality as the house of the Lord,” he said. Smith has long made it his practice when he flies out of Reagan National Airport to sit by the window. “I look over the verdant landscape of green canopy and there sitting alone, rising above the trees, are the beautiful spires of the Washington D.C. Temple,” he said. “So even from above, it has an impact and it is visible. When you land here, you always see it glowing in the darkness. It’s a source of great light to this whole community. “It’s a glorious special building, and it’s wonderful to see it refitted, retooled and ready for another 50 years.” |