Wednesday, April 22, 2020

A Temple Post

I forgot to post this news article where they interviewed Brinley.  I definitely want to have a copy for history’s sake.

Latter-day Saint temples: Proxy ordinance work temporarily suspended, living ordinances will continue where permitted ‘by appointment only’


PROVO — Three Brigham Young University students with wet hair walked out of the Provo City Center Temple on a chilly, gray and misty Friday unaware that the baptism ordinance work they’d undergone for dead ancestors will be temporarily suspended on Monday.
Proxy ordinance work at all 168 temples of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints around the world will be suspended. Ordinances for the living will be done by appointment only, the First Presidency and Quorum of the Twelve Apostles announced on Friday.
Their joint letter was released while Brinley Gwilliam, 19, was inside the temple with her friends, Katelyn Bell, 19, and Elena Peterson, 18.

“That’s so sad,” said Gwilliam, a freshman in communication disorders from Odessa, Texas. “I’m so glad we made it today.”
“We’ll have to go again tomorrow,” said Bell, an experience design major from Houston, Texas. “This is the place to be with all the chaos going on.”
Members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints perform saving ordinances in the church’s temples both for themselves and by proxy for those who have died. The spread of the coronavirus worldwide prompts the changes announced Friday.
Both proxy and living ordinances are suspended temporarily at temples located in areas where government or other restrictions on public or religious gatherings preclude temple activity, according to the letter released by the church’s senior leaders.
They also announced that all housing for temple volunteers will close. The changes are temporary and related to health concerns regarding COVID-19.
“It’s a lot going on,” said another BYU student, Trey Long, 27, who is pursuing a master’s degree in social work. “I’ve been worried about the virus, but I felt so calm in the temple.”
Long and his wife, Larrisy, 28, who is pregnant, have one child. They attended a live sealing of two friends, an ordinance with the potential to bind a man and woman together for eternity.
“It was amazing,” Larrisy Long said. “It’s always amazing.”
Live sealings like the one the Longs attended will continue in Utah temples and other places without restrictions on small gatherings. The same is true for child-to-parents sealing ordinances, and living initiatory and endowment ordinances.
However, guests at living ordinances will be limited.
The letter said temple presidencies, staff and workers would take steps to minimize the risk of spreading the disease. Staff will be reduced, for example. That will reduce capacity for even living ordinances.
“Church members will be provided with instructions when they schedule their appointments for living ordinances,” the leaders’ letter said. “Individuals with currently scheduled appointments will be contacted by temple staff.”
Trey Long is a Provo City Center Temple worker with a shift scheduled on Friday night. He said he would look forward to hearing from his supervisor about what he should do.
Gwilliam usually attends the temple every Tuesday. She went prayerfully on Friday as she tries to decide whether to leave her friends and school midsemester. BYU announced Thursday that it had suspended classes on Friday, Monday and Tuesday. Classes will resume Wednesday online, and the university encouraged students to go home while completing their courses, if possible.
“I thought I had five more weeks with friends and classes,” she said. “I’m planning to go on a mission next, so I have to decide, do I say goodbye to my friends in two days for two years or more?”
Bell and Peterson missed their normal temple day on Thursday. With classes canceled, they said the temple was one of the few things to do.





BYU students Brinley Gwilliam, Katelyn Bell and Elena Peterson learnd about the temple changes after they performed baptisms for the dead at the Provo City Center Temple on March 13, 2020.
 Tad Walch, Deseret News

“It’s the place we get to forget about everything happening,” said Peterson, a genetics major from Layton.
“It helps your day go smoothly,” added Bell, who works at the Provo Missionary Training Center, which received its last missionaries on Wednesday for the time being. She helps with broadcasts, which will keep her busy. The MTC now will help train new missionaries by remote video conferencing.
The church previously announced the temporary closure of 13 temples.
“Many governments have placed restrictions that have required the temporary closure of a number of temples,” the leaders noted.



(Here is the official link to the article online.)

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