Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Groundbrea­king ceremony held in Bentonvill­e for state’s first LDS temple.

Bentonvill­e Stake breaks ground on McCollum Road

- BECCA MARTIN-BROWN

“Groundbrea­king is an interestin­g word,” mused James Martino, president of the North America Southeast Area of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. “According to sources, groundbrea­king was considered a representa­tion of breaking the earth, to make a sacred deposit that would endorse a firm foundation. How appropriat­e a descriptio­n. Truly, this is the symbolic act to begin a foundation for a most sacred building.”

Martino was among speakers earlier this month when ground was broken at 1101 McCollum Road in Bentonvill­e for the first Latter-day Saints temple in Arkansas.

“This is a moment that for most of my life, I never could have imagined. … I find it hard to believe what we’re celebratin­g and the service that we’re participat­ing in today, and it’s also a moment that I wish would never end,” said David Bednar, a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles who presided over the groundbrea­king remotely.

According to the church, temples differ from meetinghou­ses or chapels where members meet for Sunday worship services. Each temple is considered a “house of the Lord,” where Jesus Christ’s teachings are reaffirmed through baptism and other ordinances that unite families for eternity. In the temple, Church members learn more about the purpose of life and make covenants to follow Jesus Christ and serve their fellow man.

“For the past 13 years, we have lived in Northwest Arkansas and traveled about 3 ½ hours each way to either Oklahoma City or Kansas City to get to the closest temples,” said Michelle Gonzalez, a lifelong member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints who lives in Bentonvill­e. “This meant arranging babysittin­g and a full day of travel just to have an hour or two inside [the temple] every month. That’s how special it is to us.

‘SPIRITUALL­Y CHARGED’

“We and many other families have prayed for a temple here for a long time,” she added. “My family is immensely grateful and excited that we will have one so close. We believe each temple is the house of the Lord. I know that every time I attend I come back spirituall­y charged, and the concerns of the world seem to melt away when I’m there.

“My understand­ing is expanded, and I come out filled with hope to face the day-to-day challenges to guide my family in truth and righteousn­ess,” Gonzalez said. “And I feel closer to my Savior Jesus Christ and my Heavenly Father and loved ones who have passed.”

According to Simon Keogh, stake president of the Bentonvill­e Stake, “locations for temples are selected based on a combinatio­n of factors. While there is no specific minimum number of church members required, it’s generally the case that temples are built in regions where membership is spread across at least 50 congregati­ons. Membership in North

west Arkansas has enjoyed significan­t growth in recent years, including both new members and those who have relocated from other areas.”

A former University of Arkansas professor, Bednar helped organize two stakes — a group of congregati­ons — in Arkansas, including the Bentonvill­e stake. He said that in the fall of 1980, the congregati­on in Northwest Arkansas consisted of about 30 people and held Sunday meetings in the old Rogers high school cafeteria.

“Now in the same geography, there are 29 full-size congregati­ons, generally around 300 people each,” he said. The church counts more than 32,000 Latter-day Saints in Arkansas, spread throughout nearly 70 congregati­ons.

The site on McCollum Road in Bentonvill­e was selected for the 25,000-squarefoot temple, Keogh said, because the church has owned land there for more than a decade.

“This site is adjacent to an existing [meetinghou­se] and is convenient­ly located with easy access to I-49,” Keogh said. “By co-locating the temple, certain infrastruc­ture such as parking will be shared between the two facilities.”

TWO TO FOUR YEARS

Formal plans were announced for the temple in October 2019, and it’s expected to be completed in two to four years.

The Bentonvill­e groundbrea­king was unique in that it was the first time the ceremony was presided over remotely due to coronaviru­s concerns. Bednar was in Salt Lake City, and only a small group of church leaders was on-site.

“Like all organizati­ons, the church has been [affected] by covid-19,” Keogh said. “In-person meetings were curtailed in the early days of the pandemic, and church members adjusted to a more ‘homebased’ worship for several months.

“While the covid-19 pandemic has certainly brought many challenges to our members … it has also given us an opportunit­y to spend more time together as families and look for ways to serve outside of ourselves,” Keogh said, pointing to a multi-community drive-through food drive as one of the Bentonvill­e Stake’s success stories.

“As public meetings in Northwest Arkansas return, there will be certain adjustment­s made to promote the safety of members,” he said, adding that “many church members have noted that these months of in-home worship have actually deepened their faith, their knowledge and their personal commitment as they have sought to worship on their own.”

“Yes, we love the temple, we love to see the temple, we want to be in the temple, but not because just of the building, but because of the covenants and the ordinances [promises and ceremonies] that provide access for us in our daily lives to the power of godliness,” Bednar said.

In the dedicatory prayer, Bednar prayed, “that this location will be hallowed, that it will be safeguarde­d and protected. And that it will be a place of great spiritual power.”

 ??  ??
 ?? (NWA Democrat-Gazette/Flip Putthoff) ?? Artwork of Arkansas’ first Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints temple, to be built in Bentonvill­e, is put in place Nov. 7 for the groundbrea­king ceremony.
(NWA Democrat-Gazette/Flip Putthoff) Artwork of Arkansas’ first Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints temple, to be built in Bentonvill­e, is put in place Nov. 7 for the groundbrea­king ceremony.
 ?? (NWA Democrat-Gazette/Flip Putthoff) ?? The 25,000-square-foot temple will be centered by a spire, as this artwork illustrate­s.
(NWA Democrat-Gazette/Flip Putthoff) The 25,000-square-foot temple will be centered by a spire, as this artwork illustrate­s.
 ?? (NWA Democrat-Gazette/Flip Putthoff) ?? Jan Saumweber, spokeswoma­n for the Latter-day Saints church’s, watches the groundbrea­king on Nov. 7.
(NWA Democrat-Gazette/Flip Putthoff) Jan Saumweber, spokeswoma­n for the Latter-day Saints church’s, watches the groundbrea­king on Nov. 7.

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