2012
A Piece of the Temple
April 2012


“A Piece of the Temple,” Friend, Apr. 2012, 46–47

A Piece of the Temple

I will live now to be worthy to go to the temple and do my part to have an eternal family (My Gospel Standards).

Natalie wants to be worthy to go to the temple, and something special will help remind her.

“Are you girls excited to see the temple?” Mom asked as she, Natalie, and Stephanie drove to the Detroit Michigan Temple site.

“Yes!” the sisters said.

“Is it true they’re putting the marble on the walls right now?” Natalie asked.

“I think so,” Mom said.

“I can’t wait until it’s done,” Stephanie said. “It’s going to be so pretty.”

The girls were going to a special activity day. They were visiting the new temple while it was still under construction.

When they got to the temple site they met their group of girls and their leader, Sister Jones.

Walking around the construction site, Sister Jones told stories of the Kirtland and Nauvoo Temples and the early Latter-day Saints.

“They built temples and then were run out of their towns. They had to leave behind the beautiful buildings they had spent so long making,” Sister Jones said. “We are blessed to have the temples that we do today, and to now have a temple so close to us.”

Natalie looked at the temple and imagined what it would be like to have to leave it after working so hard to build it. It made her sad.

“Do any of you know what blessings the temple gives us?” Sister Jones asked.

Kelsy raised her hand. “My family was sealed in the temple.”

“That’s right! People are married and sealed together in the temple so their families can be together forever. What other blessings are there?”

“Baptisms for the dead,” Natalie said. “That’s when people are baptized for people who aren’t alive anymore so they can choose to be members of the Church if they want.”

“Very good,” Sister Jones said. “Those are just some of the blessings we can receive in the temple.”

Natalie was excited to do baptisms for the dead when she turned 12. On her own baptism day she had felt clean and peaceful, and she wanted to share that feeling with others. Natalie felt important knowing she could do something to help people who had passed away.

“I have a gift for each of you,” Sister Jones said. She opened a bag and pulled out a piece of white stone.

“This is a piece of the same marble they are using to make the temple. I got special permission to give each of you one piece.” Sister Jones handed out the pieces of marble. “I want you to keep your marble in a special place to remind you of the temple and the blessings that the temple gives us. Can you do that?”

“Yes!” the girls said.

“I also want to challenge you to make goals to be worthy to enter the temple to do baptisms when you are 12, and to be married in the temple when you are older. The temple is a special place, and I want each of you to be a part of it,” Sister Jones said.

Natalie held her piece of marble tightly. It was white and beautiful and reminded her of being clean. She knew she wanted to be worthy to go inside the temple someday.

“I promise to remember the temple. I will go inside someday,” she said to herself. As she held the marble close to her heart, it felt like she was holding a piece of the temple there as well.

Illustration by Maryn Roos

My favorite part of the temple is the peace I feel when I think about it.