
Photography
by Scot Facer Proctor
Story
by Maurine Jensen Proctor
The
pictures of the San Antonio Texas Temple in this essay were shot in 16 minutes,
just as the sun rose on dedication day.
click
photos to enlarge

On this morning
of the San Antonio temple dedication, just before the
sun arises, we are at the temple lot. Only a handful of people
have already arrived—members of the temple presidency and the
physical facilities chairman. The lines of people, in their best
clothes, holding dedication tickets, will come later.

We are here
early for a purpose—to catch that first light that bathes the
world in sumptuous glow, painting one part of the scene at a time.
It starts by touching the gold-leafed Moroni, an angel flying in the midst of heaven
having the everlasting gospel. Then the light slides down the
temple spire and touches the engraved "Holiness to the Lord"
until it burns.

There's always
some feeling in the air the morning of a temple dedication. It's
a pregnant feeling, a pause in the heavens, it seems. If you
pay attention you can catch it.

You can see
it in the eyes of the people when they come. You can feel it in
their hearts. You can see it in the children who don't entirely
understand its meaning, but know what is happening is transcendent.
There's an anticipation.

It seems to
be marked with a joy that is as close to unspeakable as can be
found in this realm. Miracles surround the building of a temple,
not just in the construction, but in the building of the souls
of the people. We've always thought of the temples as placed
on the very fastening points of creation.

Brigham Young
said that when the Saints build temples all the bells in hell
start ringing. But on a day like this,
we can't hear them. The bells of heaven are ringing louder.

A photographer
knows that two times of day, there is magic light—just as the
sun rises and just as it sets. Things take on a golden glow that
is as temporary as the vulnerable green of first spring. It's
here and then gone. You have to work fast to capture what won't
last.

Click
here to go to Part 2 of 16 Minutes of Glorious Light.