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Editors' Note:
For all of the articles about the Finnish temple go to www.ldsmag.com/finland.
It was a misty, moist morning, still
dark outside except for the temple, which gleamed like a diamond
in the sky, as people began arriving for the Helsinki Finland Temple
dedication on Sunday, Oct. 22, 2006.
Click on
Photos to Enlarge

Something more was in the air than
a heavy dampness, however. It was a breathless, excitement that
said one couldn’t arrive quite early enough for this day of
days.

Much is left to be done the morning
of any temple dedication. The pattern repeats itself with precision.

Some people are hurrying near the entrance,
arranging shoes and white booties, which this morning will slip
over shoes wet from the pavement.

Choir members are tucked away in a
room warming up their voices, preparing to sing in the presence
of the Prophet at the cornerstone ceremony. Technicians are double-checking
wires to assure that the closed-system television works.

The press are finding their places
near the platform where the prophet will add mud to the joint of
the cornerstone.

We exchange a few tips with each other,
like best friends who have seen each other often at these wondrous
events. “Have you talked to this person? Did you know that
fact?”

The first arrivals come, clutching
white or blue tickets, so they can view the dedication from inside
the temple, bearing the whole history of the Church in Finland in
their hearts and on their faces.

They know that today, in the four sessions,
some with a special language emphasis to cater to the many nations
which are flowing here, that a promise is fulfilled.

The Church has come of age in Finland,
with every opportunity any Saint has in any land, when this temple
is dedicated.

The temple district takes in a remarkable
12 time zones and the largest region in the Church, but far more
remarkable is the simple reality that at last the temple is here.

Auli Haikkola, smiling said, “The
day after Moroni was put up in the fall, I took a group of friends
from Turku to see the temple. The leaves were yellow, sky was blue.
For the first time that day, we really understood that a temple
is coming.”

The 96th member of the Church in Finland,
Patriarch Tauno Savolainan, who was baptized in 1949, said, “There’s
a new spirit in Finland. Spiritually the temple has made a difference—a
big difference.

“When we received the notice
that we were going to have the temple in 2001, people felt enthusiastic
about it. Even our neighbors began talking about and anticipating
the temple. When these neighbors who were not members, told their
neighbors, the whole thing tenfolded.

“Enthusiasm among members to
get their patriarchal blessing has grown. For me personally, I have
gotten almost 100% more enthusiasm and I am 100% stronger than before.”

Patriach Savolainan said that in the
blessings he gives, he hears from the Spirit wonderful promise for
the future.
“We know and we believe that
something great is happening in Finland.”

Among the early arrivals at the temple
dedication was Paivi Haikkola, but unlike others in their tweeds
and black wools, she wore a traditional Finnish folk costume with
red trim.

She explained, “My grandmother
joined the Church in 1950 and this belonged to her. I wanted to
bring her with me to the temple today because of what it would have
meant to her. She never would have dreamed that there would be a
temple here.”

Paivi is a third generation Finnish
Church member on both sides of her family. “When my aunt saw
me in this dress today, she started to cry.”
Click
here to go to Part 2 of A Promised Day Arrived
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