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By Maurine Proctor with information from the LDS Newsroom
Our beloved President
Gordon B. Hinckley, who led The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints through twelve years of global expansion, has died Sunday
evening at his apartment in downtown Salt Lake at 7:00 p.m. at the
age of 97 of causes incident to age. Members of his family were
at his bedside.
A successor is not expected to be formally chosen by the Church’s
Quorum of the Twelve Apostles until after President Hinckley’s
funeral within the next few days.
He has been one of the most loved modern Church leaders and is the
greatest temple builder in the history of the world. Of the 124
temples in the Church, President Hinckley has dedicated 85 of them
and rededicated 10 more. It was planned that he would be dedicating
the Rexburg, Idaho Temple this coming weekend on February 3.
In calling for 100 temples to be in operation before the end of
the year 2000, the Church president committed the Church to a massive
temple-building program.
It took the Church 167 years to dedicate the first 50 temples. Under
President Hinckley, it took forty months, to the day, to dedicate
the next 50 temples. His great desire was to make temples available
close to members all over the world. This was accomplished in part
by his inspiration for a smaller architectural plan that made them
much more affordable.
A moment that will particularly mark his tenure and brought audible
gasps from the audience was the April 4, 1999 announcement that
the Nauvoo temple would be rebuilt. This temple had been completed
even as wagons were being built for the Saints to abandon their
homes in Nauvoo under mob pressure and became both a symbol of loss
and then restoration to Church members.
His warmth, drive and vision, despite his age, have so captivated
Church members that one observed at his passing, “We’ve
all come to the point we thought he would love forever.” His
tirelessness made him seem to us eternally young.
With the wit that endeared him to us, he often made quips about
his age. He said even though he was supposed to be in his golden
years, there was a lot of lead in them. He teased that he used to
drive the work forward with a 2x4, but now it was with a cane. He
often said he was like the last leaf on the tree, and there was
a stiff wind.
Nevertheless, his energy astounded us. He always put in a full day
at the office and to celebrate his 95th birthday, he made an announcement
that surely no other 95-year-old has done—that he would make
a round-the-world, 25,000-mile, seven-nation tour to visit members
in Russia, South Korea, China, Taiwan, India, Kenya, and Nigeria.
President Hinckley was the 15th president in the 177-year history
of the Church and had served as its president since 12 March 1995.
Only five church presidents served longer than President Hinckley:
Joseph Smith (14 years, 2 months), Joseph F. Smith (17 years, 1
month), David O. McKay (18 years, 9 months), Heber J. Grant (26
years, 5 months) and Brigham Young (29 years, 8 months).
At his first press conference reporters asked him, “What will
be your focus? What will be the theme of your administration?”
He answered, “Carry on. Yes. Our theme will be to carry on
the great work which has been furthered by our predecessors.
“We have every reason to be optimistic in this world,”
President Hinckley insisted. “Tragedy is around, yes, Problems
everywhere, yes. But look at Nauvoo. Look at what they built here
in seven years and then left. But what did they do? Did they lie
down and die? No! They went to work! They moved halfway across this
continent and turned the soil of a desert and made it blossom as
the rose. On that foundation this church has grown into a great
worldwide organization affecting for good the lives of people in
more than 140 nations. You can’t, you don’t, build out
of pessimism or cynicism. You look with optimism, work with faith,
and things happen!”
That optimism drove him as he called on Church members to “stand
for something” or “stand a little taller.”
Six months after he became the prophet the Church issued The Family:
A Proclamation to the World which has stood as an anchor to the
Church in a sea of shifting values. In January of 2000, under his
direction the Church issued The Living Christ, The Testimony of
the Apostles.
A favorite story from his mission is a measure of the man. While
he was on his mission living in a very ordinary neighborhood at
15 Wadham Place in Preston, England, he wrote home saying that he
was wasting his time and his parents’ money.
His father wrote back, “Dear Gordon, I have your letter…I
have only one suggestion: Forget yourself and go to work.”
Then, President Hinckley said, “I got on my knees in that
little bedroom…and made a pledge that I would try to give
myself unto the Lord.
“The whole world changed. The fog lifted. The sun began to
shine in my life…Everything that has happened to me since,
that’s been good, I can trace to that decision made in that
little house.”
President Hinckley felt a deep connection to the history of the
Church. He built temples in Palmyra and Winter Quarters and had
key Church history sites restored to their original look. He dedicated
many new buildings and a new visitors’ center in Kirtland.
He renovated the Tabernacle on Temple Square to protect it from
earthquake damage.
With an eye to the future, he constructed the Conference Center
which seats 21,000 as a new gathering place for general church meetings,
a place in the top of the mountains, where “all nations shall
flow unto it.”
It is believed to be the largest religious and theater auditorium
in the world and has become the hub for the Church’s general
conference messages to the world, broadcast in 54 languages.
An eloquent spokesman for the Church, he made friends with the media
and became a popular interview subject quoted widely. He won the
respect of 60 Minutes tough Mike Wallace and appeared on CNN’s
Larry King Live a number of times.
During the Salt Lake Olympics of 2002, his request that the Church
refrain from proselytizing visitors was credited by media with generating
much of the goodwill that flowed to the Church from the international
event.
At a general conference of Church members in April 2001, President
Hinckley initiated the Perpetual Education Fund — an ambitious
program to help young members of the Church (mainly returning missionaries
from developing countries) receive higher education and work-related
training that they would otherwise likely never receive.
Even before his term as president, President Hinckley’s extensive
Church service included 14 years as a counselor in the First Presidency,
the highest presiding body in the government of the Church, and
20 years before that as a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles.
President Hinckley was born 23 June 1910 in Salt Lake City, a son
of Bryant Stringham and Ada Bitner Hinckley. One of his forebears,
Stephen Hopkins, came to America on the Mayflower. Another, Thomas
Hinckley, served as governor of the Plymouth Colony from 1680 to
1692.
President Hinckley’s first job was as a newspaper carrier
for the Deseret News, a Salt Lake City daily. After attending public
schools in Salt Lake City, he earned a Bachelor of Arts degree at
the University of Utah and then served two years as a full-time
missionary for the Church in Great Britain. He served with distinction
and ultimately was appointed as an assistant to the Church apostle
who presided over all the European missions.
Upon successfully completing his missionary service in the mid-1930s,
he was asked by Heber J. Grant, then president of the Church, to
organize what has become the Church's Public Affairs Department.
President Hinckley began serving as a member of the Sunday School
general board in 1937, two years after returning home from missionary
service in Great Britain. For 20 years he directed all Church public
communications. In 1951 he was named executive secretary of the
General Missionary Committee, managing the entire missionary program
of the Church, and served in this capacity for seven years.
On 6 April 1958, while serving as president of the East Millcreek
Stake in Salt Lake City (a stake is similar to a diocese), President
Hinckley was appointed as a general authority, or senior full-time
leader of the Church. In this capacity he served as an assistant
to the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles before being appointed to the
Quorum of the Twelve Apostles on 5 October 1961.
President Hinckley received a number of educational honors, including
the Distinguished Citizen Award from Southern Utah University; the
Distinguished Alumni Award from the University of Utah; and honorary
doctorates from Westminster College, Utah State University, University
of Utah, Brigham Young University, Southern Utah University, Utah
Valley State College and Salt Lake Community College. The Gordon
B. Hinckley Endowment for British Studies, a program focused on
the arts, literature and history of the United Kingdom, was established
at the University of Utah.
President Hinckley was awarded the Silver Buffalo Award by the Boy
Scouts of America; was honored by the National Conference for Community
and Justice (formerly the National Conference of Christians and
Jews) for his contributions to tolerance and understanding in the
world; and received the Distinguished Service Award from the National
Association for the Advancement of Colored People. On June 23, 2004,
President Hinckley was also awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom
by President George W. Bush in the White House.
President Hinckley wrote and edited several books and numerous manuals,
pamphlets and scripts, including a best-selling book, Standing for
Something, aimed at a general audience. In it he championed the
virtues of love, honesty, morality, civility, learning, forgiveness,
mercy, thrift and industry, gratitude, optimism and faith. He also
testified of what he called the “guardians of virtue,”
namely traditional marriage and family.
President Hinckley married Majorie Pay in the Salt Lake Temple in
1937. They have five children, 25 grandchildren and 38 great-grandchildren.
Sister Hinckley passed away 6 April 2004.
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