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Sculpting the Face of the Savior
By Steven Lloyd Neal, MD

When we wept at President Hinckley’s funeral, who were we weeping for? For President Hinckley? For him to be reunited with his eternal companion, his family, the prophets before him — what a happy and glorious end to a life well lived!

No, we were weeping for ourselves. We were weeping for our loss, for our young children, and unborn grandchildren who would never know him. Our constant prayers as a church to sustain and uphold the prophet have helped keep him here for almost 98 years. We knew it couldn’t last forever. Yet the realization did little to soften the actual blow when the time came.

President Gordon B. Hinckley has left a legacy so rich that we could fill endless books of adulation. However, the most important book that President Hinckley wrote was in our individual hearts. And I believe the single most important achievement of his ministry was to lead our hearts to Christ. There was no end to his words of encouragement to lead us to the Savior. But more importantly, we sensed his love for us and wanted to obey his direction.

In the foreword to his book, Standing for Something, President Hinckley wrote, “We need a new emphasis on honesty, character, and integrity. As we build into the fiber of our individual lives the virtues that are the essence of true civilization, so will the pattern of our times change. The question that confronts us is: Where shall we begin?

He answered this question with the first chapter of his book, which is about love — what he called “the lodestar of life.” Citing the Savior’s reference to the final judgment when the King says we shall inherit his kingdom because we by proxy, “fed, clothed, and visited Him,” President Hinckley wrote:

One of the greatest challenges we face in our hurried, self-centered lives is to follow this counsel of the Master, to take the time and make the effort to care for others, to develop and exercise the one quality that would enable us to change the lives of others---what the scriptures call charity … best defined, charity is that pure love exemplified by Jesus Christ. It embraces kindness, a reaching out to lift and help, the sharing of one’s bread, if need be. (Standing for Something, by Gordon B. Hinckley, pg. 6.)

President Hinckley was for us, a living lesson of the Savior’s love. That is exactly how he was so effective in helping us change ourselves.


The finished sculpture, “Other Sheep I Have ...”

My family too received an heirloom-lesson from President Hinckley that helped me come unto the Savior in a unique spiritual experience — to attempt a likeness of the Savior in marble.

I began with a clay maquette sculpture, Jesus the Shepherd walking out to gather His sheep. In his left arm I placed a lamb; his right I left open and outstretched. From the verse in Third Nephi 15:17 I entitled it, “Other Sheep I Have”.


Finishing the clay surface of the maquette in my studio.

As I was struggling with the specifics of how to create the Savior’s physical likeness, the body mass and structure, and the facial composition and details — I was blessed to have input from some of the senior apostles.

Looking at the half-finished maquette, they said, “The Savior is physically powerful as well as spiritually powerful. It looks like you used your own physique for a model.” (It was true. Surgeons aren’t known for their bulging muscles.)

We spent some time discussing the features of His face — whether or not to have an ethnic nose, the thickness of his lips, his eyes, no fork in the beard, the length of his hair, and so on. We concluded that above all else, it should be a “good, strong face.” Lacking a live model, the final image for the Savior’s face came from the one in my own heart.

I finished the clay version and took the model made from the mold that the bronze was made to Pietrasanta, Italy where I had learned to carve marble.



Smaller statue now made into bronze, from which to pattern and carve the larger marble statue.

I shall never forget the feelings of my heart that summer. I felt something of the anticipation of the Brother of Jared as he strived to see the emerging face of the Savior through the veil, even as my hands worked. Some days my heart burned as if in a testimony meeting.


Artist using the air hammer to rough out the details of the marble statue, in Pietrasanta, Italy.

A year later I returned to report to the Brethren on my efforts with the finished 600-lb. marble statue and a smaller bronze cast from the maquette. I was very relieved to find it was favorable. What I didn’t expect however, was that President Packer wanted the First Presidency to see it as well.

President Hinckley was such a kind man that he would never say anything bad about someone else’s art creation. President Packer knew this and therefore presented the statues of the Savior for me so he could get his true feelings concerning them.

Following his presentation to the First Presidency, President Packer had me come to the West Conference Room in the administration building where the statues were still positioned. I quote from my journal:

We pushed open the door to the boardroom to see President Packer seated there alone. “President Hinckley liked your piece,” he said. “It would be a perfect thing to place in the MTC to inspire the missionaries. He especially liked the lamb,” he said while patting the bronze wool on the smaller statue.

“President Hinckley liked the face of the bronze statue more than the marble carved face because the nose needs to be thinner.” (I purposely left the frontal processes of the maxilla broader as it made the face more rugged on the marble version. Mistaken anticipation!) President Packer continued, “However, I told President Hinckley that we have a plastic surgeon here that can make noses thinner, so that wouldn’t be a problem.”

President Packer also told me that marble needed to be removed from between the fingers and the whole statue placed on a pedestal high enough to allow eye contact with visitors.


Installing the statue, “Other Sheep I Have…” in the lobby of the administration building of the Missionary Training Center.

Throughout this experience I felt a peace and a witness that our prophet, Gordon B. Hinckley, was familiar with the Savior — that he knew the Savior. Certainly, by their fruits ye shall know them. Truly he was a Christ-like man who helped us all see the Savior a little clearer. And when I finally meet my Savior and Redeemer, I hope I recognize his face. We thank thee, O God, for a prophet!

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© 2008 Meridian Magazine.  All Rights Reserved.

About the Author:

Steven Lloyd Neal, MD, was born in Nephi, Utah, on Feb. 9, 1953, and was raised in the Salt Lake City suburb of Murray.  He went on a mission to Fukuoka, Japan from 1972-74.  He attended BYU, graduating in Asian Studies and pre-med in 1977.  While he was attending BYU, he met Susan Clark from Sunnyvale, California. The two married and are the parents of six daughters. He went to medical school at the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio and did his surgical residency in Head and Neck Surgery at University of California at San Diego, finishing in 1987.  He was then recruited by Pendleton, Oregon to practice, where he has been for the past 20 years.  He is known in his specialty for teaching aesthetics in facial surgery, and is an instructor in sculpture at the annual Art of Rhinoplasty Course in San Francisco to help surgeons with visualizing surgical possibilities.  This specialty has led to some large art projects, in which he is currently involved. He serves as bishop of the Pendleton Oregon 2nd Ward.

Related Resources:
The Medicine of Art Archive
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