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Eyewitness
Account of the Campinas Brazil Temple Dedication
by Geoffrey
Biddulph
When the Campinas,
Brazil temple was dedicated on May 17, I was there in the Celestial
Room. This article will describe some details of the event and also
try to answer the question: why were we all blubbering like babies?
President Gordon
Hinckley and President James Faust were there for the temple dedication,
the fourth opening of a temple in Brazil. Several thousands of Latter-day
Saints from Brazil attended, and tens of thousands of people toured
the facility before it was dedicated.

Campinas Brazil Temple Early AM
All Photos used Permission of Intellectual Reserve
Copyright 2002 Intellectual Reserve
The
temple itself is truly an impressive structure, white and gleaming
on a rise overlooking Campinas. The edifice is visible from most
parts of the city and is especially impressive when it is lit up
at night. Everybody in Campinas knows where it is and all the non-members
I talked to were proud that it was built in their city and impressed
with the materials with which it was constructed. I talked to one
prominent businessman in town who has built several huge structures
and he could not contain his awe at the quality of the building
and the effort involved in its manufacture.
Campinas is
an especially propitious site for the new temple: it is a growing
business-oriented city of about 1 million people 60 miles from Sao
Paulo, the biggest city in Brazil. Church members are especially
active in the Campinas area and are certain to keep the temple filled.

Campinas Brazil Temple in Day Light
The dedicatory
ceremony started with the laying of the cornerstone. President Hinckley,
dressed in a white suit, asked several people, including some children
in the audience, to help him place the "mud" (cement) around the
cornerstone while a translator relayed his comments in Portuguese
to the observing multitude. A nicely arrayed choir sang a few hymns
in Portuguese.
It was when
the prophet first left the temple that I noticed the crying phenomenon.
He and a dozen other people in white suits walked out of the temple
toward the cornerstone, and a hush came over the crowd. I looked
around me and saw tears on the faces of several people, and I was
surprised to find myself getting teary-eyed as well.

Campinas Brazil Temple Entry and
Foyer
I was struck
by the magnitude of the event. I had read many times about the Kirtland
temple dedication and the miracles described by people who had participated.
It suddenly hit me that I was participating in a similar history-making
occurrence.
But there was
something more at work here than a simple recognition of being part
of an important event. There was a special force and emotion that
is difficult to describe but as prevalent as a thick fog.

Campinas Brazil Temple Ordinance
Room
This spirit
followed us into the Celestial Room, where we went for the second
session. The event was about an hour-and-a-half with talks by the
new temple president, his wife, President Faust and his grandson
and several hymns by a marvelous choir. There were perhaps 60 of
us in the Celestial Room, including many mission presidents and
their wives and general authorities from Brazil. The event was filmed
and relayed to other rooms in the temple where several hundred other
people watched.

Campinas Brazil Temple Celestial
Room
As soon as President
Hinckley walked into the room, the choir director started weeping.
A huge man sitting in front of me kept on wiping tears from his
face, and his teenage son to his right had eyes that were red and
shiny. The man who was translating for President Hinckley had a
trembling chin and a voice that cracked as he tried to perform his
job while being overwhelmed by the spirit in the room.
The climax of
the event was a short talk by President Hinckley, the Hosanna shout
and the singing of "The Spirit of God" in Portuguese. The prophet
started the talk by challenging those of us who are converts to
the church to recognize how much our lives had been enriched and
improved since our baptisms. In Brazil, the vast majority are converts,
and this certainly hit home for them.
I found myself
thinking about the strange road that had led me from religious skeptic
to firm believer in the space of four years. I thought of all of
the miracles that had taken place so that I could humble myself
enough to ask for direction from a Creator I had not really known
existed. I thought about how, by all standards, my life is immeasurably
better now than it was four years before: I am a nicer person, I
am more successful in my job, I am a better father and husband,
I have a lot more patience. In addition, I have blessings of health
and better relationships with my family and friends. I have found
a new level of joy I never would have thought possible.
It hit me that
four years ago I would have found completely absurd the idea of
attending such an event as a temple dedication. In those days, sporting
events and a trip to the local bar were certainly much more pressing.
The truth of
President Hinckley's statement hit me like a strong wave. It suddenly
was clear to me that his words were coming directly from a higher
source, a source that knows me well and had observed my progress.
And it was clear to me that this source was immensely pleased with
the course I have taken with my life.
As if he were
reading my mind, the prophet commented on what a marvelous thing
it was that we get down on our knees to pray to God on a daily basis.
He said God is so pleased that we do this. It is difficult to describe
the sudden certainty that I had that these words were coming directly
from our creator.

Campinas Brazil Temple Sealing Room
The prophet
reminded his audience of the importance of temple marriages. He
pointed to his wife and said with an uncommon surety that he knows
they will live together forever because they were married in the
temple. He challenged those of us in the audience who had not yet
done so to be sealed to our spouses eternally.
The prophet
then led us in the Hosanna Shout, and the choir sang "The Spirit
of God." The room filled with the sound of people singing, a rising,
immense chorus that filled us and lifted us up. The sound felt as
loud as an airplane engine. I looked around and noticed that many
people, myself included, were crying too much to sing. Who was filling
that chamber with so much noise? I don't know. I do know that there
was not a dry eye in the house.
What are we
to make of a man who brings people to tears just by entering a room?
I found myself wondering whether the prophet causes people to weep
when he goes shopping for Christmas presents at a mall in Salt Lake
City, but my instincts tell me that there was something special
about this particular event that caused the spirit to infuse us
all with euphoria and a sense of our greater purpose.
I have met well-known
actors and presidents of countries, business leaders of incredible
charisma and charm. President Hinckley certainly has some of that
presence, but there is something greater at work here.
Skeptics will
say that all of us had built ourselves up to such a state of anticipation
that we were overcome by a natural feeling of emotion upon seeing
the great man we admire so much. The skeptics will point out that
entire audiences are often driven to frenzies of passion by rock
stars and silver-tongued evangelists.

Campinas Brazil Temple Exterior Entrance
by Night
In my particular
case, I think I am pretty much immune to being manipulated by what
the world considers "celebrity." I have met enough well known people
to have something of a jaundiced view about their special properties.
And while I have heard only good things about the prophet, my feelings
of awe have much more to do with the God he represents than the
man himself. I have to admit that before I went to the temple dedication
my primary feeling was that I was fulfilling an obligation, not
completing a growing desire to be near a living prophet.
So, how do I
explain the fact that I was reduced to a puddle of tears at the
temple dedication? How do I account for the feeling of complete
elation I felt for days afterwards? How can I begin to understand
the forces that still cause me to tear up as I think about the Spirit
at work in that room?
I think the
history of the church holds many of those answers. What would cause
thousands of sober upright citizens to leave their farms, businesses
and jobs and follow an uneducated man across frontier America in
the 1830s and 1840s? What would cause them to sacrifice all of their
time and energy and money to build the Nauvoo Temple, the biggest
and most magnificent structure along the western frontier in the
1840s? What would cause them to stick with the church when mobs
raged? They could have had peace simply by renouncing their beliefs,
but most did not. Why?

Campinas Brazil Temple by Night
I believe they
must have felt something similar to what I felt as I sat four rows
away from a living prophet during a temple dedication. They must
have felt they were part of something much bigger than themselves
and that once they had a taste of the sweetness of that movement,
they could never turn back, no matter what. That is what kept them
from abandoning the barren Salt Lake Valley for the riches of the
California gold fields. That is what kept them focused on doing
what was right.
So, take it
from a former skeptic who is unyieldingly wary of being manipulated:
there are greater forces at work here. They are especially present
during temple dedications. I have seen it with my own eyes.
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