logo
Pres. Nelson to dedicate Syracuse LDS Temple on Sunday

Pres. Nelson to dedicate Syracuse LDS Temple on Sunday

Yahoo03-06-2025

SYRACUSE, Utah (ABC4) — The President of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Russell M. Nelson, will dedicate Utah's 22nd LDS Temple.
The Syracuse Utah Temple, located at 1098 South 2500 West, will be dedicated on Sunday, June 8, at 4 p.m.
Open house held for Syracuse Utah Temple
The temple was announced during the April 2020 General Conference of the Church, and ground was broken on the temple on June 12, 2021. Since Nelson became the leader of the church in 2018, 200 temples have been announced, bringing the total to 382 — which are either open, being renovated, under construction, or have been announced.
The temple recently held its open house from May 10 to May 31. When dedicated, this will be the 22nd LDS Temple operating in Utah.
of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints are referred to by members as 'Houses of the Lord,' according to the Church website. Members hold the entire property of Temples sacred, from the grounds outside to what is inside and what happens inside.
MORE INFO: What are Latter-day Saint Temples
'From the very beginning, there have been sacred places upon the earth where God has communed with His children. They were designated by God and hallowed by His presence as places where He would teach and bless His children,' the Church says on its site.
The Church teaches that throughout biblical history, the Tabernacle carried around was a '' The Church also points to several additional scriptures from the and , which mention temples on several occasions.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump's Strange God Talk Has People Concerned
Trump's Strange God Talk Has People Concerned

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Trump's Strange God Talk Has People Concerned

The people are worried about the president. In a Saturday evening address, where he confirmed the U.S. had struck three Iranian nuclear facilities, it was President Donald Trump's repeated mention of 'God' that stood out to several of his critics. At the end of his four-minute address, Trump said, 'I want to just thank everybody, in particular, God. I want to just say we love you God, and we love our great military, protect them. God bless the Middle East, God bless Israel, and God bless America.' Many on the left were quick to point out how insincere Trump sounded, particularly given Trump's own relationship with religion. During his first term, a Pew Research Center survey found that most Americans didn't see Trump as particularly religious, with only 7 percent of American adults viewing him as 'very religious.' Critics included Democrat Gen Z streamer Dean Withers, who tweeted, 'No Trump, God Doesn't Want Another War in the Middle East you Delusional F--k. Resign.' Another user highlighted the fact that Trump mentioned Israel before he mentioned the U.S., tweeting, 'Trump ended his press conference saying God bless Israel before he even said God bless America. That should tell you everything you need to know.' Others posted reaction images to Trump's message from God's perspective, including a GIF of Denzel Washington slamming a door in someone's face and an image of a woman throwing her hands up in defeat. Several users compared Trump to the anti-Christ, while others argued that his comments sounded as dry and devoid of meaning as a generic yearbook signature. One X user wrote, 'This must be the most forced and uncomfortable 'Thank you, God' ever spoken in world history.' One user felt Trump's mention of God was significantly more sinister, tweeting, 'This man started a new war and is already invoking religion to manipulate his base into it. This man is a insane sociopath.' Trump could be looking to the early 2000s for inspiration, when President George W. Bush claimed that he was on a mission from God when he invaded Afghanistan and Iraq. In 2003, Bush reportedly told a Palestinian delegation at an Israeli-Palestinian summit held in Egypt, 'I am driven with a mission from God. God would tell me, 'George go and fight these terrorists in Afghanistan.' And I did. And then God would tell me 'George, go and end the tyranny in Iraq.' And I did.' He continued, 'And now, again, I feel God's words coming to me, 'Go get the Palestinians their state and get the Israelis their security, and get peace in the Middle East.' And, by God, I'm gonna do it.'

53 Ridiculous Unnecessarily Gendered Products
53 Ridiculous Unnecessarily Gendered Products

Buzz Feed

time5 hours ago

  • Buzz Feed

53 Ridiculous Unnecessarily Gendered Products

'Cause I'm totally thinking about being "super-cute" when defending myself against an attacker. The fluffy parts would definitely just get in the way. Why do women need different tools to begin with? Finally, men can eat!!! Boys and girls need different again? What does it even mean for toothpaste to be formulated ~for men~? Bro, you gotta wipe your I swear it makes you feel like a real man. What if I'm hangry as a woman? What then? Remind me why men need different hair dryers than women? And different loofahs? And scalp massagers? Finally! Ice for women! Looks like some marketing exec decided girls like guns, too, but only if they're pink! Same with miscroscopes. What about this makes it not for girls? I'm so glad men can finally enjoy candles. And bath bombs. God forbid a girl use — or even play with — a broom that isn't pink. Lavender is for men, too! You just have to call it "manly lavender smells" instead of "lavender." Oh no, I need to mark what page I left off at in my book, but I only have my boyfriend's male book marker available! I guess I'll just have to lose my progress. :( I guess women can't have ginseng or chili? Gee, I didn't realize how important it was for men and women to use different batteries! Of course, the one for women costs more just because it's pink. Same with these razors. I'm sure glad girls can worship Jesus, too. I guess I should just be happy they have one for boys? This is just blatantly sexist. As is this. And this. These gift cards are hopelessly gendered (men get Xbox and Ripcurl; women get MAC and Sephora). Why do we have to gender these at all, and why does getting served more beer make a man a king and a woman a wench? I guess with men acting the way they do when they get a cold or the flu, I get why companies think they need different recovery shots. What about this is "for girls"? Oh great, more pink tax. Just go to Ulta. I bet they have better concealer anyway. These are the exact same, except the women's option has fewer pills and costs more. Why did they need to make a different pair of tweezers for men? It looks exactly the same as the pair I have. I guess women can't use products with charcoal. Why do men need different soap? Was there really a need for fireworks specifically for girls??? Because men can't look in normal mirrors. Wait, are they vampires? Good news, gamer girls (oh, sorry, gamer babes) — you finally have your own t-shirt! I'm so glad the Girl Boss era is over. Phew, I'm sure glad this store sells toothbrushes for men and women. Otherwise, what would I buy??? Gasp — a regular toothbrush??? I didn't realize men needed different Q-tips. Or a different soup. It's just science, y'all. Would you rather smell like men or apricot? Why do we need a different guide for women? Of course the women's version has less product, but at least it costs less this time. What will happen if I eat this as a girl? And is the correct answer. H/T: r/pointlesslygendered

How Trump's trade war has forced me to rediscover my hidden superpower
How Trump's trade war has forced me to rediscover my hidden superpower

San Francisco Chronicle​

time6 hours ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

How Trump's trade war has forced me to rediscover my hidden superpower

Like many Americans, I've struggled with the whiplash of President Donald Trump's trade war. Amid the gut punch of Liberation Day, I worried whether to dip into savings to panic-buy bananas, avocados and Parmesan Reggiano. (Ultimately, I resisted, but did stock up on coffee — I'm only human). Since then, each head-spinning tariff update has reopened wounds of childhood material deprivation and pandemic scarcity. As a child, I skipped meals for lack of resources. I have since crafted my life to avoid ever worrying again about another bounced check or missed electric bill. But it's hard to feel empowered in the face of chronic economic chaos. Tariffs are already increasing the prices and availability of essential goods. The situation could become dire when tariffs start to impact access to medications that many Americans with chronic illnesses like me rely on. With my partner recently unemployed, I'm our household's sole earner. We're tracking every penny to make ends meet. To cope, the religious side of me recites the Serenity Prayer: 'God grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, Courage to change the things I can, and Wisdom to know the difference.' As a sociologist, however, I search for opportunities for individual resistance, no matter how modest, to counter immense social forces. Yes, there's much we can't control. But we can always do something. And lately, I'm discovering that something may be nothing. I've resisted ransacking stores like a doomsday prepper, realizing that I possess a greater power than stuffing my shopping cart: my lifelong frugality. I refuse to let the world's most powerful bully — our president — drive my behavior, nor let billionaires like Mark Cuban or media commentators dictate what I 'should' do, advising me to buy more and buy now. I don't fault anyone's urgency to purchase that new phone, car or early Christmas gifts. But I'm buying as little as possible. And I invite you to join me. In the spirit of never letting a serious crisis go to waste, as former Obama White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel once wisely counseled, we shouldn't squander this crucial opportunity to modify our consumption habits and reassess what we need compared to what we want. We're overdue for a cultural reset when it comes to our dependence on cheap products and trends like fast fashion that pollute our environment by wasting huge amounts of water and energy while emitting greenhouse gases and leaving us choking on plastic. Those TikTok 'haul' videos come with a steep price. Younger me rolled my eyes at calls to dial back consumerism, such as when a decades-older college classmate lamented the difficulty of finding her son sneakers made without overseas exploited labor. But I grew up. Now I'm that older woman worried about the human and environmental cost of inexpensive goods flooding our marketplace. The truth is that some things shouldn't be so cheap. Years ago, I remember feeling mildly horrified at the mountains of toys in my sister's home. I surmised she'd bought her kids everything we lacked growing up. But visiting friends with young children has confirmed that drowning in toys is now the hallmark of a typical middle-class American childhood. Trump has made repeated statements about the number of dolls he thinks girls should have, saying, 'I don't think a beautiful baby girl that's 11 years old needs to have 30 dolls. I think they can have three dolls or four dolls.' Putting aside the ick factor of his patronizing language about gender, morally and logistically, I agree with reducing excess. But that's the only nod I'll give him. Kids will survive with fewer toys. But higher toy prices are just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to China, or 'the country that makes all our stuff,' as comedian Stephen Colbert quipped. Imagine the absurd cruelty of telling older adults to survive on only a few of their prescription pills, which are also increasingly manufactured in China. As for the nonessential stuff, I'm proud of my working-class family's survival strategies that I still employ. Growing up, we stretched, scrimped, repaired and saved. Dad scavenged furniture and books from the trash. Mom scoured supermarket sales to feed our family of six, creating a complex shopping list organized around deals from weekly loss leaders. She made everything from after-school snacks to Barbie's outfits. I clumsily sewed my own dresses to wear. Neighborhood mothers donated bags bursting with clothes their kids had outgrown. Thrift stores supplied everything else. I have come to appreciate how this childhood spurred my imagination and creativity. Though we struggled financially, I still learned to be a magician. Thinking and dreaming cost nothing. I conjured images out of thin air and changed reality with the power of my mind. Library books taught me how to be an escape artist, whisking me to faraway worlds. Spending less, not due to necessity but choice, is a quiet yet powerful form of protest. The BuyNothing project, which aims to foster community through a gift economy, promotes a different form of wealth in the connections cultivated among neighbors. Right to repair laws and tool lending libraries can help protect us from obsolescence and forced replacement purchases. We gain more collectively by sharing and giving than accumulating things that clutter our homes and clog our landfills. One of my heroes, photographer Bill Cunningham, famously declined food and drink while working events, explaining, 'Money is the cheapest thing. Liberty is the most expensive.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store