Why will there be a third Latter-day Saint temple in the Boise area? It’s not just growth

1 week ago 528

  Published at 12:45 pm, April 10, 2025

Idaho Statesman logo

Sarah Cutler, Idaho Statesman

Meridian Idaho TempleThe Meridian Idaho Temple | Courtesy The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints

BOISE (Idaho Statesman) — Active members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints regularly attend churches, also called meetinghouses, for Sunday worship services, parties and events.

But for more somber and sacred occasions, such as weddings or baptisms, members of the church flock to a temple.

“It’s a sacred place — it’s very special,” Jason Nielsen, the president of the Caldwell Snake River Stake, told the Idaho Statesman. (A stake is a geographic area with about 3,000 members of the church.) “We go there to make sacred promises to our Heavenly Father, Jesus Christ.”

Amid the Boise area’s rapid growth, members of the LDS faith will soon get their third such site. The church announced Sunday that it will build a new temple in Caldwell, one of 15 new temples worldwide. No location has yet been announced, but the temple will join two others in Boise (opened in 1984) and Meridian (opened in 2017).

RELATED | President Nelson announces 200th temple of his presidency, including one in Idaho

RELATED | Hundreds attend groundbreaking of second Latter-day Saint temple in Rexburg

RELATED | Photo Gallery: Inside the Pocatello Temple

It would be the 11th Idaho temple for the Salt Lake City-based church. The other eight are mostly in south and east Idaho: two in Rexburg and one each in Idaho Falls, Pocatello, Twin Falls, Burley and Montpelier, a small town in near the corner of southeast Idaho. One is in Coeur d’Alene.

Idaho is home to over 475,000 members of the faith in over 1,225 congregations, according to a news release. Nielsen said he didn’t have numbers of church members in Caldwell or Treasure Valley, but the decision to build a new temple in Caldwell was partly “tied to growth.”

That growth comes from people moving to the Boise area from out of state, Nielsen said, and from people converting to the faith, which has been growing worldwide in recent years. As of 2021, Idaho’s LDS population had grown about 13% over the previous 10 years.

Anecdotally, Nielsen said, there was also a sense that the temples in Meridian and Boise were getting more crowded as population grew and members grew more observant.

“It’s not all about capacity — it’s also the faithfulness of members,” he said.

There is not yet a cost estimate or timeline for when the new temple will open, but Lonni Leavitt-Barker, a spokesperson for the church, said it will be open for the public to tour before it is dedicated — after which only church members in “good standing” with the church can enter.

The new temple’s location will be announced “down the road,” Leavitt-Barker said by email, and will include a rendering.

The church’s presence in the state dates back to the arrival of pioneers in 1855, and several church presidents came from Idaho, the release said.

“The church has deep roots in the state,” the release said.

RELATED | Column: I’m not a Latter-day Saint. Here was my experience touring the Pocatello Temple with an apostle

SUBMIT A CORRECTION

Source: www.eastidahonews.com
Read Entire Article Source

To remove this article - Removal Request