was the first temple of the
Latter Day Saint movement and the only temple completed in the lifetime of
Joseph Smith : built in 1846, destroyed soon after, and
rebuilt in 2002 The Latter Day Saint movement was conceived as a restoration of practices believed to have been lost in a
Great Apostasy from the true gospel of Jesus Christ. Temple worship played a prominent role in the Bible's
Old Testament, and in the
Book of Mormon. On December 27, 1832, two years after the organization of the
Church of Christ, the church's founder, Joseph Smith, reported receiving a revelation that called upon church members to restore the practice of temple worship. The Latter Day Saints in
Kirtland, Ohio, were commanded to: :"Establish a house, even a house of prayer, a house of fasting, a house of faith, a house of learning, a house of glory, a house of order, a house of God." Latter Day Saints see temples as the fulfillment of a prophecy found in {{sourcetext|source=Bible|version=King James|book=Malachi As plans were drawn up to construct a temple in Kirtland, the decision was made to simultaneously begin work on a
second temple at the church's colony in
Jackson County, Missouri. Surviving plans indicate that both temples would have the same dimensions and approximately the same appearance and both were to be at the "centerplaces" of cities designed according to Smith's plan for the
City of Zion. Conflict in Missouri led to the expulsion of the Mormons from Jackson County, preventing any possibility of building a temple there, but work on the temple in Kirtland continued. At great cost and sacrifice, the Latter Day Saints finished the
Kirtland Temple in early 1836. On March 27, they held a lengthy dedication ceremony and numerous spiritual experiences and visitations were reported. Conflict relating to the failure of the church's
Kirtland Safety Society bank, caused the church presidency to leave Kirtland and move the church's headquarters to the Mormon settlement of
Far West, Missouri. Far West was also platted along the lines of the City of Zion plan and in 1838 the church began construction of a new, larger temple in the center of the town. They may also have dedicated a temple site in the neighboring Mormon settlement of
Adam-ondi-Ahman. The events of the
1838 Mormon War and the expulsion of the
Mormons from Missouri left these attempts at temple-building no further progressed than excavating foundations. In 1839, the Mormons regrouped at a new headquarters in
Nauvoo, Illinois. They were again commanded to build a "House of the Lord"—this one even larger and greater than those that went before. Plans for the temple in Nauvoo followed the earlier models in Kirtland and Independence with lower and upper courts, but the scale was much increased. New conflicts arose that led to Smith being
killed, along with his brother
Hyrum, at
Carthage Jail on June 27, 1844. The
Nauvoo Temple stood only half finished. Eventually, this temple was finished and dedicated. Some temple ordinances were performed before most of the Latter Day Saints followed
Brigham Young west across the Mississippi River. Smith's death resulted in a
succession crisis which divided the movement into different sects. The concept of temple worship evolved separately in many of these sects and until the 1990s only the sects claiming a succession through Brigham Young continued to build new temples. In April 1990, the
Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (RLDS Church) began to construct the
Independence Temple, which was dedicated in 1994. The RLDS Church—now called the Community of Christ—owned the Kirtland Temple from 1901 to 2024, which it used for worship services and special events but also open to visitors, including various Latter Day Saint denominations interested in the building's historical significance. In the late 1880s and in 1890, a desire to continue the ordinance work in temples was a significant consideration preceding Wilford Woodruff's decision (announced in his
Manifesto of September 1890) that the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints would discontinue
its practice of polygamy. In 1887 the US Congress passed the
Edmunds–Tucker Act, which disincorporated the church and directed federal officials to begin seizing its assets, potentially including its temples. After a conversation with Woodruff, Logan Temple president
Marriner W. Merrill stated that the contemplated public announcement prohibiting additional polygamist unions was "the only way to retain the possession of our temples and continue the ordinance work for the living and dead which was considered of more importance than continuing the practice of plural marriage for the present." ==Purposes==