Oklahoma City Oklahoma

Oklahoma City Oklahoma Temple Wiki

Quick Facts

ANNOUNCED
14 March 1999

ANNOUNCED BY
First Presidency

GROUNDBREAKING
3 July 1999

GROUNDBREAKING PRESIDED BY
Elder Rex D. Pinegar

DEDICATED
30 July 2000

DEDICATED BY
Elder James E. Faust


DEDICATION ORDER
95

LOCATION
12030 N Mustang Rd
Yukon, Oklahoma 73099-9801
United States

Description

History

Announcement

Text

The Oklahoma City Oklahoma Temple was announced on March 14, 1999.[1]Six more temples announced; total now 108“, Church News, March 27, 1999, https://www.thechurchnews.com/archive/1999-03-27/six-more-temples-announced-total-now-108-15365. Prior to the announcement members would travel nearly 200 miles to the Dallas Texas Temple.

Years earlier, the Church had purchased land on which to build a meetinghouse. With the purchase of this land, the sellers donated an additional parcel of land. The meetinghouse was built and the members enjoyed using the additional land for social and sporting events. When asked in 1999 if they could give up their baseball field for a temple, the local members were both willing and eager.

ANNOUNCED ORDER
#

Date1999 03 14
ByFirst Presidency
Role#
ViaLocal Letter

⮜Preceded by Tuxtla Gutiérrez Mexico
Followed by Medford Oregon

Groundbreaking

During the groundbreaking ceremony for the Oklahoma City Oklahoma Temple on 3 July 1999, Elder Rex D. Pinegar of the Seventy and president of the North America Southwest Area declared that turning the ceremonial shovelful of soil during groundbreaking services is symbolic of “turning our lives over to Christ and keeping His commandments.” He also recognized the role that having a temple in an area plays in aiding members to develop their faith and build strong families. Additionally, the temple’s presence will help the youth of the temple district to see their future clearly and understand what the Lord expects of them.

In his remarks, Elder Pinegar also referred to the deadly tornado that struck Oklahoma City on May 3. After the tornado, he toured the devastated areas and saw little standing but the people, which manifested their faith. He mentioned the pure motivations of Church members who reached out to help others simply because they wanted to help.

GROUNDBREAKING ORDER
104

Date1999 07 03
ByRex D. Pinager
RoleSeventy
Attendees#

⮜Preceded by Guadalajara Mexico
Followed by Reno Nevada

Also speaking during the groundbreaking services was Elder J. Michael Moeller, an Area Authority Seventy. Elder Moeller spoke of the tragedies that have occurred in Oklahoma City in the last few years including the federal building bombing in April 1995. It will be a great blessing to have a temple in this area, he added. In addition, he explained how Isaiah opened his writings by talking about temples and that Daniel spoke of a stone cut out of the mountain without hands that would fill the whole earth. This temple is part of that stone, he said.

Open House

The Oklahoma City Oklahoma Temple open house ran from 15 to 22 July 2000 with over 40,000 visitors touring the temple in the seven-day period. Organizers experimented with having half of the tours self-guided and the other half with a guide. They quickly discovered that the guided tours were far more successful and soon arranged for all tours to be assisted by a guide. In fact, the guided tours were so successful that they were used as a reference for future open houses in LDS temples. By the end of the week, fifteen hundred copies of the Book of Mormon were placed and thirty-eight missionary referrals were received.

Start Date2000 07 15
End Date2000 07 22
Days7
Attendees40,000
Per day5,714

Dedication

President James E. Faust, First Counselor in the First Presidency dedicated the Oklahoma City Oklahoma Temple on 30 July 2000. In the dedicatory prayer, President Faust said, “We pray for Thy cause and kingdom, that it may grow stronger in this community. May all who have favored Thy cause be blessed for that which they have done. May many continue to seek for knowledge concerning Thy work until they have embraced Thy restored gospel…May none of evil intent enter the portals of Thy house. May the defiling hand of the vandal and the destroyed be kept from the exterior. May all who pass this way recognize Thy temple as a sacred and beautiful structure built unto Thy Holy Name.”[2]Oklahoma City Oklahoma: ‘A sacred and beautiful structure‘”, Church News, August 5, 2000

DEDICATION ORDER
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Dedicatory Prayer

Construction Duration

SpanDuration
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Dedicatory Order

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REGION
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COUNTRY
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STATE
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COUNTY
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CITY
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Summary

The Oklahoma City Oklahoma Temple is the 95th operating temple of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

The Oklahoma City Oklahoma Temple was the first temple built in Oklahoma.

Detail

Announced

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Under Construction

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Under Renovation

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Renovation 2019

Announcement

On April 10, 2017 the LDS Church announced that the temple would close in October 2017 for renovations that would be completed in 2019. The renovations will help maintain functionality, efficiency, and beauty. The temple will receive mechanical upgrades along with updates in finishes and furnishings. The Renovations are expected to be completed in 2019.[3]Four Mormon Temples Will Close for Renovation“, Newsroom, LDS Church, April 10, 2017

ANNOUNCED ORDER
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Dateyyyy mm dd
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Followed by #⮞

Commenced

The Oklahoma City Oklahoma Temple closed on October 15, 2017 for renovation.

Rededcation Announced

On January 16, 2019, the LDS Church announced that the temple would be rededicated on May 19, 2019.[4]Temple Rededications Announced for May 2019“, Newsroom, LDS Church, January 16, 2019

Open House Announced

While the church originally announced there would be no open house, an update on 22 April indicated there would be an open house from April 24 to May 1, excluding Sunday.[5]Public Open House Begins for Oklahoma City Oklahoma Temple“, Newsroom, LDS Church, April 22, 2019

Open House

A public open house was held from April 24 to May 1, 2019. More than 21,000 people toured the newly renovated temple, including Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt, U.S. Sen. James Lankford and U.S. Rep. Markwayne Mullin.[refr]“Public Open House Begins for Oklahoma City Oklahoma Temple.” newsroom.churchofjesuschrist.org, 22 Apr. 2019, newsroom.churchofjesuschrist.org/article/public-open-house-begins-for-oklahoma-city-oklahoma-temple#:~:text=An%20open%20house%20begins%20Wednesday,through%20templeopenhouse.lds.org.&text=The%20Oklahoma%20City%20Oklahoma%20Temple.[/ref][6]Swensen, Jason. “President Eyring’s Spiritual Experience and Other Highlights at the Oklahoma Temple Rededication.” Church News, 11 Jan. 2024, www.thechurchnews.com/2019/5/19/23215073/rededicating-oklahomas-spiritual-refuge.

Start Date2019 04 24
End Date2019 05 01
Days7
Attendees21,000
Per day3,000

Rededication

President Henry B. Eyring, second counselor in the First Presidency of the Church rededicated the temple in one session at 10:00 am, Sunday, 19 May 2019. Attendance at the session was by invitation, and the rededication session was not broadcast to local meetinghouses. President Eyring said he prays the members of the Church will remember this day of rededication. He said, “It will benefit our ancestors. Don’t forget that our ancestors are real. They are waiting and when we do their [temple] work, the warm feeling [we feel] is the Spirit. That warm feeling will stay with you forever.”[7]Oklahoma City Oklahoma Temple Rededicated“, Newsroom, LDS Church, May 19, 2019[8]Swensen, Jason. “President Eyring’s Spiritual Experience and Other Highlights at the Oklahoma Temple Rededication.” Church News, 11 Jan. 2024, www.thechurchnews.com/2019/5/19/23215073/rededicating-oklahomas-spiritual-refuge.

REDEDICATION

Date2019 05 19
ByHenry B. Eyring
Role2nd Counselor
Sessions1
Attendees#

⮜Proceeded by
Followed by ⮞

Dedicatory Prayer

Construction Duration

SpanDuration
Announced
to
Groundbreaking
– y,
– m,
– d
Groundbreaking
to
Dedication
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Announced
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Dedication
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– d

Dedicatory Order

GLOBAL

#

REGION
region
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COUNTRY
country
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STATE
state
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COUNTY
county
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CITY
city
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Summary

quick numbers on dedication order

Detail

Announced

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Under Construction

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Under Renovation

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Details

Location

Exterior

The temple has a total floor area of 10,769 square feet (1,000.5 m2), two ordinance rooms, two sealing rooms.[9]Oklahoma City Oklahoma Temple facts and figures“, Church News, August 5, 2000, And one baptistry.

Interior

Region

Alabama2Birmingham · Huntsville
Alaska2Anchorage · Fairbanks
Arizona9Flagstaff · Gilbert · Mesa · Phoenix · Queen Creek · Snowflake · The Gila Valley · Tucson · Yuma
Arkansas1Bentonville
California12Bakersfield · Feather River · Fresno · Los Angeles · Modesto · Newport · Oakland · Redlands · Sacramento · San Diego · San Jose · Yorba Linda
Colorado4Colorado Springs · Denver · Fort Collins · Grand Junction
Connecticut1Hartford
Florida5Fort Lauderdale · Jacksonville · Orlando · Tallahassee · Tampa
Georgia1Atlanta
Hawaii4Honolulu · Kahului · Kona · Laie
Idaho11Boise · Burley · Caldwell · Coeur d’Alene · Idaho Falls · Meridian · Montpelier · Pocatello · Rexburg · Teton River · Twin Falls
Illinois2Chicago · Nauvoo
Indiana1Indianapolis
Iowa1Des Moines
Kansas1Wichita
Kentucky1Louisville
Louisiana1Baton Rouge
Maine1Portland
Maryland1Washington D.C.
Massachusetts1Boston
Michigan2Detroit · Grand Rapids
Minnesota1St. Paul
Missouri3Kansas City · Springfield · St. Louis
Montana3Billings · Helena · Missoula
Nebraska1Winter Quarters
Nevada4Elko · Las Vegas · Lone Mountain · Reno
New Jersey1Summit
New Mexico2Albuquerque · Farmington
New York2Manhattan · Palmyra
North Carolina2Charlotte · Raleigh
North Dakota1Bismarck
Ohio3Cincinnati · Cleveland · Columbus
Oklahoma2Oklahoma City · Tulsa
Oregon3Medford · Portland · Willamette Valley
Pennsylvania3Harrisburg · Philadelphia · Pittsburgh
South Carolina1Columbia · Greenville
South Dakota1Rapid City
Tennessee3Knoxville · Memphis · Nashville
Texas10Austin · Dallas · El Paso · Fort Worth · Houston South · Houston · Lubbock · McAllen · McKinney · San Antonio
Utah32Bountiful · Brigham City · Cedar City · Deseret Peak · Draper · Ephraim · Heber Valley · Jordan River · Layton · Lehi · Lindon · Logan · Manti · Monticello · Mount Timpanogos · Ogden · Oquirrh Mountain · Orem · Payson · Price · Provo Rock Canyon · Provo City Center · Red Cliffs · Salt Lake · Saratoga Springs · St. George · · Smithfield · Spanish Fork · Syracuse · Taylorsville · Vernal · West Jordan
Virginia4Norfolk · Richmond · Roanoke · Winchester
Washington6Columbia River · Moses Lake · Seattle · Spokane · Tacoma · Vancouver
Wisconsin1Milwaukee
Wyoming3Casper · Cody · Star Valley
Canada11Calgary · Cardston · Edmonton · Halifax · Lethbridge · Montreal · Regina · Toronto · Vancouver · Victoria · Winnipeg
Costa Rica1San José
Dominican Republic1Santiago · Santo Domingo
El Salvador1San Salvador · Santa Ana
Guatemala6Cobán · Guatemala City · Huehuetenango · Miraflores Monterrey · Guatemala City · Quetzaltenango · Retalhuleu
Haiti1Port-au-Prince ·
Honduras2Tegucigalpa · San Pedro Sula
Mexico27Cancún · Chihuahua · Ciudad Juárez · Colonia Juárez · Cuernavaca · Culiacan · Guadalajara · Hermosillo Sonora · Juchitán de Zaragoza · Merida · Mexico City Benemerito · Mexico City · Monterrey · Oaxaca · Pachuca · Puebla · Querétaro · Reynosa · San Luis Potosi · Tampico · Tijuana · Toluca · Torreon · Tula · Tuxtla Gutierrez · Veracruz · Villahermosa
Nicaragua1Managua
Panama1Panama City
Puerto Rico1San Juan
United States158Albuquerque · Anchorage · Atlanta · Austin · Bakersfield · Baton Rouge · Bentonville · Billings · Birmingham · Bismarck · Boise · Boston · Bountiful · Brigham City · Burley · Caldwell · Casper · Cedar City · Charlotte · Chicago · Cincinnati · Cleveland · Cody · Coeur d’Alene · Colorado Springs · Columbia · Columbia River · Columbus · Dallas · Denver · Des Moines · Deseret Peak · Detroit · Draper · El Paso · Elko · Ephraim · Fairbanks · Fairview · Farmington · Feather River · Flagstaff · Fort Collins · Fort Lauderdale · Fort Worth · Fresno · The Gila Valley · Gilbert · Grand Junction · Grand Rapids · Greenville · Harrisburg · Hartford · Heber Valley · Helena · Honolulu · Houston South · Houston · Huntsville · Idaho Falls · Indianapolis · Jacksonville · Jordan River · Kahului · Kansas City · Knoxville · Kona · Laie · Las Vegas · Layton · Lehi · Lindon · Logan · Lone Mountain · Los Angeles · Louisville · Lubbock · Manhattan · Manti · McAllen · Medford · Memphis · Meridian · Mesa · Milwaukee · Missoula · Modesto · Monticello · Montpelier · Moses Lake · Mount Timpanogos · Nashville · Nauvoo · Newport · Norfolk · Oakland · Ogden · Oklahoma City · Oquirrh Mountain · Orem · Orlando · Palmyra · Payson · Philadelphia · Phoenix · Pittsburgh · Pocatello · Portland M · Portland O · Price · Provo City Center · Provo Rock Canyon · Queen Creek · Raleigh · Rapid City · Red Cliffs · Redlands · Reno · Rexburg · Richmond · Roanoke · Sacramento · Salt Lake · San Antonio · San Diego · San Jose · Saratoga Springs · Seattle · Smithfield · Snowflake · Spanish Fork · Spokane · Springfield · St. George · St. Louis · St. Paul · Star Valley · Summit · Syracuse · Tacoma · Tallahassee · Tampa · Taylorsville · Teton River · Tucson · Tulsa · Twin Falls · Vancouver · Vernal · Washington D.C. · West Jordan · Wichita · Willamette Valley · Winchester · Winter Quarters · Yorba Linda · Yuma

Sources and Citations

References

References
1 Six more temples announced; total now 108“, Church News, March 27, 1999, https://www.thechurchnews.com/archive/1999-03-27/six-more-temples-announced-total-now-108-15365.
2 Oklahoma City Oklahoma: ‘A sacred and beautiful structure‘”, Church News, August 5, 2000
3 Four Mormon Temples Will Close for Renovation“, Newsroom, LDS Church, April 10, 2017
4 Temple Rededications Announced for May 2019“, Newsroom, LDS Church, January 16, 2019
5 Public Open House Begins for Oklahoma City Oklahoma Temple“, Newsroom, LDS Church, April 22, 2019
6, 8 Swensen, Jason. “President Eyring’s Spiritual Experience and Other Highlights at the Oklahoma Temple Rededication.” Church News, 11 Jan. 2024, www.thechurchnews.com/2019/5/19/23215073/rededicating-oklahomas-spiritual-refuge.
7 Oklahoma City Oklahoma Temple Rededicated“, Newsroom, LDS Church, May 19, 2019
9 Oklahoma City Oklahoma Temple facts and figures“, Church News, August 5, 2000

Last updated on: 18 January 2026