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Helsinki Finland Temple

124th temple dedicated

Dedication of the Helsinki Finland Temple

At the groundbreaking of the Helsinki Finland Temple, President Ismo Määttä of the Helsinki Finland Stake said, “The temple is a blessing to our entire country. It is heaven in the midst of chaos, and there we can find heavenly peace. Evil will not reach us there. In the temple we can be as bright as the sun, as shining as the moon.”

Three and a half years later, President Gordon B. Hinckley — President of the Church of Jesus Christ — presided over the dedication of the house of the Lord in Helsinki, Finland, on Oct. 22, 2006. “There is an intense bonding between the people of America and the Finnish Saints,” he said at the ceremony. “I have participated in the dedication or rededication of 94 of the 124 temples, but I have never seen such enthusiasm as I have seen with the members about the Helsinki Finland Temple.”

Also at the dedication of the temple was Elder Bruce C. Hafen, president of the Europe Central Area. “[Finland] will now host the temple,” Elder Hafen said. “Here sacred history has been created.”

He continued, “The temple unifies multiple cultures. ... The temple will bring a flood of new light to Finland.”

After touring the temple during its open house, a local political leader mentioned that the Helsinki temple was the most beautiful building in all of Helsinki.

Children were seen attending the dedication ceremony wearing colorful, traditional Finnish clothing. “As a Finn, it is really amazing that we have a temple,” one member said. “This will be a wonderful thing for Finland. The Church will now be seen by many others in our country. There will be many blessings for our community and for people coming from other countries.”

Attending the ceremony with President Hinckley were Elder Richard G. Scott of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles; Elder Dennis B. Neuenschwander, previous president of the Europe East Area; Elder Paul B. Pieper, then-president of the Europe East Area; and Elder Richard G. Hinckley, a General Authority Seventy.

Dedicatory prayer excerpt: “We dedicate and consecrate this, the Helsinki Finland Temple, to Thee and Thy Beloved Son as Thy holy house, Thy sacred abode. Wilt Thou accept it as our offering unto Thee. Let Thy watchful care be over it. ... We pray for this great nation of Finland. May it ever be respected and honored among the nations of the earth. Bless its neighbor nations of Russia, Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia, from which Saints will come to serve in this temple. May they have no difficulty in crossing the borders into this land when they come to work in this, Thy holy house.”

Read the dedicatory prayer of the Helsinki Finland Temple here.

Timeline of the Helsinki Finland Temple

April
02
2000
Announced

A temple for Helsinki, Finland, was announced by Church President Gordon B. Hinckley on April 2, 2000, during his closing remarks in April 2000 general conference. This was one of six temples announced at the conference.

President Gordon B. Hinckley
March
29
2003
Groundbreaking

Ground was broken for the Helsinki Finland Temple on March 29, 2003. Elder D. Lee Tobler, president of the Europe Central Area, presided over the ceremony, which had about 600 attendees.

Children, some with their own shovels, join ceremony for Finland's first temple.
September
21
2006
Open house

An open house was held from Sept. 21 to Oct. 7, 2006. Nearly 17,000 people toured the temple in this time. More than 1,200 government leaders, executives and religious teachers participated in the tour.

Members of the LDS Church gather outside Helsinki Finland Temple prior to attending one of four dedicatory sessions on Sunday, Oct. 22, 2006. Weather forecasts predicted cold temperatures with the threat of snow. Temperatures were instead unseasonably warm with occasional light rain. Many traveled great distances, some from the Arctic Circle, others for up to four days from Russia, others from across the Baltic Sea.
October
21
2006
Cultural celebration

A cultural celebration was held Oct. 21, 2006, where roughly 7,000 members of the Church attended. Latter-day Saint youth from Russia, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Finland performed at the event. The theme the Saints wished to convey with the performance was the unique power the temple has to unify diverse people and hostile nations.

Dressed in colorful traditional customs, youth beat drums to provide cadence for adults to dance.
October
22
2006
Dedication

The temple was dedicated in four sessions on Oct. 22, 2006, by President Gordon B. Hinckley. Roughly 10,750 attended the dedication ceremony, several hundred being from Russia. A member meeting was held the day before, on Oct. 21, 2006, with President Hinckley speaking. Approximately 7,000 people attended the meeting.

President Gordon B. Hinckley , followed by Elder Richard G. Scott and Elder Bruce C. Hafen, emerges from first dedicatory session of the Helsinki Finland Temple to conduct cornerstone ceremony Sunday, Oct. 22, 2006. Weather forecasts predicted cold temperatures with the threat of snow. Temperatures were instead unseasonably warm with occasional light rain. Many members of the LDS Church traveled great distances, some from the Arctic Circle, others for up to four days from Russia, others from across the Baltic Sea.
SEE ALL Timeline of the Helsinki Finland Temple

The Helsinki Finland Temple was announced April 2, 2000, with a groundbreaking ceremony held three years later, on March 29, 2003. After an open house from Sept. 21 to Oct. 7, 2006, a cultural celebration was performed the evening before the dedication ceremony. President Gordon B. Hinckley dedicated the Helsinki temple Oct. 22, 2006.

Architecture and Design of the Helsinki Finland Temple

Standing on 7.4 acres, the Helsinki Finland Temple is situated within a wooded area filled with pine and birch trees. This house of the Lord is located just west of Helsinki, in a town called Espoo.

The exterior walls of the temple are made with a light-gray Italian granite, giving it a light exterior, while the stone walls surrounding the temple grounds are made with Finnish brown granite. The total structure comprises 16,350 square feet and includes a baptistry, two instruction rooms and two sealing rooms.

Quick Facts

Announced

2 April 2000

Dedicated

22 October 2006

Current President and Matron
Location

Leppäsillantie 3

FI-02620 Espoo

Finland

Appointments

Additional Facts

Fact #1

This was the first Latter-day Saint temple in Finland.

Fact #2

Once dedicated, the temple served Saints in Finland, Russia, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania.

Fact #3

At the time of its dedication, the Helsinki temple had the largest temple district of the 124 temples that were operating at the time, encompassing 12 time zones.

Fact #4

The Helsinki Finland Temple was the last temple dedicated by President Gordon B. Hinckley before his death on Jan. 27, 2008.

Fact #5

Languages for ordinance work in the temple include Estonian, Finnish, Latvian, Lithuanian and Russian. Swedish and English are also occasionally used.

Fact #6

The temple was built on solid rock.

Fact #7

Before the Stockholm Sweden Temple was dedicated in 1985, Finnish Saints had to travel to the Bern Switzerland Temple.

Additional Facts

Fact #1

This was the first Latter-day Saint temple in Finland.

Fact #2

Once dedicated, the temple served Saints in Finland, Russia, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania.

Fact #3

At the time of its dedication, the Helsinki temple had the largest temple district of the 124 temples that were operating at the time, encompassing 12 time zones.

Fact #4

The Helsinki Finland Temple was the last temple dedicated by President Gordon B. Hinckley before his death on Jan. 27, 2008.

Fact #5

Languages for ordinance work in the temple include Estonian, Finnish, Latvian, Lithuanian and Russian. Swedish and English are also occasionally used.

Fact #6

The temple was built on solid rock.

Fact #7

Before the Stockholm Sweden Temple was dedicated in 1985, Finnish Saints had to travel to the Bern Switzerland Temple.