HAWAIIAN TEMPLE | Laie Hawaii Temple
We visited the Laie Hawaii Temple. This temple is owned by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, and we enjoyed seeing the beautiful temple grounds on our lazy Sunday. It's good to regularly disconnect from the world and evaluate the direction you want your life to go. We enjoyed our Sunday!
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Hi! We're just your average husband and wife flying around the world in business class for FREE. Without our miles and points, we never would have been able to afford this once-in-a-lifetime experience. We grew up on opposite sides of the United States in Texas and Ohio. Later in college, we met and got married in August of 2016. As poor newly weds and recent college grads, we moved to New York City to begin what we thought would be our long careers in finance. Only one year later, after accumulating over 2 million points through travel hacking, we booked round-the-world business class tickets to over 40 countries. Completely for free, using the personal travel hacks we had learned to save us $62,000. We quit our jobs, sold everything we owned, and began this once-in-a-lifetime adventure on August 27, 2018. Our hope is to entertain and enrich you every day through our daily videos, as well as share the personal travel hacks we're using to travel the world for free :) Let's be friends :) say hello sometime!
Places to see in ( Oahu - USA ) Laie Hawaii Temple
Places to see in ( Oahu - USA ) Laie Hawaii Temple
Laie Hawaii Temple is a temple of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) located on the northeast shore of the Hawaiian island of Oʻahu. The temple sits on a small hill, a half-mile from the Pacific Ocean, in the town of Lāʻie, 35 miles (56 km) from Honolulu. Along with Brigham Young University–Hawaii and the Polynesian Cultural Center, the Laie Hawaii Temple plays an important role in the town of Lā'ie, with the Visitors' Center attracting more than 100,000 people annually.
In addition to initial building and construction, the temple has been dedicated for use by several presidents of the LDS Church. The temple site was dedicated by Joseph F. Smith on June 1, 1915, with Heber J. Grant dedicating the completed structure on November 27, 1919. Spencer W. Kimball rededicated the temple after significant expansion on June 13, 1978. Following seismic upgrades and remodeling, Thomas S. Monson rededicated the temple on November 21, 2010.
The Laie Hawaii Temple was the first temple built by the LDS Church outside the contiguous United States. The temple is also the oldest to operate outside Utah, and the fifth-oldest LDS temple still in operation. The Laie Hawaii Temple was formerly known as the Hawaiian Temple or the Hawaii Temple until the implementation of the standard naming convention for LDS temples.
Laie Hawaii Temple is not used for regular Sunday worship. As temples are considered sacred houses of the Lord, only church members who keep gospel covenants are allowed to enter for the purpose of participating in sacred ceremonies such as endowments, baptism for the dead and eternal marriage, a ritual in which couples and families are sealed for time and all eternity. Because of these guidelines, non-Mormons are not allowed inside temples, but public tours of the grounds outside and of the visitors' centers are available.
( Oahu - USA ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Oahu. Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Oahu - USA
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Laie Hawaii Temple
My deaf friends and I went to Laie Hawaii Temple for visit on February 26, 2014
Behold Laie (Youth Celebration of 150 yrs of the LDS Church in Laie)
Behold Laie The 150th Sesquicentennial Celebration of the LDS Church in Laie. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has been in Hawaii since 1850, when Elder Charles C. Rich, an apostle, called ten LDS men from the gold mines of northern California to open missionary work in the Sandwich Islands, now Hawaii. Within several months five of the elders left the mission, but George Quayle Cannon, Henry William Bigler, James Keeler, William Farrer, and James Hawkins remained. Initial conversions came on the island of Maui, where the first branch was organized in the Kula District, near Pulehu, on August 6, 1851. The Church made remarkable headway, with more than 4,000 Hawaiian convert members in fifty-three branches by late 1854. By this time, several small schools were under way, meetinghouses were constructed, and the Book of Mormon had been translated into the Hawaiian language by Elders Cannon and Farrer and Jonatana H. Napela, a local member. It was printed in 1855. In 1990, the 49,000 members of the Church in Hawaii, both native Hawaiian and others were found in thirteen stakes, constituting more than a hundred wards and branches. A temple has served members in Hawaii since November 1919.
Following the pattern established elsewhere, an attempt was made to gather the Hawaiian Saints to a local Zion. A village, called the City of Joseph, was established on the island of Lanai in 1854. However, the project failed, at least partly because of environmental conditions. In addition, with the most devoted Hawaiian members having moved to Lanai, the branches on other islands were weakened, and the Church fell into decline. This trend became severe when the Mainland missionary leaders were called back to Utah in 1858 because of the Utah expedition.
This leadership vacuum opened the way for the adventurer Walter Murray Gibson to run the Church on Lanai and elsewhere as his personal political kingdom from September 1861 until 1864. He was excommunicated from the Church in April 1864 for introducing many false doctrines, including selling offices in the priesthood.
Shortly thereafter, President Brigham Young sent Francis Asbury Hammond and George Nebeker to Hawaii to buy property for a new gathering place. On January 26, 1865, the Church purchased for $14,000, a 6,000-acre plantation at Laie on Oahu island for the spiritual and temporal welfare of the members. Laie remains the focal point of LDS activities in Hawaii though strong stakes have also developed in Honolulu and in other areas.
Since 1865, there have been five major developments in the History of the Church in Hawaii:
First, on June 1, 1915, President Joseph F. Smith dedicated a site at Laie for the Hawaii Temple. Four and a half years later, on November 27, 1919, his successor, President Heber J. Grant, dedicated the completed structure, the first LDS temple outside the North American continent.
Second, President Grant organized the Oahu Stake on June 30, 1935, with Ralph E. Woolley as president.
Third, for the benefit of the Japanese people in Hawaii, President Grant formed the Japanese Mission in Hawaii in 1937, with Hilton A. Robertson as president. Its name was changed to the Central Pacific Mission in 1942. By 1949 missionaries of the Japanese/Central Pacific Mission had baptized 671 Americans of Japanese ancestry into the Church, and thousands of others have joined the Church since then. Many of these converts and their children have held important positions in the Church. Adney Yoshio Komatsu was the first of that group to be called as a general authority.
Fourth, in September 1955 the Church College of Hawaii was founded under the direction of President David O. McKay. Initially a junior college, it was made a four-year school in 1959 and was renamed Brigham Young University-Hawaii Campus in 1974. Two thousand students, mostly from the Pacific and the Asian Rim, attend.
Finally, the Church founded the Polynesian Cultural Center at Laie in October 1963 to preserve and present the cultures of Polynesia and to provide employment for the college students. The center has grown to become Hawaii's number-one paid attraction, drawing nearly a million visitors a year.
The Point - Laie Hawaii
Laie Point and Hole in the Rock
Laie,Hawaii
John and DeAnne enjoy a day in Hawaii
Sea Turtle @ Temple Beach Laie, Hawaii
Laie Hawaii Temple Cultural Celebration (part 5)
Videos taken from the Laie Hawaii Temple Presentation held at the Brigham Young University Hawaii Canon Activities Center, November 20, 2010 with President Thomas S. Monson.
When Im in Laie Hawaii
DJI Drone video footage
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Laie Point Oahu Drone Tour - Things to do on Oahu
Drone tour from the Laie Point on the Eastside of Oahu. Only accessible by one street, Laie Point is a hidden location that not many people ever get to see. When the waves get big on the Eastside of Oahu they explode 50ft+ in the sky after crashing into the giant rocks offshore. Subscribe for More Weekly Videos.
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Visiting Laie Hawaii temple with my family
2012년 8월에 아들이 선교 사업을 마친 기념으로 가족들이 하와이 라이에 성전을 방문하였음. 정말로 아름답고 평화로운 곳이었음. 성전에서 의식을 마치고 나왔을 때, 성전의 아름다음과 평화로움이 마치 지상의 천국 같은 느낌이었음. Our family visited Laie Hawaii temple in celebration of my son's finishing his mission work in 2012, Aug.
It was so beautiful and peaceful, I felt that I was in a paradise on the earth. I never forget such a peaceful and happy feeling at that time after being done proxy endowment with my family in the temple.
Laie Hawaii Temple Cultural Celebration (part 4)
Videos taken from the Laie Hawaii Temple Presentation held at the Brigham Young University Hawaii Canon Activities Center, November 20, 2010 with President Thomas S. Monson.
Morgan First Looks, Laie Temple
Morgan First Looks. Laie Temple. Oahu Hawaii. Nanimedia Video
Laie, HI - Dec 7th
First day back in Laie
LAIE POINT (Short Edit) - HAWAII (Please watch in HD 1080p)
No words can truly describe the beauty of Laie Point, you just have to see it for yourself! Enjoy breathtaking views of the North Shore to the Windward coast, locals leisurely fishing for the catch of the day, and the famous puka island with a hole in its center! Step carefully and enjoy some of Oahu’s most spectacular ocean views. La’ie Point is located near the Polynesian Cultural Center!
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Birch Run - Primal Drive by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (
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Laie Cottage.AVI
Video of cottage interior and view
Laie Hawaii Cultural Celebration (part 6)
Videos taken from the Laie Hawaii Temple Presentation held at the Brigham Young University Hawaii Canon Activities Center, November 20, 2010 with President Thomas S. Monson.
Laie, Hawaii Drone Video 2019
This is shot with my new Mavic 2 Pro