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LDS Radio Online 16 May 2005
We just want to let everyone know about LDS Radio Online. Now you can listen to inspirational and uplifting LDS music at work or home 24/7 for FREE! Visit us at www.ldsradioonline.com or www.lds-radio.com. Thanks!
LDS Radio Online Send Email
 
Articles of Faith 20 Apr 2005
I need the Articles of Faith in Japanese, Romanji, if someone has a copy.

Thanks,
Stout Choro
Larry Stout Send Email
 
question 18 Apr 2005
Hi, i am a member in taiwan. my 13 year old boy wants to study Japanese during the summer. I would like to know if anybody knows any member family can offer home stay and any good languahe school in Tokyo area. Truly appreciate if can offer phone numbers. Exchange will be great too.
ching lee Send Email
 
Angel Moroni Statue Atop Tokyo Temple 19 Dec 2004

Angel Moroni statue atop Tokyo Temple


Curious onlookers gather on streets at Tokyo Japan Temple

Curious Onlookers, Copyright Toshihito Kido


By David van der Leek



A statue of the Angel Moroni was placed on the Tokyo Japan Temple December 10th, 2004 as spectators looked on. The temple was dedicated October 27, 1980, by President Spencer W. Kimball. The temple includes a parking garage in the basement and an upstairs apartment for the temple president and matron. With the new statue of the Angel Moroni, the distance from the ground to the top of the statue is about 180 feet.



Angel statue atop temple, Copyright Toshihito Kido



When President Spencer W. Kimball announced at the start of the Tokyo Area Conference on August 9th, 1975 that a temple would be built in Japan, the congregation burst into applause, then tears. The Tokyo Japan Temple was Asia's first Latter-day Saint temple.



Angel statue rising to top of temple, Copyright Toshihito Kido



The Tokyo Japan Temple district covers membership in 26 stakes and 15 districts. The temple was designed to extend upward instead of outward. Many visitors comment on how the lines of the temple give a feeling of elevation and of drawing the heart and soul toward God.



Read the Tokyo Japan Temple Dedicatory Prayer.



Tokyo Japan Sealing Room, Source Church News



The Tokyo Japan Temple has two ordinance rooms and five sealing rooms with a total of 52, 590 square feet of floor space. It was built on the site of the Church's former mission home in downtown Tokyo, which was demolished to make way for the temple.



Tokyo Japan Temple Celestial Room, Source Church News















SRC="http://www.mission.net/japan/tokyo/north/files/sog.mp3"
WIDTH="311"
HEIGHT="44"
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the song will start momentarily.


David van der Leek Send Email
 
ohmura's of shizuooka ken 26 Nov 2004
I am trying to find a current address (email or snail mail) for the ohmura family in Shizuooka ken. They were baptized in december of 1999. If you have any information on them please let me know. Thank you very much.

Michael A. Bowe
May 1996 to March 1998
Michael A. Bowe Send Email
 
Senzoku Ike members 26 Oct 2004
Hi, this is Gibson choro, I was there in June-September 1999. Is Aoki kyoudai still there? I can't remember his first name. He got baptized right when I arrived, just wondering if he's still going strong. Thanks!
Brandt Gibson Send Email
 
Hello from Senzokuike! 22 Oct 2004
This Japan Tokyo South Mission website has sooo helped me contact some "natsukashii" people I used to work with as a stake(now ward)missionary...! If any of you remember my name, and if you would like to hear about/from Senzokuike members, please let me know anytime! =)Thank you!
Mieko Takahashi Send Email
 
Ph.D. Student Research on Reverse Culture Shock 19 Oct 2004
Dear Returned Missionaries,

I am a graduate student conducting a Ph.D. research study on cultural readjustment, reverse culture shock, and repatriate distress. I think that this study could be very helpful to churches in continuing to improve missionary care and training.

Any American who has lived abroad for at least one year and has returned to the U.S. during the past year is eligible to participate.

If your current status qualifies you for the study, please consider participating in this research.

Participation simply involves filling out an anonymous, online questionnaire about the sojourn and return experiences. It takes most people 15-20 minutes to complete.

In order to complete the questionnaire, participants should go to http://www.surveymonkey.com/s.asp?u=36057399214 and enter the password “returnee.”

Thanks!


Maren Wolfe
Combined Psychology Program
Department of Education
University of California, Santa Barbara
Santa Barbara, CA 93106
(805) 708-6355
mmwolfe@education.ucsb.edu
Maren Wolfe Send Email
 
RE: Where is he gone? 19 Oct 2004
Fortunately I found ex Elder M. Potter on this site =) Thank you!
Mieko Takahashi Send Email
 
Research on LDS in Japan 19 Oct 2004
Hello. I am a grad student at the University of Hawaii-Manoa. I am writing a paper on the Mormon Church in contemporary Japan and was wondering if I might be able to speak to anyone about their experience--by either phone or email, or in person if you're in Honolulu...
Thanks.
Nick Send Email
 
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