What do you think?
Rate this book


Renowned scholar Hugh Nibley presents a fascinating work written in two distinct yet related sections. In Temple Nibley discusses the meaning of the temple, the history and origin of ordinances and sacred vestments, and the temple's necessity in the Lord's work today.
In Cosmos Nibley explores man's place in the cosmos, or the expanse of Heavenly Father's kingdom, and how the temple fits into this divine realm of existence. he also writes about the importance and significance of language and writing in a chapter entitled "Genesis of the Written Word."
636 pages, Kindle Edition
First published April 30, 1992
“The temple is..the place where all time, space, and humanity come together...a sort of halfway house between heaven and earth…[a] sacred observatory, like the tabernacle for the camp of Israel, and at the same time a kind of planetarium, a model of the cosmos”.
“temples are houses of the Lord, where members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints regularly go to worship. Inside these holy buildings, faithful Church members make promises with God, feel His Spirit, and come closer to Him through sacred ceremonies called ordinances”.
“Ordinances are not deep, dark secrets to be kept as such from the world.” They are individual. “I do not reveal these things, they must remain sacred to me”. ... “For my covenants are all between me and my Heavenly Father”... “only I know exactly the weight and force of the covenants I have made - I and the Lord with whom I have made them”.
“When the Lord speaks of giving precious things to the dogs and pearls to the swine, it is not with contempt for those creatures, but with the futility of such things for all concerned - the dogs would find no value in precious things, which would be thrown away into dirt and trodden under foot”.
“Yesterday...immediately upon entering you removed your street clothes. And that was the image of putting off the old man and his works”. He quotes a man from antiquity, Cyril of Jerusalem, “and may that garment, once out of, never be put on again!”...“like a garment, you come to resemble the son of God”.