LDS leaders announce new Mormon temple for Cincinnati

The LDS Church has had a presence in the area since the earliest days of Mormonism in the 1830s.

Until now, the Louisville Temple in Louisville, Kentucky, has been the closest temple for members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in the Cincinnati area. Today, members learned that they will be getting their own temple. (© Intellectual Reserve, Inc. All rights reserved.)

(RNS) — My own city of Cincinnati, Ohio, will get a Mormon temple, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints announced on Sunday at its semiannual General Conference. Cincinnati was one of 15 cities identified as future temple sites, including Edinburgh (for the first temple in Scotland) and Chihuahua, Mexico.

All together, today’s declaration means that 350 LDS temples are in operation or some stage of development all over the world. For Latter-day Saints, temple rituals are the highest form of religious life, accessible only to members who hold a “temple recommend,” a clearance to attend issued to those who fulfill certain requirements. Temples are not used for ordinary weekly Sunday worship (which is open to all), but are reserved for the holiest rituals of our faith, such as marriage for eternity.

My cell phone started exploding with text messages the moment President Russell M. Nelson made the announcement at the end of the Sunday afternoon session. Latter-day Saints here have hoped and prayed for this, and many of us were aware that the church had recently purchased a 35-acre plot of land in the northern Cincinnati suburb of Mason. 


Here is some information about the temple site from Warren County. According to the property information, the lot was purchased Sept. 11, 2023, for the sum of $7,875,000.

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Curious about the purchase, I drove there from the city a few weeks ago to take photos of the site, which is located at the intersection of Mason-Montgomery Road and Cedar Village Drive. It’s in a thriving suburban area with offices, shops and many restaurants (and traffic snarls to boot, though you can’t see that from these photos). 

The 35-acre site in Mason, Ohio that is slated to become a temple of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. (Photo by Jana Riess)

The 35-acre site in Mason, Ohio, that is slated to become a temple of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. (Photo by Jana Riess)

The intersection of Mason-Montgomery Road and Cedar Village Drive in Mason, OH.

The intersection of Mason-Montgomery Road and Cedar Village Drive in Mason, OH. (Photo by Jana Riess)

I would expect that, since the land plot is so large, there will be a considerable buffer area between the temple and the roads. Other temples also have a stake center on the same plot of land; I suppose that is a possibility, though I have not heard any plans for this.

I also don’t have any information about how local residents will feel about the temple. Will they welcome it as a boon for our area, beautifying the landscape and bringing a special spirit? Will there be tension over the chosen site? Some other communities — most notably in Cody, Wyoming — have not been happy with the planned large temples going up in their residential areas. The church likely will not release an architectural plan for the Cincinnati temple for quite some time yet, so we will have to wait to have a sense of its size. 


Members here in Cincinnati are excited about finally having a temple of our own after nearly 200 years of members in the area. The LDS Church has had a presence since the earliest days of Mormonism in the 1830s.

For decades, people have been praying for a temple here. In the 1940s, David I. Stoddard, the outgoing president of the Northern States Mission (of which Cincinnati was a part) predicted we would have a temple here someday. At that time, it must have seemed like a dream. Members had to travel more than 1,000 miles to Utah if they wanted to marry in the temple or receive their endowment.

Then in the late 1960s, members helped raise the money to fund the temple near Washington, D.C. — in addition to paying their regular tithing and fast offerings. Through the 1970s, the Washington temple was our temple. Then in the early 1980s, the Chicago temple became available, so members carpooled and bused the six hours there in the 1980s and 1990s.

And then in 2000, hallelujah, the Louisville Temple was dedicated. Its location just 100 miles away made regular monthly temple-going a possibility for Latter-day Saints in our area. And in the years that I’ve lived here, we’ve added temples in Indianapolis and Columbus, Ohio, both within a two-hour drive. The prospect of having a temple just outside of Cincinnati itself feels almost surreal.

As a scholar who studies Mormonism and the religious landscape of the United States, my reaction is that a temple here is superfluous because our membership is so small. We are going to struggle even to have enough volunteer labor to staff this temple along with the three others that are within a two-hour drive. But as a church member, I can’t help but be excited. I know how many people I love have prayed for this very thing to happen, and as such, it is a banner day.

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