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Philadelphia • The world's newest Mormon temple, in the heart of Philadelphia, aims to embrace and shut out the city at the same time.

Open to the public for a month before only worthy Latter-day Saints may enter, the temple is an homage to Independence Hall, where the Founding Fathers drafted and signed the U.S. Constitution. Mormons consider the document divinely inspired, and a church-commissioned painting of Benjamin Franklin signing it hangs in the temple's foyer.

Although this is the 152nd Mormon temple to be built, it is the one that most strongly connects Mormonism — one of the largest made-in-the-USA faith groups — with the birth of the country. It's an emotional tie for members of a church who have often been treated as outsiders in their native land.

"We believe that part of the reason for the founding of this country was to enable a faith such as ours to be established and to grow and flourish the way it has," said Mormon general authority Larry Y. Wilson, who directs temple building for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

From the painting to the details on the baptismal font railing, the Philadelphia Pennsylvania Temple, as it is called, honors not only Franklin's city but also the state where the church's first prophet was baptized and where half the faith's signature scripture, the Book of Mormon, was translated.

Steps from the clamorous Vine Street Expressway, the granite building with its spire jutting about 20 stories into the skyline is foremost a place of spiritual quiet. The air conditioning on a recent summer day was powerful but silent, the carpets soft underfoot. Light gently refracted through thousands of crystals in the chandeliers.

"A temple is regarded by members of our faith as the house of the Lord, and just as with Solomon's Temple, we seek to build it from the finest material and using the finest craftspeople to construct it," Wilson said.

Like the other 151 LDS temples around the world, the Philadelphia edifice is designed to make Mormons feel, as they ascend four stories to pray and meditate in the temple's Celestial Room, that they are drawing ever close to God.

"It's built as a haven for people to leave behind the world and get their bearings in the universe," Wilson said. "We've tried to eliminate as much worldly influence as we can."

Inside the temple there is no grand sanctuary in which to hear a rousing sermon, no wide aisle down which a bride might walk. The interior of the 61,000-square-foot building, rather, evokes a well-appointed Georgian-style mansion, with pale yellow carpeting, cream-colored walls, and burnished mahogany banisters.

The church will not disclose the cost of the temple, for which funds were raised through tithing.

Each of its rooms is designed for Mormons to prepare for or receive a particular blessing. Unlike the thousands of Mormon meetinghouses and chapels around the world in which non-Mormons are welcome — the equivalents of neighborhood churches — an LDS temple is built for worthy Mormons to participate in religious rites, called "ordinances."

These ordinances include the baptism of Mormons' ancestors, and the "sealing" of marriages and families, so they may — as Mormons believe — live together in the afterlife.

"We want to have everyone have the opportunity to be sealed into Heavenly Father's eternal family as far back as Adam and Eve," said Josephine Scere, a Mormon and school counselor who lives in Philadelphia.

Once the Philadelphia temple is dedicated on Sept. 18, Scere will no longer make her monthly trip to the temple to which she had been assigned, in Maryland just outside Washington, D.C. She will instead immerse in the font in the Philadelphia temple to, by proxy, baptize her deceased relatives in the faith — including those she has never met — so generations, she believes, will meet in heaven.

The Philadelphia temple, the first to be built in Pennyslvania, will serve more than 41,000 Mormons in the region and be staffed by 800 Latter-day Saints — all volunteers. It sits midway between the two nearest temples, the one near Washington and midtown Manhattan's.

To Mormons, another temple means more baptisms and more sealings — more people who can spend the afterlife with God and their families.

Mormons will give everything to seal themselves to their families, said Vai Sikahema, a Mormon leader from New Jersey, television news anchor and former player for the Philadelphia Eagles.

Living in a hut with a dirt floor on the island of Tonga in the 1960s, Sikahema's parents saved for six years to buy one-way passage for their family of five to New Zealand, where there is an LDS temple.

Even before they had saved enough money to book passage home, they wanted "to receive the crowning ordinances that are only performed in temples." They were sealed to each other and their children in a ceremony — Sikahema said through tears — that is his earliest memory.

"Our sacrifice as a family was no more difficult than someone who lives on Kensington and Allegheny," he said, referring to a poor neighborhood in Philadelphia.

When you don't have a car, traveling to Washington or New York by public transportation presents enormous obstacles, he said. "That's why the church builds these temples where they're built, and why so much of the resources of the church are used so that people don't have to make the kinds of sacrifices that my family made."

When every Mormon temple announced or under construction is complete, there will be about 175 around the globe to serve the world's Mormons, who number more than 15.6 million, with about 60 percent living outside the U.S.

"Someday there will be hundreds of temples around the world," Wilson said.

From Aug. 10 to Sept. 9, the public may tour through the Philadelphia temple and ask questions of their Mormon guides.

The architecture and interior design all point to the importance of marriage and family in an individual's connection to God.

The first floor baptismal room, for example, sets a warm pool atop a dozen nearly life-size, bronze-plated oxen, each representing one of the tribes of Israel. A mural shows the baptism of Joseph Smith in the Susquehanna River in northeastern Pennsylvania.

It is here, after a church member dons white clothes — symbolizing purity and the equality of all people — that he or she will immerse to baptize an ancestor of the same gender by proxy.

In one of the four sealing rooms, heterosexual couples marry and family members are bound to each other for eternity. The infinite reflections of the bride and groom in gilt-edged mirrors, which face each other on opposite walls, are meant to reinforce the idea that marriage will last beyond death.

After Sept. 18, when the temple is dedicated, only card-carrying Mormons will be admitted. The card, known as a "recommend," shows that a church member has been deemed worthy of entry.

Once through the door, Mormons will see the painting of Franklin and one of Jesus that hangs below two crossed quills — one quill stands for the Book of Mormon, the other for the Constitution.

Has Benjamin Franklin been posthumously baptized in the LDS Church? Yes, according to Mormon sources. But the church treads gingerly on this topic, having angered many when Anne Frank and other Holocaust victims were baptized by proxy. Under LDS teachings, those in the afterlife can either accept or reject these ordinances.

"We don't encourage people to do ordinance work for people who are not part of their family," Wilson said.