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In May 1966, the first missionaries arrived. Five years later, 27 congregations were established in 10 cities. [1] From 1981 to 1984, Julio E. Dávila served as president of the Colombia Cali Mission of the church. [5]
Ground was broken for the Bogotá Colombia Temple on June 26, 1993, by William R. Bradford. [1] Fifteen years passed from the time the announcement of the Bogotá Colombia Temple in 1984 to its dedication in 1999. The temple was dedicated on April 24, 1999, by LDS Church president Gordon B. Hinckley. [2]
The temple is in the metropolitan area of Barranquilla, in the oceanside community of Puerto Colombia across from Colegio Alemán, approximately two kilometers west of Barranquilla. A groundbreaking ceremony, to signify the beginning of construction, took place on 20 February 2016, with Juan A. Uceda presiding. [ 3 ]
Does temple have visitor's center (link opt) --> | preceded_by = Concepción Chile Temple | followed_by = Rome Italy Temple | temple_id = barranquilla | lds_id = barranquilla-colombia | notes = }}<noinclude> ***Must be wikilinked – all other data is automatically wikilinked where appropriate
The LDS Church has 367 temples in various phases, which includes 202 dedicated temples (193 operating and 9 previously-dedicated, but closed for renovation [1]), 3 scheduled for dedication, 51 under construction, 2 scheduled for groundbreaking, [2] and 112 others announced (not yet under construction). [3]
The Episcopal Diocese of Colombia is a part of Province 9 of the Episcopal Church in the United States of America. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Colombia claims 209,985 members in Colombia. There is a small Greek Orthodox community in the country. [4]
Colombia-Venezuela: 1 Jul 1968 Central American and Andes: Colombia 1970 Colombia Bogota 1974 Colombia Bogota North 1992: extant Venezuela Colombia Cali Colombia Barranquilla Colombia Bogota South: Brazilian North: 7 July 1968 Brazilian Brazilian South: Brazil North 1970 Brazil Rio de Janeiro 1974 Brazil Rio de Janeiro North 2018: extant Brazil ...
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