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FAIR › Scripture Study Resources: Supplement Your Come, Follow Me Study › Study Resources for the Doctrine & Covenants and Church History › Week 40 It Is Thy House, a Place of Thy Holiness
DOCTRINE AND COVENANTS 109-110
Doctrine and Covenants 109:22 promises that those who enter the temple worthily shall feel thy power, and shall see eye to eye, and shall confess that God is with thee. The temple becomes a refuge from worldly confusion, a place where our spiritual vision is clarified, and our relationship with God is strengthened.
In Doctrine and Covenants 110:11–16, Moses, Elias, and Elijah each appeared to confer specific keys: gathering Israel, the gospel of Abraham, and the sealing power. This moment marked the Lord’s direct preparation of His people for the last days and emphasized the importance of temple work in hastening His coming.
Without these keys, the Church could not administer saving ordinances like baptism, temple sealings, or the gathering of Israel. Doctrine and Covenants 110 highlights that God’s authority is crucial for His work to progress and for families to be bound eternally.
In response to the dedication and prayers offered at Kirtland, the Savior Himself appeared (D&C 110:2–10). This divine visit shows that temples are places where God’s presence is especially close, offering us access to personal revelation and peace beyond this world.
If you have questions on this week’s reading, please email your questions to us here.
Practical solutions for someone in faith crisis:
Action Step: Set a goal to attend the temple (or do family history work if a temple isn’t nearby) at least once a month.
The Lord promises that the temple will be “a place of thanksgiving” and a shield against the storms of life (D&C 109:21, 25–26). Regular temple worship renews our spiritual strength and invites personal revelation.
Encouraging Thought:
Wherever the Saints gather and the temple spirit is present, there the house of the Lord will be
Action Step: Recognize and support those who hold priesthood keys in your ward, stake, and family.
Priesthood keys ensure that God’s work is done His way. Honoring those keys opens the door to receiving inspired guidance, personal blessings, and protection from deception.
Encouraging Thought:
Doctrine and Covenants 109 shows the power of unified prayer: the Saints prayed together for protection and blessings, and the Lord responded miraculously. United prayer amplifies faith and invites the Spirit more powerfully.
Encouraging Thought:
“Where two or three are gathered together in my name, there am I in the midst of them.” — Matthew 18:20
Objective: Help learners understand the importance of preparing their lives as places where the Spirit can dwell, like the temple.
Blank paper, pencils, markers, list of temple attributes from D&C 109:8.
Activity Steps:
Follow-Up Question: What is one thing you could ‘build’ into your daily life this week to invite God’s Spirit more fully?
Objective: Teach about the restoration of priesthood keys and their importance today.
Paper keys cutouts, pens, chalkboard or whiteboard.
Activity Steps:
Introduction (5 min): Show a key and ask: “What important things can you open with a key?” (Home, car, safes, etc.). Connect this to spiritual “keys.”
Scripture Discussion (5 min): Read D&C 110:11–16. Explain briefly what Moses, Elias, and Elijah restored. Write the words “Gathering,” “Gospel of Abraham,” and “Sealing” on the board.
Application (5 min): Give each learner a paper key. Ask them to write on it one “door” in their life they want priesthood power to help them open (e.g., better family relationships, stronger faith).
Follow-Up Question: How have priesthood keys already blessed your life, even if you didn’t realize it before?
Objective: Show how unified prayer can bring greater power and peace into our lives, like at the Kirtland Temple dedication.
A printed or displayed excerpt from Doctrine and Covenants 109:22–26, small slips of paper, a container.
Activity Steps:
Introduction (5 min): Ask: “Have you ever prayed with a group for something important? How did it feel different than praying alone?”
Scripture Discussion (5 min): Read D&C 109:22–26. Highlight how the Saints prayed together for divine protection and spiritual power, and how the Lord promised blessings.
Application (5 min): Have each learner write a righteous desire on a slip of paper (e.g., strength, guidance, peace). Place them all in a container, then offer a group prayer, asking the Lord to help with the desires collectively.
Follow-Up Question: What does praying together teach us about the kind of community God wants us to build?
The Family: A Proclamation to the World (priesthood keys and temple work in family life)

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