National Temple Explained

National Temple
Location:Lagos State, Nigeria
Coordinates:6.5886°N 3.3888°W
Built:32 years
Inaugurated:4 December 2011
Construction Cost:undisclosed
Parking:1,500 spaces
Publictransit:Ikorodu

The National Temple is the church building of The Apostolic Church Nigeria, which is located in Olorunda-Ketu, Lagos State. It has 100,000 seats.[1]

History

In 1969, the annual Lagos, Western and Northern Areas (LAWNA) Convention which was usually held in Ebute Metta was moved to Orishigun, a town in Ketu due to the rapid rate of increasing converts. In 1970, the convention was moved to the present location in Olorunda-Ketu and 1976 annual conventions started holding place in what is now known as the Old Convention Hall.[2]

In 1979, the first LAWNA Territorial Chairman, S. G. Adegboyega, laid the foundation of what was to be the National Temple. In 1994, Samuel Jemigbon made rapid progress in the construction of the structure in his tenure as the third LAWNA Territorial Chairman.

The National Temple was completed on 19 November 2011 under the pastorship Gabriel Olutola who described it as "the House built with prayers" and "a symbol of the church's unification."[3] [4] It has a capacity of 100,000 seats[5] [6]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Udodiong . Inemesit . 2017-08-14 . 11 things that are never going to change about this denomination . 2023-10-03 . Pulse Nigeria . en.
  2. Web site: National Temple Overview . https://web.archive.org/web/20130106064445/http://www.tac-lawna.org/lawnanewsite/nationaltemple.php . dead . 6 January 2013 . 12 July 2015 .
  3. Inemesit Udodiong, 11 things that are never going to change about this denomination, pulse.ng, Nigeria, August 14, 2017
  4. Web site: World's Largest Temple Completed in Lagos State, Nigeria . NaijaGist . 6 December 2011 . 12 July 2015.
  5. https://web.archive.org/web/20130106064445/http://www.tac-lawna.org/lawnanewsite/nationaltemple.php
  6. https://thenationonlineng.net/were-repositioning-at-100-says-apostolic-church/ We’re repositioning at 100, says Apostolic Church