LDS Living wrote:At the hesitancy of the rest of the committee to describe their proposal, Temple Square President Stephen L. Richards announced that the building plans included a spot for the Christus.
And so it began, the Church officially proceeded with plans to have a marble replica version of the Christus hand crafted in Italy. The making of the statue was sanctioned by the First Presidency and formerly introduced to the Church as a new approach in visualizing and appreciating the Savior. President Richards, soon after arranging the order for the crafting of the graven image of Christus,
"became gravely ill and passed away just days before the finished statue arrived in Salt Lake City. Sadly, he never saw the statue that he hoped would become a legacy to the Church."
The introduction of a
graven image to represent Jesus Christ was entirely a new concept in the Church and was a clear departure from the standing tradition of avoiding graven images -- not to imitate the apostate practice of Christendom by setting up statuary of Christ to adore. Up until this point, the Church kept the biblical commandment whereby graven images of Deity were not tolerated in the House Israel. The Church maintained that Christ was the
rock of Israel and the
chief cornerstone of the holy temple. The making of a statue to publicly express his glory and image as a focal point of faith and belief in his Person was not a consideration.
Statues to honor prophets and saints were acceptable but the Person of Jesus Christ was
everlasting truth itself and could never be appropriated into a graven image, doing so defiles the Law of Moses:
Elder Charles H. Hart, First Council of the Seventy, General Conference, Oct 1911 wrote:
Peter tells us in holy writ that,
"all flesh is as the grass and the glory of man as the flower of grass. The grass withereth and the flower thereof falleth away; but the word of the Lord endureth forever. And this is the word which by the gospel is preached unto you." Just as the statue of the Prophet Joseph and the statue of his brother the Patriarch stand upon granite foundations, so the gospel of salvation is grounded upon the granite bedrock of everlasting truth.

Brigham H. Roberts, First Council of the Seventy, General Conference, Oct 1913 wrote:
In this connection I would like to call your attention to the growth of interest that we find in coming up to the headquarters of the Church and visiting this Temple Block, where we are increasing the number of testimonies in stone as well as in word; multiplying in bronze as well as by verbal utterance, the memorials of God's dealings with His people.
I would like to read to you, as introductory to inviting your attention to these things, a passage from the old scriptures relating to a certain great incident in the history of ancient Israel. When Joshua was leading Israel from the east side of Jordan to the west side, the Lord apparently desired to magnify His name, both in Israel and among the peoples of that country ; and, therefore, with power and an outstretched arm He began the establishment of His people in the promised land. In crossing Jordan, at the flood tide —which occurs at the harvest time — he caused that when the priests took the Ark of the covenant, — which was the sign of God's visible presence in Israel, — when they carried it to the waters of Jordan, the waters were divided, and the priests stood in the bed of the river, the waters being held back by the power of God, while the hosts of Israel passed over dry shod. Joshua was commanded to direct twelve men in Israel, one from each tribe, to go to the place where the priests stood and carry from thence stones, which should be erected as a memorial altar unto the Lord, of the manifestation of His power on that occasion in behalf of His people. I now read what the scriptures say about that incident:
"Then Joshua called the twelve men, whom he had prepared of the children of Israel, out of every tribe a man; And Joshua said unto them; Pass over before the Ark of the Lord your God, into the midst of Jordan, and take you up, every man of you, a stone upon his shoulder, according unto the number of tribes of the children of Israel" . . . .
The Lord was anxious, apparently, that there should be a testimony in stone, an enduring monument of the manifestation of His power in behalf of Israel. I think I catch a glimpse of the same spirit in the experiences of modern Israel. For many years, now, with a great joy, I have looked upon this magnificent Temple upon this block, as a collective testimony in stone, to God's presence and power and salvation, among the Latter-day Saints that is mightier, perhaps, than the verbal testimony of any man, because it may be seen by so many, unmoved through many generations, and has been established by the collective mites of a community. They have builded a monument of testimony in stone that God has given commandments to this generation. I was struck not long since, when writing the history of the times in which the foundations of this Temple were laid. . . . .
Out here on this Temple-square, we have the bronze statue of Joseph Smith, the prophet of the great and new dispensation of the Gospel ; and the statue also of his faithful brother, Hyrum Smith, standing upon granite pedestals, properly inscribed, declaring their mission and their achievements in the world, so far as those achievements can be briefly stated, saying, doubtless, in the inscriptions what the Prophet Joseph would like to say if he could meet face to face the tens and hundreds of thousands of people who read the burning words of truth which God gave him to speak to this generation. These utterances are recorded upon the bronze tablets, and the Prophet is thus voicing forth his message to the world, and though dead, yet speaketh, in this memorial of bronze and stone, that loving hands have erected upon this square. . . . .
Long may these testimonies of stone and bronze, which our feeble hands have erected, stand on this sacred block as God's witnesses unto the inhabitants of the earth, that He has given a new dispensation of His truth to man, and confirmed it by a manifestation of His mercy and power in the deliverance of His people, I pray, in the name of Jesus. Amen.
No statues or bronze images were made to glorify or represent Jesus Christ on Temple Square. Never at any time was a revelation given to disregard the Second Commandment given by Moses!
President Heber J. Grant, President of the Church, General Conference, Oct 1924 wrote:
We have decided to erect on this block a monument in honor of the Three Witnesses (perhaps we will include the Eight Witnesses), to be located in the rear of the statues of Presidents Joseph and Hyrum Smith.
But no statues of Jesus!
Elder John A. Widtsoe, Quorum of the Twelve, General Conference, Oct 1924 wrote:
As President Grant has stated here today there is no doubt in our minds about the reality of the First Vision of Joseph Smith. Every religion is built upon a conception of God. The Lord, knowing this, has declared himself in all generations. The first statement in Holy Writ makes it clear that man must understand the true God and must not worship false gods nor set up gods for himself. "In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth" — Almighty God, not blind forces, made the earth and the heavens above. Later on, out of the thunders and lightnings of Sinai, the first commandment was: "Thou shalt have no other gods before me." And on the back of the statue of Joseph Smith, in this square, you will find as a great fundamental message, that "It is the first great principle of the gospel to know for a certainty the character of God."
As of October 1924:
[Yes] Statue of Joseph Smith
[No] Statue of Jesus