Weekly Letter June 29 2015
Hi everyone, hope you guys had a great week.
This week I got my new companion, Elder Alarcon. He is from Lima, Peru. He has been a member of the church for only two years and was introduced to the church by a friend. When he sent in his mission papers he was the only member of his family but just two months ago he was able to baptize his whole family. He has a great testimony and being a recent convert and a brand new missionary he has a lot to learn but he's great.
This week Elsa Lima got baptized (I would put an exclamation mark but my typewriter doesn't have one). She passed her interview on Wednesday and had her baptism service on Saturday. Her son Daniel started going to church when he was twelve but she never gave her son permission to be baptized, being somewhat hostile towards the church. When Daniel turned 18 he was able to choose for himself and he got baptized and one year later left on a mission to Argentina. Daniel's letters to his mom each week softened her heart. She began really listening to the missionaries and attending church until she was finally baptized. At her baptism service she cried when we sang the hymn "I'll go where you want me to go", the same hymn her son sang right before he opened his mission call. After she was baptized she bore a teary testimony. A lot of people showed up for the service and overall if was fantastic.
My companion and I have continued to focus on contacting people in the street this week. We've received numbers and addresses for a ton of people. One lady we were able to visit this week is named Yisefia and we had a great lesson on the restoration. We found 6 new investigators this week and had four investigators in sacrament meeting.
This week I was able to study a little bit on the topic of agency. I love the words to hymn number 240, "Know This, That Every Soul Is Free." In the first verse we find these words:
Know this, that ev'ry soul is free
To choose his life and what he'll be
For this eternal truth is giv'n:
That God will force no man to heav'n
This truth is manifest in the ever-present analogy of Jesus Christ being a shepherd but not a sheep-herder. He leads the sheep but certainly does not push them along. He is found out in front rather than in the back.
The second verse of the hymn clearly explains this principle:
He'll call, persuade, direct aright
And bless with wisdom, love, and light,
In nameless ways be good and kind,
But never force the human mind.
God will not force us to heaven but he does expect us to submit his will to his to be guided safely there.
Elder D. Todd Christofferson taught:
"In yielding your will to his, God will tutor you in the successful use of moral agency. You'll find freedom to be, to feel, and to do."
Elder B.H. Roberts taught:
"The man who so walks in the light and wisdom and power of God will, at the last, by the very force of association, make the light and wisdom and power of God his own, weaving those bright rays into a chain divine, linking himself forever to God and God to him."
It is no wonder, therefore that Neal A. Maxwell proclaimed that submission to God's will is "the only unconditional surrender which is also a total victory."
I believe this verse of my own composition sums up my thoughts:
As sheep therefore, we follow Christ
Not for blindness, but because of sight.
And with eyes open we follow He,
who is the light for all to see.
Thanks to all of you for your love and support.
Until next week,
Elder Dawson
Baptism. Elsa is the one dressed in Brown. |