Tuesday, September 8, 2015

ALL CHINESE DAY = HUGE HEADACHE

July 13, 2015

Family,

Thanks for the dried apples, chips and pretzels.  They are awesome, especially the dried apples.

Sadie - MTC till Aug 10-12. Not sure when I leave yet.  I don't get travel plans till about 1.5 weeks till we leave.  I cannot speak the language well yet, although I can get my point across.  The food is all the same, but fine.  It's nice I don't have to cook for myself. Saves time.
Dad - The assignments for the zone leaders aren't that much.  They last 3 weeks long.  We assign people to teach priesthood, organize sacrament besides the speakers, interview all the district leaders.  We have a lot of meetings Sunday mornings with the Branch Presidency and other leaders which takes up the 3 hrs we used to have Sunday mornings to study.  We have to do some others stuff when new missionaries come in, but we didn't have any last wed and I we aren't getting any this wed.  
Mom - There are 6 Mandarin zones, though 2 of them leavetomorrow morning.  Liza is in the other mandarin zone.  I see her quite a bit.  She is just a few classrooms down.  I report to the branch president.  The investigators are members.  They are actually our teachers who act as people they taught on their missions.  Our zone has the coolest teachers out of all the Mandarin teachers I feel like.  We have one dude who you can just tell is a stud, Liao Liaoshi.  He is half chinese and half vietnamese.  Our other teachers is OuYang Liaoshi.  He is a stud too.  He is from central america.  He speaks fluent spanish, english and chinese.  It is funny teaching them.  Sometimes when we need to call our investigators, they take off their teaching tag and pull out a pen and we use pens as phones to talk to them.  They just start speaking really fast.  When our teacher is going to be an investigator, he always says he is going to eat food.  When he comes back from being an investigator, we ask him how his food was.  They make no acknowledgement that they are investigators.  Pretty funny.  The time is flying.  I can't believe I am already more than halfway done at the MTC, but yet it feels like I have been here for a long time.  Our lessons are fine.  The doctrine is fine, no problems there.  It is just being able to communicate what I want that is frustrating.  Sister Bain is going to Taiwan. Her name is Bei Jie Mei. I probably won't be performing our piece for a while, since we have lost most of our time with little stuff we have to do for the zone.  The old zone leaders leave tomorrow morning.


This week was a good week. We got to clean the temple last Monday.  That was kind of cool.  We were asked to clean the base of the chairs in the endowment rooms where they are bolted into the carpet.  We took little brushes like toothbrushes and brushed our any dirt, hair or whatever might have found it's way there. Then we go with a damp soapy rag and wipe it down.  Then we go with q-tips and clean all around where we couldn't get earlier.  They sure do a deep clean.  After that we cleaned and vacuumed the chairs, cleaned the floor boards all around 3rd floor.  We had a lot of elders doing other crazy deep cleans for the rest of the temple.  There were 6 sisters who spend the whole 3 hrs just cleaning one chandelier.  and that was a smaller one in one of the sealing rooms.  I can't imagine the one in the celestial room of the provo temple.  That one must take weeks.  

We had an all Chinese day on Friday.  That was really hard. We couldn't say anything in English all day.  I had a huge headache by the end of the day.  It just fries your brain trying really hard to understand everybody all day.  

We get to be investigators now to each other in the zone.  That also takes up much of our add study time, teaching and being taught with our district.  It is great to be an investigator.  We did this a lot in mission prep class at BYU.  He actually had us go in groups of three with 1 teacher and 2 investigators to teach.  This is because you learn a lot more about how to be a good teacher from being an investigator than you do from teaching.  

Elder Woolley and I dominate at Spikeball.  It is this new game that caught on at  BYU this past year and they have 2 nets out at the field of the MTC that we play on. I'll have to send you a pic next week. It's really fun. You play 2 one two. You use a little ball and a volleyball net in a circle a few feet off the ground.  You get 3 hits to bounce it off the net. If the ball hits the ground it is the other teams point.  I don't know if that makes any sense.  Anyway, it's a blast.  

Some funny things with the language.  During our TRC (this is where we teach members or real investigators who volunteer to come and let us teach them for 20 min on Sat.) I was trying to use the word specifc which I thought was juti (2nd tone one the u and a 3rd tone on the i). I was wrong. I guess it means pigs feet.  I might of been pronouncing the tones wrong.  Anyway, specific is actually teding, no idea on the tones.  Also, one of the sisters in our district was explaining to our teacher that she needed to call the investigator. She accidentally said she needed to "poop words" instead of "hit electric words" (phone call).  

We got to attend President Packer's funeral on Friday. I don't know if you got to watch it, but I'll say some things I liked from it.  Ballard or Oaks said that Packer always said, "Let the pending items pend." when they were trying to make a decision.  I think that was cool.  This can relate to revelation and answers to questions.  We are promised that the Lord will answer our questions, but we need to know that it will not always be answered quickly.  Bednar said in the closing prayer, something like, "may this be a new beginning of renewed service." 

On Tuesday we had our devotional from Spencer J Condie, an emeritus member of the Seventy.  He said a lot of things that I liked.  He talked on the first vision and it's central importance.  He told us to speak slowly and let the spirit carry the message into the hearts of the investigators especially when reciting the first vision.  He told us there is great converting power in the first vision.  When our investigators hear the first vision account, he says, they should be changed forever.  He told us to never let it become commonplace, never lose the wonder of it all for it is the investigators first time hearing it.  He told us to tell it as if you were a witness standing behind a tree in the grove. If questioned about the truthfulness of the first vision, he said we should tell the investigator to pray to God. "don't take my word for it.  Ask God. He was there." He said, "the things of God are understood by the Spirit of God." He shared a response a prophet made, i forgot which one, when someone told him that it was egotistical to say that we are the only true church.  He said, "I didn't say it, the Lord said it.  I'm only quoting him." He also explained the importance of testimony.  Quoting from Elder Ballard, "the Spirit cannot be restrained, when you bear pure testimony." The number one converter for people, President Monson found while Mission President in conducting a poll, was humble and simple testimony of the first vision.  Brother Condie explained that the 1st vision is at the heart of our religion.  These things reminded me of some leader of the church who said, we don't need to defend our words, they defend themselves.  He told us that we might need to teach investigators the same principle multiple times.  Look at 3 Nephi 11. The people didn't understand till the 3rd time.  3 times Nephi was constrained to kill Laban.  Joseph was appeared to 3 times by the angel Moroni that one night.  I liked that reminder that our investigators are the same way.  They might not understand till it is explained to them multiple times.  

I love what it says in Ch 8 of PMG on accountability.  " The attitude you have toward your mission experience is a reflection of your love toward your Heavenly Father and His Son." I love that.  That can apply to anything we do in the church I believe.  We need to make sure we have a good attitude and are obeying for the right reasons, out of love instead of fear or duty.  

I also love what it says in 3 Nephi 17:3.  This is a great principle to learning anything in the church, learning through the scriptures, or learning through the temple.  "Therefore, go unto your homes, and ponder upon the things which I have said, and ask the Father in my name, that ye may understand, and prepare your minds for the morrow and I come unto you again." All those steps are crucial.  Step 1 is pretty easy: return home. The others aren't as much.  Step 2: ponder on what you heard.  Step 3: ask Heavenly Father that you may understand. Step 4.  Prepare for the next time.  We were able to go the temple this morning and it was great.  After leaving though I realized I had not done very good at step 4 leading up to going to the temple.  I'm going to try and implement these steps better in my study and temple attendance. It is great counsel.  

We had our Priesthood lesson, Sacrament topic and our Sundaydevotional all on the Book of Mormon.  PMG says some great things about it in Ch 5.  I don't have time to talk about it.  I could talk forever on this topic.  It was a good reminder to always teach from the Book of Mormon and to always be studying from it every day.  I hope to be able to become more familiar with it in order to answer my Investigators questions with a scripture from the Book of Mormon.  I could answer their question using my words, but there is a power in the Book of Mormon. As it says in PMG. "The Book of Mormon, combined with the Spirit, is your most powerful resource in conversion." If you have any time, read Ch 5 from PMG.  It's awesome.  Ch 4 is also awesome.  And Ch 6.  And Ch 10.  Well, it's all pretty amazing.

Thanks for all your prayers and your support.  I know the Book of Mormon is God's word through the power of the Holy Ghost.  And by that same power, I know Joseph Smith was a prophet of God, the Savior lives, and the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints is once again established again on the earth preparatory to the second coming of the Messiah. 

Love,

Elder Stratford




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