An impromptu lesson with Ian Roach, Elder Carter Eden, and Elder Anderson
Elder Anderson's district
11/30/2020
Today was a lot of fun! We had a great Pday, and more success in 30 minutes today than we do working all day most days. We had a lesson with a family that was seriously prepared for us. We just got to know them a little at first, which mostly involved me messing up their names repeatedly (there were six people in the family, and three different last names, I was struggling a bit), and then we taught them a simple lesson about how God is our loving Heavenly Father the lesson went really well, and we were so excited to get to teach the family. We were amazed, we read a verse with them from Isaiah about how God knows us by name, and they all understood it pretty well! That’s not an easy place to start, if I read anything besides psalms to families in Brazil they didn’t really get it, so it was amazing to see how smart these kids were, and how they were understanding concepts that adults couldn’t. We were so excited after that lesson, on top of it being an awesome, inspired lesson, we picked up five people because of it, and so we immediately called around the District to spread the good news. Everyone was so excited and celebrated with us, it felt so good that we were all seeing such incredible growth in these last few days, this was an actual miracle.
12/1/2020
Today was a great day. We had service projects all day which were a lot of fun. We got to go up on a stepladder to clean out the gutters for one elderly family, which was a lot of fun. I was the one who went up on the stepladder since Gomez was afraid of heights, even though “heights” as a missionary can’t exceed ten feet, so we weren’t in a dangerous position at all. I had a lot of fun cleaning out the gutters because I would throw all of the stuff down on Gomez who was below me (just kidding, occasionally I’d try to hit him with a leaf, but leaves are pretty hard to throw at people). After that service project we went to go help out another member in their front yard by raking all of the dead leaves out of their yard. The Elders we share a car with also had an appointment at the same time, so they dropped us off a little early and we just hiked through no-man’s land for the fifteen minutes before the family got home. Well, apparently the land did belong to someone, we were wandering around right next to the road and a long distance away from houses, but when we eventually turned around from the roadside we’d been hiking along and went back for our service project a person started shouting from their backyard, called us over, and then told us this was private property. We apologized, and they just kept staring at us angrily. We apologized again, and then walked away. We were wandering a couple dozen feet away from the road in unfenced, uncultivated land, which definitely wasn’t a capital offense, but we felt bad that we made someone mad nonetheless. The second service project also went really well, we raked a ton of leaves. A ton is an exaggeration, but it was definitely over 200 pounds of leaves, which is a lot. Then we went back to the church for the lessons we had, and got to finish out the night in a very relaxing way.
12/2/2020
Today went really well. We had a lot of lessons with our member families and one with the nonmember family that we’re teaching as well. It’s a good thing that we connect to this family so well and can do no wrong, because I am really out of practice as a teacher of an introduction to the Gospel. I’m going to spend my time regoing over and practicing teaching these lessons tomorrow because the stuff I contributed tonight was not on par with what I was doing in Brazil, and I was teaching in Portuguese there, this should be way easier in English, but now I just have more of a tendency to ramble. My teaching hasn’t actually gotten worse, I think I’m just starting to notice more when people aren’t understanding than I used to, and so I did what I could to help those who were struggling along tonight. I was sad because I was looking forward to virtual exchanges with Collins and Hatch tomorrow, which meant that we would have been teaching as a group of four instead of two, but they cancelled on us because they hadn’t actually figured out all the rules for how we’re going to be doing it yet. We have interviews with President tomorrow, which is very exciting. One really uncomfortable thing did happen tonight: During our missionwide devotional, there was an unplanned prayer shared. We always join the devotional virtually right after working, and so sometimes if we’re running a little behind it can be stressful to try to wrap things up to join the devotional. Well, evidently that’s what happened tonight with two Sisters when they had been having a very tender conversation, and so while one Sister was using her phone for the call with the family they were teaching, the other decided to get on the devotional so that they could switch over right after. Well, the Sisters forgot to mute themselves, and so right when it was time for our opening prayer, the Sisters were offering the closing prayer for their meeting. The prayer they offered that took the place of all of our’s (unbeknownst to us) started off, “We know that death is a hard thing…” and at that moment both Elder Gomez’s and my eyes popped open and we made eye contact. So the opening prayer for our meeting addressed the plan of salvation and reflected the pain of the passing of recent loved ones. After the prayer President started the devotional like normal. He’s so busy sometimes that I don’t think he even noticed that an out of the normal prayer had just transpired.
12/3/2020
Today was a great day! We had interviews with our President and they went really well. We talked a little bit about our efforts in this area, and then he promised us that we would succeed in our purpose to bring souls to Christ in February. February will be a special month for our whole mission, because we’re all going to find a lot of success in that month. President detailed his promise to me in our interviews today, although it sounds like he hasn’t revealed it to most of the mission yet. We had a couple of lessons today and they went really well. We (I) embarrassingly double booked a couple of lessons tonight, although fortunately we were able to reschedule them so they all worked out. We had a service project with Sister Thompson and Brother Case tonight. It was a lot of fun, because it genuinely felt like we were all there as friends, it just felt good to be there and to get to help Sister Thompson. Sister Thompson also pulled me aside at one point and tried to give me money so that I would buy sweatpants on Monday (she saw that I was wearing shorts in the 24 degree weather), and I had to assure her very firmly that I had the funds to buy some warm pants myself before she was willing to relent. The members here are too nice to us, they take really good care of us. That offer also showed an incredible sacrifice, because she later revealed to us in our lesson with her that she has been incredibly stressed lately, especially about finances. An offer like that takes a lot of love, she has a really good heart.
12/4/2020
Today was a great day. We had a service project this morning, we walked a widow’s dogs. That was the first time I had ever walked a dog, and I actually had a lot of fun (probably because it was a voluntary, and not a mandatory activity for me) There were two dogs, I told Elder Gomez he should take the tamer one, and that I would take the more rambunctious, crazy dog. We walked with both dogs and the Sister for a bit, until one dog started whining because of the slow pace we were taking, so the Sister took the other dog back and we went for a run with the crazier one. I really enjoyed the run, the dog was a little older so my fast jogging speed matched the dog’s running speed pretty well, and when the dog got really excited it would pull me along and cause me to go even faster. Elder Gomez didn’t have any help running, so he tired out a long time before I did thanks to that dog doing a lot of the work for me. After our service we got to do some planning and then teach some lessons. The planning went well, and the lessons went even better. It’s sad to say, but I just now feel like I’m starting to figure out how to plan effective lessons with my companions and we’re learning how to teach really effectively together. I suppose there isn’t really an overarching strategy that you can use for everyone, really it’s just about adjusting to each companion to build off of their strengths, but now it’s happening for Gomez and I. The lessons that we’re teaching are perfect, not because we’re saying all the right things, but because the Spirit is there, and He carries the message to the hearts of our families far better than we ever could.
12/5/2020
Today Monument earned its name since we had a monumental day. I cut my hair this morning, it turned out pretty well and baffled my district that I would have the audacity to go get my hair cut at a barber shop on a day other than pday (I didn’t, I just cut it myself while listening to general conference talks, by far the most spiritual haircut I’ve had yet). Then we had a service project at Brother Case’s house. We were mixing and applying cement, although the work that we were doing here was easier than mixing it by hand in Brazil, the only hard thing I had to do was lifting those bags of cement to load them into the mixer. Raising them above my chest was quite the struggle, and so was shot-putting it onto the machine to mix it. Fortunately I got to practice it a lot since mixing the cement up was my job. The whole project was a lot of fun, and I was very impressed that their whole family was out there doing it. The only unfortunate moment was when the cement mixer splashed some water containing chunks of cement powder into my right eye. We aren’t supposed to go in houses as missionaries right now, but the family made an exception for me so that I could flush my eye out. Fortunately I was able to clean my eye okay, and return to shot-putting cement bags afterwards. All of that was fun, but not the reason why today was so monumental. Today was an incredible day, because we put two kids from the family that we’ve been teaching on date for baptism. The date is for before the end of the transfer, so we’ll get to be here for their baptism. Teaching this family is really cool, because they know almost nothing about religion. A couple days ago we taught them about who Christ is, they didn’t really know anything about Him. To have gone in a week from never having known these people, to now having them on date for baptism is a miracle in and of itself. It shows just how much God’s been preparing this family for us, as does the fact that today was their daughter’s eighth birthday. Their mom (the person in the family with religious background who used to be members of the church) asked if we would be willing to talk about baptism since it was their daughter’s eighth birthday. They really have just been prepared for us in every way. Our lessons with this family have been so powerful, tonight the mom told us it looked like our faces were glowing when we shared our testimonies.
12/6/2020
Today was a lot of fun! We had our Christmas church meeting today, we’re still on a three week rotation, and today was the last time that we would meet before Christmas, so we had a couple of special musical numbers and stuff today. It was an especially good meeting because Sister Adams and her family got on to attend it, so we had investigators in Sacrament today! We had a great day today, we were able to get 15 lessons this week with members which was a little lower than we hoped for, but still in the mission standard of excellence. We got to watch the First Presidency’s Christmas Devotional tonight, which was an awesome break from how hard we had been pushing ourselves to work. Then, Brother Case brought by the best smelling apple pie ever to thank us for helping him mix concrete yesterday. It was really good to get to see their family, and we were more than happy to accept that pie.
Today the scriptures that I want to share come from a revelation that Joseph Smith had. In Doctrine and Covenants 42 we read:
49 He who hath faith to see shall see.
50 He who hath faith to hear shall hear.
51 The lame who hath faith to leap shall leap.
These are some of my favorite verses about miracles because there are no conditions attached, they plainly teach that miracles can be accomplished according to our faith. Now, another miracle that happens in accordance with my personal faith is being able to be led to those who seek to hear the Gospel. So why haven't I been finding people every week if I had the faith to find someone this week? Why are there blind who still can't see, deaf who still can't hear, and lame who can't leap, despite blessings from God's authorized servants promising that all these things can happen in accordance with our faith? It's because God's preparing a way for these miracles to happen. Every time you exercise your faith, that doesn't go unnoticed, it's used to prepare miracles. The veil is being rent, God is showing Himself to His people, and we are being prepared to witness miracles.