A project I do at every one of my areas. |
This is a project I do at every one of my areas. Since Norway is a very international country, I find the local library's other language sections, and provide copies of the Book of Mormon in each language for that library. And of course tape in a pass-along card in the back. Consider Mo i Rana and Stavanger taken care of!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Heisann alle dere!!
Man,
I feel like I'm on top of the world right now. Life is awesome! The
gospel works! And God makes everything possible! All we usually need is a
big reality and perspective check. Thank goodness for the Holy Ghost -
that's exactly His job!
Well, last week after emails we drove out to
Månafossen.Apparently it's one of the largest waterfalls in Norway, but
don't quote me on that. What defines what a large waterfall is anyway?
Amount of water? Width? Heighth? I don't know. But regardless, the trip
was fun, the hike short and intense (classic Norway!), and the waterfall
gorgeous.
Månafossen! |
On the way up to Månafossen. Gotta love me some Norwegian valleys. |
Rainbow! It reminds me of Rainbow Falls in Mammoth :) |
My hot companion Elder Levine :P |
Throughout the week we had a few dinners at a few
families' homes. Stavanger ward has the greatest amount of American
families in it out of all the wards in Norway. So we get fed. And we get
fed well. One family made us her mission-wide famous Cafe Rio pulled
pork. MMM.
A funny experience at the other family's home began
when we arrived a little too early, so dinner wasn't quite ready. So we
decided to go out and bonk on some doors. After 3 blanks, we finally ran
into this nice Norwegian guy around our age. After explaining the Book
of Mormon to him he said "yeah sure! Come on in." After teaching him for
a few minutes, he was blown away at the fact that we believe in a
living prophet. "Really? A prophet? Alive today??" "Yup, and he speaks
in behalf of God for the whole entire world." "I don't believe it." he
said. "Well, we'll prove it." was our reply. He soon gave us the
keyboard to his giant home theater/computer set-up. Before he knew it,
we were listening to President Thomas S. Monson's Sunday morning address
"The Race of Life" http://www.lds.org/generalconference/2012/04/
the-race-of-life?lang=eng&media=video.
The Spirit filled the room, and we discussed the importance of a living
prophet. What a great experience! I also highly recommend having
President Monson as a teaching companion :P. But unfortunately, we
arrived at our previous dinner appointment quite a bit later than
expected. Woops!
On Friday we held splits with Kristiansand - and boy
was that amazing! I learned an exCEEDINGLY great amount from Elder
Bird! Just different ways to study as a companionship, apply practicals
to our studies as well as studying the language. And also organizing an
apartment, but that's another story for later.
Train-ride to Kristiansand. Gorgeous! |
Kristiansand is a town built for missionary work.
It's not too big, so that people still aren't in a rush and will openly
talk with you. And it's not too small, so there's still plenty of people
to talk to throughout the day, even until 8 pm! Did I mention the
Kristiansand dialect is delicious? The southern dialect is so smooth,
squishy and lovable. I even ran into a few fellow Danes (thank you,
family heritage!). Our focus on the splits was on teaching people, not
lessons and delivering good, applicable commitments. Man, I learned a
ton. As well, the 3 hour train ride is some great time to write in your
journal and think (of course, after trying to speak to your local
Norwegian sitting right next to you. But, to be honest, that's not very
common early in the mornings.).
Sadly, the train-ride back was really rainy and cloudy. But you have to have some rain for the beauty, y'know? |
As of a week ago we've finally begun trying some
experimental contacting. The Book of Mormon 5 minute teach has been hit
over the head for over a year now, and people are just turned off by the
book right away. Especially in Stavanger (we've had some very good,
skilled missionaries at contacting here in Stavanger). So we've decided
to take a different approach. Instead, we are contacting people with
"Finding Faith in Christ" and "The Restoration" DVDs. They work very
well, mainly because the victim isn't having a blue book shoved down
their throat. Even better, halfway through the DVD contact, we mention
and explain the Book of Mormon anyway, so we get the best of both
worlds! Always make contacting light and fun. Some of my favorite
contacts are "Hey, have you heard of Jesus Christ?" "Uhh, of course."
"Well do you have faith in Him?" "No!" "Well, why not??" and take it
from there. Or stopping random people with musical instruments asking
them to play for me right then and there. I've realized how much Garrett
has gotten into me :P. My all-time favorite, though, is "Do you pray?"
and depending on the answer I usually follow up with "Well do you get
answers?" and blatantly respond with an exasperated "Why not??" and
begin explaining how God loves us, His children, so very much that He
wants to answer our prayers. But He won't answer us unless we're willing
to listen, and willing to act on the answer ("sincere heart and desire"
Moroni 10:3-5). Why else would God have His most-likely favorite phrase
scattered throughout our Standard Works? "Ask and ye shall receive.
Knock and it shall be opened unto you."
Do you really believe He MEANT that when He inspired His prophets to write that down?
Of course He did.
God
DOES answer prayers. And He loves us so much that He doesn't always
give us the answer right away. Sometimes we grow more; sometimes what WE
desire isn't always the most important; and sometimes the Lord's plan
is so fine and wonderful we can't comprehend it quite yet. Just be
patient, with an open ear and heart.
We're all walking an agency-based pathway to
something far greater and incomprehensibly extraordinary than we can
possibly conceive.
-Eldste Bryce Thomas Johnson
Locally picked lettuce and apple. Jarlsberg Norwegian cheese. And some lunchmeat. mmmm. Why didn't I go to weekly saturday farmer's markets before?? |
No comments:
Post a Comment