大家好,
Post-hurricane life
is... cold. As with many storms, this one has left a chilly aftermath,
including a Nor'easterner coming in tonight. There is already snow
falling from the sky, which I have mixed feelings about, and I am beginning to
wish that Sisters could wear pants.
The work, however, is
doing great. One of our investigators is preparing for baptism, and he's
fantastic! We taught him lesson 3 yesterday, all about the Doctrine of
Christ. The Doctrine of Christ includes five steps:
1. Faith on Jesus
Christ and His Atonement
2. Repentance
3. Baptism by
immersion for the remission of sins
4. Receiving the Gift
of the Holy Ghost
5. Enduring to the End
As we were teaching
him about these principles, he just understood. There is no other way to
describe it. The hardest one to teach in my opinion is the last step,
about enduring to the end. Often people look at baptism as a thing that
finishes the conversion process. On the contrary, baptism is only the
beginning our discipleship to Christ and is a gateway to the path leading us
back to our Heavenly Father. When we asked our investigator his opinion
about if we need to continue building faith after baptism, he looked at us and
said (I'm translating) "Of course! We need to continue to learn
more." I was SO happy to hear that. He gets it! As he
takes these steps to grow closer to Heavenly Father, he is only going to see
more blessings in his life. That's true for all of us, by the way.
As we continuously try to better ourselves and become more like Jesus Christ,
we see more blessings and experience more happiness in our lives.
Now that I have talked
about that for a bit, let me inform you about how the hurricane affects my
mission and our work here.
We are still waiting
to hear about when we can go to help the New York, New York South and New
Jersey, Morristown Missions. At this point there is not enough of an
organized effort for missionaries to go down to help right now. There are
many areas of the city that are still not open to civilians and many still
without power. Luckily we in our mission have power (the only on who
doesn't right now is the mission president, and that's because of all the trees
down around his house) and we have been able to return to proselyting work
until we are called to serve other places. We also have been actively
looking for service opportunities in our area and have had a few chances to
work distributing food and water, as well as helping people fill out forms for
replenishing food stamps. They were very grateful to have some Chinese
speakers around to help!
Ah! I almost
forgot. Today was transfers, and we lost two of our district. Elder
Huang and Sister Gao have returned home, bringing the Chinatown district down
to 12 missionaries. Because Sister Gao left, Sister Chueh has now
switched over and is Sister Khong's new companion. She will finish
training Sister Khong, and Sister Liu will finish training me! I am so
grateful to have the opportunity to be trained by Sister Liu. She is so happy
and such a good missionary! I also am hoping that my Mandarin will
improve lots over the next six weeks, since SIster Liu doesn't speak much
English and we need to communicate somehow! We use her electronic
dictionary a lot to translate things, and so far, it has been pretty great.
To start off our
cycle, we went to the National Museum of Natural History and checked out the
Dinosaur Exhibit! It was pretty awesome. I like dinosaurs. :)
That's all the time I
have for today. The Blairs have invited us over for dinner, so we have to
get going. I love you all!
Love,
Sister Beer
P.S. I got to go
stay for a couple days up in Harlem (while we didn't have power in Chinatown)
with some sisters there, and it was super fun! Also, I can say now that I
have been to Harlem, which is pretty cool. While I was there, I was
looking at pictures on the wall and who should be smiling back but one Kirt
Davis! It makes sense, he was an Assistant to the President (AP) in
this mission for a while, but I forgot that people here knew him. Kirt,
you are still remembered and loved by many here in New York!
No comments:
Post a Comment