Tuesday, June 2, 2015

Best Week

Dear friends and family:

Elder Storm and I had one of the best weeks we have had together. Our key indicators were well-rounded, without huge imbalances. One of the things we were happy that we were able to do was to get standards in member-present lessons and new investigators.

Our district leader, Elder Chiparro, has been pretty sick for the last week or so, and so on Thursday we went on a quick exchange with them so that his companion could go out and work their area a little bit. The next day, on Friday, we had apartment inspections. (We passed, don't worry.)

This Sunday, we had several families committed to come to church. One is a part-member family. Mikerlange was baptized over a year and a half ago, when I first came into the area. Since then she has gone inactive. Now, she has a nine-year-old daughter who has never been baptized. When we went to visit her, we discovered this and are now working to help her be baptized. Mikerda, her daughter who is preparing for baptism, is extremely intelligent. We committed her to read the introduction in the Book of Mormon. When we came back and asked her about it, she proceeded to describe in great detail what went on the first six chapters, going into a lot of detail. Unfortunately, she and her family were not able to come to church due to their ride falling through. (Our fault, not theirs.)

As well, we were able to help Lusane and Jonal come to church. We stopped by their apartment complex and had Jonal follow us in their own car. They loved sacrament meeting, but unfortunately had to leave afterwards because Lusane had to go to work.

Thanks,

Elder Slade

A French "Blessing"

Okay so first I will start off with a little French lesson. In English we often say "bless you" or other such things, so considering the word for thinking or to be pensive is penser. It is logical to assume the French word is blesser. Which in fact it is not. It is very much not. When we wish to bless someone the word is benir and when we want to hurt or cause physical pain to someone then would we say blesser. I don't know how many times at the beginning of my mission I said in a prayer asking God to hurt all those that we know so that they may feel of his power....

With that being said, the title of this email holds double meaning.

It was Sunday morning and my alarm clock was going ringing at its usual 6:30. In the process of very groggily trying to turn off the infernal beeping my alarm clock took a tumble. So as I was once again groggily trying to turn off the alarm clock which was now on the floor, the unspeakable happened.

*duh duh DUUUUUUUUH*

My copy of Jesus the Christ, a wonderful amazing book written by James E. Talmage which just happens to weigh just about 5-10 pounds, also took a tumble and landed by its corner right on top of my toe.

And that is how Sister Cummings broke her second bone and second toe in her life, and is currently sporting crutches.

*pause for transitory music*

This story has actually been a blessing, in both the English sense of the term as well as the French connotation. It taught me a wonderful lesson. There are two kinds of Humility. One chosen and one thrust upon. I have had the opportunity to witness both this week as one I was required to look upon my companion for support and the other I chose to follow the spirit of the Lord and do more work than I had felt like doing and immediately saw the benefits.

As missionaries we keep a record of how many investigators keep the engagement and attend church each Sunday. As usual we struggle to find one who will come. This being said as we found ourselves with nothing to do as a lesson had finished early, we were just about to head home and call it a day when a feeling came to us that we needed to visit an investigator that we hadn't been able to contact for a while. That morning I had prayed that I would be able to feel the spirit of the Lord and use this day that I was given as a missionary as effectively as I and my companion could. We acted on this thought immediately, realizing that it was an answer to the prayer that had been said that morning. We passed by this woman's house and lo and behold she was there! We invited her to church and she not only said yes but invited her three daughters and brother to join as well. Then next day we were among the happiest missionaries alive as we sat with the five wonderful daughters and son of God listening to the words of the Lord being taught to us.

Humility is the ability to accept the will of the Lord. It is not a bad thing to be humble. In fact being humble is much better than being humbled. I am so grateful for the wonderful moments that I have been given to help to be humble and accepting. I love being a missionary and going out and helping others feel the joy that I have felt.


I love you all! Passé une bonne semaine!


Tuesday, May 26, 2015

Good week

Dear friends and family:

We had a pretty good week this past week. We struggled a little bit at the start of the week, but by the end of the week we were able to get one of our new investigators, Stephadina, to come to church. She enjoyed it a lot, and she has a date to be baptized on the 6th. We also have two other investigators who have a date to be baptized on the 13th. It was a miracle that we found them.

The miracle happened because our ward had a barbeque/picnic last Saturday. It was in a park, but unfortunately there was a fee to get into the part on weekends and holidays. Nobody had been told about the fee. When we pulled into the park for the first time, we found out about it and called the bishop to see if there was anything we could do to prevent any investigators/members from being charged to come to the ward activity. He asked us to go and talk with the people manning the entrance and ask them if they could count the number of cars entering the park to go to the ward activity. When we went to talk with them, we found out that one of them was a less-active member who had not been to church for several years because of her job, but who still loved the church and wished she could go back. She was baptized in New York and had even gone to the temple and received her endowments. Her friend, who was there with her, was looking for ways to come closer to God and to develop her faith. She gratefully accepted a copy of the Book of Mormon, and asked us to come and teach her and her husband. They accepted a date for the 13th, and we are excited to work with them more.

Elder Storm and I have been doing well. We had a quick fire exchange with the zone leaders yesterday, after district training, and we were able to learn a lot about knocking doors and being simple but powerful.

Thanks,

Elder Slade

The Miracle of a Pregnant Woman's Purse

Life is going pretty great here in Canada! Things are finally getting warm except those awkward moments when the weather goes "I am going to deep freeze you in your sleep." But we are learning to survive. Many friends and families have asked me to share some of the miracles that have happened this week, and this being the last week of a heavy spending month, many of them have to do with food.

But before I get to that. When my companion and I realized that Sister Ford's camera had a smudge on it, therefore making everyone look as if they had a halo. We jumped on the opportunity. And then had a Selfie moment. #wehadtwentyminutesbeforezoneconferencestarted

First off. On Sunday my companion and I were running late after having a pretty amazing discussion of the gospel and divine potential and while running out the door forgot the emergency breakfast snack pack that we keep just for moments like this. We got to church and just as we were taking the sacrament we realized just how hungry we were. I don't believe I have ever had such a hankering for bread and water on a non-fast Sunday than at that moment. As we went through all our meetings, teaching in the Gospel Principles class and the Primary our stomachs began to make the most untimely whale mating noises known to man. And then after these three hours of church we then had to attend two meetings to add another three hours to our schedule. We were dying and had no way or means to obtain food. Nevertheless we said a prayer. And it was answered.

A pregnant lady who was waiting for our meeting got suddenly sick of the food that she had packed and gave it to us sisters. And then just following that a member whom we had been to dinner with the night before gave us two granola bars saying that she was sorry that there was no desert last night. The circumstances may have been silly but I can sure testify that the Lord protects his missionaries.

As we were debating where to spend our feeble amount of remaining funds and finding that we may be living off of rice for the week, a member called saying that there was a huge sale on fruit and that she had bought us a whole bunch. And then members continued to invite us for dinner appointments nearly every night for that week.


The miracles this week don't seem to be as related to the missionary work but it has nonetheless strengthened my testimony of the importance of the work that I am privileged to be taking a part in. The Lord helps his servants as they go about doing his work. I am so grateful for the wonderful opportunities that I have been able to witness here as I serve the Lord in Lemoyne

Wednesday, May 20, 2015

The Pathway to Happiness

Well I don't have too much time this week but I would like to share with everyone something that was confirmed for me this week.

I had the opportunity to sing at the civil wedding of an investigator and his wife this weekend. While sitting there as they took their vows, I pondered in something that our mission president had shown us a couple months back in regards to saving ordinances.

He had drawn six circles in a pattern very similar to a rock climbing wall. He then drew a couple of lines and labeled the circles starting at the very bottom with baptism and ending with marriage in the Temple, also known as a Temple Sealing. Much like this

Temple Sealing

              Endowment
-----------------------------
Melchizedek Priesthood
-----------------------------
              Sacrament

Confirmation

              Baptism

He then told us that we as missionaries are focusing a lot on this first part (below the bottom line) and how sometimes people get stuck there. The thing is in order to achieve the highest degree of glory and live with our Heavenly Father after this life, a man must receive the Melchizedek Priesthood which a woman does not need to obtain. And then everyone must obtain their Endowments and be sealed in the temple for time and for all eternity. These things are ESSENTIAL to achieve Eternal Life.

As I was pondering this I thought of the importance of the Temple. Our own temple, the Montreal Temple, has been closed for my entire mission so far for renovations and has been announced to open in November. This announcement has given us a wonderful opportunity to testify of the blessings of a temple and how it is a building wherein we receive sacred ordinances that allow us to live with our families for eternity and to live with Heavenly Father after the coming of the last days.

Growing up it feels like I did not understand the importance of the temple, and I was just beginning to cherish it when I was whisked away to the wonderful land of Quebec where there is no temple for the time being. Ironically this has made me cherish it even more. I know now that the Lord loves his children and wishes them to come back to him. In order to do so and live with our families for eternity we must be baptized by someone holding the proper priesthood authority and then given the Holy Ghost through the confirmation, which ordinances we then receive and renew when we take the sacrament every Sunday. And then we may receive those ordinances that are so cherished and holy that can only be made in the holy temple of the Lord.


I know and I can testify that the Lord loves his children and he has provided them a way for them to return to him through the sacred ordinances that we make a take a part in. I know that this church is true and it holds the fullness of the gospel and that through this we have the true power of God and by this power we may be baptized, confirmed and receive the holy covenants in the temple and be sealed for all time and eternity with a family who we love and they love us. I am so grateful to be a member of this church and to be a missionary out here sharing these wonderful truths. And I leave you with these things in the name of Jesus Christ, Amen

Missionaries get sick too!

Dear friends and family:

This week was one of the rougher weeks I've had on my mission again. It wasn't that Elder Storm and I didn't get along, we got along very well this week actually. It was rough because starting late Tuesday/early Wednesday, Elder Storm and I both started getting sick. We received a cold from one of our investigators. (It was an unwelcome gift, but we graciously accepted anyway.) We then proceeded to miserably work through the brunt of it until it became too rough to keep going, and we went home an hour/an hour and a half early (on Thursday, I believe) to take care of our runny (and bloody) noses and a small fever that I had started developing.

Lesson learned. Don't try to work through a debilitating sickness, just stay home and that way you'll heal up quicker and be more effective when you get back to work.

We had some promising investigators that we picked up at the start of the week, but we lost contact with each of them by the end of the week, and when we went to round them up on Sunday morning, we were unable to talk with any of them. I think we might have scared them off by our runny noses and sniffly testimonies. :P Hopefully none of them caught the cold from us.

One of the highlights of the week was the Haitian conference on Saturday. It was really a fantastic event. I've never before seen so many Haitian saints in the same place. The turnout of the conference was over 400 people from the seven stakes, but I know that just from the Miami Shores ward, there were many Haitians that were unable to come because of work or transportation issues. The conference bodes well for creating another Haitian Creole branch in the near future, which I understand is one of the underlying purposes they had in organizing the conference. I hope that I am still in my mission when that happens.

Another thing that was great about this week is that Abigaile came to both the conference, and to church just yesterday. That is the third week in a row that she has come to church, despite the fact that she still does not believe in Joseph Smith or the restoration. It just goes to show how much better it is for a member to invite friends to come to church than for us to invite random people who we just met. It's difficult enough for us to get people to come to church even a single time, but here we have a member who invited a friend to come to church, and she's come three times already!

We received the conference ensign this Tuesday, and I've been trying to study the talks during personal study. I've been keeping tally of the general topics of the talks so far, and I've had to laugh again at how many of the talks are about marriage and families. More than half of the Saturday morning talks are directly about it, while almost all of them mention it at least briefly.

Thanks,
Elder Slade


P.S. Next week, my P-Day will probably be on Tuesday due to the holiday on Monday.

Tuesday, May 12, 2015

La Fete des Meres- Let us go a singing

Happy Mother’s Day everyone! It was amazing to be able to see and talk to my family via skype this week as they told me all about their adventures and who is going where on their missions and who is getting married to who. *cough* Brittney *cough cough* I love them all so much and am so grateful to have such a wonderful family and a brother whom the next time I will see him he will be the one wearing the plaque.

This week the parable of the talents, once shared by Jesus Christ, has often come to mind. For those unfamiliar with the story Christ tells of a master who just before leaving for a far off country had entrusted three of his servants with varying amounts of monetary units, then called talents however we can easily relate these to our denotation of a talent. Two of these servants had been able to use those talents and trade until the moment when they had gathered double than what they had originally been given. However the last of the servants had hid his talent and wished not to share it and by the time his master returned, had lost the place where he had buried his gift. In the end the two servants who worked hard with these talents had in turn received many more blessings than imagined while the one who hadn't was left with none.

You might be wondering why this is so constantly in my thoughts this week. Well I had a memory this week of the moment that I had decided that I had wanted to take voice lessons. My wise parents had recognized that I was able to sing and had lovingly encouraged me to practice and grow this talent through voice lessons and participating in choirs. The hard work has paid off at many moments and God has blessed me with a voice that can and has touch the hearts of his children on many occasions.

One such occasion was this past Friday. As we do every Friday, my companion and I with a handful of other missionaries, visit a nursing home and volunteer by gathering the residence and singing with them a whole bunch of Quebecois songs. Many of which are really quite hilarious, residence and the songs. The woman who directs this had noticed that I had been blessed with a pretty good voice and as a "finale" asked me to sing for everyone. Choosing one of the only songs that I would actually know I was able to share my rendition of "Danny Boy."

Though this song is not one of the most spiritual of songs in the bunch I tried my hardest to pour my testimony into it, as we were asked not to sing very spiritual of songs for the sake of unity in the residency. Luckily very few could understand the English I was singing and instead focused on the spirit and the sound. Afterwards I sat down and an elderly woman sitting next to my with tears in her eyes, hugged me while saying "thank you I felt loved."


This moment has helped me to grow my testimony in God. He gave me a talent and helped me to cater it to the moment where it became something I could give to others. In my setting apart blessing that called me to be a missionary the man who blessed me promised me that music would be the way I could share the spirit with many. This blessing has been fulfilled on many occasions but was most apparent at this moment when a woman was touched by the feeling she felt and not the words which she heard. I know that I have been called by a real and true prophet of God who is guided by a loving Heavenly Father. I am so grateful for the moments he has given me to be the instrument in his hands as he helps others to feel his love. I am so grateful to be his missionary, to be called to go forth with faith and tell the world of the Restoration of the Church of Jesus Christ on this Earth. I am grateful for the moment I have to sing the song of redeeming love to the people of Quebec, Canada. I love you all and I say these things in the name of Jesus Christ, Amen.