(Elder Cummings)
I don't have words for the miracles we have seen this week. My new companion, Elder Knapton/ Tub txib Ntaj neeb Lauj is a powerful missionary. He teaches with the Spirit and the power and authority in his words are clear. We are on fire together.
I don't have words for the miracles we have seen this week. My new companion, Elder Knapton/ Tub txib Ntaj neeb Lauj is a powerful missionary. He teaches with the Spirit and the power and authority in his words are clear. We are on fire together.
It is now post-Hmong New Years so we are now doing
post-Hmong New Years work! That is
knocking on several hundred doors of those who signed up at the New Years and
experiencing quite a bit of rejection.
Elder Knapton and I weren't having too much fun with this. We were having no success, so we spent some
time thinking and studying the next morning.
We decided to change our approach. We had previously been introducing ourselves
as "The missionaries from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saint," and we realized where that fell short. We aren't really representatives of a
church. We are representatives of
Christ. We are servants of God. So, with that increased understanding we
began to introduce ourselves as servants of God, sent by God to them to teach
repentance and baptism for a remission of sins.
The work took off.
In two days we found five new investigators, one already has
a date to be baptized on January 30th.
People can feel the power behind our testimonies in a much more powerful
way now. One older lady who believes the
Hmong spiritualism jumped when we pronounced who we were and immediately
changed from disinterested and stand-offish to inviting us to come back and
talk with her son. We are seeing
miracles!
A large part of that is coming from an increased faith in
Christ. Last week I wrote about grace
and this week I realized that grace applies in missionary work. It is a common thing for missionaries to hear
that "exact obedience brings miracles." A big emphasis on that truth is made in all
missions around the globe. The
equivalent doctrine of that is that "a sinless life brings
salvation." Equally true! It is not, however, possible for us. That is why we need grace, and as I wrote
last week, we access that through the Gospel of Jesus Christ (Faith in Jesus
Christ and His Atonement, Repentance, Baptism, receiving the Gift of the Holy
Ghost, and Enduring to the End). For
missionaries none of us are or ever will be exactly obedient. We all fall short in so many ways, from staying
out to late, to eating lunch too long, to breaking the laws of the land and
speeding. We all fall short of exact
obedience. As we focus our lives on the
Savior we still can receive all the blessings God promises us. We missionaries can still work miracles as we
have true faith in Christ and real intent in our actions. We are not perfect, but through Jesus Christ
we can work as if we were.
Elder Knapton and I have done this this week. Our shortcomings are being noticed and of our
faults we are well aware, but we know in whom we have trusted. Jesus Christ will qualify us as we earnestly
seek to chose the right. It is
empowering to know the plan.
Let us all press forward, drawing nearer to our Savior each
day. He loves us. He watches over us. I know that He lives.
With love,
Elder A. Jared Cummings






