Thursday, January 21, 2016

A Wonderful Week

(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.

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

Thursday, January 14, 2016

Happy New Year!

(Anziano Wilkinson) 
The past few weeks have been very busy for us. First of all, we survived the end of the year, the crazy Italians who shoot fireworks out their windows (which apparently is not that uncommon of a sight, I'll post a picture below), and the seemingly endless rain which followed for the entire week after.

We have seen a lot of progress in the people we are working with and have added several people to our teaching pool! One of those new is named Harish and he comes from India! He is getting his doctorate in mathematics at the University of Pisa and speaks fantastic English, but little Italian haha. However, apparently his courses are in English so his schooling is going just fine. He is fantastic and has made sure to teach Anziano Mattson and I how to properly eat Indian food. Who knew I'd learn the basics behind Indian cuisine while serving a mission in Italy!

While teaching him about the plan of salvation we asked him a question about what he believes happens after we die. He said he didn't have one anymore, but when he was younger he believed in the common Hindu belief of reincarnation. He said he stopped believing in reincarnation when he came up with a mathematical proof that proved it couldn't be true. Then he excitedly proceeded to tell us his proof. He's a funny guy for sure, but (although I'm not an expert on the subject) his proof seemed to make a lot of sense haha.

This week I've been thinking a lot about how I'm going to make this year better than any before (a hard task, considering how blessed I really am!). I think too often we think of New Years resolutions as things that apply to ourselves and thus we forget to think outwardly when we set goals for the new year. I think this may be part of the reason why basically 99% of New Years resolutions are not kept for longer than a month: they fail to see beyond ourselves and are thus too shallow! As I have been thinking, my thoughts have been turning constantly back to service. This year I want to serve more selflessly and seek actively for chances to help others; chances both big and small!

There is a verse in the Book of Mormon in Mosiah 2:17, which reads, "And behold, I tell you these things that ye may learn wisdom; that ye may learn that when ye are in the service of your fellow beings ye are only in the service of your God." This concept is such a profound one and tells us many things, among which is that God truly does love us! He rejoices when we are served by others and when we serve others because he knows that service brings gratitude and happiness to both the server and the served. In fact, the wording of this verse would seem to imply that he gets just as much joy from our service as the recipient!

The more we serve, the more we make those around us and ourselves happy. The more we serve, the more we please our Father in Heaven and in turn we are all blessed more! Service brings happiness and is by nature selfless (because serving ourselves isn't really service). So on that note I invite you all to join me in setting a goal to serve more and do so more selflessly this year! I know that as we do this that we will all be blessed and will find ourselves very uplifted by the year's end, and everyone else too!

Have a great week everyone, happy New Year, and don't forget to look for opportunities to serve!


-Anziano Jake Wilkinson

A Roman candle being shot out of a window.

We found a Chevy.  And it was a pickup truck no less!

Fresno YSA

(Elder Cummings)
Tuesday morning during personal study I got a phone call from the assistants...I was being transferred that night out of Hmong work to go be a zone leader in the Fresno Stake YSA ward until further notice.  Alright!  My bags were packed before companionship study got underway and the rest of the day flew by and I fell asleep that night in an apartment I had never been to with a companion I had never met before.

One thing that stood out to me right off the bat: white American single eighteen to thirty years olds laugh at different jokes than old Hmong women.  I was not funny to anyone.  I've never considered myself super-funny to begin with, but I was not the conversation killer.  I was pretty good at it too!  I didn't think the Hmong culture had effected me so much, but it did.  I'm a little weird now.  Now worries though, by now I'm back to being "normal."

Another thing: most people don't expect to cry because of spice when they eat dinner. I was actually a little surprised about that and even more surprised when I actually MISSED that!  It has been a week now without any crazy spicy peppers and I am actually craving them.

Third thing: being a missionary in a YSA ward is exhausting.  In the Fresno Mission YSA missionaries have a bedtime of 11:30 as opposed to the normal 10:30 for missionaries.  They do not, however, have the privilege of getting up an hour later than normal.  I had no idea how much of a difference one little hour of sleep could make.  I have been completely dead this week and one of my New Years resolutions, to be up by 6:00 every morning to have time for meaningful morning prayer, is already out the window, for now at least.  That will just be my vision for the end of the year instead of my demand for the beginning of it.

Perks of being a YSA missionary/zone leader include the pickup truck that we drive around town, a much more comfortable approach to teaching and finding, and a seemingly endless supply of Jamba Juice, Starbucks hot chocolate, and In and Out that the college aged people we visit dump on us.

The teaching is so strange.  It feels like more organized member missionary work.  We do really schedule "teaching appointments" per say, we text and see if we can "hang out and talk about Jesus."  There is a reason that works better for my generation.  Anyways, it has been a lot of fun to talk to people my age again.  It has been hard not to be around Hmong people and not be speaking Hmong, but since my companion, Elder Whitfield, is actually a Spanish missionary we have still been able to do language study.

The normally scheduled transfers are this coming Tuesday.  Saturday night we got the call outs for who was going where and I'm heading to a new area again.  I had just become comfortable with a whole different style of missionary work and now I am heading to who-knows-where with another new companion and I am just excited to go on another adventure!  I may have only been in this new area for a week, but I have done the work God needed me to do here.  I have been able to share my testimony with many who I never would have met.  My determination to be obedient to the commandments and missionary rules has increased.  I am so full of the Spirit and I love it!  I know that God has a specific plan for me and I am excited to see where it takes me!

This week in my scripture study has had the theme of the Grace of Jesus Christ.  This is a doctrine I do not understand thoroughly and for the most part I have never spent any time seriously pondering it.  As latter-day saints we have a tendency to focus on the "good works" part of living a Christian life to make it clear that we do not believe that salvation comes from accepting Christ as your Savior alone.  This leads many to believe that the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints believes in salvation by works.  We absolutely don't.  There is no salvation without grace.  Despite our best efforts we all will ALWAYS fall short of the perfection necessary to return to live with God.  This is what the prophet Nephi is getting at when he says that "it is by grace that we are saved, after all we can do." (2 Nephi 25:23).  We will never be able to qualify ourselves by our own merits alone and so it will never be by something we do alone that we are actually saved.

The function of grace is to bring the imperfect sinner to become clean and perfect so as to live with God again, "for no unclean thing can dwell there" (Moses 6:57).  Grace enables us to change who we are.  It doesn't force us to become something we aren't.  Grace, freely given, makes repentance possible!  That is so wonderful!  That we can progress to become someone worthy to live with our Father again!  The most wonderful thing about grace is that we can use it in our life TODAY to make those changes.  It is accessible NOW through faith in Jesus Christ and His Atonement, repentance, baptism, receiving the gift of the Holy Ghost, and enduring to the end.  All of that is using grace to change us.  All of that is what we must go through to return to live with God again.  We use grace to change, and once we have become a completely new creature perfected in Christ then we receive Salvation.  No grace, no salvation.  No works, the grace goes unused and the salvation made possible is not received.  Were it not for the Atonement of Christ we would be hopelessly lost.

I am so grateful to know my Savior.  He is the Son of the Most High God.  I know that He lives.  I know that He did suffer in agony for us so that we can be made free from the bonds of death and the chains of sin.  He is the Savior of all mankind.  He is my Lord and Redeemer.  He has a perfected body of flesh and blood and speaks to His living prophet today.  He is Alpha and Omega.  It will not be long before he reigns again triumphant on the earth.

I hope you all press forward this week and use the grace of Christ in your life to draw closer to God!

Lots of love,

Elder A. Jared Cummings

Tuesday, January 5, 2016

More Hmong New Years


(Elder Cummings)
It has been a while since I have had a preparation day (due to Hmong New Years), so sorry for not having sent anything last week and due to issues with the myldsmail server someone of you may not have gotten my email the week before.  No need to fear, I am still working hard in Fresno, and speaking better Hmong than ever.

So much has happened since I last wrote.  The world celebrated the birth of the Savior, the ward wished me a happy birthday, and the eight Hmong elders in the California Fresno Mission found 1,221 potential investigators in a week.  We are all absolutely exhausted, and just in time for the busiest time of the year for Hmong work.

Christmas in the mission field is something special.  I loved it.  Having your whole life, twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week dedicated on the Savior has given me a more completely perspective on just what Christmas is.  Jesus Christ came into the world to give his life for our sins, to give us strength to overcome our weaknesses, and to "take upon him [our] infirmities...that he may know according to the flesh how to succor his people" (Alma 7:12).  Jesus Christ, the Savior of all mankind, the God of Israel, the God of the whole earth, began his humble sojourn in the flesh in a humble manger in the small town of Bethlehem.  Christmas marks the coming of our Salvation.  Christmas is His day.

A birthday in the mission field is less "exciting."  We went to church, and then booked it straight over to the Big Fresno Fairgrounds to proselyte until the sun went down.  We ate dinner that night at a wonderful senior missionary couple's home.  Mom, we were all well fed for my birthday dinner.  We had salad, ribs, twice-baked potatoes and homemade apple pie.  I think I hit a real landmark of maturity that night.  Despite the ribs I did not get anything on my white shirt and tie.

Hmong New Years was an event unlike anything I have ever seen.  Thousands upon thousands of Hmong showed up to celebrate the end of the year from all over the world!  I talked with those from Massachusetts, Georgia, North and South Carolina, all over the west coast, all over California, Alaska, Canada, Arizona, Texas, Laos, Thailand,  and France.  Listening to someone speak Hmong with a french accent is a particular skill I have not quite developed, but the one I did meet asked for French speaking missionaries to come visit her at her home in a town just outside of Lyons, France.  All eight of the Hmong elders were there and we were working hard.  Elder Gray, one of the two newest additions found over 200 people through his own efforts! 

As part of the new year celebration the missionaries all dress up in Hmong clothes.  In the attached picture we have from left to right, me, in clothes designating me as a Thai-Hmong-American, Elder Gray in traditional White Hmong clothes, Elder Bagley also in White Hmong clothes, Elder Cunningham with a Green Hmong set plus a matching coin vest, Elder Richardson wearing traditional Americanized-Hmong clothes, Elder Pace eating an authentic Hmong churro, Elder Knapton wearing a White Hmong set with another matching coin vest and a pretty cool txoj siv (belt), and in the front we have Elder Ballard in his Green Hmong set.  The biggest difference between the difference clothing is the pants.  White Hmong is loose fitting, Green Hmong is essentially the original hammer pants, and Thai-Hmong which is pretty tight around the calves, and fit and look like a really cool pair of jogger pants.

And yes, that "temple" in the background is our booth.

I am very excited to press forward this next week and reconnect with the 169 potential investigators who live in the Fresno Hmong West area.  There are so many prepared people.  This is going to be fun!

It is 2016 now too.  2015 has left my life much changed.  I got into college, was struck with senioritis, had a miraculous post-graduation recovery, began my missionary service, left home, my older sister came home and I learned a second language.  The Lord has blessed me with so much and I am excited to see what he has in store for me this year.  I am excited to see what he has in store for all of you this year.

Thank you for you Christmas and birthday wishes! Make 2016 count!


Elder A. Jared Cummings

Me with General Vang Pao.  I've been telling Hmong people that he is my grandfather to much laughter.  In the Hmong culture when you respect someone you refer to their last name first, first name last.  Vang Pao is Pao Vang, and since I am a Vang we are related...somehow.
Tub Txib translates more directly to what the calling of a misisonary is, "son sent."  The one on the left is in Green Hmong and the one of the right is White Hmong.  On the name tag the change is subtle, but this was I can reach out to more of the people we teach by being more a part of their specific language culture. 
Walmart run with Elder Gray: This was a fun one, so many people were giving us funny looks, but we needed to get some water for all the thirsty missionaries back at the booth.

The booth - just before take down.  Kayla was a temple missionary, and I so was I...kind of.


Thursday, December 31, 2015

Hmong New Years

(Elder Cummings)
Hmong New Years is completely exhausting.  We have receive 450 referrals in the last three days, 203 of them are from today alone.  We have been working hard!  I got myself some Hmong clothes of my own that I love!  I'm not wearing the top right now, but here is a picture of the ankle of them.  They cost me $145, which was a really sweet deal.  A recent convert gave me a Hmong cap for my birthday too.  That with the Hmong clothes plus my curly hair makes me look like a Jewish boy.  I'll send you a picture of the hat too.

It was great to see you on Christmas!  I love you all.  I will be writing more next week!

With love,

Jared

Happy New Year!

(Anziano Wilkinson)

I hope everyone had a great Christmas and enjoyed spending lots of time with family and eat lots of good food! It was exciting for me to be able to skype my family and catch up with them a little more face to face, or rather, screen to screen! My companion and I had some great food and had the pleasure of trying some new Italian dishes, and some old classics; the main dish was lasagna. As typical in Italian culture, this lovely family wouldn't let us leave without stuffing ourselves full of food. Hey, no complaints here! We also got the chance to watch a Disney movie, so my comp and I chose Frozen since neither of us had seen it.

After the big holiday we hit the pavement again and have begun to find lots of new people to teach, which is an exciting way to start the new year! As usual we're setting goals and making plans to make this new year a great one. Which for me includes learning how to cook Italian food better! I've decided that I will make a Ragu (back in the states we call it red pasta sauce with meat in it) on New Year's Eve since we have to return home early that evening. Apparently Italians take their New Years parties pretty seriously. I'll let you all know by next week next week if I live through it! But for now, have a great New Years, set some awesome goals, and achieve some amazing things!


-Anziano Jake Wilkinson

Thursday, December 24, 2015

Christmas is almost here!

(Anziano Wilkinson)
The exciting day is almost upon us and the countdown is getting smaller and smaller. Christmas is almost here! There is probably not a more exiting day of the year for a missionary! I can't wait to skype home to my family soon; they're probably just as weird as ever, but I still miss them to death and can't wait to hear their voices!

So with all the Christmas spirit people have been feeling, we've started to accumulate a lot of lunch appointments (which made the grocery shopping really easy this week). So we're pretty excited for this opportunity to fill ourselves with some good old Italian food! And also were excited for the chance to bring a nice Christmas message to each of their homes, because Christmas is a missionary's favorite topic to talk about! (Or, at least, it's my favorite haha).

So a few weeks ago I was struck by the accounts of the savior's birth that are contained in the book of Luke and in the Book of Mormon. They talk about the same event but from radically different perspectives and yet the power behind both accounts is tangible. So for Christmas this year I invite everyone to read Luke chapter 2 and Third Nephi chapter 1 and ponder upon the importance of the birth of a savior! I know that a savior was indeed born for us. I know that he suffered for us and I know that he died for us. And last of all he rose from the dead that we too might have the chance to do so as well! I am so grateful for his gift to us and I rejoice at the wonderful opportunities that this opens up for us! We have a savior. His name is Jesus Christ. Find him and learn of him; there is no more rewarding venture in the whole universe!

Merry Christmas everyone and enjoy the festivities!


-Anziano Jake Wilkinson