A couple of weeks ago we were able to attend a baptism of a young girl. Her mother is Chinese and her father is Italian. This is one of the tender mercies of living in the International Ward. The first speaker was a member of the bishopric. He is an American working at the embassy. He gave his talk directly to the girl. It was in Chinese.
The rest of the meeting was in English, but at the end when she was confirmed and given the Gift of the Holy Ghost by her father, he did it in Italian. Evidently the girl, only eight years old, understands all three languages.
Last Sunday I was asked to teach the Gospel Essentials class. I had taught this chapter about priesthood before, but decided at the last minute to make some alterations. One in particular was to compare the priesthood to how electricity is conveyed from the power plant to the individual homes.
Having taught the lesson, I felt successful in helping those attending to understand that priesthood is a means of God sharing some of his Godly power and authority with us. I felt that the rest of what I taught turned out to be a flop. Throughout the rest of the day, I regretted not having done as well as I had intended.
That evening, we decided to take a walk before retiring. We were just turning off from the sidewalk to our building when the junior elder missionaries drove up and stopped us. They wanted to thank us for the Sunday School lesson earlier that day. It turned out that one of the investigators in class was Muslim and his educational background happened to be electrical. He told the elders that the example I used had helped him understand what priesthood was. Another tender mercy.
For the first time in my life, I was given an opportunity to sing with a quartet. I would never have chosen to do that, but they were desperate for a fourth person, so I agreed. To tell you the truth, I actually enjoyed it.
We sang "Abide With Me; 'Tis Eventide" for our zone conference. Diane played the piano.
In seminary we had a fun activity object lesson. I won't go into the details of it, but we had the students search for a treasure following four hints to find it. Part of the treasure were these bookmarks we gave each of them. On the back we wrote something personal to the student.
Seminary is coming to a close soon. We only have two more weeks. Actually, next week the kids are out of school. Then we have two weeks after that. We've worked pretty hard on seminary. We were even counting down the number of classes when we learned that the other ward's seminary teacher had to go back to the States because of her ailing father. She found substitutes for her class during the mornings, but that left us having to handle the Wednesday evening class she was going to teach. We were scrambling for a lesson when we remembered that Elder Skoubye is a patriarch in the Church. We asked if he would not mind teaching a class on patriarchal blessings. He agreed and he did.
What can you say about patriarchal blessings that you can't say in ten minutes? Well, both he and his wife shared personal experiences they had when he would give blessings. She told how she would record as he would pronounce the blessing and later transcribe it and have to add punctuation and all. She told us how amazing it was that they both remember each blessing with such clarity and after mailing them or literally handing them off, they had no memory of what was in the blessing.
He told the youth that after his first blessing, he felt that there was something missing. It disturbed him to the point that he could not sleep that night. He decided to read over the blessing again, hoping to find relief or figure out what he may have forgotten. As he did, he told us that the Spirit suddenly gave verbal direction. He was told, "Put an article here." "Extend this sentence with these words." He was amazed at all he was told and when he finished he felt the comfort of knowing it was exactly as the Lord wanted him to have it. He had recognized how special those spiritual promptings were and from then on, when he would pronounce a patriarchal blessing, he would only do it as he had learned to be prompted.
The tender mercy here was two-fold. One, that we didn't have to come up with a lame class on the spur of the moment, but two, and this is really special, the Spirit in the classroom was so strong. I even noticed one student who was there who rarely comes to seminary, stayed focused nearly the entire class. How wonderful was that?
Sister van Hoff and Sister Enger |
Elderberry blossoms |
Before we sign off, we have to tell you, we gave a presentation to the Europe Area Presidency. Actually, Sister van Hoff gave the presentation. It involves forming organized, multi-stake networking technology groups. The presidency approved our proposal, but to start it out with a pilot program, which was part of our plan. WhooHoo!!!
We are so excited. We have been working on this since last September. Yesterday, we chose the two areas where we will pilot the program and sent emails to those who will be involved.
It is our hope that this is what the Lord wants at this time. If the pilot program is successful, then we will know.
We are working on other projects as well. Here are some pictures of us testing out the best way to hold multi-ward (large group) video conferencing.
Setting up for large group video conferencing. |
Projecting computer screen onto a large screen. |
Main hub for audio and video out and in. |
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