We, Sister Jansen, Sister Aldredge, and I are very happy and very busy here in Kaunas, Lithuania. We are seeing immediate results from our mission fast, in people's receptiveness, and in personal progress. We are working hard to make more effective the planning/preparing phase of missionary work with the work itself. We're putting in lots of dedicated hours, and the Lord has truly helped people open their hearts and doors to us. This week, I really want to help my sisters teach better by letting them work through some new principles to teach. The Lord has helped us to become bountiful finders, but the real test now, is whether we found those who have true interest and can adequately teach and invite them to make progress. It's crazy being the oldest out here. I know that we are finding, and now the work is ours to teach in order to baptize. We're going to need to build our courage and our confidence, and I'm sure the Lord will qualify us. It's relieving, when we allow the spirit to testify to us that our best is enough, and then we can do as is written: "Those that wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength." Truly, we've been given wings .
Things have been a little topsy turvy. I feel like we've had a lot thrown on us all at once, and yet it's all turning out to be a fun adventure. The experience that typifies this last few weeks, would be the one that my companion, Sister Aldredge wrote home about me. "We went to this member's house... and they have this dog named Lordas (Lorde when you address him... anyways) I kid you not, they opened the door, the three of us walked in, and it was literally the scene from Without a Clue where Sherlock gets taken out by that dog, ya know? I just see one of my companions get taken out by this huge beast of a dog, who pins her and starts licking her face :). I was laughing SO hard! Then we sat down and he jumped up and sat in her lap like he was a little mini poodle or something! Oh man, it was so great! I don't think I've ever had such a hard time keeping in the laughter (because this isn't unacceptable behavior for dogs here... their dogs are like a child)." In a word, we're laughing all the time, while I'm getting my face mercilessly licked.
The weather has been a little unpredictable. The rain was half-frozen for a day last week, it was so cold. I couldn't believe that the end of June could be so wet! We're a pretty small district here in Kaunas. We've got one pair of Elders and ourselves to proselyte through the whole city. We've got a wonderful support system from the members. The branch is much smaller here in Kaunas. The primary is much smaller, but we're hoping to find and teach more families with young children. I wish I could describe the life we've got here. We wear skirts, we talk to all sorts of people in the town centers. We're surrounded by centuries of Catholic tradition. The people here are very believing, almost to the point of mysticism. It's a refreshing change from the choking materialism of the "modern" world. Though Lithuanians now mostly live in flats, their blood is in the Kaimes, or country. The still very much cling to the village mind-set, being very hard-working, self-sufficient, with plenty of village-gossip to keep things interesting.
Ata,
Sister Paul
No comments:
Post a Comment