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Showing posts with label testimony. Show all posts
Showing posts with label testimony. Show all posts

11.26.2014

interview with lindsey stirling

So on Tuesday evening Bonnie L. Oscarson and David L. Beck (young men and young women general presidents of the Church) met with world-renowned (I even met fans of hers in Belgium!) dancing violinist Lindsey Stirling and did this really cool broadcast called a face2face, which essentially just means it was a live interview and that youth from all over the world could ask Lindsey questions.

I watched it and loved it! I love her testimony of our Savior, Jesus Christ. I love that she keeps her standards, and that her team calls them "Lindsey rules" on tours. I love that she is real with these kids. She isn't ashamed of sharing her own experiences to help them.


Share this with friends! Share it with family! Her story is inspirational and she has great things to say!


P.S. If you're interested, there was also one with David Archuleta on the 24th of June! You can find that video here.

11.02.2014

starting again

So...

I'd like to apologize for writing that post about being back and how I was going to keep a record of my efforts to build the Kingdom and such, because I said that and then I didn't start recording any of that. The truth is that the last six weeks have been surreal. I have trouble speaking English. I have trouble not eating the food I'm used to. I have trouble having free time (wish I could have told my mission self that one!). I have trouble not planning every second of every day. And... I have trouble getting the motivation to start doing some of the things that I did before I left. Blogging is one of them. So it's taken me a while to really want to write anything. The good news is that I think I'm ready to start documenting my spiritual journey here. And that's mostly because I feel like this is one of the ways that I can truly continue to "paint [my missionary badge] on [my] heart."


I'm glad I came to that conclusion, because that's honestly been one of the hardest things about being back. I'm not entirely sure how one goes about doing missionary work at home. I've been so unsure about how to be an effective member missionary - how to continue to make a difference and help the Lord in His glorious work. But I am convinced that this blog, among a couple other things I've been figuring out, will help me be able to share what the Lord wants me to share.

I realized on my mission that we don't just belong to a Church. We belong to a lifestyle. Being a member of the Church of Jesus Christ means not only attending Sunday meetings, but living the way that the Savior lived. Loving as He loved. Using that love to become a better, stronger person. Doing our best to live up to our divine potential. We are children of our Heavenly Father, who sent His only Begotten Son to suffer and die for us to enable us to not only return to our Heavenly Father, but also to be okay along the way. To find happiness in enduring. To find motivation to reach out to others and serve. To bring as many as we can with us!

I went to my YSA (Young Single Adult) ward today and it was awesome. It was probably the first time I've been to all three hours of church since I've been home due to homecomings and things. The peace I felt was wonderful. I went to the temple last night and the peace was wonderful. I love the peace I feel after a good talk with my Heavenly Father. Or reading my scriptures! Spending time with my family! Basically I just love that it's so easy to feel my Heavenly Father's love. I mean, He sent His Son for us! And Jesus Christ Himself... Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends! (John 15:13) We are so loved. God is watching out for us. He's given us tons of things to help us out of hardship and lift us up! I'm so grateful for that. I have no idea where I'd be without all those things and the knowledge that I have that I am His daughter.God lives. Christ lives. I love Them! I'm so grateful that the Spirit has testified those things to me.

Life is good. I think it's safe to say that, though I miss many things about my mission, I'm okay. :)

2.18.2013

if you haven't seen this...

You should. I might have cried like a little baby... I'll never tell...



Just kidding, I totally bawled.

I feel so honored to be a part of it all. What an incredible thing to be a part of - it is so amazing to me that I am able to be one of the first. One of the flood - I go in the first real week of foreign missionaries who put papers in after the age was changed. Everything with my papers went so smoothly... There's a reason I'm going when and where I'm going... And that is so cool to me!

On another note, you guys, it is so amazing to me how many people have answered the call to serve.

The ages were not changed for convenience.
The ages were changed to hasten this work.
This is so much bigger than, "Sweet! I get to go on a mission two years earlier than I thought I could!"
This means that the Lord wants His gospel spread now.
It means that the world is ready for the work to go forth rapidly.

Wow. These next few years will bring many miracles, I think.

Hope you enjoyed the video! I know I did!


PS I only have 30 days left! Wednesday it'll be four weeks exactly!


1.13.2013

Testimony

My heart is so full right now. I just really need to write it all down... I'd like to talk about our Fast and Testimony meeting today, and bear my own testimony.

As I walked in to Sacrament meeting, I debated whether or not I wanted to bear my testimony today. Last year, one of my resolutions was to get up to the pulpit every testimony meeting of the year, and I accomplished that, so I didn't feel like I needed to because it had been a long time, and I didn't have something that I felt I needed to share with people, necessarily. 

I had been asked to say the opening prayer, so if I did get up, it would be for the second time in the meeting, which I counted as a con: Though I am not a shy person, I am not overly confident when I am speaking in front of an entire congregation of people. Singing in that situation is preferable because, though I worry about my voice cracking or saying the wrong words, I know exactly what words and notes I am supposed to sing. 

While the young men passed the sacrament, I decided that it would be to my benefit to bear my testimony; I need all of the practice I can get before March, when I'll be bearing it daily, because though I am sure of my testimony, I am not sure of my speech. I don't consider myself great with words. I tend to ramble and change topics in rapid succession when I bear my testimony, and it makes me wonder if even the Spirit can follow what I say... Let's be honest, I'm rambling right now!

Well, the first person to get up with Elder Kikuchi, an Ameritus Seventy who lives in my ward. He bears his testimony every Fast Sunday that he is in town, and it is always amazing, but this time it was different - more personal. He spoke of how his wife recently became very sick. Her lung cancer, which had been in remission, was discovered to have not only reappeared in her trachea, but spread to her brain, where the doctors found not one, but several tumors. Elder and Sister Kikuchi were upset and frightened, but they had faith, and prayed and fasted that she would come out of things all right - He said that it was a very difficult time. 

The scans were done just before Christmas, and as the holidays commenced, many doctors where not available to do further tests, but there was one man, a Latter-day Saint, who graciously scheduled to see her on the 31st. As they were walking in to the hospital, Sister Kikuchi turned to her husband and told him that the Lord had healed her. After an MRI, and then another nuclear MRI to make sure that what he was seeing was correct, the doctor, confirmed what she had said - both the tumors in her brain and the cancer in her trachea were completely gone. Before they had the opportunity to tell their family members, their son's 8-year-old son came in to his parents' room in the middle of the night - "Mom? Dad? Grandma is okay. She is healed." It was an incredible story, and equally as incredible was the timeline - this all happened between the end of November and now.

As you may imagine, Elder Kikuchi's testimony of the power of faith brought many people up to the stand. I waited for a few, who all spoke just as powerfully as Elder Kikuchi, mostly about recent miracles which they have experienced or witnessed. By this time I was in tears because the Spirit's presence in the room was so strong. I stopped thinking about what I was going to say, stood up, and walked to the pulpit, where I tried, as best I could, to say, as Alma says, "the smallest part which I [felt]." I had a really difficult time, actually, because I was crying so hard, but, though I knew I hadn't said everything that I felt, I knew that the Spirit had conveyed the message that I wanted my ward to hear, through my otherwise almost powerless words.

I am so grateful for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. I don't know where I would be without it, but I do know that there's a large possibility it would be a very dark place. I love the Gospel of Jesus Christ. I love Him, for everything that He has done for not only me, but for everyone who has come, and will come, to this earth. As another sister said in my meeting today, I know that He died for me, and that, even if I were the only soul who chose to come to earth, He still would have suffered in Gethsemane, and died for me on the cross. I am so grateful for His Atonement - the knowledge that I have the opportunity, through His infinite grace, to return to live with Him and my Father in Heaven is so tremendous to me! When I think about it, I feel this overwhelming joy that is better than any other feeling I've ever experienced, and I understand why those before me have said, "Hosanna!" because that is what my heart feels when I think of Him.




 16 Therefore, let us aglory, yea, we will bglory in the Lord; yea, we will rejoice, for our joy is full; yea, we will praise our God forever. Behold, who can glory too much in the Lord? Yea, who can say too much of his great power, and of his cmercy, and of his long-suffering towards the children of men? Behold, I say unto you, I cannot say the smallest part which I feel.              
                                                                               --Alma 26:16

why I'm serving

So this is going to be a HUGE post, but I'd like to share the story of why I want to go on a mission, and how I've come this far.

As long as I can remember, I have had a strong desire to serve a mission. That desire has grown through various experiences, but it has been there since I was a little girl. I was always the loudest voice whenever we sang "I Hope They Call Me on a Mission" in Primary. I remember, when I was 7 or 8, singing "We’ll Bring the World His Truth" with my mom for my uncle's mission farewell when he went to the England London Mission. We got to take him to the airport to see him off, and I thought it was so cool that he got to go to England to teach people about Church! Church was so fun! Everyone should get to go to church! 

Some years later - I think I was maybe 12 or 13, an older friend of mine (like nine years older than me) decided that she was going to serve a mission. I had looked up to her as long as I'd known her, so I always watched her as an example... My desire to serve my own mission was strengthened tenfold as I saw her prepare, receive her call to the Spain Madrid mission, and become the first missionary I would ever write. Her letters, though we did not exchange many, gave me great insight that I had not previously had as to what missions were actually like. She greatly inspired and influenced my decision to serve.

When I was 14, I received my patriarchal blessing. The Stake Patriarch was a man I had never met. As he laid his hands on my head and started to speak, I knew that he was called of God - he spoke about things that he could not have known about except through divine revelation. I waited for him to say something specific about a mission; to tell me flat out that, if I lived according to the Gospel, I would serve a mission. He didn't. He did, however, tell me I would bring people to the gospel - just not the means. I knew it didn't mean that I wouldn't go, and continued to feel that strong desire to serve.

Over the next five years, I had several more desire and testimony building experiences. There were a few times I believed the Spirit had witnessed to me that I would serve, but I was never certain, because I knew that my 21st birthday was far away, and a lot could happen before then.As I started college and watched friends and fellow students start to seriously date and get married, I realized that, though I did not want to get married before serving a mission, it was a possibility. I decided that if, before I was 21, I dated a man and, after much prayer and deliberation, was answered that I was supposed to marry him, I would do it. I would trust in the Lord, and follow His game plan. However, I still had a burning desire to serve, and held out hope that I would be able to go. 

This last October in General Conference, when President Thomas S. Monson announced the age change (from 19 to 18 for men, 21 to 19 for women), the course of my life changed. I didn't have to wait any longer! My 19th birthday was just a few weeks away. I set up an interview with the bishop of my Young Single Adult ward at school, as well as scheduling appointments with both my advisor and the man over my research scholarship. I discovered that, school-wise, everything would work out perfectly! When I met with my bishop the next Tuesday, he had not yet received word from the bishop of my home ward, so he could not give me access to mission papers online yet. He told me to pray, fast, and study my scriptures to make sure that what I wanted was also the Lord's will, and to come back the following Sunday. He also read me this:


 Behold, you have not understood; you have supposed that I would give it unto you, when you took no thought save it was to ask me. 
 But, behold, I say unto you, that you must astudy it out in yourbmind; then you must cask me if it be right, and if it is right I will cause that your dbosom shall eburn within you; therefore, you shallffeel that it is right.
 But if it be not right you shall have no such feelings, but you shall have a astupor of thought that shall cause you to forget the thing which is wrong; therefore, you cannot write that which isbsacred save it be given you from me.
                                                                                 --Doctrine and Covenants 9:7-9

I had not really thought much about that before. What if I wasn't supposed to serve a mission, even though everything seemed to be working out in favor of it? Suddenly, after knowing it was what I wanted to do for almost my entire life, I was unsure. I wanted to do the Lord's will, but it was so hard for me to think about the possibility that, after a lifetime of desiring, a mission might not be what the Lord wanted for me. I did what the my bishop and the scripture said, but I didn't feel like I was getting an answer. Sunday came and I told my bishop that I would like to open my papers regardless. Even as I filled out my papers and went to the required doctor and dentist appointments, I did not feel like I had an answer yet.

I finished my papers on a Tuesday, and my bishop sent them to the Stake level. The Stake Executive Secretary called, and I set up an appointment with a member of the Stake Presidency for the next Sunday. As time went on, I became more and more worried that what I thought was the lack of an answer might actually be the "stupor of thought" that the Lord speaks of in D&C 9:9. 

That Friday, I attended a wonderful Religion in Life devotional at our Institute. The sister who spoke, I believe her name was Sister Olsen, talked about her mission story - she did not want to serve a mission, but her bishop had asked her to consider it. She prayed about it, but did not feel like she was getting an answer, so she assumed that the Lord was leaving it up to her, and decided that she wasn't going. A friend of hers attended a devotional where an older sister spoke about receiving answers to prayers, and suggested that Sister Olsen come talk to this her and get her opinion on the situation. When asked, the older sister told her that she believed that the reason Sister Olsen was still concerned about the situation, despite her decision not to go, was that she had in fact received an answer, and it was a yes.

As wonderful as the devotional was, I started to doubt more than I ever had before. In my notes from the devotional, I wrote, "Have I already gotten my answer?" and "I need to be open to the Lord's will, even if His will is that I stay here." I was upset, and, as I thought about it more, I actually began to feel physically sick. I biked back to my apartment, took the stairs two at a time, entered my door, and called my mother.

I felt horrible - what if my answer really was no? What would I tell my bishop and the Stake Presidency? I knew that they'd understand, but I felt like I'd be letting them down, after taking up time they could have spent interviewing other people. Despite my dismay at the thought of what might happen, I decided that if my answer really was no, I would stay home, even if it was hard. I also felt that, either way, everything would make sense after my interview. My dark feeling turned into tears as I told my mom about the devotional and my doubts. She consoled me as best she could, but also told me that my fears could very well be real. She also reminded me that, if I felt darkly, maybe the feeling wasn't the Holy Ghost - maybe it was Satan. I'd forgotten about the power of adversary in my search for an answer. After discussing this possibility, because it was very definitely a dark feeling, my mom advised me to continue praying and studying until my interview - maybe by then I'd have a definite answer.

After what seemed like an eternity, my Sunday appointment rolled around. I walked into the office of President Rigby, the second counselor in the Stake Presidency. After an opening prayer and introductions both ways, he started the interview. I answered all of his questions, a little bit nervous that he'd tell me I wasn't supposed to go, or that I'd receive a definite answer that this was not what I was supposed to be doing. He asked me a few questions about my papers, made a few corrections... and the he asked me why I wanted to serve a mission.

As I pondered his question, I was overcome by an overwhelming sense of joy. I told him why - I am so grateful for Gospel of Jesus Christ in my life, and I cannot bear to think that there are people out there who cannot partake in its blessings simply because they don't know about them! I realized that even though I did not know where I would be serving, I already loved the people there, wherever it was. I told him as much, and he told me that feeling will only grow. He congratulated me on my decision, told me he would send my papers on to Salt Lake later that day, and we closed with a prayer. The whole time I kept thinking, "I got my answer! I got my answer! I'm supposed to go! How could I not see it before!? I got my answer!"

As hard as those few weeks of doubt were, they were so worth it. If anything, they made me more sure about my decision in the end. To feel that immense darkness and then to feel overwhelming light so close together made everything so much more poignant. Really, I'm grateful for that horrible feeling, because it made the light seem that much brighter.

A week and a half later, I received my call. As I read the letter I tried not to read ahead, but I failed and almost started to cry. Belgium/Netherlands Mission, Dutch-speaking, March 20th! I took a deep breath and read it out loud to my family and friends, including my grandparents on Skype, who are serving in their mission in the same place! My dad's ancestors are all from the Netherlands. It is a literal occurrence of "the hearts of the children... [turning] to their fathers." When I touch down in the Netherlands after I leave the MTC, I will be in the land of my ancestors.

It's amazing to me how much of a story there is to tell. It all just started with a little girl who wanted more people to experience Church. I have come so far since, and will only grow more in the next 66 days until the MTC, and then in the next 18 months. I am so grateful for the opportunity that I have to help the work along, and to serve my Heavenly Father as well as my Savior Jesus Christ. I'm so excited to increase my love for the people of Belgium and the Netherlands through service! I know that if I live the way the Gospel teaches, and listen for answers when I pray, I will not only have success, but also learn, grow, and mature into the woman who I am supposed to be.