Tuesday, November 19, 2013
November 18, 2013
Oi Familia!
Our baptisms all fell this week but we´ve still got quite a few possibles for this week. Lais´dad didn´t sign the paperwork because of her ``behavior`` but we´re going to talk to him again this week. It´s funny, for every single parent who has signed the paperwork, their kid backed down in the end. And conversely, all of the teenagers who still want to be baptized have parents who won´t give permission. We´re making slow progress with Oridette, and I´m starting to not think she is such a Bruxa. She actually likes us now, but she still isn´t letting Sandrielle go to church. We offer every day to clean her yard, do her laundry, cut her toenails, ANYTHING. No one ever lets us do service here :( It´s actually really funny sometimes. Asking to help with dishes after lunch is basically a joke now because the answer is always no. Brasilians are funny. They tell you to eat more then right after they tell you you´re getting fat. I love the honesty haha
This transfer is FLYING. I can´t even believe it. It seems like Sister De Paula just got here. I am still praying to stay here. Jaqueline is probably the biggest miracle of this area. She deserves a little more written about her. I already talked a little bit about her but she´s a recent convert with two teenage kids, Bia and Hercules, and she´s shorter than I am. She has cancer and some days she can´t even get out of bed, but she is honestly doing more work than us at this point. She brings almost all of our investigators to church, talks to the parents of all the teenagers, calls everyone to remind them of church, even the people who don´t live on her block. We really need to be careful now because she was so upset about the last baptism that fell that she got really sick and didn´t go to church. Most, okay, all of our success right now is because of her. And she keeps insisting that she doesn´t do enough. I think she needs to be an example to our other members who have cars and won´t even pick people up to go to church. Jaqueline is an angel. Absolutely the craziest, feistiest woman I´ve ever met, but she´s an angel.
This week has just been about staying animated and happy, even when things are going wrong. Losing energy ALWAYS has to do with one of the Christlike atributes in PMG. If you aren´t sleeping enough or excersizing, that´s obedience. Otherwise it´s faith, hope, patience, diligence, charity or something else that´s missing. Be of good cheer! God´s work can´t be frustrated, His plan has already won. The problem is always yourself.
We definitely have some awesome cooks in our ward, especially desserts. Every meal has rice, beans, and spaghetti. EVERY MEAL. My favorite thing here is Lasagna. Before I go home I´m going to buy little metal desert bowls so I can make Mouse and other delicias :) Mouse is the best thing on the planet. Mouse de Maracuja and Mouse de Limão.
I love you guys! Keep smiling! When in doubt, just break into song!
Com abraçãos,
Sister Moore
Wednesday, November 13, 2013
November 11, 2013
Querida Familia,
This was probably the coolest week of my whole mission so far. Just as I thought, Venis was the first to be baptized and it was everything a baptism should be. Well, except for the fact that she didn´t go to sacrament because of a family conflict and we had to get a ride from a member to go to another ward fifteen minutes before the baptism.. but all´s well that ends well. The seminary teacher gave us a ride and she is pretty much my favorite person in the ward. The difference in this baptism really was the help of the ward. Everyone did their part. She was a reference from Jaqueline, who really has gone through a rapid change. What started as manipulative has ended with her really wanting to give references, even to the other Sisters, for the sake of the people being taught, not to make us visit her. Her daughter Bia too, who didn´t know what a prophet was in her baptism interview, is actually helping us teach and find people. She´s only 13. It´s so awesome.
The baptism had everyone who needed to be there, investigators, the young women´s president, Jefersone the seminary teacher, just everything was perfect. The spirit was so beautiful. And yes, I sang. Not sure the name of the song but it´s number 65 in the Portuguese Hino so you can probably look it up. After the baptism, Amanda told us she wants to be baptised but her mom won´t let her. This is a huge problem with everyone right now so we´re really praying about parents. The saddest case is Sandrielle, who is literally locked in her house by her Grandma Oridette. Praying for a miracle! I want to be the good fairy who saves her :( She was crying one day when her Grandma didn´t let her go to seminary. I hardly ever her see her now.
A MIRACLE happened with Lais. The day after she told us she wanted to wait, she had a dream. A DREAM. This is the kind of thing missionaries joke about happening. An angel literally came to her and said that what those two girls are telling you is true, and you need to follow this path. WOW. We were all crying. God really loves his children and WILL answer in a way that we will understand. Lais is so special. She is only 13 but looks and acts 20. Luckily her parents are cool, but they still want her to wait which is frustrating. Satan is so ready to snatch up the good ones... she already told us she wants to wait until December because she has tests this month but we talked her out of it. Next week!! Prayers please!!
Ah, so many cool lessons. Dagna is no longer progressing even though she comes to church. She knows the church is true, but she needs to come follow the savior and stop putting off baptism. The coolest thing about her is her 6 year old son. He loves church more than anyone I´ve ever met and he doesn´t even go to primary. Dagna told us that he never was like that in the catholic church, that he always wanted to leave. He´s even inviting friends, telling them we have a little snack (the sacrament). SO CUTE. They came to the baptism but Dagna didn´t seem too affected. It´s really these little kids that know. We have another, Joao Paulo, who just LOVES me and Sister Seal. We´re teaching his whole family but he´s the coolest. The only thing is that he tries to hug us constantly and we can´t.. ugh worst rule ever. Hopefully soon I´ll have pictures of these two little amiginhos.. at their family´s baptism..
Now to explain the pictures. We had an activity with mostly, okay, only youth about the tree of life. They had to follow the rod and we had some people leading them astray. Almost everyone let go but it was really funny, we gave everyone another chance, or 4 chances, and they all made it to the tree of life :) See the beautiful fruit bowl we made?
I cut my own hair this week! Haha
The one picture was supposed to be us jumping but it went too early.. I thought it was funnier that way.
The other people in the last picture are Jaqueline, Bia and Amanda.
OH YEAH! Bia and Amanda, who isn´t even a member, wanted to go contacting with us last night after the baptism and they literally took us to everyone´s house that they knew. I couldn´t even believe it. We didn´t even have to do anything but follow them and mark a day to come teach. SO COOL. Now we just need some cool young men. The men of this world need to step it up a bit ;)
Joao Pessoa.. I don´t really know how to describe. It gets more beautiful every day to me. We have two baixos that we work in, Mangabeira and Bancarios. Bancarios has the supermarket and the high end apartments. In general, Brasil is still not as rich as America, but it seems like it in comparison with Mangabeira. We have two principal roads with lots of clothing shops, salons, churches, bars, and other things. Everything is pretty open. The houses are squished together in Mangabeira with walls or gates in front of each one. There are lots of beautiful flowers and trees. It´s poor, but I´ve never seen a dirt floor. A lot of people have tiny houses with a huge TV and everyone, even the poor people have at least 3 cell phones. Not sure why. The mission home is close by, we take a bus. The farthest area I think is an hour away from it. We´re right in Joao Pessoa. I´m literally praying to stay in this area because I love it so much.
My name tag says Sister so that people don´t think I´m Catholic haha here it´s pronounced seeshteh. Dad is gonna love my nordestina accent, it´s almost a different language.
I got your letter! We really only get mail once a month or if we have to go to the mission office for some other reason. I really want sandals, there are some here that I think will work for R$80 (about 40 dollars), but without my card I´m a little stuck. Wells Fargo does not exist here, Bradesco is all we are allowed to use. Hopefully I can get letters before December, but we´ll see. If you want to still get me Sandals, just compare them with shoes I already have for size. I´m definitely closer to a 7 than a 6. Anything neutral. It´s all better than my other options haha
I really am reading the things you say, but I´m already out of time! It´s sounds like everythings great! Praying for you all. I love you so much! Christmas is just around the bend!
Beijinhos e abraços,
Sister Moore
Monday, November 11, 2013
November 4, 2013
Oh my gosh since when are your Halloween costumes that legit? Jealous. Know what I did for Halloween? Fasted with my zone..
But seriously this week was infinitely better than the last!! The biggest miracle is the group of teenagers that are ALL getting baptized. Now I have some pride issues telling this story, Mom, because it has to do with seminary. So we have a recent convert, Jaqueline, who is completely obsessed with my companion and calls all the time. I haven´t talked much about her because I think we waste way too much time at her house and she is very, VERY manipulative. Even though I think it´s mostly to get us to come visit her, she spends all day calling everyone she knows to see who wants to hear our lessons and come to church. At first I was super irritated because I thought her references were all out of nowhere and that no one was interested and we were just spending all day talking to super noncommittal teenagers. Which was the case for a while. But then we taught this really cool 15-year-old girl Venis, and I was shocked at how much she actually understood and the questions she asked. Because of her, we have now been personally bringing 4 girls to seminary and counting. This really is a miracle situation. Everyone wants to go to seminary, like it´s the cool thing to do now. We participated in one class and it´s just so cool I don´t even understand it. We marked the baptism of Venis, Lais and Paula and I just know the rest are going to follow. Another cool thing is that they are starting to dress modest and no one even told them to. It´s the cutest thing ever. Venis gave me a sticker from her notebook (all notebooks here have stickers) to keep on the back of my name tag to always remember her. She really is something special and I know this is the start of something huge. One girl has already brought her whole family to church. FUTURE MISSIONARIES. Last night we also marked the baptism of a 16 and 18 year old, both boys. Man, the men in this church need to step it up because the girls are sure excelling ;) Also, I have this horrible feeling I´m going to be seminary teacher someday.
It´s finally Christmas! Haha not really but it´s always Christmas in our apartment, and our ward apparently too because we´ve been singing Christmas hymns since September. So funny. The power went out at Jaqueline´s house one time and she lit candles and I started singing silent night in Portuguese and everyone joined in, even her crazy dad who sits in the same spot outside all day. It´s so hard to tell funny stories in emails..
I have a few nicknames that I think especially Dad would enjoy; Pequenina, Pequena Sereia, Bebezinha and my favorite, Ovelinha. One of our investigators called me Ovelinha and Sister Seal is Cabritona, which means little lamb and big goat. We were laughing so hard. Sister Seal does have a really intense and forcive way of teaching, which is good most of the time. I think she could breath a little more often haha and I think she knows that.
Dad, I appreciated your letter a lot and those pictures. You´re gonna make me cry! I love you lots! You´d be sad to know I haven´t heard Bossa Nova here even once, it´s been replaced by either American or Brazilian pop :( There´s one member, Izaira, who loves classical music and jazz. I wish you could see how cool the members are here and how much the church has grown. It´s just like any other ward, but a little noisier :) Testimony meeting is the best, and everyone always says the most perfect things.
I promise I´ll have pictures next time! Pray for the baptism of Leonice, Anderson, Fernando, Eliane, Dagna, Lais, Juliana and Venis this week. I know it´s always a ton of possibles and I think the ones who really are going to be baptized are Leonice, Lais and Venis. Cleonice was finally confirmed and I can breath a little! So much reason for rejoicing this week!! The Lord´s work is amazing, because it´s HIS work. All we really need is to be humble and obiedient!
Well I´ve gotta go but I hope you all have an awesome week! I love you so much!
Beijinhos,
Sister Moore
Wednesday, October 30, 2013
October 28, 2013
Querida Família!
I can already tell this is going to be a very hard transfer, but I´m just trying to stay positive. If you lose the excitement in missionary work here, it will just get worse and worse. One day was particularly bad, every appointment fell through and we one street contact that was so lackluster that we just had to laugh or else we would´ve cried. Jesus Christ never had an off-day where he just didn´t feel like talking to anyone. He gave everything, even for the people who wouldn´t give Him the time of day.
Dagna is pretty much just staying in place, she stood us up twice and didn´t come to church Sunday. Eduarda´s family didn´t come either, the dad is the only one who is really interested, so I´m still hoping for him to keep commitments and find an answer. Right now we are having the most success working on the street of two recent converts, Jaqueline and Eduardo. They know everyone and just keep giving us references. The only problem is that they´re almost all teenagers and kids and we have to talk to their parents.
I really am still doing well and am not complaining, I just think there´s something to be learned from every hard situation. I know Brasil is the place where I´m meant to learn certain things. Here, if you aren´t baptizing weekly, you know something is going wrong. There´s always a mountain of problems but the challenge is finding solutions that are doable and will help you slowly improve each day. I´m kind of an idealist, and this month I´m praying for patience. Awful thing to pray for haha.. but just because things aren´t immediately better doesn´t mean they aren´t improving. Sister Seal says I have a gift for finding problems, which can be good, but without solutions or patience it can definitely add up to tons and tons of problems. The thing that keeps me going is knowing that there is something I need to learn, that I need to change and DO in order to learn it. That´s why we have so many commitments and programs in the church that call for action; covenants, personal progress, priesthood.
In John 7:17, Christ gives the ultimate test to know if anything is true: DO IT. No one can know this Gospel is true through thinking about it, only through living it!
I don´t really have anything to take pictures of, I don´t carry my camera around. I do have some favorite scriptures that I´ve found on the mission! The beginning of Romans 5 is my favorite about patience. I guess the Romans were impatient people, because that book has a lot on patience. Also I love in the last chapter of Timothy II where Paul says ``I have fought a good fight, I have finished my course, I have kept the faith``. That verse just stays in my head all the time.
Finally, I love in Ether 6 when the Jaredites are crossing the waters for almost a year and they never stop singing and praising day and night. Being in that little boat for a whole year doesn´t really sound fun, but the wind never stopped blowing towards the promised land and the lights never went out. The symbolism of that whole story is so beautiful.
I love you all so much and am so glad you are doing missionary work! Dad, sometimes I can just see you here talking with these Brasilians. I really like your stories and your advice, so you should keep giving them. I can see now how this country has become a part of you and how it´s becoming a part of me. I love you!
Mom, I knew you were going to think I died when I wrote two days late ;) haha you are so crazy. But I love you and miss your hugs. Thank you for giving me this gospel!
Don´t be weary in well-doing!
Sister Moore
Wednesday, October 23, 2013
October 23, 2013
Oi familia!
Transfer weeks we have p-day on Wednesday, sorry I forgot to tell you! It feels like a lifetime since I wrote last. I´m in the same area with the same companion which is really a good thing just a little anticlimactic.. haha but really this a great area and we still have TONS of work to do and things we need to change. I´m also glad I don´t have to train, it really only happened as a last resort because more Sisters were coming in than were in the field and able to train. I´m really sad that Sister Johnson got transferred, but she got her dying wish and got transferred. Her area and companion were NOT working for her at all and something had to give. Sister Willette is getting a new trainer which is crazy and we´ll meet her today. I think she´ll be Brasilian.
Dagna didn´t get baptized because she doesn't want to have any doubts. It´s so frustrating because she KNOWS it´s true and is SO ready. Her son Gustavo is feeling better now. At least she still says she wants to go to church and live the commandments, so I believe she´ll get there. We´re going to watch the longer Joseph Smith movie with her because that really makes it click for people . The lesson we learned is to listen to our leaders, they told us to remark the baptism immediately because once a baptism falls once it´s really hard to get back. We were thrilled to see her back in church through.. and she brought her Sister!!
Speaking of... we had EIGHT investigators in church!!! That is a huge deal. We have one family, but the parents need to get married. Then we had Paulo, this super cool guy from Portugal, Dson who we didn´t even remember inviting to church, and Eduarda, a 15-year girl who came with a recent convert! The awesome thing about Eduarda is that we found her family yesterday. It was insane finding a normal family, all together at home, and the one who was the most interested was the DAD!! We are praying that he will lead his whole family in being baptised together. They have three teenage daughters. It is amazing how much I´ve come to appreciate the ideal home, because you never see it here. Now all that home needs is the gospel and the priesthood! We´re going to read the Family Proc and I´m so pumped. Praying with them altogether gave me such a good feeling. It´s something I don´t think many missionaries think about in the rush to get people baptized in two weeks, but I really want to invite everyone to pray and read scriptures as a family, to receive an answer together as well as individually. Teaching the gospel to your children I think is the most important duty we have in this life. Or one of them.. converts are amazing but the way children just trust and believe and love makes the home the ideal place to learn.
I am still feeling sick to my stomach about our converts who aren´t confirmed. Cleonice is coming home tonight and I´m just praying she doesn´t have a mountain of work to do that will stop her from coming to church. She is really firm though, but I´m glad we get to see her again. Antonio is another story.. by far the worst thing that happened this week. Long story short, he doesn´t want to keep the law of chastity and doesn´t want to be confirmed. All I can think is that I´m grateful God is in charge. I was just reading in doctrine in covenants about someone who willingly broke their covenants because they fell to the pressure of the world and Satan tempted them right away. But God will do what is good for all of His children. It definitely was a sickening experience that I hope I never have to repeat.
I´m praying for Aunt Nancy! I almost had a heart attack reading that but I´m glad they caught it early! Mom, you are an awesome missionary. I´m not sure if it works in the states like it works here, but with catholics you could always just pull out a picture of Christ´s baptism and explain immersion, age of account ability and priesthood authority :) Haha I don´t think I´d be able to teach in English. It´s just so different here. If they don´t accept baptism the first contact, they aren´t a new investigator.
So everything´s pretty good , I´m happy to be staying and finishing my training. This ward is really special and I am excited to start a new transfer. I´ve survived the 7 plagues of our apartment, mosquitos, ants, lizards, frogs, cockroaches, wasps and SHOWER WORMS. Other than that.. we´re surviving.
There just is never a boring day in a place where everyone wants to stop you in the street and tell you their life story. One couple rejected the invitation to go to church but still fed us cake.. people are so insane here haha It´s a lot of fun though. Sometimes at night I feel like I live in Tortuga with bars on every street but encounters with drunks have only been funny. We do avoid it though so don´t worry :) It´s just a different world.
It is a blessing to be here and every day I´m learning what it means to be your own best convert. As you become the kind of missionary the Lord wants, that will change who you are forever, and baptisms are just a consequence. The Gospel has to become a part of every fiber of your being, every word reflecting in your actions.
I love you all so much! Have a fun Halloween! Send me pictures of the dinner!
Sister Moore
Monday, October 14, 2013
October 14, 2013
Oi abencoados!!
This was kind of a tougher week for the work. We received a list of inactives from the bishop the other day and it was just the saddest thing in the world sitting there as he went through all of the names individually and it took SO long and we just can tell he is so tired. I think he´s been bishop a long time and he really is tired of the acummilating membros afastados. Mostly it made me think about President Monson telling us to rescue, so that´s gonna be my new word for the next transfer: RESGATAR! President Costa of the 70 specifically promised our mission that for every reactivation we´ll have a baptism. It´ll definitely be hard and a lot of people will waste our time, but I know that´s what Brasil needs.
The worst thing this week is that both of my baptisms still aren´t confirmed.. Cleonice is traveling because her son is very sick but Antonio suddenly has to work every Sunday after telling us he doesn´t work. It is just so stressful feeling like you´ve baptized someone who won´t even come long enough to get confirmed. Cleonice is very strong and I´m not as worried but I just don´t know if Antonio was ever telling us the truth. I guess that´s just agency. The other thing that happened this week is that Dagna´s baptism fell through. It was because her son has Denge but it was still really sad, we had the font all ready and she didn´t call us or anything. She is still my favorite investigator that we have. She feels the spirit so strongly and is so willing to change to follow the church. She even brought her son to an activity and was actively trying to make friends. Hopefully her baptism isn´t postponed for too long. Satan has a way of getting to people. I´m just praying for her son, he´s only 6 and the thought of him with Denge is the saddest thing ever.
Time is FLYING. I can´t believe my first tranfer is almost over. There is a good chance I´ll be training next week. No one knows! Here they don´t tell you about tranfers until 9 the night before. I´m really good no matter what happens, I would like to finish my own training, but if I have to train it will a great learning experience. I would really love to have a Brasilian companion. The language really is coming well though. I love talking to all the members. There really are some special families. One couple just seems like they could be a part of our family, the way their little house is decorated and their sense of humor. That picture I sent was from Sister Seal´s birthday where our ward pretty much threw a surprise party. It was so funny. I just love them.
I still don´t understand exactly how to use family history to do missionary work but that sounds really interesting. We teach people so fast I think the temple might overwhelm them, but it would be great to teach the recent converts. I think when I get home I really want to get more into family history. I can for sure take a class at BYU on it. WOO HOO!!! I haven´t thought about it too much, but I still think history is what I´m supposed to do.
That´s funny that Michael works at a pretzel shop. Tell him he needs to go on a mission :)
Bishop Glenn really was a special bishop. Keep helping the missionaries!! They need it!! I´m so glad we are a missionary family. We´ve been talking a lot about the second coming in our apartment, and how we think the prophet at some point will make an announcement to move all the saints to the mountains. It´s not doctrine, but I´ve just been thinking a lot about how I wouldn´t be suprised if the faithful had a test like that in the last days. If the prophet one day made an announcement to leave everything behind and go somewhere, would we do it? The second coming is just the most interesting thing in the world to study, and we´re told to be watchful right?
I love you all so much!! Time is going by too fast here! Christmas is only in like 10 more weeks! Haha trunky moment.
Feliz Anniversario Pai! Eu mandou uma carta, mas nao recebera no tempo certo :( Nao temos um correio em nossa area. Mas, eu espero que tenha um dia MARVILHOSA!!! Eu sinto saldades de voce! Mesmo que voce e um pouco doido a veces. Amo voce!
Com besos e abracos,
Sister Moore
Sunday, October 13, 2013
October 7, 2013
Sister Johnson and Sister Moore with Brazilian Kittens |
No baptisms but here´s some kittens!!
"Doubt your doubts before you doubt your faith." Elder Uchtdorf That quote was the same one me and my companion decided was the quote of the conference. I don´t know what it is, but I can see Elder Scott being the next prophet. I just feel a lot of love in his voice when he speaks. Conference just makes me realize how important families are in the plan of salvation and how the world cannot change eternal truths. It is so evident here in Brasil where almost every home doesn´t has a father figure or people are just living together. Marriage is just not valued here because it is expensive.
One of the speakers said something along the lines of ``how would you feel if someone made a committment every week and never kept it?" and I just started laughing because that is my life every day. We are a covenant making people and that is where our blessings come from. We have to hold up our part and LIVE our beliefs.
I´m making it a life goal to make my kids look forward to conference like Christmas. As a missionary it really is like Christmas. Two whole days of sitting down and four opportunities to have people in church. We had Dagna at the first session. She is one of my favorites but she´s progressing slowly because she´s actually sane. She has a really cute 6-year-old son who pays attention to every meeting and is really smart. That really is rare.. Brasilian children are generally not well behaved. You can hear it from outside the schools. Another one of our investigators does nothing but stay home all day with three awful grandchildren, like I´m not going to lie, they are so annoying. They don´t wear clothes and they just scream in all our lessons and I feel so bad for their poor Grandma. Another reason the traditional family is so important. Those parents are never there.
I love you and am praying for Longmont! Keep being good missionaries! You are doing exactly what all members should be doing and it´s so awesome!!!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)