Sunday, June 3, 2018

Every Day Inspiration . . .

EVERY SINGLE DAY we find things that are uplifting and inspiring!   

We are inspired by:

The students who get up for early morning seminary!  Classes start sometime between 5:00 AM and 7:00 AM, depending on the area.  Close to 100% of the students walk to class, some maybe even 45 minutes.  Rain, shine, cold, warm, -- they are expected to attend class at least 75% of the time to get credit.  And these students have spiritual depth!  We always feel the Spirit when we visit these classes!  Here are pictures of a few of the classes:


This class is usually split up into 3 different homes, in groups of 5 or 6.  But when we come to visit they all meet together, and each group has a LONG walk.  The church rents a not-so-great school for the meetinghouse.  We are studying the Book of Mormon in seminary this year.  This was an impressive lesson as they were picking out the doctrines of King Benjamin's address. 


 This is usually a larger class but we visited when some of the students were on holiday.  The one in the white T-shirt is the teacher.  He sells plastic bags in town for his living, usually starting around 6 in the morning.  Accepting the calling to teach EM Seminary was a sacrifice because he has to start work later every weekday, but he cares about his students and is an exceptional teacher.  When he heard that some of his students didn't have enough money for transport to go and hear the prophet, he paid for them to go.  



Ruth, the teacher of this class, is an identical twin.  Her sister teaches the Institute class in this same branch.  Elder Theurer picked up gospel art picture books for some of the teachers (40 cents each at the Distribution Center here) and Ruth uses the pictures to teach.  Ruth is also a great teacher!  She is a taskmaster, but also fun and inspirational!


This is actually an evening class.  The students aren't getting up early, but they will have to come after school or dinner, then walk the distance home from the class in the dark.  This wonderful teacher brought a visual aid to teach the students about the allegory of the olive tree in the book of Jacob.  She wanted to show the what it meant to graft.  Her class has grown since we last visited.


Sister Hwindingwhi is the amazing teacher of this class.  She has students with different schedules so she teaches some in the early morning, some in the evening, and then she taught this class on Saturday!  Pretty much teaching every day but Sunday.  Now, that is a sacrifice!  Three of the students in this class are below the age of 14 so they won't get credit for seminary, but they come anyway.


One last picture:  This was a Stake Young Men's Camp that went for 3 days.  Each morning at 5:00 AM they had an early morning seminary class.  This picture only shows the boys around the fire.  There is also a very large group back away from the fire, shivering and wrapped in blankets, sitting on the ground and on logs (including Elder Theurer and I).  On this day, they were talking about Abinadi and the commandments.  These young men had some impressive contributions, even at that early hour!  (One contribution will be in the GEMS section).


We are inspired by:  

Our Institute students!  They generally meet once or twice a week, in the evenings or on the weekend.  Most classes are 90 minutes.  We currently have 17 Institute classes going and they are amazing!  They will be awesome future leaders of the Church in Zimbabwe.

 
 The teacher in this class is the one wearing the hat.  The one you can't see.  But she is the other identical twin. 

Every Friday night we are responsible for an institute class in the Marimba Stake.  This semester we are having the students do the teaching.  And with only a few exceptions, the lessons are excellent!


After the lesson we have class activities.  We have anywhere from 15 to 30 students attend.  This activity was for getting acquainted and also to help them with ideas for more in depth conversations when dating.


 












 

One week we introduced the students to improvised American Bowling:

Elder Theurer put down a masking tape line that they weren't supposed to go past. 😁



Partially filled water bottles had to suffice.  They "bowled" in teams and it got quite    competitive!  Since it is a Friday night class, part of our goal is to get them to interact.



We are inspired by:

The faithful members of the church in Zimbabwe!  Here are just two recent examples:



I'll be honest.  I have forgotten this sweet sister's name since I spent several hours with her at the Zengeza Ward building.  We were supposed to meet the Bishop's wife at 11:00 to pick up some seminary information.  We arrived late because we were held up at another branch, trying to drop off some manuals.  We were afraid that we might have missed the Bishop's wife.  This sister, who was there waiting also, assured us that she had been there for almost an hour and no one had come to unlock the gate.  We called the bishop who was confident that his wife was on the way.
An hour and a half later she finally arrived.
We found out that this good sister was there to clean the church.  She told us that she was assigned to do it and that she would not go home until it was done.  Ultimately she had waited for almost three hours, without a single complaint.  As we left after completing our business, she was busy cleaning, along with the bishop's wife and another woman.





These two boys ( also seminary students) had a similar experience that day at the church building.   Reginald, on the right, walked for 45 minutes to get to the church, and Tinashe, on the left, 30 minutes.  They had come for a meeting with the bishop.  Unfortunately the bishop got called in to work.  When we called him, the bishop told us his wife would be able to help them.  As previously mentioned, she was very late arriving (but did I mention that when the bishop's wife finally arrived it was with a toddler in tow and a new baby on her back?).   These two boys also did not ever complain.  As the time slowly passed, we pulled a ball out of our truck and taught them to play 4-square and volleyball.  They were delightful young men who were also just there to do their duty.

Zimbabweans are steadfast and patient! 



We are inspired by:

The beautiful and spectacular scenery of Zimbabwe!  In the last month we have been blessed to go to some beautiful places.   The first place was to a largely unknown, unadvertised game park called Imire.  (PS  Game drives in Africa should be on everyone's bucket list!  What an incredible experience!  OR, even better, just come on a mission to Africa!). Here is what we saw as we drove around on a land rover:


 
This is a black sable, a member of the antelope family.  They are becoming 
seriously endangered in Zimbabwe (most likely because of poachers).


We always love to see the Zebra!  (Here they pronounce it "Zeh-bra")

A small family of Impala.  Our guide told us that one male usually has about 20+ females in his herd.

 Can you say Hakuna Matata?  It's fun to watch these warthogs
prancing around and digging in the dirt.

These are Blesbok, another antelope species.  
 It's a little hard to tell, but this is a hyena hiding in the trees.  He is a lot bigger than he looks here!

 
The rhinos know that when they see the land rover there will be food, so they will come close.  They actually look a lot less menacing when they are eating, maybe even cute?  Their horns are very sought after.  Poachers will kill a rhino just to get his horn.  The game park keeps the horns cut very short so that there is no temptation.  Plus, there are always guards patrolling the game park with very large guns. 






Giraffe have always been a fascinating favorite of mine!  And it's so much better to see them in the wild, just a few feet away!  
But if you're a giraffe, it is sure tough to eat!  That must be why they stay so thin.

 
Are elephants everyone's favorite?  Then they saved the best for last!  First we saw them in the wild, and then three of them ambled in to the place where we were having lunch!!!  They have been fed there before and we were more than happy to accommodate them!





 Elder Theurer, our delightful guide Anyway (yes that is his real name), and Elder Selcho.


 Next adventure:  We were asked in May to go to Mutare, 4 hours away, to do an Inservice for the seminary and institute teachers there.   We stopped at Nyanga National Park on the way to see a completely different and beautiful landscape.  Mountains!

 The carpet of beautiful, flat, green trees are the acacia trees -- especially loved by the giraffe.

Mutarazi Falls (a series of stunning waterfalls coming out of rock cliffs) is in Nyanga National Park.  Mutarazi Falls is the highest in Zimbabwe and 2nd highest in Africa.  If you look very carefully above this picture of the Falls, you can see a sky bridge that goes across the gorge.  There is also a zip line that crosses beside it.  We arrived at the Falls just before dark.  We rushed along a sometimes obscure path to get a few of these pictures because it was starting to get dark.  We were worried about the trip back -- a no good, awful, very bad dirt road that took an hour to drive the 18K to the Falls.  Fortunately the views made the trip worth it.  Now, to be clear, you couldn't have paid me, even if we'd had tons of extra time, to go on that sky bridge or the zip line. 😳😱

Although Zimbabwe has beautiful rolling hills, this is the area with the most mountains.  We visited and partially climbed Mount Nyangani, the tallest in Zimbabwe.

On the way back from the mountain we visited examples of historic pit houses, thought to have existed up to 2000 years ago by people who emigrated, bringing with them domestic animals (sheep and cows), pottery, tools, and weapons.  These people also farmed, raising millet and sorghum.


 You can see how their homes were built quite low into the ground.  There is a group of homes and storage buildings all built together around an open area.  You can see the tunnel opening that goes into the central open area.  The animals were kept there for protection.

Elder Theurer is demonstrating how the animals came into the center area.  We all scraped our heads in that tunnel.  The cows and sheep must have been on the small side.
 

The large central areal for the livestock.


And last, we are inspired by: 
The GEMS that we have collected over the last few weeks:
 

"Carefully answer this question in your heart, in your conscience:  'What do I need to do to draw closer to the living Christ?'
  How many would acknowledge that if you and I were to really do these things, marvelous results would take place in our lives. Why do we wait? What are we waiting for?  What are you waiting for?"                   (Steven R. Covey)


"If you are enjoying something that is not good, then you are calling evil good."
                                                                  (President Mkhabela)
 

"Are you active in the Church or active in the Gospel?"  
                                                                  (President Wicho - Harare Mission)


"Some people fast to cleanse impurities from their bodies.  Fasting also cleanses impurities from our spirits."
                                                                  (Rainans, a YSA from the Kadoma Cluster)


Two acronyms that I have recently enjoyed:
          G. R. A. C. E.  =  God's  Riches  At  Christ's  Expense
          S.  I.  N.  =  Simple  Instruction  Neglected


"The power of the priesthood heals, protects, and inoculates every righteous man and woman against the powers of darkness."
                                                                  (Sheri Dew)


"It takes time to get our lives tangled up.  We can't expect them to be unraveled in a single day."                                                          (Brad Wilcox)


"The Sabbath is a whole day, 24 hours.  The Sabbath is not finished when church is over.  It lasts all day."                                        (A Marimba Stake youth at the Young Men's Camp)


Once when President Brigham Young was asked why we are sometimes left alone and often sad, his response was that man has to learn to “act as an independent being…to see what he will do…and try his independency—to be righteous in the dark.” 
                                                                 (Quoted by Sister Mkhabela at Zone Conference) 

 
If you have felt the influence of the Holy Ghost during this day, or even this evening, you may take it as evidence that the Atonement is working in your life. For that reason and many others, you would do well to put yourself in places and in tasks that invite the promptings of the Holy Ghost.
                                                                     (President Henry B. Eyring)

“[God] has infinite attention to spare for each one of us. He does not have to deal with us in the mass. You are as much alone with Him as if you were the only being He had ever created. When Christ died, He died for you individually just as much as if you had been the only man [or woman] in the world.”
                                                               (C.S. Lewis)
💕We continue to be so grateful for inspiration from all of our friends, from the examples that you have set for us, and the experiences with you that have blessed our lives.
We love you!
Elder and Sister Theurer 






                       

 







 

Wednesday, May 2, 2018

The PROPHET comes to Zimbabwe!

A once in a lifetime event happened this month in Harare, Zimbabwe.  President Russell M. Nelson, the Prophet (to the whole world) and President of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, came to visit Zimbabwe!  He was accompanied by Elder Jeffrey R. Holland of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles.  We heard from the Public Affairs couple that many of the other African countries were questioning, "Why would he go to Zimbabwe?"  President Nelson's simple answer was "because I was directed to by the Lord."

(Couples L to R:  Elder Hamilton, Africa Southeast Area President, and his wife; President and Sister Mkhabela, our wonderful mission president; President and Sister Nelson; Elder and Sister Holland; Elder Palmer, new SE Area President, and his wife.  The second row starts with the Mkhabela's daughter and then all of the senior missionaries, except public affairs)
 
President and Sister Mkhabela called in every missionary from all parts of Zimbabwe to be there for the prophet's visit.  The Spirit in this room was intense, tangible, and overwhelming!  Everyone was super excited!



President Mkhabela wanted to make sure everything went perfectly so we practiced for the picture several times.  After that, everyone had to practice shaking hands so Elder Theurer and I stood in for the Prophet and his wife. 😁



President Nelson and Elder Holland and their wives were on a global ministry tour that took them to London, Jerusalem, Nairobi Kenya, Harare Zimbabwe, Bengaluru India, Bangkok Thailand, Hong Kong, and Honolulu.  The over 16 million members of the Church are in 175 (of the 195) countries of the world. 

The Public Affairs couple from Kenya caught a picture of us shaking hands.  I was reaching for Elder Holland and Elder Theurer paused with President Nelson.  President Nelson was friends with the Theurer family and so he had a few extra words for Elder Theurer, a sweet experience for him!   The entire experience was just unforgettable!

Elder Holland explained that an apostle used to interview every missionary every year, and now with the size of the Church that is no longer possible.  But, he said, "You each received a mini-interview today.  We looked into your eyes as we shook your hand."  (That gave me pause--  what does the prophet, or an apostle, -- see when he looks into my eyes?) 

A group of sister missionaries

One of 2 BYU football players in our mission

Elder Koch from Denmark (tall!) and Elder Lukumy from Tanzania











                                                              

After the hand-shaking, we went into the small chapel where 145+ missionaries packed in for a 2 hour meeting just for us, where wonderful words of wisdom and counsel were shared! 


We don't have other pictures from the meeting but this is a clip of some highlights of the meeting with the missionaries: https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/#inbox/162e864c1c147d63?projector=1
(on YouTube - "Behold a Royal Army")
At the conclusion of the meeting President Nelson left a beautiful blessing on the missionaries.

The main meeting, held in downtown Harare, was attended by over 4000 people, including travelers from Zambia, Mozambique, Botswana, and South Africa. We were excited to hear that the crowds in Zimbabwe were the largest of all! 
For the many people that could not attend, the meeting was broadcast in the stake centers and district buildings.  There are almost 32,000 members of the Church in Zimbabwe.




People walked.  People took buses, taxis, and kombis.  Only a few people drove. 

And oh what a choir!!!  Twenty-five people were selected from each unit of the four Harare Stakes.  They were led by Sharon Nield Spencer, a long-time member of the Church in Harare, and a brilliant musician.  She led a choir number, "Come Unto Jesus", African style, that was incredible.  Sister Holland was so moved by the song that she said they were even better than the Tabernacle Choir.

Members of the choir as they sang, "God be With You Till We Meet Again," waving goodbye to the prophet.  They sang this song in both English and Shona.

The talks were amazing.  Neither President Nelson or Elder Holland used a single note, but they were inspiring and uplifting!  Sister Nelson spoke with some notes, and she was also amazing.

President Nelson was especially attentive to the young children.  Because of the lights he had trouble seeing them.  He asked them to wave so he could see them.  And then he asked if they would stand and sing, "I Am a Child of God" for him.  This young 11 year old girl was the only child singing with the choir so she was asked to join the rest of the group, but to sing in the microphone! 

 Just like the Savior, President Nelson really loved being with the children.  Two of my piano students were in the crowd toward the front, so I asked if they got to shake his hand.  "No", they responded, "We hugged him"!  

A temple has been announced for Zimbabwe.  Elder Nelson told the crowd that he wanted to be here for the dedication of the temple . . . so they had better hurry and get it built.


 And oh what a way to end an already wonderful conference!  As the meeting concluded, President Nelson was ready to give another blessing, this time one for the country.  He called Elder Holland up to come and join him.  Elder Holland stood with him and put his arm around the prophet's waist as the blessing was pronounced.  Double priesthood power!!! A prophet and an apostle together.

Some links for video and further information about the global ministry tour:
https://www.mormonnewsroom.org/article/president-nelson-global-ministry-tour-landing-page?cid=HP_FR-27-4-2018_dPAD_fMNWS_xLIDyL1-A_  (for the Mormon Newsroom)

https://www.mormonnewsroom.org/article/president-nelson-global-ministry-tour-zimbabwe

https://www.facebook.com/ZimbabweMormonNewsroom/videos/2174804729213413/

It was fun to hear some of the reactions of Zimbabweans that we associate with.  Most just said how much they loved the conference and how much they loved the prophet.  I was touched by the words of "The Professor".  He and his crew of two young men come every Monday to wash the cars at the mission office parking lot.

 Professor is in the middle.  On the day I took the picture his daughter was there helping also.  We pay $5 a week to support him in his business, and for that we get a perfectly clean car inside and out.  He says his young son prays every weekend that the cars will be dirty so his dad will have cars to wash.
Regarding the prophet:  he said that he had wondered what President Nelson would be like, and he found out that the prophet was "just like us"; that he didn't act like he was an "authority".  Professor sat close to the stage and said he couldn't believe that President Nelson turned, and even got on his knees, so that he could intently watch the choir while they sang.  He intently watched and listened to every speaker.  He spoke without notes,but "when he spoke it wasn't him speaking".  Professor felt his heart burning inside him when the prophet spoke.  He stated, "those were not man's words."  


One of our Institute students said that he had missed the solemn assembly session of General Conference in October, and that he had been praying to know if President Nelson was really a true prophet.  As soon as the prophet walked in to the large hall, this young man said that he felt an overwhelming feeling, and he knew that his prayer was answered.

 
And now the GEMS that we have collected over the last few weeks:


A few thoughts from President Nelson at the Zimbabwe Devotional:

⤳"Your children should be able to memorize the sound of their mother's voice reading the scriptures to them."

⤳"Teach your children what it really means to be a child of God." (His fondest wish)

⤳"Please help your children to know how to pray."

⤳"We speak of enduring to the end.  What is the end?  It is receiving the ordinances in the temple."

A few thoughts from Elder Holland at the Zimbabwe Devotional:

⤳"In the Church of Jesus Christ, you get a lot more than you bargained for. . . .There is no end to the blessings -- they keep on coming!"  (The 3 examples he gave were Act 3:1-8, Mark 2:3-12, and Ether 3 -- the Brother of Jared)

⤳"Learn to be righteous in the dark."    (Quoting Brigham Young)

⤳"With God, all the rules are fair, and there are wonderful surprises."   (Quoting a Catholic Nun)

⤳ "Be the best you can be!  Learn everything that you can.  [Live/serve so that you] Have no Regrets!  


A few thoughts from Sister Nelson at the Zimbabwe Devotional:

⤳"What has the Spirit taught you that you never want to forget?"

⤳"Think of a problem.  What eternal laws govern that problem?  What eternal laws need to be followed to receive the needed blessing?

⤳"We need to live our lives not after the manner of men.

⤳"Always have a question for General Conference.  Come fasting and praying.  You can even pray to get help with your question.  Be willing to follow through with the answer."



And a few other thoughts:
 
"If you aren't in over your head, how do you know how tall you are"?
                                                                                     --  T.S. Elliott

"Failing is an essential part of the mortal phase of our quest for perfection. We don’t often think of it that way, but that is only because we tend to focus too much on the word perfection and not enough on the word quest . . . Failure is an inevitable part of the quest. In our quest for perfection, how we respond when we fail will ultimately determine how well we will succeed. . . .  My plea for you today is to learn how to fail successfully."                                                                                                               -- Kevin J. Worthen  (BYU President)

"It's the life of a disciple.  You can always manage."
                                                                          (-- Alywin Tsongora, one of our busy, multi-taksing S&I  teachers)



We are so grateful to be here serving. 💕 Every day we learn new lessons from these humble, kind, and loving people.  We send our love to all of you!

Elder and Sister Theurer