June 22, 2009

Here family. This is the letter i recieve from my mission president every week. This week is great becuase it is about two people i worked with a whole lot when i was in Arecibo and Hatillo. They are great members! Really Great!

Elders and Sisters,
Every missionary, sooner or later, must decide why he or she is here. What motivates our service, our daily labors in the face of heat and discomfort and disappointment? The answer to that question will make all the difference.
At the end of his mission, Ammon spoke of his love for those he had helped come unto Christ:
Behold, the field was ripe, and blessed are ye, for ye did thrust in the sickle, and did reap with your might, yea, all the day long did ye labor; and behold the number of your sheaves! And they shall be gathered into the garners, that they are not wasted. Yea, they shall not be beaten down by the storm at the last day; yea, neither shall they be harrowed up by the whirlwinds; but when the storm cometh they shall be gathered together in their place, that the storm cannot penetrate to them; yea, neither shall they be driven with fierce winds whithersoever the enemy listeth to carry them. But behold, they are in the hands of the Lord of the harvest, and they are his; and he will raise them up at the last day. (Alma 26:5-7.)A key phrase is found in verse 7, "and they are his". What does this mean?
Paul taught:
Take heed therefore unto yourselves, and to all the flock, over the which the Holy Ghost hath made you overseers, to feed the church of God, which he hath purchased with his own blood. (Acts 20:28)The Lord has prepared thousands to receive His restored Gospel. They are His because He suffered and paid the ultimate price for them. We have accepted the work of seeking them out, teaching them by the Spirit, and inviting them to make sacred covenants with Him. Can we see that each one we find is precious to Him? That we have taken upon ourselves a sacred stewardship, for each one? That we will account to Him one day, for each one?Do we love them as He does?
Ramón Caraballo and Efrain del Toro were sitting together about 2 1/2 years ago, talking about life's problems. Ramón said, pessimistically, "There are no opportunities in life!" Efrain had been struggling with personal issues that seemed too big for him. He could see no way out. He felt that he lacked the power to resolve them. As Ramón spoke, Efrain turned and saw two young men dressed in white shirts and ties, approaching on foot. He recognized them as Mormon missionaries because he had visited briefly with two other missionaries nearly a year earlier. Then, he had no real interest. But now, when he saw the two missionaries, he felt something different. He replied to Ramón, "No, there really are opportunities in life!"
The missionaries were looking for an address. They were lost. Efrain helped them, and then readily agreed when one asked if he was interested in learning more about their message. A few days later, they arrived at his home a few minutes after the appointed hour. They found him sitting outside his home, waiting for them, pointing at his watch as a mild chastisement for being late. He insisted that they return almost daily, and soon he accepted their invitation to be baptized.
What did he find when he attended church, and as he became involved in his branch? Friends, real friends, who stood by him and helped him, loved and cared for him. He found a diligent branch president who shepherded him along the path to full membership and activity in the restored church of Christ. He was spiritually nourished by the word of God in sacrament, quorum and other meetings. He received and fulfilled assignments, and was ordained a priest. He helped the full-time missionaries teach their investigators. Eventually, he received the Melchizedek Priesthood.
Later, he invited the missionaries to contact Ramón, who also accepted the invitation to learn more. Efrain helped teach Ramón, and bore his testimony often. Ramón was baptized. He entered into the same path Efrain had found 6 months earlier.
In March of 2008, at a district general priesthood meeting in Arecibo, Ramón was presented to receive the Melchizedek Priesthood and to be ordained an elder. I asked both Ramón and Efrain to stand and help me as I spoke in the meeting. They related their experiences since joining the Church, and each expressed gratitude for blessings from a merciful Heavenly Father. They thanked the other brethren for welcoming them into their branch family. I asked their branch president to express his feelings about these two valiant members of his branch. With emotion, he expressed his love for them, and in response to my question, described the great sorrow he would feel if they were ever to fall away. It was clear that this wonderful priesthood leader felt toward his flock the same way Christ felt.And the missionaries who found and taught them?
Yesterday, I interviewed Ramón and gave him a recommend to receive his endowments in the Lord’s holy temple. He has been dating a lovely and faithful sister, and they have talked of marriage. His happiness showed in his face. Both he and Efrain are living the marvelous blessings of the restored Gospel. Ramón wanted to tell me about something that happened to him shortly after his baptism. He learned that his sister had been diagnosed with cancer. She had signed authorizations for surgery to remove the cancer. She was not a member. Ramón had learned that Melchizedek priesthood holders can give blessings of health using consecrated oil, but he was only a priest. So, he invited his sister to receive a blessing from the missionaries. She accepted, and the blessing was given.Ramón’s eyes filled with tears as he told me what happened after the blessing. Some time later, but before her scheduled surgery, his sister had more tests. This time, every single test came back negative! Her cancer was gone, completely. The surgery was cancelled, and his sister is healthy and well today. Ramón bore fervent testimony to me that the Lord healed his sister. His faith was strengthened.Then, with a serious and earnest look in his eye, Ramón explained why he wants to go to the temple. He recently dreamed that he saw a deep pool of water. He saw three people swimming in the pool, and somehow sensed that they needed his help. When he awoke, he understood that the three were his father, his mother and his brother, all of whom died without hearing the Gospel. Ramón has worked diligently with his family history consultant to prepare their names so he can do the work for them when he goes to the temple, after receiving those same blessings himself.The ripples in the pond will go on forever.Why are we here? To find Christ's own, and to invite them to return to Him, to Him who bought them with his blood. And to do all within our power to keep them secure within their newfound faith. To love them as He does, and to pay our own little price that they may find Him again. To labor all the day long, every minute of every day, that we might not miss even one.
To lose ourselves in His work, and thereby to find ourselves. And that will make all the difference.
President and Sister Martineau Puerto Rico San Juan West Mission

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