We are often asked what we do in a day, so I thought I would post one of our days. This is pretty typical, although we visit different people with different problems, needs and desires. Some are members of the church we are asked to minister to, others are people we have become friends with and some are new people interested in learning about the church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. Our assignment is to nourish and help the Dargaville and Wellsford Branches, to teach lessons, give talks, training where needed, and visit members and in-active members. All of it is very rewarding and we love the work we are doing.

Monday, October 15, 2018
Today was pretty busy for us. John went to the gym this morning but I didn’t go because I had a lot to do and needed to be ready for this afternoon.
Our first appointment was with Gloria Pratt at 2:00. She was happy to see us when we came and proudly showed us how clean her floors were. John had given her that vacuum last week and she said it works great, and she is very thankful for it. We are so glad we could help her with that.
Our lesson with her went really well. She told us she has gone to many churches in this area throughout the 40 years she has lived here. She has never felt like any one Church was better than the other. However, the Pastor of one church gave her his car when he bought a new one, and that was a huge blessing in her live. She hadn’t had a car for eleven years and now she could drive to the stores and other places she needed to be. She doesn’t go to that church on a regular basis, but is good friends with the Pastor’s wife, since they were in a knitting club together.
Gloria is an interesting lady. She believes in God and believes he has helped her many times in her life. Her husband committed suicide some forty years ago and she raised seven kids on her own. I guess he was a drinker and kind of wild, and she told him she did not want her kids raised in that kind of influence. It was not long after that he took his own life. She doesn’t blame herself, but she feels bad it happened that way.
She lives on very little money the government gives her every fortnight. With this money she sponsors four children in Kenya. She has done this for twelve years now, and pays $55 a month for each child. She writes back and forth to them, and the oldest is now graduating from a technical trade school where she will be able to have a good job as an adult. Doing this has been very rewarding to Gloria, and years ago she even traveled to Kenya to check out these kids and the program. It is a world wide program and we too know about it, as we have gotten brochures about it too. The amazing thing is that she does this when she has so little income herself.
When we do missionary work with people, we always try to find out as much as we can about them. It not only gives us opportunities to serve them, but helps us understand their feelings about life, religion and where their heart is. People always seem to open up to us, no matter what their financial, family, personal or religious feelings are. Of course the people in this country are very open anyway, and I have to say that I like that. There is a genuineness about them. What you see is what you get, and it’s up to you to accept them! I do!
We gave Gloria a Book of Mormon today, and she promised to read it. We went over the restoration and gave her the pamphlet on it so she could review what we taught her. We then set up another appointment to come back on Friday. We believe she is genuinely interested and we will do our best to help her gain a testimony of the gospel. We pray she does her part and will listen to the promptings of the spirit! She is a good lady and we want her to have the blessings that come from joining the Lord’s true church.
When we left, she introduced us to her cute little dog and her “ fat” cat. That cat should be named Garfield as he looks EXACTLY like the cartoon cat, Garfield! 
Her little dog is also as cute as can be. They are best friends and it is fun to watch them interact. However, the dog gets jealous when people pay too much attend to the cat and not him. It is really funny how he tries to interfere with that!
As we left, Gloria gave us some more of her lemonade lemons, and told us how to make good drink out of them. We will give it a try!
At 7:30 tonight we had an appointment with Rena and Jordan Richards. However, they called us and told us the whole family was having FHE together and asked us if we would mind coming and giving them the FHE lesson! We hadn’t planned on that, but of course we said yes! That meant we had to prepare and get a lesson ready for about ten adults and a couple of children! It’s not easy to do that in just a couple of hours but we worked on it and with prayer, put something together.
John talked about how it is the last days and how we need to be spiritually prepared and keep the commandments. He told them that a sifting out among the members of the church is and will continue to occur, as things in the world get worse. He stressed how we want to be on the Lord’s side and not one of those people who end up leaving the church to follow the beliefs of the world
I built on his theme and talked about “Living Water’. Christ is the Living Water and we need to build our lives on Him. How do we do that? By keeping the commandments. All of them! By taking the Sacrament every Sunday and renewing our covenants with him. In-activity is a big problem with people around here, and I wanted to talk about the blessing that taking the Sacrament every week is in our lives.
Here is the outline of what I talked about. I want to share because I feel it is important!
Living water notes:
Just as water was and is today essential to the physical life of people everywhere, just so is the gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ essential to the spiritual life of God’s children. That analogy is suggested by the words of the Savior to the woman at the well in Samaria, when He said: “. . .whosoever drinketh of the water that I shall give him shall never thirst; but the water that I shall give him shall be in him a well of water springing up into everlasting life” John 4:14
This difficulty of understanding about water recalls the story of a sailing ship that had become disabled in a storm. It drifted aimlessly for many days. The crew and passengers became famished and parched from lack of food and water. Finally another ship came into view. They signaled frantically for water. The other ship replied, “Let down your buckets where you are.” This communication made no sense at all, for they supposed they were far out to sea in typical ocean water. Again the famished ones requested water. Again the signal came, “Let down your buckets where you are.” They could not know that they had drifted into the mouth of a great river and that the water beneath them was fresh and could save their lives. The water of life lay just beneath them, yet they were dying for lack of this knowledge.
Like those passengers, multitudes of people are thirsting for “living water,” and they know not where to find it. Like the people on the other ship, we are signaling that we have found the “living water.”
What is living water?
The Savior taught that “whosoever drinketh of the water that I shall give … shall never thirst;
It is Christ—His gospel, but is it more than that?
STORY OF WATER CRYSTALS
Written by the Scientist, Masaru Emoto.
It was 1994 when the idea to freeze water and observe it with microscope came upon me. With this method, I was convinced that I should be able to see something like snow crystals.
After two months of trial and error, this idea bore fruit. The beautifully shining hexagonal crystals were created from the invisible world. My staff at the laboratory and I were absorbed in it and began to do many researches.
At first, we strenuously observed crystals of tap water, river water, and lake water. From the tap water we could not get any beautiful crystals. We could not get any beautiful ones from rivers and lakes near big cities, either. However, from the water from rivers and lakes where water is kept pristine from development, we could observe beautiful crystals with each one having its own uniqueness.
The observation was done in various ways:
1 Observe the crystal of frozen water after showing
letters to water
2 Showing pictures to water
3 Playing music to water
4 Praying to water
In all of these experiments, distilled water for hospital usage produced by the same company was used. Since it is distilled twice, it can be said that it is pure water.
The result was that we always observed beautiful crystals after giving good words, playing good music, and showing, playing, or offering pure prayer to water. On the other hand, we observed disfigured crystals in the opposite situation. Moreover, we never observed identical crystals.
In the last days when the Savior appears on the Mount of Olives and saves the people of Jerusalem, water will flow from beneath the temple and soon become a great river that will flow down and heal the Dead Sea.
Sacrament story (from Isabelle)
“I was in Sacrament meeting today and had this thought come to me. The priest blesses the water by saying sacred words over it, and it made me think about the Japanese scientist who did those experiments on water and the beautiful crystals that formed when positive words were written on labels on the containers.
Then we take the water into our bodies and I was wondering what kind of an effect that has on us literally. We take the water which represents Christ’s blood into our bodies. Christ takes upon him all the sins and sorrows of each of us and now we, during the sacrament, take into our bodies sacred water that perhaps can truly, physically change us.”
We need to take the Sacrament every week! We need to think about the living water that we are literally drinking! The Savior reaches out to us, but do we take hold of his hand and let him heal us?
Or do we rationalize and think we can do it later?
Photos of the crystals taken after being exposed to music. The first one is messy, and is a result of hard, metallic rock music. The second one is from the hymn “Amazing Grace”; and the third one is from a symphony of Bach.
These beautiful, frozen crystals physically show the power and affect that words, music and prayer have on them. It is beautiful and gives us something to contemplate on how words, music and prayer affect us physically.
After our lesson, John and I played a game with the family called “If and Then”. Everyone had to write two sentences down with a name in one from someone in the room, and when the papers were mixed up, and the sentences randomly read, we got a lot of laughs from everyone. The game is a good group game and is a lot of fun.
The Richards then provided dessert crepes for everyone! Needless to say, they were yummy! John went outside and looked at the new race car Jordan Richards has bought and put together for track racing, and I stayed in the kitchen visiting with Sister Richards. We had a wonderful evening and loved our time with this big, beautiful family!
Tonight I am thankful for a good missionary day, and for the spirit we felt as we taught and shared our testimonies.
Well, there you have it! One day of our visits and preparation in this mission!