[Guest author: Dad]

He’s baaaaack!

It’s been twenty-five months since Alex headed to Peru for his mission. He had an amazing time, but all good things come to an end, and despite wanting to stay and continue the work, he came home today.

Wow. What an amazing feeling to see him after two years– when the only communication we really had was via a weekly email message (and even that was spotty at times). It was immediately obvious that he’d grown as a person: he’s more thoughtful and mature, although he discovered to his chagrin that he’s not as tall as Zaque.

We headed home from the airport, and when we were home I noticed his shoes.

That’s two years of walking miles every day through the dusty, rocky streets of Lima.

It was also cool to see his passport, showing the day he left and the day he returned:

Now we’ll have two months to hang out with him until he heads off to BYU for college. We have some weird Peruvian soda in the fridge…

… and who knows what else is still to come. I’m waiting for him to whip up a big bowl of suri for us…

31 days left… (Written October 6, 2017… Finished October 15th) 🙁

TODAY I COMPLETED 24 MONTHS IN THE MISSION! I HAVE OFFICIALLY FINISHED!
No, not really… But that means that I have exactly 1 month left before I finish!

(I know that I’ve mentioned how much time I have left WAAAAAY too much… I’m not sure if it’s a coping tactic because I’m really stressed and scared, or if I’m in shock and that’s why I still can’t quite believe it… Whatever it is, it’s strange and I’m not sure I like it.)

I’M SORRY! I’VE BEEN DOING SO MUCH WORK LATELY THAT I HAVEN’T HAD TIME TO WRITE, EVEN ON P-DAY! I DON’T HAVE TIME TO WRITE ANYTHING REALLY WELL-SAID OR “PRETTY” RIGHT NOW BECAUSE I WANT TO TELL YOU WHAT’S GOING ON, BUT FOR NOW I THINK I’LL JUST HAVE TO STICK WITH A SUMMARY OF THESE PAST FEW WEEKS. (IT’S EITHER THAT OR I DON’T WRITE UNTIL NEXT WEEK, SO…)

So, the latest news (apart from completing 24 months) since the last time I wrote:

First, cambios came around again and, on September 26th, I was busy all night and pretty much the entire next week coordinating, driving around, waiting, taking people to the airport, trying to teach Elder Hewitson how to be Secretario Personal, and solving problems that suddenly arised (LIKE THEY ALWAYS DO!). It was so crazy that it was funny! (And, thankfully, it really wasn’t all that stressful – maybe because I’ve adapted to my job, or maybe because I’m getting better at stress management… or maybe I was just too tired to think straight!) Here are a few of the problems:

– Elder Sánchez, the assistant, had a flight that they cancelled at the last minute. So they planned to send him in FIRST CLASS! What luck! Seems like the Lord was rewarding him for his dedicated service!… Until they informed me an hour later that even that wasn’t available, so the only other option was a flight that went to Panama and THEN to Colombia at 11:00 PM… Economy Class. He was kind of upset with me after that, but I didn’t even do anything! I just took the only option they gave me to get him home (And, honestly, I thought it was pretty funny!)

– Elder Parker also ended up with a few problems with his flight and ALSO ended up going to Panama! He ended up with FOUR flights instead of the three that were planned and ended up arriving much later because of that. His route ended up being: Peru -> Panama -> Texas -> Colorado -> Idaho.

Here we are with his four tickets:

It’s interesting to take my compañero from the CCM to the airport so he finishes while I still don’t… But what was even stranger was finding three of the other guys from our district in the CCM! Seriously, I ran into Elder Pierce, Elder Willard, and Elder Bishoff! Here’s half our CCM district (including Elder Parker and me):

In our area, we’ve seen a couple of really cool miracles, too:

1. Leonor, one of our converts, had some problems with one of her neighbors in the past that was still causing problems between them. We learned about this problem because her neighbor, who we are now currently teaching, mentioned that she still had an actual fear of being in her house because of all the insults that Leonor had given her before… But then mentioned that they had stopped about two months ago… which was when we first started teaching Leonor! (The Gospel really does change people!)

We mentioned this to Leonor and explained that she should ask her neighbor to forgive her so that they could remove the current hostility that they had. However, she wasn’t very willing because she didn’t feel that it was her problem since she had already forgiven her neighbor for the wrongs she had done and her response to our teaching wasn’t as positive as we would’ve liked. Personally, I didn’t have much hope that she would actually do it.

So Saturday comes around and we went to the first session of General Conference. While we were waiting outside the door to saludar (there isn’t an English word for that…) the members and investigators that were showing up, we saw Leonor arrive… And she had brought her neighbor with her! It turns out that the very next day after we taught Leonor, she had gone to her neighbor’s house and asked for forgiveness, and then Saturday she ran into her and guided her to the chapel to watch the Conference! (Just in case you haven’t figured it out, Leonor is awesome!)

2. Liz, one of our investigators, had a baptismal date for the 7th and we were worried because we hadn’t seen her for almost two weeks due to various problems that they had. But when we finally managed to visit her, we discovered that she was still really strong and dedicated and still wanted to be baptized very much. She’s so excited and converted that she cried when she told us about how the Gospel has helped her and her family. It’s taken her almost two months to prepare herself but she really has come to KNOW that the Gospel is true and has felt its influence in her life! It’s definitely been worth the wait!

(…Unfortunately she didn’t end up getting baptized… When she had an interview to prepare herself for baptism we found out that she and her husband actually weren’t married! They both had told us that they were, but they really aren’t… She can’t get baptized if she isn’t keeping the commandment to strengthen her family through marriage, so we’ll have to wait a little bit more… She was so disappointed that she stopped receiving us for a little bit, but we’re going to help her. It was just a huge letdown for her… And for us.)

3. Elder Castrejón, my companion, got up and got dressed before ANYONE ELSE!!! Normally he’s the LAST one! Ha ha!

Another few things of note:

1. For the last few days we’ve had Elder Farinango with us! For a couple of crazy changes he’s been with us now for two weeks!

It’s cool to be four missionaries instead of three because we can do twice the amount of work, but also because we celebrated his cumpleaños with Elder Primo!

(Papa John’s lets us buy two pizzas with the second one just a sol, so we opted for that instead of buying a cake!)

And then, because we could, we all decided had a massive sleepover one night!

Well, I’m not sure you could call it a sleepover if we all live in the same house… Really we just all slept in the same room… Either way, it was something different!

OK, I think I’m finally all caught up! Hopefully next week will go a little better and I’ll have more time! ¡Hasta entonces!

— Elder Schroeder

23 months down!

Wow, it’s crazy to think that I hit 23 months in the mission last week! After September 26th, I’ll officially be the oldest missionary in the ENTIRE MISSION! I’LL HAVE MORE TIME IN THE PERU LIMA NORTH MISSION THAN EVEN THE MISSION PRESIDENT! So that’s kind of crazy to think about…

… And that also means that exactly 1 day before I complete 25 months, I’m home!

Well, I’m not really sure what to write about this week because it’s been pretty routine; that’s why I didn’t write last week. I guess I’ll just write some of the quick little miracles that I’ve seen lately, but I’m going to do it in Spanish just because I can! (And because my autocorrect is set for Spanish and sometimes it’s just easier without all the little red lines under the English I write… Haha!)

Hace tres semanas atrás hablamos con una joven que se llama Melanie, la hija de un miembro que ya no va a la Iglesia. Ella ha estado yendo por un buen tiempo ya pero no ha tenido el deseo de bautizarse o hacer mucho más (de lo que nosotros sabíamos, por lo menos). Pero este domingo pasado hablamos con ella un ratito acerca del bautismo y cómo se sintió en la Iglesia. Le dejamos un folleto del plan de salvación para leer y un capítulo del Libro de Mormón y planificamos pasar el martes. Cuando fuimos, descubrimos que había leído el folleto y parte del capítulo (era muy largo) y nos dijo que quiere bautizarse, pero primero quiere estar segura que es lo que debe hacer. ¡Normalmente no pasa algo así de un momento al otro!

Tenemos a otra investigadora que se llama Liz que ha estado progresando poco a poco pero que siempre nos ha dicho que no quiere que le presionemos para que se bautice. Ella quiere que los deseos de bautizarse vengan de ella misma, entonces le hemos enseñado con su esposo que ya es miembro y su hijo, Aramís, que ha querido bautizarse por un tiempo. El viernes fuimos a su casa para enseñarles nuevamente esta vez Liz nos dijo que quiere bautizarse y, con lágrimas en los ojos, dijo, que sabía que esto era lo correcto para ella y para su familia. Ella tenía el temor que solamente se bautizaría por emoción y por sus hijos, pero no por ella misma; ahora ella realmente sabe. Nos dijo que sabe que el Libro de Mormón es verdadero y que quiere ser parte de la Iglesia.
Durante todo este tiempo que les hemos estado enseñando, nos enfocábamos más en contestar las preguntas de Liz y no habíamos hablado tanto con Aramís. Cuando Liz dijo que quería bautizarse, Aramís estaba feliz pero dijo que ahora él no está seguro que debe bautizarse. Entonces Liz decidió que esperaría para bautizarse con su hijo.

Empezamos a enfocarnos en Aramís, contestando sus preguntas y dudas para ayudarle. Yo sabía que él quería bautizarse y que sabía que la Iglesia y el Libro de Mormón eran verdaderos, pero por sus dudas él quería esperar. Fuimos el viernes para hablar solamente con él y, con la ayuda de los asistentes, hablamos con él y le ayudó a decidir que debe bautizarse. Él todavía siente conflicto entre sí porque siente nervioso, pero ¡ha decidido que se bautizará el 23 de noviembre con su madre! Él está poniendo su fe a prueba pero sé que él tiene la fe suficiente para hacerlo y que va a sentir muy agradecido que tomó esta decisión.

[Courtesy of Google Translate] ———-

Three weeks ago we talked to a young woman named Melanie, the daughter of a member who is no longer going to church. She has been going for a long time now but has not had the desire to be baptized or do much more (than we knew, at least). But last Sunday we talked to her about baptism and how she felt in the Church. We left a pamphlet of the plan of salvation to read, and a chapter of the Book of Mormon, and planned to see her again on Tuesday. When we went, we discovered that she had read the booklet and part of the chapter (it was very long) and told us that she wants to be baptized, but first she wants to be sure what to do. Normally something like that never happens!

We have another investigator named Liz who has been progressing little by little, but who has always told us that she does not want us to pressure her to be baptized. She wants the desires to be baptized to come from herself. We have taught her with her husband (who is already a member) and her son, Aramis, who has wanted to be baptized for a while. On Friday we went to her house to teach them again. This time Liz told us that she wants to be baptized and, with tears in her eyes, said that she knew this was the right thing for her and her family. She had the fear that she would only be baptized by emotion and by her children, but not by herself; now she really knows. She told us that she knows the Book of Mormon is true and that she wants to be a part of the Church.

During all the time we have been teaching them, we focused more on answering Liz’s questions and we had not talked so much with Aramis. When Liz said she wanted to be baptized, Aramis was happy but said that now he is not sure that he should be baptized. Then Liz decided she would wait to be baptized with her son.

We started to focus on Aramis, answering his questions and doubts to help him. I knew that he wanted to be baptized and that he knew that the Church and the Book of Mormon were true, but because of his doubts he wanted to wait. We went on Friday to talk only with him and, with the help of the others, we talked with him and helped him to decide that he should be baptized. He still feels conflicted because he feels nervous, but he has decided that he will be baptized on November 23 with his mother! He is putting his faith to the test, and I know he has enough faith to do it and that he will feel very grateful that he made this decision.

———-

Now, for the stuff that’s a little less spiritual – but still very relevant: I accidentally wasted 100 soles on paperwork that I messed up on! It’s the first time I’ve ever made a mistake that’s actually costed a decent amount of money and it’s not a great thing, but I guess it’s a miracle that the only thing I messed up were these papers! I almost didn’t even notice until Elder Hewitson pointed it out to me! So that just made more stress for the 13th, which was both great and awful (for a time), because we had a conference with Elder Oaks, one of the twelve living apostles!

It’s cool to know that God continues to guide us today through living representatives like a prophet and twelve apostles; Elder Oaks and several other leaders in the Church taught us some very important things that we’ll use in our work to share the Gospel of Christ here in Peru. Some of the things they shared that I liked:

* The Gospel isn’t just about going from “unworthy” to “worthy”; the goal of our Heavenly Father is that we become “perfect” and gave His Son so that we can do it

* What we share isn’t just “a good idea” – it is quite literally the only way to return to live with our families forever

* Becoming saved is a personal matter, but becoming like Jesus Christ is a family matter

* Repenting for our sins and mistakes and becoming better isn’t God’s backup plan for us – repentance and change IS the plan!

* If we really want to receive answers from our Heavenly Father, we can’t just pray and ask – we have to pray and ask with a desire to act or change based on what we receive

So that part was a highlight of the week, but the three days preceding it and the several hours afterward were some of the most stressful moments here in the offices! I mean, if you don’t show up to hear a living apostle speak, you’re not just missing a Sunday school class, and since I’m secretario personal it was my job to coordinate everything that has to do with transportation! I made a plan, remade the plan, had to change the plan according to what Presidente Godfrey wanted (and also because the location and time changed), and contracted the buses. I made about 300 changes by the time I was finished, and on the actual day of the conference ONE OF THE BUSES BROKE DOWN! (And of course it has to be the only bus that we can’t possibly replace because it was the furthest away!)

Honestly, I probably would have laughed at how perfectly unfortunate that was, but I was too busy trying to find a solution! Luckily they got it working again and everything went well, but we had to make sure that everything went well… And then the 100 sol error that I made took about an hour of hunting people down after the conference to fix, so almost immediately after the conference I hit the ground running, so to speak, to find the people I was looking for… As a normal missionary you never have to worry about things like that after a spiritual conference, but there’s always more to do if you work in the offices! I love my job, except for the sporadic moments when problems arise! On the plus side, they keep life here interesting!

(In case you didn’t notice, the stress might be getting to me… Good thing it’s P-day!)

Anyway, to top this off, here’s some pictures from these last few weeks:

Papa John’s has a special that lets us get a second large pizza for just one sol more, so we took advantage of it:

… Unfortunately Elder Sánchez and Elder Castrejón are trying to lose weight and are on diets, so they fought their inner demons (And each other!) while they decided if they should eat the pizza or not:

“Look, we’ll just split it! It’s tiny!”
“No! We can’t eat that!… Well, maybe just a little, but you eat the first part!”
“No, you eat it! It’ll be so tasty but there’s so many calories…”
“Fine, then let’s not eat it!”
“No, how can we resist this?!… Here, eat it!”
“Yeah, OK, but I’ll eat it after you. You eat first!”

(I was over in the corner, dying!)

And here we are in the bus on the way to the conference:

(Man, I am not photogenic at all!)

– Elder Schroeder

OK, I’m REALLY far behind now because I haven’t had much time to write, even on P-Day, so I’ve got about 4 weeks to make up (I started with the last email I sent). But today I hope to be able to write everything, and to be able to add pictures I’m going to divide it up by weeks:

Week 2:

First, we went to a sealing! Elder Klein’s converts, Carlos and Karina, were sealed to each other and to their daughters for time and all eternity, meaning that even death won’t separate them. If you were wondering, here’s what an eternal family looks like:

(I wonder if “rabbit ears” exists in heaven, but if we inherited a sense of humor from God, it could be!)

This is the second sealing that I’ve ever been too, and again I was surprised by how quickly these covenants with our Heavenly Father take place. If you think about it, a baptism takes all of 30 seconds but is literally the only way to enter into the Kingdom of Heaven (even Jesus Christ needed to be baptized), and the sealing, the requirement for an eternal family, takes a half-hour (and most of that time is just waiting for all of the people who wanted to be present to show up!). Tiny things really do have a huge significance.

Oh, and who were all the people that showed up? From what I counted, about seven members and nine missionaries!

Why so many missionaries? Well, for one thing, Carlos, Karina, and their family are the best, and then they’re also famous in the mission because Carlos makes metal placas and Karina makes customized ties and skirts!

The temple was also a really cool experience for me because I gained an actual testimony that you can receive guidance when you’re there. I’ve been trying to be better about being more sincere when I teach people about Christ and how much his Gospel has helped me, but I’ve always had trouble. But I went to the temple that day and prayed to be able to be sincere… and it worked!… For about a week. Not really sure what happened there, but I’m glad I could be sincere for at least a few days because I saw several miracles. Here’s one that I shared (Sorry, it’s in Spanish):

“Uno de los milagros fue encontrar a Haydé, a quien encontramos después de casi dos horas sin que una persona nos dejara entrar para enseñarles – honestamente, ¡ni ella nos dejó entrar! Tocamos porque el miembro que me acompañaba conocía a sus hijas, pero no ellas estuvieron y parecía que Haydé no quería nada. Entonces pregunté, ‘¿Le gusta leer?’… ¡y ella dijo que no! En este momento algo me hizo cambiar mi manera de contactar y dije, ‘Tengo un libro que ha cambiado mi vida, y solamente pregunto porque quiero compartirlo con usted.’… El otro milagro allí fue que por quizás primera vez realmente SENTÍ lo que que dije – que el Libro de Mormón había cambiado mi vida y realmente quería compartirlo. Ella también sintió el Espíritu y cambió su actitud, y cuando ofrecí compartir un pequeño mensaje con ella aceptó (¡aunque todavía no nos dejó entrar!). Compartí un poco acerca de cómo el Evangelio ha cambiado mi vida y que Jesucristo le puede dar paz a ella, y al terminar me dijo, ‘¡Mire ésto! Yo estaba muy baja ¡y justo llegaron ustedes para traerme paz!'”

[Google Translate says: One of the miracles was to find Haydé, who we met after almost two hours without a person letting us in to teach them – honestly, she did not let us in either! The member who was with me knew his daughters, but they were not there and it seemed Haydé did not want anything. Then I asked, ‘Do you like to read?’ … and she said no! At this point something made me change my way of contacting and I said, ‘I have a book that has changed my life, and I only ask because I want to share it with you.’ … The other miracle there was that for maybe the first time I really MEANT what I said – that the Book of Mormon had changed my life and I really wanted to share it. She also felt the Spirit and it changed her attitude, and when I offered to share a small message with her she accepted (although she still would not let us in!). I shared a little about how the gospel has changed my life and that Jesus Christ can give her peace, and when I finished he said, ‘Look at this! I was very low and you just came to bring me peace!’]

Soooo… I need to work on getting that ability back!

Anyway, the next interesting thing has to do with my becoming the ugliest, most unfashionable vulture ever:

Elder Klein finished his mission on the 15th of August, so he left behind a whole bunch of stuff in order to pack his bags (looking at the things he left, it’s probably really easy to guess why!). So, like the vultures that we are, the other four of us in the offices starting taking all the leftovers.

Then I got to take everyone who was “dying” to the airport, and I also organized the busses for cambios!

… Talk about some of the 39 most stressful hours of my life! I say, “39 stressful hours” because THAT WAS HOW LONG I HAD TO STAY AWAKE IN ORDER TO DO IT!!!

Anyway…

Elder Klein had warned me that the day of cambios was by far the worst, and I believed him: My first day in the offices, he had stayed up for two days straight without sleeping and you could tell. Since we almost always send the U.S. missionaries home around midnight I actually planned my day using my Agenda with reversed times; instead of planning for “12pm” I scheduled for “12am”:

Each of the names on there are the missionaries and when their flights left, which should have all gone according to plan…

Here’s one of the pictures I took while we were checking in. You tell me if it was going according to plan or not:

Luckily no one missed their flight, but it was close! I’m not sure how, but they made it!

After that I took the next missionary to the airport, Elder Seminario, and picked up all the new missionaries that were coming in from Mexico (Apparently the CCM here in Peru isn’t big enough, so the 13 Elders that came from the U.S. went there instead.) This was by far the easiest part, but it’s going to mean a lot of work for me; normally the missionaries go through the Interpol process when they go through the CCM, but now I’ll have to do it at 6:00am… I’ve already realized that being sercretario personal means working 24-hour days (Or maybe even more!)… Luckily I’m not having too much trouble! There are some days when I’ve almost fallen asleep in lessons or during the car ride, but other than that I handle it just fine. I suppose it’s good practice for college!

For some reazon, I was confident that no one would miss their flight, despite the odds. The most stressful part was when I was organizing everything for the busses. Here we’ve been trying busses to take missionaries around the mission for their cambios, so we hire two busses that go around the mission (which is in a U-shape), each starting at one end and ending at the other, and the missionaries that need to get on climb on the bus, stick their luggage below, and get off when they get to their new zone. Here’s a map so you have an idea of what I’m talking about:

I should have known that we would have problems, simply because I had to work with more than 150 other people to do this. In a perfect world everyone would get on the right bus and get off at the right stop, but I know our mission isn’t in that world! Luckily it all worked out in the end!

The last part was taking Hermana Garibay to the airport at 6pm, and when I got back a little after 11pm I was finally able to sleep after 39 hours of work!… I I slept so hard that I didn’t wake up until 10am and even then it was hard. Elder Primo, one of the assistants, even shook me and yelled my name and I didn’t do anything, so I guess I was really tired!

So, because Elder Klein left, Elder Castrejón and I got a new companion: Elder Hewitson. The poor guy showed up only to:

* Watch Elder Castrejón and me work on a million things at once during cambios

* Watch me go to the airport

* Stay in the house until 11am because I slept in until 10

* Carry a microwave down from one of the biggest cerros I have climbed:

We met a new family that recently moved into our area, but the husband fell down while he was moving some things and hurt his back so much that he can’t move. So we helped out a little bit! (But seriously, that hill was ridiculous! They literally lived in the top of the hill and moved all the way to the bottom!) But we’re obviously very happy to help out a little bit – they’re going through some really hard times right now. It always feels good to help people.

Anyway, to finish things up, I had more days staying up really late (New record: 3 days of work with only 5 hours of sleep somewhere in there!), some crazy coordinating to do, and a baptism!

The baptism, obviously, was the best part! About six weeks ago we met a less-active member named Hanssel who hadn’t gone to church for several years, ever since his grandmother, who was a member, had died. Elder Primo had talked to him when he took them in his taxi and he lived in our area, Payet, so we visited him. We taught him about repentance and how Christ’s sacrifice lets us return to God and he immediately began to change his life, bringing his parents with him! His father, David, was a member, but his mother, Ana, had never decided to be baptized. When we started teaching them, she decided that she did and was baptized on the 19th. Here are the three of them:

It was really cool to see that because they had lost their way a little bit with all the things that happened to them over the years, but when we brought the Gospel back into their lives they immediately accepted it! They’re the best!

Now for the craziness: Apparently, the other missionaries in Peru have to come here to Lima to do some of the paperwork for their visas (I’ve never really thought about that before because I live and work in Lima, so it’s all somewhat close for me). Two missionaries from Piura had come in from their mission to do their work but one accidentally left his passport on the plane. By the time he realized it, the plane had already gone to Colombia, so he missed his return flight to Piura and had to stay here in the offices with us until they left at 5am the next day! Since I’m the secretary, I had to be in charge of that, so I stayed up until 2am to see them off. It’s just part of the job, but I never imagined something like that would happen! The phone call that I got to set it all up was the most confusing thing: the person calling just told me that two missionaries had gotten stuck here in Lima and needed a place to stay for the night, so they asked if they could stay in our offices! I had no clue what was going on!

Anyway, that’s all. Finally caught up! I’ll let you know how next week goes!

– Elder Schroeder

Well, I’m bored of writing my emails in the usual way, so I’m going to write this one like a newspaper. (And yes, I know I haven’t written for about 3 weeks, so I’ve got some catching up to do. That’s why I’ll write three!)

(*Note*: Not all quotes are accurate; some have been adapted and/or fabricated by creative license)


Three more souls – three baptisms in Payet

Payet, Tahuantinsuyo – A baptism took place this past Saturday, August 5th, in the capilla, making a very special experience for everyone present. Three women – Leonor, Magaly, and Andrea – had been preparing themselves for several weeks and finally made this important covenant with God.

“I felt so good,” said Magaly, who was baptized together with her daughter Andrea. “I felt clean and pure, and what made it more special was that I was able to take this important step with my daughter.” Andrea, who recently came from the United States, was equally enthusiastic: “It is so beautiful that I’m not only with my mom again, but that we both started this road back to God together, too.”

Leonor, unfortunately, had very little to say about the experience because she had a sore throat that day! She hadn’t been feeling well and couldn’t say much, but she was obviously very content. She probably would have enjoyed it more if she had been well!

Each one of them has passed through different trials and challenges, but in the end they have come to this important point in their lives when they have been born again. Magaly actually hadn’t wanted anything to do with the missionaries for several months and didn’t decide to follow the Savior until a few months ago, even though her soon-to-be husband is a member. But when two of her children, Óscar, Jr. (age 12) and Kimberly (age 9), had made the decision to be baptized and her pareja, Óscar, Sr., recommitted himself to the Church she began to follow them. “At first,” she said, “I think that I was only going to support my children. But later on I started to go for me, because I wanted to.”

Her progress, however, had been hindered for many months, until this June when her daughter, Andrea, came from the United States to live in Peru with her mother again. She also began to attend church and listen to the missionaries, and as she progressed towards baptism the Lord made it possible that Magaly, too, could be baptized. Together they made this important covenant and are now preparing to enter the temple.

[Photo: Magaly and Andrea just before their baptism with the three elders who taught them. Why the missionaries all look like they haven’t slept in weeks remains a mystery.]

Leonor was a very different story. Her son is also a member but she had never decided to follow him until one day when the missionaries of Payet found her, thanks to her son. In that first appointment they taught her a brief but powerful lesson that touched her heart. Elder Schroeder, one of the missionaries there, said, “I felt kind of like we were only giving a trailer of The Restoration of the Gospel of Jesus Christ (the first lesson we usually teach), but the Spirit was so strong there that we all could feel it. I honestly think it was better that way because it let her feel what the Gospel can do for her rather than just teach her.” From there she has progressed rapidly and after three weeks was baptized.

[Photo: Leonor with the missionaries, her son, Fernando, and her granddaughter, Yahmiley.]


1999 Joseph Smith video frightens missionaries and rock group shines in first performance at local baptism

Payet, Tahuantinsuyo – Also in the same baptism mentioned earlier, a series of unplanned occurrences created unexpected results – some good, some bad, and some very interesting.

Sources report that the first surprise came while those recently baptized were changing, when the missionaries present – having forgotten to bring a USB with their videos – resorted to a DVD presentation of Joseph Smith – The Prophet of the Restoration made in 1999, not ever having seen it before.

For those of you unfamiliar with it’s content, it begins with a dramatic demonstration of the martyrdom of Joseph Smith the prophet and his brother Hyrum in Carthage Jail. Even though the scene is historically accurate and does a good job of showing this sad event, it wasn’t exactly what the missionaries wanted to show, especially after a baptism.

“I saw that it was only 12 minutes and thought, ‘That should be good,'” said Elder Schroeder, “especially because the full-length video is more than an hour. However, when the suspenseful music started I got a little worried… And then the shooting started!”

Elder Klein actually left the room following this part, deciding it’d be better to simply return and see the aftermath. “There are kids here!” he exclaimed. “What on earth are we showing?!”

“One good thing I’ll say,” said Elder Mossel, one of the senior couples who attended the baptism with his wife, “is that it kept everyone interested! I didn’t see a single person sleeping in that room!” Elder Schroeder, even though shocked, also added, “I suppose it’s a good way to show what Joseph Smith went through in trying to bring the restored Gospel of Jesus Christ to the earth.”

After the demonstration of the martyrdom, the rest of the video went well, but Elder Schroeder still felt that he should say something: “I couldn’t just leave it like that! I was still in shock about the first scene!” He stood up and briefly explained the importance of prophets, called by God to teach His children, and how the Gospel that they and Christ taught was lost and later restored to the earth. He finished by sharing a surprisingly sincere testimony of the things he taught, bringing himself to tears. “I think that was one of the very few times that I have actually felt what I’ve said. I know it’s true, but it has always been hard to say it with a conviction that I feel,” he said later. “I just wish I could do it all the time.”

Following this spiritual moment, a music group consisting of the women of the Relief Society (the organization in the Church made up of women 18 years of age and older) played a special musical number with a twist: “Cuenta tus bendiciones” (Hymn 157, Spanish) with a guitar. The audience found it somewhat difficult to hear because the singers’s voices didn’t carry all the way to the back, but the message was good. “I liked the guitar,” said one. “Never heard that before!”

[Photo: The Sociedad de Socorro (Relief Society) playing their new hit single with their guitarist (first row, far left)]


Training meeting causes boredom – Lima secretaries prepare for Mexican CCM group

La Molina, Lima – On August 10 those of the area offices of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints held a special training meeting to teach the new mission secretaries about the various tasks and processes required for the missionaries’ visas.

“Many of the things that are spiritual have temporal counterparts,” said the head of the travel offices. “We have to work and organize everything in this world as well as spiritually… In the Church ‘we believe in being subject to kings, presidents, rulers, and magistrates in obeying, honoring, and sustaining the law’ (Article of Faith #12), meaning that we have to work according to the laws of the places in which we serve.”

This training was especially important because on September 15th many missionaries will be coming from other countries without going through the migration process normally handled in the Missionary Training Center here in Peru. This means that the secretaries of the missions will be in charge of coordinating and organizing a trip to Interpol, among many other things, to make these newcoming missionaries legal for the next 24 months they will be serving.

The only problem was the boredom and the stress. “I’m not really excited to try and collect 13 missionaries at 5am to take them to Interpol, where we will then wait for something like 7 hours while they go through the process,” said one. “But I guess that’s just part of the job.”


 

Well, I’ve finally figured out what my release date is:

NOVEMBER 5, 2017!

That’s both thrilling and horrifying. On one hand, being in the field is starting to take more of a toll on me and I’ll be very happy to be coming back, but, as you know, it’s also very stressful to think about… I feel like a broken record saying that again, but, well…

Aaaaaaanyway, on to some more interesting stuff…

I suppose it’s about time that I explain my job, now that I have almost an entire cambio doing it. As secretario personal, I’m in charge of:

* Transportation for the missionaries that are entering the field and “dying” – organizing buses and taxis, ordering plane flights, etc.

* Preparing everything for the “dying” missionaries

* Wasting hours of my life at a time in lines to do paperwork… Or, I mean…

* Legal paperwork for the extranjeros (I forgot that word in English…) which, in Perú, are their Carnés de extranjería, their Prórrogas de residencia, and working with their passports and documentation. To do this I have to be a legal representative for about half the mission, so that’s kind of cool… (Don’t cross me or I’ll kick you out of the country! Nah, just kidding!)

* Organizing the phones – Making sure every area has a cell phone, replacing lost or broken phones, getting new phones for new areas, charging people for breaking or losing their phones, etc. This is stressful because everyone wants and needs a phone right now, but I have to get everything from the area offices rather than the mission offices… They don’t always do it that quickly.

* Doing other little miscellaneous tasks for Presidente Godfrey

It’s a lot of work, especially because I need to be really organized to keep track of everything. It’s a lot of pressure because if I mess something up we can have pretty big problems… But that hasn’t really happened to me yet, so we’re fine. However, all the work I have means that my schedule is never routine, so it keeps me on my toes while making me change things (like when my P-Day is). So that’s what I’m up to around here.

As for our area, we’re doing really well! Even though we only work as “real” missionaries from 5:00 PM, we’re having some good success and two people decided they wanted to be baptized! Their names are Keisy and Franz. Here they are in between the three of us:

Keisy is Franz’s nephew who was going to be baptized about a month ago, but he got scared because the water was cold, and in the end he didn’t. However, since his baptism we’ve also been teaching Franz, who we got to know when he went to Keisy’s almost-baptism… And then they got baptized together! It was special because Keisy’s mom (Franz’s sister) was so happy that her son and brother had gotten baptized that she was in tears. The Gospel is awesome!

More exciting news: We also have three other people that are going to be baptized tomorrow! I’ll explain more about them next week (Stay tuned!).

Other than enjoying the actual mission work, we’ve been doing a few other things as well. Well, OK, really just one thing: Eating!

Here we are, just in a normal restaurant:

(Sorry, I don’t have many pictures — there’s not really anything interesting to take pictures of, so I’ve only got pictures of P-Days… And we don’t do much on P-Days either…!)

Anyway, hopefully I’ll have something else to report next week… namely, baptisms and the stories behind them, but I suppose something funny would also be good. ¡Hasta luego!

Élder Schroeder
Secretario Personal
Misión Perú Lima Norte
Mobile: 972-606-816
Av. Carlos Izaguirre 124, Independencia, Lima

(Pretty awesome, right?! This is the official signature that I put on all the emails I send out!)

Eating suri again…!

Sorry, I know I didn’t write last week. Once again, I didn’t have time. Oh, well. Not a whole lot happened anyway.

Nah, I’m just kidding! A lot of things have happened, but they haven’t really shown fruit until recently! The first is a cool miracle that we saw this past Sunday. We have an investigator named Franz who is preparing himself to be baptized and who has had some difficulties as he’s been progressing. The latest challenge was that he lost his job for a while (But a little miracle gave him another! Right after he listened to us for the first time, the very next day, someone he knew called and asked him to start working immediately!) and now the challenge is that his job is incredibly demanding. He said that he’d been praying to get more work… And now he got it, so much that he works from 7am until 11pm!

When we talked to his family on Sunday morning they said he had been working all night and probably wouldn’t come to church that day, and when they showed up he wasn’t with them. We didn’t really know what to do — he needed to come to church that day so we could finish some of his baptismal preparation — so we each said a prayer… And within 10 minutes he showed up! We just turned around a little later on in the service and he was there! When church ended we had a chance to talk to him and he said, “I can’t miss coming to church to thank God for giving me more work. I ask for more work and look at what happens! I need to thank him properly!” Hopefully he’ll be baptized this week on the 29th with his nephew!

Aside from a few other small miracles all over the place (they’re everywhere if you just look a little bit!) there’s not much else… Except, of course, that we at suri, the giant maggot from the jungle, again, but this time with my new companions. Here they are:

Oh, and just for the record, they were still alive when we ate them!

Here’s Elder Castrejón:

And here´s Elder Klein:

(Having 9 giant maggots wriggling in your hand is a really weird feeling!)

And then I also have a video of when we actually ate them… RAW! If you want to see it I’ll upload it to Google Drive.

But that’s all for this week, folks! I’ll let you know what else happens!

— Elder Schroeder

P.S. If anyone’s got any questions, go ahead and ask them! I’m not really sure what to explain about the mission or about being in the offices, so anything you might want to know about this or anything else, I’m totally willing to explain! But I won’t know what to explain until you tell me!

Finally! I’ve been wanting to send you guys pictures for the last few weeks, but I haven’t been able to do it because I haven’t had time (Last week I didn’t have time to write a weekly email because I was working on P-Day!… I’m pretty sure I’m never going to have a real P-Day until the end of my mission because someone always needs me to do something! (So don’t expect an email every week… Sorry)

But I’m all good here in the offices. I’m liking the work because it allows me to think a little bit about how to make the mission more efficient and productive and with our mission president’s permission we might be able to implement it. Recently I was going around training a couple of zones about how to use the mission database to contact people who have requested missionary visits. We had 1,500 people that hadn’t been visited, let alone contacted! But after the training it’s gone down by the hundreds every week! So seeing the effects of our work has been cool!

Anyway, to catch up on a few things that we’ve had going on lately (But that I haven’t mentioned because I didn’t have pictures):

First, on the last P-Day before all the crazy changes happened, my district and I took some pictures with the shirts we made. They came out pretty well:

… Now I’m all by myself in the offices… Nah, just kidding!

On my first P-Day here in the offices we went to eat at a really nice restaurant and ate about 40 soles of meat! Considering that a decent meal costs about 10 soles, we spent a lot… but it was worth it!

Here I am with my order (It came with it’s own mini-grill because there was so much meat!):

Before you think that I ate it all by myself, I assure you that I shared with Jefferson, our chauffer (Yes, we have chauffers, but it’s because we often have to drive all over the mission to do various things, not because we’re rich!… Especially not after spending 40 soles in one go!)

Here’s Jefferson and Elder Primo, Elder Sánchez, Elder Castrejón, and Elder Klein (in order) (And obviously I’m over there on the end!):

Elder Castrejón and Elder Klein are my companions and Elder Primo and Elder Sánchez are the president’s assistants, but we all have P-Day together because we all live in the same house and often work together, too. It’s a lot more fun!

I suppose the last “interesting” thing is that I’ve been working with the mission phones lately because no one had been doing it for almost 6 months… That took a lot of work! But now I’m on top of it and I took a picture of all the new ones I’m going to ship out:

I’m proud of it!

See you all next week (If I have time to write, I mean…)

— Elder Schroeder

One crazy week…

Well, first I know it’s not normal for me to be writing this on a Saturday… P-Days are supposed to be Mondays, like they have been for the last 21 months! But it seems that a lot of things are going to change from here on out, starting with a few things:

1. I’M EXTENDING MY MISSION!

Ever since I really started to know and like the mission, I’ve always considered extending because, as I’ve mentioned many times, I love being here and doing what I do! The last cambio (ever since May) I’d been thinking a lot more seriously about it because I’m getting close to the end. So I did some fasting and prayer and asked my mission president if I could, and when he told me it was still an option (I thought it was already way too late! I’m a procrastinator…) I took it! If I could do the mission for even longer I would be so happy, but I know I can’t do it forever… so I’m going to take advantage of however much time I can! I didn’t really know what my presidente had in mind for me until Monday, when he told me what my cambio was… And here’s the next big change:

2. I’m the new secretario personal!

Yeah, I know, that’s not really all that interesting or cool. I’m going to be working in the mission offices to organize everything that has to do with visas and other important things to make sure that the government doesn’t kick all of the missionaries out of the country, and it’s an incredible amount of work! That’s actually why I’m taking P-Day on a Saturday — the rest of the week has been so busy after all the cambios that we haven’t had time to take P-Day (Well, they — my companions and the president’s assistants — didn’t have time. I did, so I get two P-Days this week!).

But seriously, it’s a lot of work being here in the offices! The idea in the mission is that the office workers don’t do anything (Basically, we think they’re lazy because they aren’t always out finding and teaching investigators — most of the day we’re in the offices), but it’s completely false! I’ve especially seen this this past week, when there have been meetings every day and I’ve had to be trained by my companions at the same time. Some days we’ve worked from 10am until 6 or 7pm in the offices or running errands around Lima (Not even taking time to eat lunch!) before going to our area to find and teach people until 10:30pm. On the way back to the cuarto we usually stop by the offices to finish something else up, and we finish the day by planning with the assistants until 11:30 at night!

I really like how we work almost 100% in the mission (before, my companions and I would have from 10pm until 11:30 to do our own things, leaving us these few hours when we didn’t focus so much on the mission), but the work is very different. I’m going to miss being a normal missionary because it’s a little more public, but I suppose working in the background a little more is a good way to humble myself!

3. I’m in a trio!

As I’ve already mentioned a little, this Tuesday I was changed and left my old area and my companion (My “son”!) and moved to Independencia to work in the offices with the other two oficinistas, Elder Klein (who’s training me to replace him as secretario personal) and Elder Castrejon. It’s interesting to be in a trio again (I was in a trio for a few weeks when I was starting the mission), and it’ll be cool again, especially because I have a lot more experience!

I suppose that’s all the news for right now! From here on until the end of my mission it seems like I’ll be in the offices, and that probably means that I’ll be taking my P-Days on Wednesdays! I’ll write about the other interesting stuff that’s going on as I get more into this new job! ¡Hasta luego!

— Elder Schroeder

Ya vienen los cambios… (¡Quizás mi último cambio de área!)

Well, I still don’t know what the cambios are going to be this time, but I’m almost 100% sure that I’m going to another area… and it’s very likely that that will be where I “die”! I’m kind of disappointed that I’ll probably be leaving my companion — Elder Pereira has been a really awesome companion and a great friend, but now that I’ve finished training him he (should!) be ready to guide the area by himself. I’ll be sad to leave Industrial, too, because I really like the ward and it’s been fun, but I can’t stay here forever! (And then it’s entirely possible that I don’t even go anywhere! Who knows?!)

Anyway, highlights of this week:

First, of course, is that Ruth was baptized on Saturday!

(She’s the girl there in the middle in white!)

I haven’t mentioned her much (I know I really should have, but I didn’t…), but we’ve been teaching her for about a month; she’s the girl I mentioned in my last report, about how we found her one day because she asked us if we could visit her, and last week she had shared her testimony! Well, as I said, we had been teaching her and her mom, Carolina, (she’s the woman to Ruth’s left, behind me) and her brother (the boy next to me) for a little while now but for a variety of reasons Ruth hadn’t felt ready to be baptized. Well, about two weeks ago she had prayed and asked if she should be baptized, and the next day (Sunday) woke up and couldn’t get the thought of baptism out of her head!* When we saw her at church that day, she told us, “Hey, I want to be baptized and I want to serve a mission!” (She had just heard about the mission in her Sunday school class!)… My companion and I just stood there a second, both of us trying to figure out what to say next! “Ummm… OK! When would be good?” So we planned everything so she could be baptized the 1st, and it was awesome!

It’s always something really special when someone you know decides to be baptized and make that promise with our Heavenly Father and our Savior! Carolina was crying, she was so happy, and she’s also preparing to be baptized a little bit further on! Baptisms always improve every week!

*Another cool thing about this miracle: For a while now, I have been praying every night for Ruth, Carolina, and all the other investigators that we are teaching, hoping that He would help them to overcome their problems and doubts and help them to choose to follow the Gospel — and it happened! It’s not anything new to know that God answers prayers, but it’s always great to see that he does it so personally, especially when we truthfully don’t deserve it!

I suppose the last little thing was our family home evening that we did with a family in the ward. We finished it, everything normal, and I expected that the compartir would be some crackers or something, like always… I was wrong! It was the dreaded TOCOSH!!! For those of you who don’t know, tocosh is what happens when you throw a sack of potatoes in a hole full of water and let it sit for a few months. Then you take it out, clean it off a little, and eat it! If you think that’s unappetizing, wait until you smell it — it smells like a sewer! Here’s Elder Pereira’s face when he tried it:

I’ve already eaten tocosh once, when my district and I punished ourselves for being late to the district meeting and/or forgetting our stuff, but my poor companion hasn’t ever had the pleasure! He almost threw up, and we didn’t even eat tocosh by itself (like I had tried before) — we ate a much tastier kind, mixed with cinnamon and sugar!

It’s been a pretty good week, and next week I might have changed areas and/or companions! I’ll let you know! ¡Chao!

— Elder Schroeder