Tuesday, June 23, 2020

Mission Report

Sister Kathy Thatcher
Mission Report 
Paradise 3rd Ward
20 May 2018

You are a beautiful sight.  It’s nice to be home and among those we love.  It is also sad to leave our mission.  I told our family I think it is a little like death. You leave people you have learned to love.   You get on a plane and fly away far from them and there you are greeted by others that you have ‘long since lost awhile’, and you love them. Half of your heart is here with them and the other half back with those you have left.  I think this is a little like what it will be like when we die. 

I’m grateful for the opportunity to tell you a little bit about our mission.  I’m grateful that I have had the opportunity to serve with my companion, Elder Thatcher, and for the experiences we had together.  We served in the New Zealand Auckland Mission.  We were also part time in the New Zealand MTC where President Thatcher served as a counselor there.   We also worked in a ward - the Clover Park Ward.  We worked as regular missionaries when we were’t at the MTC. I think it was the perfect mission.  We were at the MTC where we got to see and love New Missionaries.  And we got to be trained ourselves, over and over again.  Then we would go out and try to do what we were  teaching the missionaries to do and we’d get discouraged. But, we could always go back to the MTC and be filled again with the Spirit that was there, and receive the instruction that we needed.  It was the perfect mission. 

One of the great missionaries to the Maori people of New Zealand was Matthew Cowley.  The story is told that when he was asked what was important about serving a mission, he said simply, “It’s the people! It’s the people! That is who is important.”  It was so with us and I’d like to tell you a little about some of the people we came to love in New Zealand. 

We served in the MTC with President and Sister Howes and President and Sister Briggs.  We knew the Howes before we went there.  They asked us to come serve with them.  President and Sister Howes are amazing people, and it was one of the great privileges of our lives to serve with them, and to watch them, and to see what life is like with people who are totally consecrated to the Lord. Their full time, all their energy, was given to the missionaries and they loved every minute of it.   We could go home on Sunday nights together.  We had arrived at the MTC before 7:00 in the morning and left around 10:00 at night.  We were exhausted and so happy to get to go into our little apartment and be by ourselves and unwind.  But that wasn’t the case for the Howe’s.  They never got to unwind.  They lived at the MTC.  They were up in the night with sick Elders and Sisters.  They woke them up early in the morning.  They got up at 2:00 and 3:00 in the morning going to the airport to pick them up when they came or take them to the airport when they were leaving.  Their lives were totally consecrated.  

We got to hear them teach.  They were tremendous teachers.  They would teach the gospel with such power.  The young missionaries came from the islands of the sea, and from all over the world.  We had missionaries from Europe, South America, many from Australia, some from America, we even had Cindy Young’s nephew and others from Cache Valley.  Some of these young missionaries from remote islands of the sea were so humble.  You have never seen more humble, missionaries.  One came carrying a grocery sack with an extra shirt in, and wearing flip flops.  It was all he had.  He didn’t even have scriptures, and like many, he hadn’t been to the temple.  But they came.  They came because they love the Lord, because they have been touched by the gospel and they want to be missionaries.  The Howes, and the teachers, and those who run the MTC take these young Elders and Sisters, they greet them at the door with hugs and welcome them, and immediately begin to train them.  And they grow. These frightened humble young missionaries in 3 weeks time, grow into mighty servants of the Lord.  This was one of the great miracles we witnessed over and over again on our mission.  

We didn’t know President and Sister Briggs before our mission but they became our dear friends.  I’ve thought about the many people that we learned to love there, including the Briggs, and how friendships made when you are serving a mission are probably like no other friendships in your life.  They are eternal.  They are remarkable.  I think it is because you are serving the Lord together in such a great cause, and that binds you.  I’ve heard that comrads in arms have a remarkable bond and that is kind of what it is like to be a missionary and serve with other missionaries.  You love them.  

We met other people on this mission that had tremendous impacts on us.  Sister Rangi Parker and Elder Parker work in the Church Museum of the Pacific.  We were able to see them quite a bit because we would take the missionaries to the temple two weeks out of three, and while there we would visit the museum with the missionaries.  Rangi Parker has spent 40 years collecting memorabilia and letters, and pictures, and stories of the early missionaries to the Pacific.  She became a dear friend, and like all the other members in New Zealand, especially the Maori’s and the Polynesian people, she loves missionaries.  This is the only church Museum anywhere in the world outside of SLC and it is because of Rangi Parker and her collection.  It is marvelous to see. 

The Temple President there, President and Sister Roberts were other people that we came to love and admire.  They were another consecrated couple who had served as mission president and were on another mission when they were called to be President and Matron of the temple.  They would take these young Elders and Sisters and speak to them and teach them.  Many of the missionaries came, never having been to the temple so this was their first time at the Temple.  We had wonderful experiences there.  

Our Bishop in the ward, Bishop Utai, was from Samoa.  He had been a Stake President there for over 20 years before he moved to New Zealand where they promptly made him the Bishop.  My, we came to love Bishop Utai.  When he was a young missionary only out for two weeks his grandfather passed away.  A couple months later his father passed away.  Then, well into his mission, his mother also died.  He said, “I look forward to seeing them again.  I never got to say goodbye.”  That was Bishop Utai.  He served all of his life consecrating his life to the Lord.  He and his dear wife have raised 10 children and every one of them have served missions except the two youngest, twin daughters and still in YW’s.  He was a great example to us.   A great bishop.  

There was a Sister Talo in the ward that we came to love.  She was the Primary President.  I’m not sure how many children she had because some of them were in Samoa but she had about 4 children with her in New Zealand that she brought to Primary and she had a brand new baby when we asked her if she would pick up one of our investigators, a young Hindu boy named Ronak, who wanted to come to Primary.  Sister Talo with children in tow, would drive to Ronak’s home,  pick him up, bring him to Primary, stay the 3 hour block, take him to her house where she would feed him dinner along with their family, and have him play with her children a few hours before taking him home.  Sister Talo and her fellowshipping sons, were some of the saints we loved so dearly. 

I learned so much on this mission. I learned a lot about missionary work.  We had sent 11 children on missions.  I had read so many missionary letters and loved the experiences of our children, but I had always wanted to serve a mission - always.  As a young girl I dreamed of serving a mission in Samoa.  Isn’t that interesting.   I didn’t get to go then, but I can’t tell you how many missionaries and people we knew from Samoa in New Zealand.  It was finally my turn to go on a mission.  I learned for myself that all the stories I had heard of other missionaries, all the inspiring things I had loved all my life, were true and could happen to me because it is the Lord’s work - it is not the missionary.  

I don’t know of anything that can make you feel more humble than missionary work unless it’s motherhood or being a parent.  In missionary work you see all of your weaknesses. You know that you can’t do what you have been asked to do and you feel extremely weak.  Even things you thought you understood all your life you realize you don’t know.  I can’t tell you how many times I felt I just couldn’t do what I was asked to do.  Sometimes I even had to play the piano for the MTC Choir.  I could just see my mother in the life beyond worrying about me having that assignment because she knew how horrible I was at playing the piano.  When I would make a mistake I would think, “I know mom.  It should be Janice. Janice should be here.  She could do everything so much better than I am doing.  But, I am all they have right now at the MTC so I will play the piano making mistakes, feeling very weak.”  I do know that the Lord is capable, and any of us, even the little missionary with the grocery sack with a dirty shirt for an extra shirt, can be a missionary because it is the Lord’s work and He helps you. 

So many times you don’t even realize that you are doing something that is important to the Lord.  One time we had a call from the area office.  The secretary asked for Elder Thatcher and said, “There is a woman in your ward, in the Clover Park ward, that needs a blessing.  Her name is Mousie Skews, she has cancer, she is not a member of the church, she is Catholic, but she has asked for a blessing.  Would you go give a blessing to her.”

Of course Elder Thatcher said he would go.  We wondered who to take to help with the blessing and thought of President Briggs, and then we thought, ‘No, she is in the Clover Park ward and we should get Clover Park people to know her.’

We called Bishop Utai who cheerfully agreed to come.  This was a Monday night, family home evening, and Bishop Utai was an extremely busy man.  Always willing to serve he graciously followed us there in his car.    

We had the address but didn’t recognize the street name.  We put the address in our little GPS and started driving.  We went all through the Clover Park ward and were heading into a different area of Auckland.  We were so embarrassed and thought, “Oh, my goodness, we took him away from family home evening and this in not even in our ward.”  

When we arrived, and finally got out of our cars, we apologized to him.  He assured us it was fine.  We knocked on the door and were welcomed inside.  We could see through the doorway into the living room, a woman sitting there, her head bald from cancer treatments, and one leg missing from an amputation needed because of the cancer.  When Bishop Utai saw her he gasped.  He knew she was Samoan the minute he saw her and he began to talk to her in Samoan.  They connected as he learned that she his very dearest friends wife’s sister.  This friend had served with him in the Stake Presidency and had been a bishop under him for many years.  We loved watching them talk together warmly in Samoan.  Mousie told him she had been longing for Samoa and missing her home, but had been too sick to go back. 
Bishop Utai was meant to be there that night, not Elder and Sister Thatcher, but Bishop Utai.  He gave her the blessing in Samoan.  We left knowing that the Lord was involved.  All these little workings of the Lord happen because Heavenly Father knows his children, intimately, every one of us, and watches over us and feels after us.  The Lord is mighty in HIs ministry to people.

When I think about what I learned on the mission.  I think I learned the most about the Lord -  who He is,  how He loves, how He teaches, how He blesses, how He works, His majesty.  I was in awe of things that would simply happen on the mission; the times we were led, the people we met, the experiences we had.  Sometimes we would leave home and we couldn’t even speak to each other.  The spirit was too strong. Then, after a few minutes we would say, ‘Can you believe what just happened in that home?’

I came to know that the Lord is powerful, and kind, and forgiving, and can use even weak missionaries in His work.  I love King Benjamin’s great sermon.  And I know all of you know the scripture, “When ye are in the service of your fellow beings, ye are only in the service of your God.”

King Benjamin talks about service all through that talk.  He also says that we are always unprofitable servants no matter if we serve all our lives because the Lord just keeps blessing us for that service.  But the scripture I came to love most on my mission is his statement, “How knoweth a man the master whom he has not served.”  I know that when you serve the Lord you come to know Him better.  And that is really the only way to get to know the Lord.

We have so many wonderful stories, so many wonderful people we met.  There is Enekosi.  You see, I had this companion who believed in tracking because on his mission as a youth, he tracked 10 hours a day.  He thought that was what missionary work was.  I didn’t think we would have to track as a missionary senior couple, but I had this companion who tracted.  I learned that if he ever said, “We need to go tracking, we need to increase our teaching pool. We need to go tracting.”  I didn’t argue, and I didn’t complain, I would just go.  Sometimes I hid behind him on the door, but I went and every time we tracked it seemed there were miracles. 

One time he asked, ‘Where do you think we should go?’ 

You’ve heard stories about how you pray and then you have an idea and you follow that.  We prayed, and we didn’t really feel very much, but there was this one street where the birds were singing, and the flowers were extra beautiful and I thought, “Well that’s a pretty street.  Let’s go there.”

I think on that one street after tracking we had 6 appointments.  One of them was with Enekosi and Leitu.   We had knocked on several doors where no one was home and then we saw these children playing in the front yard.  We thought we should go there because at least we knew someone was home.  We asked the children if they would like to see a little movie about Jesus.  Of course they wanted to and called for their grandmother who opened the door.  You could tell she didn’t want us there.  She said she had an appointment and had to go.  I said we could just sit there on the steps and show the children this little two minute video and then we would leave. She said, ‘No, come in, come in.’

We were half way to the kitchen when her husband, Enekosi came out. I was kind of afraid, he looked a little angry.  But he wasn’t angry.  He took us into the kitchen and sat us down.  We showed him the little Children’s Bible Video ‘Fishers of Men’.  It softened him and When It was over he said, “I have been a very bad man most of my life.  But, my wife has cancer and for 2 years I have not been drinking.  I read the Bible every day and I teach my grandchildren songs about Jesus.  I said, “Well, we have a song that we love in the church.  On our little computer we played, ‘I am a child of God.’  Enekosi was in tears.  He said, ‘You need to come teach us.’

So We had the marvelous experience of teaching Enekosi and Leitu.  We introduced him to the Book fo Mormon which he loved.  This was a man who read the Bible at least 2 hours every day.  But he began reading the Book of Mormon and he would say, “I love this Mormon Book.  It is the same.  It is the same gospel.  It’s prophets teaching about Jesus.  It is the same.  I love this Mormon Book.  It  is more clear than the Bible.”   I could tell so many stories about Enekosi but I always talk too long.  

I know the Lord knows us.  We would go on fun walks in the evenings, just Elder Thatcher and I.  One night we walked up a road we had often gone on and there, on a little round-a-bout was a sign - ‘Garage Sale’.  Well, if any of you know me you know my DI habits and my weakness for yard sales.  I said, ‘Look at that Elder Thatcher!  It starts at 7:30 in the morning and I’m going!’   I had never seen a thrift store or a garage sale in all the time I had been in New Zealand. 

I got up the next morning, took off my name tag and just went in my walking things.  There I found, you won’t believe it, a large plastic container full of legos for 5$.  I thought, ‘I shouldn’t buy these.’  But, I couldn’t pass them up. I  thought, ‘Everyone of my grandsons would love these, but I’m too cheap to mail them home.  That would cost a fortune!’ 

Unable to stop myself, I bought this $5 huge thing and then a young man that was there said, “I have more legos at home if you would like them.”  

“Really!”  I said and he said, “About twice that many.”
“How much would you sell them for?’
“10 bucks”

And so he went home and brought back this HUGE container of Legos.  I had walked to the yard sale but I had to go back home and get the car to bring the legos home.  There was no way to get them home to the grandkids.  So we started thinking who we we could give them to and we thought of Ronak, our little Hindu boy.  And we thought of Sister Talo’s two boys who had befriended Ronak.  We took the HUGE one to the Talo brothers and asked them if they had ever had lego’s.

“No! But we have dreamed about them all our lives.” They said.  
  
Then we went to Ronak’s house.  We knocked on the door and said, “Ronak, would you like some lego’s?”  He said, “I’ve never had any legos.  But I’ve always thought I would enjoy them.”  As we handed Ronak this big carton of wonderful Legos his father Roy came to the door and said, “Did you know that it was Ronak’s birthday today?”

Of course we hadn’t known, but the Lord knew didn’t he! And the Lord knew a missionary who, if there was just a little ‘Garage Sale’ sign, it would draw her in.  I tell you the Lord knows us and he can use even our weaknesses in His work.  

I know I’ve taken up too much time and I will end by telling you one little story.  

One of the last times we went to the temple with the missionaries, President Howes son and his wife were visiting with their family.  It was their son Luke, who had been our son Paul’s missionary companion in Austria.  They were staying at the MTC with their three children.  Can you imagine coming to visit your grandparents and you get to sleep at the MTC and watch the missionaries and attend their meetings and eat with the missionaries in the cafeteria and listen to your grandparents teach the missionaries, and dress like missionaries, and act like missionaries, Well you couldn’t walk into the MTC without feeling the spirit and those children were alive with what they were feeling.  

It was time to go to the temple and I said, “why don’t you let me stay outside of the temple with the children so that Luke and Jerusha could go.”  They had never been to the New Zealand temple and Jerusha’s parents and grandparents  had been married in that temple.  So I spent the time with the children while all the others attended the temple with the missionaries. 

At the visitor center they showed the 4 of us two movies.  Wonderful movies that I could watch a hundred times and never tire of.  One is called ‘Days of Harmony’.  It’s about Joseph and Oliver translating the Book of Mormon.  The 2nd one is about David Whitmer and takes place at the Whitmer farm where the Book of Mormon translation was completed.  They are inspiring films.  They put us in a little private room where we watched together.  

At the end of the last video, after the church has been organized, and the Book of Mormon has been published, and all of these difficult things are behind them,  David Whitmer says to Joseph, “The work is finally finished Joseph!”

Joseph looks at David and says, “The work has just begun.”

At this point of the young Howe boys said to me, “I’m glad that the work isn’t over.  I want to be a part of the work.”

That touched me.  It was what I was thinking as well.   I’m glad the work isn’t over.  That all beautiful missionary experiences didn’t end with Parley P. Pratt and Wilford Woodruff and Joseph Smith and Matthew Cowley, and all of the great missionaries of the past.  There is a tremendous work to be done.  The Lord is moving in His majesty. The restoration has come.  The church has been restored.  The gospel is here. But there are so many Enekosi’s and Truan Trans and people throughout the world who need to be taught.  There is work for each of us.  There is work for every mother and every father, for every child and every youth and every little humble person on one of the isles of the sea.  There is work for us to do.  

I pray that we will all have a desire to be servants of the Lord, to come to know Him as we serve Him.  To learn to love, which is what happens when you are a missionary.  You love the people you meet.  It really is all about the people.  

I’m  grateful to the Lord for the opportunity of being a missionary.  I’m thankful for the good companion I was able to serve with.  I got to see him as a missionary, his faith, how he studied, how he taught, how he tracted, how he loved the Lord.  It was different than seeing him as a husband or as a father.  I’ve loved him all these years for those things.  I’m grateful to the Lord that he lets weak people be a part of His great latter-day work.   And I’m thankful to be home.  

I remember as a child hearing about David O McKay, whose father served a mission.  He was called  just after 2 sisters had passed away and his wife was pregnant.  When he returned from that mission, young David McKay asked his father, “What was the greatest miracle you ever saw on your mission?”  His father pointed to his wife, David’s mother, and said, ‘She is the greatest miracle I saw.  She added to the family home, and kept the farm running, and kept the children going.”

I felt that too.  Some of the greatest miracles we saw were in our own family here at home.  The way they helped each other.  The way they conducted their lives.  The way they lived.  We have seen many miracles in our family.  

I love the Lord, I love this work,  I love the Book of Mormon.  I love everything about this latter day church, this gospel, and pray we will be faithful and true and live according to our covenants.  That we will serve the Lord with all of our might, mind, strength, and heart.  And that we will be consecrated as those wonderful people we have learned from on our mission. 

In the name of Jesus Christ, Amen



Mission Report
Elder David Thatcher
Paradise 3rd Ward
20 May 2018

Brothers and Sisters it’s good to be home.  It was good to serve a mission too.  We had, as Sister Thatcher said, a perfect mission.  Before we left on our mission, secretly, I wanted to be a proselyting missionary.  Now, Merv Weeks, when he went on his mission he apparently asked the bishop and the stake president if he could serve a proselyting mission.  I didn’t want to do that because I did not want to keep the schedule that we kept as young missionaries. And so, I kept it to myself.  But it didn’t matter because we still got to serve a proselyting mission and not only that but we got to study ‘Preach My Gospel’ along with all the Elders at the MTC and every week we got to go to the MTC and get retrained and get help on what we were doing wrong as missionaries.  

One of the responsibilities of the Presidency of the MTC was to interview all the missionaries.  President Howes is a very organized man so he had a form for us for the first week for the first interview that we would have with the missionaries, and he also had a form for the interviews for the 2nd week, for the second time we would interview the missionaries.  It was really boring.  The form wasn’t very interesting after interviewing so many missionaries so I kind of deviated a little bit.  

Very often I would ask the missionaries why they decided to serve a mission.  Very often they would say, ‘My older brother or my sister went on a mission and they liked their mission and so I decided that I wanted to go on a mission.”  Or sometimes they would say, “Well, I love the Lord so the natural thing is to go on a mission and tell the people about the Lord.”

Sometimes I would also share scriptures with the missionaries.  I found that not all missionaries were brilliant, fully qualified, scriptorian missionaries.  I found that sometimes they didn’t know very much at all.  Sometimes I would share scriptures about the Book of Mormon with the Elders or the Sisters. And as they were leaving they would say, “President, thank you for sharing those scriptures with me.”

One time I was interviewing an Elder who only spoke Samoan.  He didn’t have very much English at all.  And so we had one of the teachers come in to translate.  At the end of the interview the translator told me that he wanted to thank me for sharing these scriptures with him because he had been looking for them and he didn’t know where to find them.  I guess I share that with you  to in a small way tell you how much we love these Elders and Sisters at the MTC.  

Probably the majority of the missionaries were Polynesian.   Many of them had gone to the church high school either in Samoa or in Tonga.  The ones that had gone to the church high school were really quite well versed. They normally spoke better English.  They also were better prepared to be missionaries.  But sometimes we would get missionaries from one of the Islands like Kiribati, or Niue or Vanuatu, and these missionaries were extremely humble as a rule.  You just loved these missionaries because they were so humble and they had come from such poor circumstances, but they wanted to serve too.  They wanted to serve too.  And so they were welcomed and they came and they were being trained just like everybody else. 
Oft times in these interviews I would ask them if they liked their teachers in the MTC. They would say, “Oh, we love our teachers.  They are wonderful teachers.”  

It was always a thrill to rub shoulders with these missionaries.  Every meal time at the MTC we would hug the missionaries.  Sister Howes and Sister Briggs and Sister Thatcher would hug the Sisters and we would hug the Elders - every mealtime.  It was our humble way of trying to show these missionaries that we loved them, and we accepted them, and that we wanted them to be successful.  

Most of them only stayed at the MTC for three weeks.  We got to know them a little bit.  We were always sad to see them leave.  Some of the missionaries would stay for six week but only the ones who were learning English.  The only language taught at the MTC was English.  Even though many of the Elders and Sisters there were maybe from French Polynesia and the only language they were required to speak was French.  Or some of the missionaries would only speak Samoan or Tongan which meant they were going back to their island to serve their mission.  

We encouraged the missionaries to learn English.  I don’t know if you are aware of it or not but if the missionaries will put forth enough effort to learn English.  The Church will educate them at a greatly discounted rate so they can afford to get a college education. 

My time is up, but I wanted to share one interesting tidbit.  When we would come home from working in the evening sometimes we would turn on TV.  There were 3 religion channels, First Light, Hope and Shine.  These were television channels where oft times there would be a minister or reverend or a preacher that would be teaching on the channel.  We found that many of these lessons could have be given in our Sunday school classes.  I was amazed by that because when I was a kid and listened to ministers from other churches, you couldn’t have used those lessons in our classes.  It appeared to me, and I thought that somehow they have come to learn the doctrines of the restored gospel.  I think it’s an indication that the teachings of our church are so compelling, and so wonderful, and they make so much sense that the other churches have adopted these teachings.  

We have a favorite talk given by Truman Madsen years and years ago which he entitled, “Are Christians Mormon?” My oldest brother put me on to this talk.  In his talk he puts forth a premise that in the latter days we would see the churches all teach the same things and that the only thing that would differentiate the churches would be the Holy Priesthood of God.  That our church is the only church on the face of the earth with which the Lord is well pleased and  is the only true and living church, because we have the Priesthood of God, which has been restored through Heavenly Messengers.  

We had so many wonderful experiences on our mission.  We had so many opportunities to teach the gospel.  I think Sister Thatcher even came to enjoy tracking.  That was a miracle.  But I want you to know that whenever I said I thought we ought to go tracking, she never turned me down.  She always was willing to go tracking with me, even though it scared her and she did not enjoy it.  I think we were the only Senior Couple in all of New Zealand that tracted.  That was not something the Senior couples did.  And it is a shame, because the people seemed to respond easier to us than they did the young missionaries.  I don’t know if they responded better to us than they did the sister missionaries, but they responded probably better to us than they did to the Elders.  So it was a lovely experience.  

We are grateful that we got to serve a mission. It was a short mission but it was filled with wonderful experiences and wonderful people that we met. As a result of our mission we love the Polynesian people.  We are grateful that we got to serve amongst the Polynesian people.

We are grateful to be home.  I’m grateful I don’t have to wear a suit everyday.  And I’m grateful that I don’t have to wear that name tag every day.  I don’t like being conspicuous and whenever we were out in public people would always turn away when they would see our name tag.  I like people looking at me or looking me in the eye and not feeling like they have to turn away.  

But what a wonderful blessing to serve a mission.  A wonderful blessing to be members of this church.  A wonderful thing to have the example of faithful people like the Sorensens, and the Nielsens who have served missions.  When we were trying to decide if we would go on a mission, and we were praying and fasting and trying to find out if we should go we finally decided, we’ve already been told.  The lord doesn’t need to tell us that we need to go on a mission.  He has already told us. A hundred times he has told us that we should go on a mission so why should we have to be told again.  I’m grateful that we discovered that little secret so that we went on our mission because it was a wonderful blessing.

I bear testimony to you that the gospel is true, that we are so blessed to live here in this wonderful place and have the gospel in our lives.  We are grateful for those who came to visit us while in New Zealand, for my sister and her good husband, and for Merv and Clara Jean who came to visit us.  We had some wonderful times with them.  

So grateful for the opportunity we had to serve.  I say this in the name of Jesus Christ,  Amen.  




Mission Report  
Elder David K. Thatcher & Sister Kathleen Thatcher 
New Zealand Auckland Mission – July 2017 – May 2018

Our mission to the New Zealand Auckland Mission was a sweet, special time for us.  We had always dreamed of serving a mission together and were beginning to wonder if we would get the opportunity.  Our son, Aaron, was fighting stage 4 lung cancer and we felt needed to help his family of 6 children, 3 of which have Cystic Fibrosis.  We have a large family of 13 children and at the time of our service 12 of the 13 were married with families.  We had 62 grandchildren.  Our youngest daughter was not married and it was hard to leave her as well.  

We were asked by our dear friends who had been called to serve as the President of the MTC in New Zealand to come serve with them.  They wanted Dave to serve in the MTC Presidency as a counselor.  We struggled with the decision to go as we fasted and prayed, wanting to know that it was what we should do.  We decided that we could maybe serve for one year – that Aaron might live that long, and if he got really bad we could leave our mission early. Finally Dave said we should just move forward and put in our papers.  We received our call and prepared to leave putting our faith in Heavenly Father knowing he would sustain our family at home and hoping that we could serve the Lord as faithful missionaries. 

We were called to serve at the MTC and also as MLS Missionaries in the Auckland Mission.  We served at the MTC with President and Sister Phil and Judy Howes, President and Sister Ivan and Suzanna Briggs, and ourselves, President David and Sister Thatcher.  We were at the MTC on Sundays from before 7:00 am and ending around 9:30 pm. The MTC Presidency was in charge of the Sunday Schedule for the missionaries there, which usually numbered between 50 – 110 missionaries. We were also there every Thursday, which was either an intake day or a temple day with the missionaries.  On most Tuesdays and Saturdays we also spent time at the MTC.  

What sweet experiences we had with the missionaries who came to serve and learn at the MTC.  Many of the missionaries were from the Pacific Islands, New Zealand, and Australia, but we also had missionaries who were called to serve in the islands or Australia or New Zealand who came to this MTC.  We had missionaries from America, Europe, South America, China, and many other countries.  The New Zealand MTC only teaches one language, English, but there were classes that were taught in Samoan, Tongan, and French for missionaries called to serve in Samoa, Tonga, or French Polynesia, who already spoke those languages. We quickly fell in love with the missionaries who answered the call to serve.  Many were poor with little education but a great love of the Lord and a desire to serve him.  We watched them come in as shy frightened youth and leave in three or 6 weeks as mighty servants of the Lord.  

We also loved the training we got at the MTC.  It was a place where the Spirit was felt as you walked through the door.  We were constantly inspired and taught by our faithful leaders there.  It was one of the great honors of our lives to serve with President and Sister Howes. President Howes is from Adelaide Australia and he had served a mission in his youth in Peru.  He had been a bishop, Stake President, Temple President, and Mission President in the Sydney North Mission before being called as the MTC President.  Sister Howes was a convert who had taught over 20 years of early morning seminary. They were marvelous teachers.  The Howes were totally consecrated missionaries and we grew in our desire to be better missionaries and people by just being around them.  All the missionaries loved them and were taught powerfully by them and the Spirit that accompanied their teachings of how to serve as good missionaries.  We also became dear friends with the other missionary couple that served at the MTC, President and Sister Briggs.  They became the dearest of friends.  

Each missionary was greeted at every meal with hugs by the MTC Presidency.  We quickly learned to love each missionary and grew in our ability to pronounce their names as well.  We sang together in the MTC choir every week.  We participated in beautiful devotionals taught by the Area Presidency and other General Authorities.  We were visited by two Apostles while serving there; Elder Gary E. Stevenson and Elder Neil L. Andersen. These were highlights for the missionaries, many of whom had never seen an apostle.  We loved the staff at the MTC as well.  They were remarkable young people who had served missions themselves and had the ability to inspire and guide the new missionaries.  

We took the missionaries to the temple 2 out of 3 weeks each intake.  The Hamilton Temple was an hour and a half from the MTC.  Some of these missionaries had not yet been to the temple so we shared their first Temple experience with them.  We got to know the Temple President and Matron well, as they would speak to the missionaries in a special meeting before the session.  The temple also served the missionaries a delicious diner in the cafeteria after these sessions.  They were beautiful temple trips.  

Adjacent to the temple was the Visitor’s Center and also The Matthew Cowley Church Museum of the Pacific.  This wonderful museum, the only one like it outside of Salt Lake City, is the result of one wonderful woman’s collection of early missionary histories in the islands of the Pacific.  Sister Rangi Parker, who has collected early missionary stories, pictures, and memorabilia for over 30 years became a dear friend.  We loved her inspirational stories and her deep love of missionaries. 

Matthew Cowley, the great missionary to the island people, is known for a statement he made about what was important in life or a mission, ‘It’s the people, it’s the people!’ he said.  We felt the same about what we came to love and value on our mission;  ‘It’s the people!’

Though we loved our time at the MTC that wasn’t the whole of our missionary service.  On days we were not there we served like other missionaries in the Auckland Mission.  Our mission President was President Alan Walker.  We loved him and were blessed by his fine leadership.  

We were assigned to serve in the Clover Park Ward.  Our bishop was Bishop Utai who had been a Stake President in Samoa for over 20 years. He was a remarkable man and we loved and admired him.  

Elder Thatcher served as a missionary in the Netherlands in his youth and believed that missionaries should tract, so tract we did.  It was a frightening thing for me at first, but I was determined that if Elder Thatcher felt we should tract, I would not ever say no.  We had many miracles happen while tracting and were able to meet and teach many wonderful people.  Sometimes we would look at each other in amazement at what we had just experienced in a home.  We came to know that this work is the Lord’s and he uses his missionaries, and works through them, no matter their weaknesses.  

Some of our sweetest experiences were with Enekosi and Leitu.  We met them while tracting.  Enekosi is a student of the Bible, spending at least two hours a day in its pages.  But after we introduced the Book of Mormon to him he came to treasure and love ‘that Mormon Book’.   We saw the wonder of this book through the eyes of a man who was learning so much more than he had ever known even though he studied the Bible in such depth.  He came to value this ‘Mormon book’ and the beautiful light it shed on what he already loved.  

Another investigator was Tuan Tran, a Vietnamese man who was a Christian and loved the Bible.  He read the Book of Mormon loving it because it taught of Jesus Christ.  He loved all the latter-day scriptures we gave him.  Some of the sweetest moments of our time in New Zealand were sharing new truths with Tuan Tran.  

We taught others and well.  A wonderful Hindu family the Singhs became dear to us.  And we loved associating with the wonderful Saints of the Clover Park Ward.  They were very missionary minded and would gather every Tuesday evening to have what they called ‘rescue night’.  They made visits to in-actives and non- members in the ward. 

When we left our mission the Clover Park ward threw a farewell party for us, showering us with love and gifts and even performing a haka in our honor.  We thought our hearts would break having to leave these wonderful people.  

One of the blessings of serving this mission together was simply being together.  Our love for each other grew.  I learned what a wonderful, dedicated, hard working missionary my husband is and could see afresh what a dedicated missionary he had been as a young man.  I am so grateful for his humble desire to serve the Lord. 

We loved watching some of the missionaries we had worked with in the MTC that also served in the Auckland Mission after leaving the MTC and joining us in the field.  Attending District Meetings was a treat for us. We would always take fruit and treats for our dear missionaries.  

Being missionaries is a humbling thing.  You quickly realize that you can’t do this work on your own.  You need the Lord’s help.  You need the companionship of the Holy Spirit, and many times a day you feel that help. It is humbling and wonderful at once. We know that the Lord loves his missionaries and works with them.  He is on their right hand, and on their left, and goes before them.  You also learn that Heavenly Father loves all his children and knows them.   He feels after them and loves them no matter their circumstances or degree of righteousness or wickedness.  It is a marvelous thing to serve a mission for the Lord and a delight to serve with the one you love most, your husband or wife.  We will forever be grateful for our opportunity to serve.  

We cut our mission short a few weeks due to our youngest daughter getting married.  Our son was also not doing well and we felt our time to serve was over.  

Our mission seems like a dream since we have been home.  We are so grateful we were able, with the Lord’s help, to carve out the precious months we had to serve.  We will forever be grateful to the Lord for the privilege to serve our mission in the New Zealand Auckland Mission and the New Zealand MTC.  It has changed us and deepened our understanding of the great latter- day work.  The Church is TRUE.  The Gospel is a treasure and how great and important it is to spread the gospel to all people.  

Sister KathyThatcher and Elder David Thatcher 








Tuesday, May 1, 2018

saying goodbye . . .

Clover Park Ward

We were told of a ward party to be held last Friday evening.  These are events you don't want to miss.   They are so fun, the people so happy and welcoming, and the food is great.  We always try to get our investigators to come and when they do it is magic.

Marietta Ulugia, who is the life of any party,  called to tell us that they would like us to bear our testimonies at the party since we would be going home soon.   We went, funeral potatoes in hand, and were blown away by what awaited us there.

The gym was set up with chairs in rows facing each other and a couch covered in a Samoan spread with a Polynesian wall hanging behind it and a table laden with gifts to the side.  The couch faced the stage and the tables of food.  We put our food on the tables with the other platters and took our seats on one of the back rows, saying hello to everyone as we sat down.   It seemed like everyone had gotten there before us. They were ready to begin.

As soon as we sat down Marietta stepped to the microphone and the event began.  She began by asking us to take our seats on the couch.  Surprise!  This was not a ward party but rather a farewell to honor us.  The evening had been planned for us.

"We have brought you here to show the love and appreciation we have for both of you for the work you have done in our ward."  said Marietta to begin the evening.  We wanted you to feel 'what's in our hearts', she said.  "The slide show we are about to show is a little insight about the Thatchers and their journey on their mission through the photos that Sister Thatcher has sent me and, please forgive me, some that I borrowed from your blog.  I hope you like it."



Marietta Ulugia - dear vibrant friend - the life of every party, and slide show producer
Marietta starts the slide show - you were in it too! - she gave me a copy of it that we will show you at home


She then began the slideshow which was full of pictures.  Many of you are in it.  There were also beautiful quotes, which just happened to be backwards because of the way the show was projected.  This only added to the charm of it all.  I know the work that goes into making a slideshow and was very touched at what Marietta had put together.  It was beautiful.


Sister Ulugia with granddaughter Lynell


Next, members of the ward stepped up to the microphone and expressed their love.

Brother Hopoate, the ward mission leader talked about rescue night and the work we had done together. "I so appreciate how you guys approached missionary work with kindness and faith.  I was driving around and saw Elder Thatcher walking around the car to open the door for Sister Thatcher, 'Oh, look at that! It's awesome he is showing so much love for his wife.'  I'm glad my car is electric.  When we have met some of the less-actives or investigators that you have worked with they have had nothing but good to say about you - the strong spirit you've brought into their homes.  We hope as you prepare to go back home you have enjoyed your time with us and enjoyed the New Zealand Culture.  If we don't see each other again in this life, because of the gospel we have hopes to see each other again in the next life."


Marietta hands microphone to Brother Hopoate


Brother and Sister Vaivai: (Stake Presidency Counselor and the best fellow shippers in the church)
"We are very good friends with Leitu and Tito because of you.  We would like to thank you for bringing these people into our midst. And you changed lives.  So like others who spoke before we thank you for the work you are doing in this ward.  We wish to express our love and gratitude.  We are missing you when you go but the Spirit is always strong in the hearts of these people. I keep in contact with Dan.  he is busy tonight but we will continue to contact with him. Hopefully they will accept the gospel.   I don't know if my wife would like to say something but we have some bola (?) We make these special for you, It is special in Samoa, it is for the men."  

They then put beautiful leis or bola, around our necks, a red one for the men and one for Sister Thatcher.  President Vaivai ended by saying;

' It's just little, but show you how much we appreciate the work you do for us.  Thank you.'"


Bishop Utai, Elder Thatcher, Sister Thatcher, beautiful Sister Vaivai and President Vaivai


Sister Laveai Talo  (The Primary President who has picked up Ronak Singh and brought him to church with them - her sons Larry and Lavon are great missionaries with Ronak)

"I was very shocked when the RS came out and told me that you were going home so soon and that we were having this send off dinner tonight.  We will miss you Elder and Sister Thatcher.  You guys have been a big help in our ward bringing in lost souls back to the gospel and helping our little ones.  I don't know what to say, thank you so much for helping us out.  I'll try to bring Ronak to church.  I keep trying.  We will try to bring them and hopefully one day they will come join us in the gospel.  Thank you.  We love you and you are a part of our eternal family.  We have something for you guys. (more beautiful shell necklaces and a beautiful basket of gifts).


Larry, Sister Talo, Sweet little Sila, and Lavon


Next they gave us time to bear our testimonies.  We were able to tell them how much we had loved being with them and watching them work together.  They have made our mission so special.  They have taught us how to be missionaries.  Their Rescue Nights have been amazing.  So many of the members came out to support that effort.  They were willing and happy to go out and make contacts in the ward.  When we had investigators who would come to church or to parties these saints would rally around them and in the warmest way make them feel welcome.   We talked about Larry and Lavon making friends with Ronak, and Sister Talo who would pick him up for Church because we were at the MTC.  She would pick him up and after church would take him to their home for dinner and play time with the boys.  The Vaivai's have been so good to befriend our investigators.  So many have been wonderful in so many ways. 

They lastly had a very special gift for us.  It was a Haka from the Young Men.  The YM's president  Brother Perich is Maori and performed his family's personal Haka to honor us.  He told us afterwards that it felt appropriate because it had been made by 3 brothers and now was being performed by the 3 Aaronic Priesthood Quorums.  The Teachers quorum president had asked him if he would teach it to the YM so they could perform it for the Thatchers.   Brother Perich said; 

"The Teachers Quorum President exercised his Priesthood keys and asked me.  What could I do? I had to honor that."
  
It was a beautiful gift and so appropriate as we leave Aotearoa, (the Maori name for New Zealand which means 'the land of the long white cloud')




We were able to get pictures with many of the ward members afterwards.




Brother Rotana is the one who carved the Maori bone necklace for me.
Brother Rotana has become a dear friend.  We wrote about his conversion story in the blog.  He is Maori and carved the necklace they gave me at the end of the Haka dance.  He told me that it has special meaning.  It honors womanhood and motherhood.  He told me it is only for me, I must never give it to another and the longer I wear it the more power it will have.  He carved it with his hands and his grandfather was a Maori prophet and a healer.  He was known all over the country for the healings he performed.  'That blood is in me and I carved the necklace.  You will wear it and the powers of a mother will come into it.  When you get home and see Aaron,' he said,   'take the necklace and just touch his forehead with it.  That is all I ask.'

We will be home soon Aaron, and I will be wearing Brother Rotana's carved necklace.  I will be following his instructions.



Brother Rotana explaining about the necklace he carved for me

Brother Rotana's Maori Book of Mormon that he has the missionaries sign.
He brought it for us to sign

President Vaivai, Brother Rotana and Eder Thatcher

Sister Sau Lavea, who is packed with fun - what a dancer she is!


One of the joys of the night was when Brother Ols told us that he is back in the church and that they are planning to get to the temple before it closes in July.  Such wonderful news!  We have a testimony that the Lord can work miracles in lives - especially when there is sacrifice.  Sister Corinne Ols has sacrificed continually for the good of the YW of the ward.  She was so good with our Teqwyn Edmonds who was fully active in YW's before her family moved and loved being in the church with these new friends and Sister Ohs.



Corrine and Tana Ola
Corinne is the wonderful YW's leader who brought Teqwyn into activity
She is one of our miracle workers 

"I'm back in the Church!" brother Ols told us.  "We are going to get to the temple before it closes"

The daughter of Corrine and Tana will be baptised soon by her father



Another great joy was having Marietta tell us that she believes she and her husband will make it to the temple.  Elder Thatcher and I could hardly hold  our excitement in tow for  these two couples who have made great progress in their lives.  If we feel such joy, can you imagine the joy that Heavenly Father and the Lord feel?  Once again we have watched Brother and Sister Ulugia serve faithfully in the ward.  They were at every Rescue night and always willing to do anything to help anyone.  We love them dearly.  Sister Ulugia reminded me that I had told her that one day they would make it to the temple.  She said it didn't seem possible then, but she can see it now.  We are so excited for them. 




Clover Park Ward
Can you feel the love and fellowship?

Great women every one!
Sister Talo, Sister Fiu (Sister Talo's mom), Sister Tipoti, sister Vaivai, Sister Ola, Sister Ulugia, Sister Wendy Malungahu, sister Thatcher, Siter Palu Saulala, Sister Hopoate, Sister Lavea, Sister Fereti, Sister Perich (F) Sister Elizabeth Saulala and Sister Matewai Roberts

Sister Elizabeth Saulala



With the Relief Society Presidency
Marietta Ulugia (2nd Counselor), Sister Paul Saulala (1st counselor),
 Wendy Malungahu (President),  Sister Fia'i Fereti (secretary

With Sister Matewai Roberts and Brother Warren Roberts 

Brother Richard Heather, Elder Thatcher, Ola daughter and myself

We have loved the children, here are
Promise Roberts, myself, Sila Talo, and Lynell Matamaki (Marietta's granddaughter)

They showered us with gifts from the families of the ward
Lava lavas, fans, purses and totes, jewelry and bracelets for the granddaughters
a polynesian dress and shirt, a beautiful ceremonial bowl, flowers for our hair
table mats and napkins, paintings, and the basket to put all the gifts in.
 What an overwhelming outpouring of love.  



And later after most of the gym was cleaned up they put some music on and we all danced a Samoan dance together.  Brother Roberts took my camera and did the filming and narrating.  We love Brother and Sister Roberts.  Sister Vaivai tried to teach me the dance and Bishop was helping Elder Thatcher.   We tried to follow.  They dance with such naturalness and enthusiasm.  We could watch them dance all day.  Notice how effortlessly our Bishop Utai dances, and the grace and beauty of Sister Vaivai.  And can you see that talented Samoan behind me who is having such fun?  That is Brother Ulugia, Marietta's husband.

These people know how to have fun.  How we will miss them.


They enjoy each other so much that no one seems to want to go home
The party continues in the foyer
=
Bishop Utai stood by the door of the church waving farewell to all until the last car had left the parking lot
  Such gracious loving people

A Series of Lasts

Last Intake at the MTC

Last Thursday we welcomed our last group of missionaries to the MTC.  It was one of the calmest intakes.  We only had about 25 missionaries arrive.  There were about 23 ESL Missionaries still here for their last 3 weeks of learning English.  It always seems like a miracle that the missionaries keep coming.  Each with his or her own story and journey of faith.  It has been wonderful to 'behold this Royal Army'.  We see them come and we watch them 'march forth to conquer on life's great battlefield'.  We know them to be 'united, bold and strong, who follow their commander' and sing His victory song.



Last Intake

Elder Webber from Bolivia (heads up Murphy) and Elder Pincock from Idaho
our new Zone Leaders 

All these Elders are from the Islands except that one in the top center who just thinks he is

Like all the Thatcher missionaries before us,
The MTC has been a place of growing, of learning -
a sacred place where the Spirit has been felt in rich abundance

Our last day of adventure and sight seeing

On intake day Sister Michi Matsumori who comes to the MTC every intake day to help us, invited us to come Monday morning to her home in Auckland for breakfast before we toured Auckland on the Hop On Hop Off Bus.  We thought we should at least see downtown Auckland before going home and we took Sister Matsumori up on her kind offer.  Sister Matsumori's husband is the legal counsel for the church in the area.  He works harder than he ever has in his career.  Part of the challenge is dealing with 41 countries and their varied laws.   The Matsumori's  are wonderful.  That is one of the great blessings of serving a mission as a senior couple.  You rub shoulders with such amazing, talented, faithful people.  



Sister Matsumori helps Elder Thatcher


Sister Briggs on Michi's deck enjoying the incredible view of Auckland

The Matsumori's


The breakfast was divine.  The most scrumptious buttermilk pancakes with exotic syrups, bacon, eggs, yogurt, orange juice, fresh fruits, granola . . .  we tried not to over eat.  President Briggs probably did the best.  When we were confessing how many pancakes we had eaten he humbly said, "I only had one . . . one set of four."

After cleaning up and visiting, Michi led us through the town to Devonport where we hiked Mt. Victoria and caught the best view of the Auckland Skyline and  Harbor that we have seen.




Found this rock figure like something out of Lord of the Rings on the way up Mt. Victoria 

On top - the perfect day to take in all the beauty


Michi, Myself and Sister Briggs

From atop Mt. Victoria - Michi had recently come here with the YW she works with for their New Beginnings to watch the sunrise.  She said they had balloons in the value colors grouped at intervals all the way to the top.  They picked them up one color at a time until they got to the top where they became the backdrop for their breakfast. 

Michi took this shot of the two of us

We left Michi and caught a ferry to Auckland

. . . on the ferry ride


It was nice to ride the Hop on Hop off bus around Auckland and not have to worry about driving.  We only hopped off at two placed . . . .



The War Museum


And . . .



The Sky Tower



 The Sky Tower is the most recognized of spots in Auckland and we were thankful to be able to go to the top of the 60 stories and catch the breathtaking view.



Doesn't do it justice but you get the idea

The 360 degrees of view are amazing.  This is of the bridge that takes you to Takapuna where the church offices are

Sister Briggs 

It was a wonderful day spent with dear friends.  The only thing that would have made it better would have been to have President and Sister Howes with us.  They couldn't go.  They are too busy on Mondays at the MTC.

Our last interview with President Walker

Yesterday, Tuesday May 1st, we drove to Auckland again for our final interview with President Walker.  It was a privilege to sit across from him and hear his instructions and have him give us his blessing.  We admire and love President and Sister Walker.

President Walker has done a magnificent job of inspiring these missionaries and of building them.  We are always taught profoundly when he teaches us at zone conferences.  I  have many of his teachings recorded that I will love to share with David and other grandchildren when they leave for their missions.  He taught us privately this time and I thought I had my voice recording app on.  I did for the first part of the interview but it must have turned off for some reason and I don't have the last beautiful part with his prayer for us and his blessing to us.  Still we were grateful that it recorded the part where he talked about his door approach because we loved the simple power and directness of it.  I have transposed it to send to Megan and will put that part in the blog here.  Enjoy.

President Walker has asked the missionaries to use TTIP (teach, testify, invite and promise) in their door approaches.  We feel this is inspired.  It is right out of PMG for teaching, but he tells them to use this in their daily tracting.  One of the Elders in our district says he loves doing this because he is able to bear his testimony many times every day.

President Walker told us of tracting with the STL Sisters missionaries.  I  recorded this part of the interview so this is word for word as President taught us.  He and Sister Walker went tracting with the Sister Training Leaders.

We knocked at our first door.  It was a screen door, very rare.  The woman of the home comes to the door, she must have been in her late 40’s early 50’s.  She was caucasian,  She knew who we were. There were 4 of us there, Sister Walker and I and two of the Sister Training leaders.  And she didn’t look happy that they were there, but, she was there.  So she said;
‘Yes, may I help you?’
And then,  nobody said anything, because we didn’t determine ahead of time who was taking the door.   So there was this awkward silence and finally one of the Sisters said,
‘How has your day been?
And she says,
‘Um, good, why are you here?’
Then the other Sister says,
‘That’s a nice flower you have over there.’
And then, she’s irritated,
‘Well, thank you, but, why are you here?’
They finally said,
‘Well we are missionaries . . . ‘
‘ I don’t need missionaries!’
and that was the end of it.

I pulled them aside and said,
‘Look, we can’t do that.  We don’t have time to diddle daddle.  I said, all the research the brethren have done shows that there’s no relationship between your relationship with someone and their willingness to accept an invitation from you to listen to the gospel.  And then it came to my mind what Elder Renlund had talked about, and I said,

“OK, what we need to do, we have a brief window of opportunity, we need to teach and testify so the Spirit can come, and that they can feel that. Our job is to sift. If we bring the Spirit, and then say, ‘Will you listen to our message?'  which is really, it’s abrupt, but it’s to the point, and they have to use their agency to say yes or no.

At that point, because they’ve felt the Spirit, they’ve had a spiritual experience, whether they realize it or not, and they have an opportunity to exercise their agency.  If they’ve been prepared, they will say yes. That’s what I’ve told them, and if they’re not, they will say no.  You don’t need to sit there, and you don’t need to try to convince them that they are wrong unless the Spirit constrains you otherwise.

People say, well, what about that story of Elder Rasband, he put his foot in the door.  I said, ‘He only did it once.’  It was only that one time and he never did it again.  But it was because he was constrained by the Spirit.  If the Spirit tells you to do something, you do it.  But otherwise, we are here to sift. We don’t have time, if we get to the door and they say they’re not interested, then we can move on.   But you need to at least teach something and testify.

It’s amazing, when I do it too, it’s like, you have people and they will stop, and they will think for a second.  I went to one door and I was  just saying, I said;

‘We are representatives of the Lord Jesus Christ. ( I’m not going to tell them I’m Mormon, because a lot of people don’t think we are Christian, so I just say;

‘We are representatives of the Lord Jesus Christ.’

That’s all say when I go to the door.  That’s my introduction.  Then I say, whatever comes to my mind, but I’ll say something like;

‘Our message is that the Heavens are opened,  that God speaks to man, that He will speak to you. He has spoken to me.  I know my purpose in this life, and our message is to bring that story. . . where did we come from before this life, why are we here, where are we going after we die.  And there is a lot to that.’

That is our message.  Will you listen to our message?  I’ll also say, ‘I know it’s true.  This will bring blessings to your life too.   (because you’ve got to promise them blessings)  Will you listen to our message?’

I’ve had people just ready to say, ‘Get out of my door, in a nice way, and just stop for a second and think.  A lot of them will still say no, but at least, maybe even though they said no they will feel bad later because they felt the Spirit and the Spirit works on them, and the next time someone knocks on their door they say, ‘You know what, come in.’


We love the power of His door approach and wish we had another year to put it into practice. We all need to be more bold and direct and willing to share what we have and know.  We need not apologize for wanting to share.  We share and leave it with the Lord.

President Walker said the closing prayer and exercised his keys to bless us and all of you through us.  It was a beautiful thing to be a part of.  We left holding hands and saying little.  Somethings are too sweet for words.


Leaving Auckland for the last time - after our exit interview with President Walker


The list of lasts continues. . .

We are going through things and saying goodbye to those we have met.  We are meeting with Enekosi and Leitu in a little while and have been invited to meet with the Stake Presidency tonight.  One thing wonderful about that is we know they are not going to call us to anything.

We have been copying our notes from our lessons and will be getting that to other missionaries and our ward mission leader.  We will be going to the temple for the last time tomorrow with the missionaries.   We will be saying goodbye to so many.  We are trying to eat everything left in our fridge and we are packing our suitcases.

We will be home soon and this whole mission will probably seem like a dream.  We hope we remember what we learned and felt here better than we remember dreams when we wake.  Serving a mission with dad has been a dream come true for me.  We will forever be grateful for these few months spend in the service of the Lord observing his power, his saints, his servants, and his majesty as he directs this great latter day work.

We leave with hearts full of love and gratitude for the Lord's blessings to us during this mission, for the many answers to prayers, for the accompaniment of the Spirit as we taught, for the people we were led to meet, and the love that filled our hearts for them.  We leave with prayers and hope going forward that those we have taught will continue to seek and learn and recognize truth.  And we leave with a prayer in our hearts that each of you back home that we love will find such joy in your times of service to the Master.  For we know that;

Neither the wrath of the storm tossed sea,
Nor demons nor men or what ever it be,
No water can swallow the ship where lies,
The Master of Oceans and Earth and Skies!

They all shall sweetly obey His will,
Peace, be still. . . Peace, be still. . .
They all shall sweetly obey His will
Peace, peace, be still.

We know as long as we are with the Master,  rowing in the same boat as He, we will experience safety amidst whatever storm rages around us, and have that peace that passes understanding in our hearts.  We love the Master.

And we love you,
mom and dad
grandma and grandpa
Elder and Sister Thatcher