Monday, October 31, 2011

cell phones!

Hello everyone,

Well the big announcement here is that the church is giving cell phones to every companionship here in Mexico. Right now, only the leaders are permitted to have cellphones (district leaders, zone leaders, Assistants, and Secretaries), but now, every companionship will be permitted. That will certainly help the work to flow a lot smoother. More safety for the missionaries too.

Things have gone OK this week. We had stake conference last Sunday, so we couldn´t ask all of the members to come with us for teaching appointments. That is what we usually do. On Saturday night, while planning, we look at all of our appointments for the next week and plan who would be a good fellowshipper for that investigator. Then we write out a list. Sunday after sacrament meeting, we jump with all of those people and ask for their help. That has helped us to have more lessons with members present than not. But because of conference, we couldn´t do that, so our fellowshipping was down this week. Oh well, we´ll try harder next week.

I had the chance to go with a couple to be married. The missionaries have contact with a judge who gives us a discount for the marriages, so when our investigators have to be married (in order to live the law of chastity and be a candidate for baptism) and we go with them, it´s about half the price that one normally pays. It was a great experience. The following day I was able to interview them for baptism, and it looks like their whole family will be baptized (4).

Happy Halloween! and happy Day of the Dead (Día de los muertos). Day of the Dead here is in about 3 days (not sure exactly of the date). The people place an alter with lots of food, fruit, bread, flowers, and candles for their deceased ancestors, with the idea that God allows their spirits to return to earth with their loved ones this one day each year. They place the deceased´s favorite food on the altar with their picture. It is a false tradition, but it´s an interesting point of the culture anyway.

Well that´s about it. It is already November and still hot hot hot in the day (not too hot, but enough heat to make us look for shade). But it is really cold in the mornings and at night. I suppose that´s to expect being in the desert and all.

Thanks for all the support, prayers, and help.
Love you all,
Elder Bunker

Monday, October 17, 2011

Conversion

Hello all,

Sorry for the delay...in my new area, there is a lot more work to do (it´s not so easy
to wash cloths, for example). I don´t have so much time on Mondays anymore
because of that.

This week has been a good one. We have had a lot more success in finding
people to teach and having the participation of the members in our teaching
appointments.

Last Monday we hiked a big hill in our area. Afterward, we ran down the
side. It has a bunch of sand-gravel, so it felt like being superman and
taking such large leaps down the mountain. We spent about 45 minutes
hiking up the mountain and about 2 minutes going back down. It is really
cool because at the top, you can see city all the way around the hill for
miles and miles. All the houses fade into the smog-sky. It´s pretty crazy
how big the city is (and how large our area is). There are so many people
here in Mexico City. So many souls to save.

I was thinking about being converted. We as missionaries are asked to
read the Book of Mormon and repeatedly follow Moroni´s promise throughout
our mission. It is super important, even as members, to do this regularly.
To ask if the church is true regularly...not that the answer will change, but
the importance of having a fresh answer and experience to relate is huge.
I don´t want to tell people ´oh yes, I was born in the church, but I wasn´t
converted until age 15, which was 5 years ago´. I would much rather tell
them ´oh yes, i was born in the church, but I was converted 5 years ago.
And 4 years ago. And again 3 years ago. And yesterday, in fact.
Yesterday I received my answer that the Book of Mormon is true.
Let me tell you the details of my experience that I had last night...´.
That way when something happens in the church, or with the members,
or someone makes a mistake, or messes up, it doesn´t put in jeopardy
my testimony or salvation. My salvation is not dependant on how well
member X follows the teachings of the church. My salvation and
testimony depend on what God told me through the Holy Spirit last
night. I´d much rather depend on God than on human behavior. I invite
all to repeatedly test God on his promise in Moroni 10:3-5 in the
Book of Mormon. Because God cannot lie.

Thanks for all of your support and prayers and letters. They really
do help and sustain me (but I´m not too dependant on the letters :)

Love,

Elder Bunker

Dan overlooking Mexico City


Monday, October 10, 2011

Not much time to write today because I am in charge of the District Meeting in about 20 minutes.

As a district leader I have a cell phone to communicate with the other leaders,
and I receive text messages with the top news headlines every other day.
Well this first week was pretty crazy. My new area has almost NO organization. At least
in my past areas, the roads were north-south, and east-west. Here they curve and
change and change names and it´s pretty difficult to orient myself. There are 6 Elders
in my district, All with less than 4 months in the mission (my companion has 8 months,
and I 13). It´s a rather young district, but that´s OK. We all have stuff to learn from each other.

It´s hard
because we only have about 7 hours of time on Preparation Day (we still have to
study and everything in the morning). And we have to wash cloths, hang them to
dry, clean the house, etc.

This morning we went to climb a mountain in our area. It has a section convered
in sand, so we went to the top and jumped (galloped) down the mountain. I
felt like Superman taking such big strides. Then we went to a members
house to wash cloths, and her water ran out. We had to take a big blue
barrel (like the ones we have) down the street, drop buckets down into a
cistern below ground, and pull the water up and empty it into the barrel,
then take the barrel back to the house (a big pain) and take bucketfulls
of water to the 3rd story of the house to wash the cloths. Needless to say,
I am EXHAUSTED today. I will sleep excellently tonight. Our boiler doesn´t
work here either, so we use a big resistor that plugs in and sits in a bucket
of water to heat it up. It takes about 30 minutes to heat up a bucket about
the size of 4 or 5 liters. Then we mix it with cold water to get luke warm
water and we shower by dumping bucketfulls over our heads. It does help
save water.
Love,
Elder Bunker