January 15, 2008 – January
27, 2008
A little bit of missionary
humor. This is the front door of an apartment we stopped at. The sticker in the
top left says “I accept! It’s that easy,” but the icon of the Virgin of
Guadalupe indicates that this family is Catholic, and probably not very
interested in receiving Mormon missionaries.
Elder Nájera
and I had a few setbacks during the early part of 2008. Our area was very large,
so we had to plan our appointments carefully to make sure that we weren’t
spending too much time and money taking buses between different neighborhoods. Several of our investigators had lost interest in listening us, or in coming
to church, so we had to stop teaching them to free up time with others. In some
missions in the world, the people are much less open to listening to Mormon
missionaries, so when missionaries find people that want to listen to them, they’re
able to spend more time with each of their investigators, and probably don’t
decide to stop visiting them unless the investigator asks them to. One of the
tricky things about my mission was that there were always a fair number of people
that were willing to listen to us, so we had to learn to prioritize our lessons
based on who seemed most likely to progress toward joining the church. It was
nice to know that we would eventually find people that wanted to be baptized,
but it was still hard to stop visiting people with whom we’d already formed relationships
just to go back to going door-to-door and street contacting again.
When Elder
Guerra went home, the leadership in our district changed. Elder Guerra had
been the district leader, the one responsible for a few pairs of
missionaries and teaching a weekly training meeting. When he left, the sister
missionaries in the area next to ours were also transferred, and two new elders,
Elder Tovar and Elder Eduardo, replaced them. Elder Tovar was the new
district leader. Elder Eduardo was a new missionary, fresh from an MTC
in Mexico City. Unlike the MTC in Provo, the Mexican MTC was small, and only
hosted missionaries bound for missions in Mexico that already spoke Spanish
fluently. Today, that MTC has been replaced by a much larger one, also in
Mexico City, that hosts a wider variety of missionaries.
The Xalapa Zone after a district
meeting in January 2008. Standing: Elders Eduardo, Lindsay, Nájera, Breceda,
Calzada, Bowman, Bada. Sitting: Elders Hernández, Schwarting, Alonzo, Sharp,
Durán, and Kowalski. Not pictured: Elder Tovar.
Elder Eduardo’s
presence meant that I was technically no longer “the new guy,” but he was
probably still more effective than me since he was more familiar with the
language and the culture. We did a couple of rounds of splits with Elders Tovar
and Eduardo, and I got to work with Elder Eduardo. It was simultaneously cool and
intimidating to work with each other since we had so little experience between
the two of us. We didn’t always know what to do, but we managed to muddle
through our lessons. I was glad I’d had the experience of doing splits with the
local teenagers in Alborada, so it wasn’t quite as hard as it would
have been otherwise.
Another one of
my difficulties during this time was my impatience with my own progress and
situation. As a junior companion, I was constantly doing things wrong, and I
didn’t feel very great about my own abilities. In retrospect, I think I was craving
recognition and praise. I had grown up as the oldest child in my family and was
used to being good at the things I tried to do and being congratulated for it. I’d done well in high school and
had also just come off a successful freshman year of college the year before. Compared
to these victories, being stuck in a foreign country talking to people about my
religion took me out of my comfort zone and made me feel kind of defeated about my
own abilities.
The unfortunate
result of this struggle was that I started to fantasize about being assigned to
a leadership position. The LDS church uses a lay clergy. Teachers and
leaders in the church aren’t paid for their service, so they have to hold normal
jobs in addition to the time they devote to church service. This also means
that there’s no career clergy, so leaders and teachers and all other types of
positions in the church are filled by extending callings, or assignments to
specific positions.
We’re taught
not to covet specific callings just because we want to be recognized as
important. This is kind of backwards from much of the business world, where
ambition and drive to get a promotion can be seen as a good thing. Most of the
time this isn’t a problem since the “higher” positions in the church just
require more of your time and still offer no compensation, so there’s really no reason to want them. But in this case, I really
did want to be assigned to be a leader, probably because I felt insecure about
my abilities. I knew it was wrong, but it’s still how I felt.
I did my best
to channel my ambition into trying to become a better missionary. Brother
Toledo, my MTC instructor, had given each of his students a packet of
notes he’d drawn up for a training meeting when he was a missionary. It was
titled “How to Be an Effective Leader,” but it had lots of good general missionary advice drawn
from Preach My Gospel and supplemented with his own experience. I read through it again and felt motivated to try to apply some of its suggestions.
A few people around
me had also unknowingly contributed to my interest in leadership by mentioning
that they thought I’d eventually become a leader in the mission. Brother Toledo
was actually the first. He had been a fantastic instructor, and I had a lot of
respect towards him, but that also meant that when he said I’d probably be a leader, I believed
him and took it as a deep praise, when it was probably just meant to inspire me
to be better. It happened again in Xalapa when the zone leaders surprised us with an
evening visit. They stopped by just to talk to us and get a sense of how the
work was going in our area and within our companionship. While they were
talking to me, Elder Breceda said I’d probably become a leader in the
mission eventually. Elder Nájera said the same thing during one of our study
sessions one morning when he could tell I was getting frustrated with my
teaching ability. Each of these occasions made me want to be a leader even
more.
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