February 16, 2008
The streets of Boca del Río, the municipality just south of the port of Veracruz. The only thing I knew about getting to the
temple from the Veracruz bus
terminal was to take the bus that said “Vía Muerta” (“Dead Way”).
In February
President Johnson announced that Elder Bednar, of the Quorum of the Twelve
Apostles, one of the most senior governing bodies of the church, would be
visiting our mission. This was a big deal to us missionaries, and especially for those who hadn’t lived in Utah before. To most of us, members of
the Quorum of the Twelve were celebrities, people we’d seen on TV during
General Conference or read about in
magazines, but never in real life before becoming missionaries. Some of us may
have heard one of them speak in person at the MTC or BYU, but almost
none of us would have met them before. My understanding is that these kinds of
visits to missions were regular events, but still rare. This would be the only
time an apostle would visit while I was on my mission.
Another part of
why it was so exciting was because the entire mission would be gathering
together for a massive conference. I looked forward to seeing many of the
missionaries I’d gotten to know that had been transferred away to other places,
especially Elder Stojic. This conference was something of a bonus, too, since
we’d already had our zone conference for that transfer. I was so excited the night
before we left that I had a hard time writing in my journal.
Early in the
morning on the day of the conference, Elder Nájera and I got on a bus to
Veracruz. At the Veracruz bus terminal, we once again got on a city bus that
would take us down past the temple. The conference was being held at the
stake center on the temple grounds, the same place we had the Christmas
conference only a couple of months prior.
When we arrived,
President Johnson seemed a little nervous. He was trying to get all 190 or
so missionaries seated and ready for Elder Bednar before he got there. He was
asking zone leaders and district leaders whether all of their groups had
arrived, who wasn’t there yet, and what was going on. I remember one pair of elders
walked in late (though still before Elder Bednar arrived) and got singled out
for it. I was glad we hadn’t hit traffic or had some other delay.
With everyone accounted for, we filed out of the chapel to take a group photo
of all the missionaries.
The entire mission in front
of the Veracruz Temple for the conference with Elder Bednar. They lined us up
by height, so I’m on the back row.
Once we were done
with the photo, President Johnson got up to prime us for Elder Bednar. He
mentioned that visiting authorities like Elder Bednar frequently offer
opportunities for missionaries to ask them questions about church doctrine,
their job, or other things. I remember President Johnson specifically telling
us not to ask Elder Bednar any really strange, unknown questions like, “What’s
the name of God’s wife?”
A minute or two
later, Elder Bednar walked in, and the conference began. The first thing he
told us was to avoid writing down everything he said, and instead to listen
carefully and write down impressions and connections that came to our minds
while listening. My notes show that Elder Bednar encouraged us to be bold and
unafraid since fear was an expression of a lack of love towards the people we
could be talking to. I probably wrote this down because I definitely didn’t
feel like I was bold, and I knew that I didn’t have enough love towards the
people around me because I was still feeling culture shocked. I couldn’t feel
comfortable adapting myself to the attitudes and lifestyle of most of the Mexicans
around me, so I think I frequently ended up judging them more than serving
them. My notes have a few more items, but it’s clear that I only wrote down
things that seemed particularly relevant to my own mission.
When he had
finished his remarks, Elder Bednar invited us to ask questions, just like
President Johnson had predicted. Elder Bednar had obviously been asked a few
curveball questions in the past, because before he let anyone ask anything, he
also said to try to ask good questions, such as, “What has your role as an
apostle taught you about prayer,” to which he could give a detailed, productive
answer, and to avoid bad questions, such as, “Where is the Sword of Laban,” to
which Elder Bednar said his only answer would be, “I don’t know.” I chuckled
and wondered how many times eager missionaries must have asked apostles (or
mission presidents) questions like these, for them to both go our of their way
to give examples of what not to ask. As for myself, I was too worried about
looking silly to ask anything in front of the whole group, but I listened to
the answers he gave to others’ questions.
When his time was up, the whole mission lined up to meet Elder Bednar and shake his hand individually. It was too brief of a meeting for him to learn anything personal about us, but it was a nice gesture and it was still exciting to all of us.
When his time was up, the whole mission lined up to meet Elder Bednar and shake his hand individually. It was too brief of a meeting for him to learn anything personal about us, but it was a nice gesture and it was still exciting to all of us.
As with the
conference when Elder Grow visited, this superconference went much later
than a typical zone conference. By the time it was over, the sun had already
gone down, so we needed to hurry back to the bus terminal and then back home to
Xalapa. But before I left, I managed to say hi to lots of the missionaries
I hadn’t seen in a while, including Elder Stojic. He and I hadn’t talked since
we arrived in the field, so I was eager to hear how things were going for him. He had spent his first few transfers in the southern half of the
mission, where the climate and culture are pretty different from Xalapa. He
said it was always really hot and that the food was heavily seasoned and spicy.
I could tell by looking at him that he’d lost a lot of weight since the MTC.
His suit looked big on him and his face was a lot more narrow. I wondered if
the southern food had been rough on him.
Elder Stojic and I after the
superconference.
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