The title refers to a famous Chinese tongue twister about 44 stone lions. I thought it was only appropriate, given that I've been called Chinese-speaking to the France LYON Mission!
Tuesday, April 26, 2016
Pics: Chicken, cars, and architecture...
I ate a barf flavored jelly bean
Sorry I'm late! Yesterday we went to the Parc de la Tête d'Or and played football (American football, it was super fun)
and had an exchange afterward. The problem is, I had forgotten I was going on exchange until we went to MacDo to use the wifi and got an email with my train tickets. Long story short, we had the moving équipe drive us back to our apartment so I could pack a quick bag and then straight to the gare. Now I am bien in Chalon again with Elder Lindsey, he's awesome.
Last week we did yard work for a member, pulling weeds and getting rocks out of their backyard so they could plant about a million flowers back there. That night at the Institute we helped a recent convert set up his LDS account and then get onto FamilySearch. It's kind of fun trying to search for his ancestors when their last names are like Ravelojaona or Randriamaromanana...yeah he's from Madagascar.
On Saturday we had Samedi Sportif, which is when we go out to Ecully and play soccer with a bunch of members/amis/potentials/random bros who want to come. It was windy and raining, but still fun. Almost everyone that comes is African, usually Congolese, and they are absolutely hilarious! That night we had a fun activity with some of our Chinese friends where we all made cheesecake. Elder Tomlinson helped us because he's a good cook and it was all super super delicious.
We also had Zone Conference last week! It was fantastic. One of the things President Brown focused on was the important of repentance. Everybody makes mistakes, and everybody can repent and become clean again. There's a process to it and it can be hard, but it can be done. We need to make sure we repent, because even if you do everything else in the Church perfectly, you're not 100% clean and it's really going to come back to bite you when all is said and done. If we don't teach repentance so that our amis internalize it, know how to do it, and do it regularly, part of that blame is on our heads! How great is our calling, right? There is a bit of pressure there for sure, but through prayer and fasting and enduring to the end, all things are possible :)
I love you all and hope you have a good week!
Elder Jensen
江长老
Last week we did yard work for a member, pulling weeds and getting rocks out of their backyard so they could plant about a million flowers back there. That night at the Institute we helped a recent convert set up his LDS account and then get onto FamilySearch. It's kind of fun trying to search for his ancestors when their last names are like Ravelojaona or Randriamaromanana...yeah he's from Madagascar.
On Saturday we had Samedi Sportif, which is when we go out to Ecully and play soccer with a bunch of members/amis/potentials/random bros who want to come. It was windy and raining, but still fun. Almost everyone that comes is African, usually Congolese, and they are absolutely hilarious! That night we had a fun activity with some of our Chinese friends where we all made cheesecake. Elder Tomlinson helped us because he's a good cook and it was all super super delicious.
We also had Zone Conference last week! It was fantastic. One of the things President Brown focused on was the important of repentance. Everybody makes mistakes, and everybody can repent and become clean again. There's a process to it and it can be hard, but it can be done. We need to make sure we repent, because even if you do everything else in the Church perfectly, you're not 100% clean and it's really going to come back to bite you when all is said and done. If we don't teach repentance so that our amis internalize it, know how to do it, and do it regularly, part of that blame is on our heads! How great is our calling, right? There is a bit of pressure there for sure, but through prayer and fasting and enduring to the end, all things are possible :)
I love you all and hope you have a good week!
Elder Jensen
江长老
Monday, April 18, 2016
The Life of a Weary Traveler
I guess I'm not really any wearier than the next man, but I did travel a bit more this past week than I've gotten used to!
A week ago, on Monday night, we went to President Léporé's (stake president) house down south of Lyon for dinner. His wife is American and he speaks impeccable English, so dinner and the ensuing Family Home Evening was all in English. He actually told us that with all the work he does for the Church and going back and forth to Salt Lake City, he's often more comfortable speaking to audiences in English. Also, other members have told us that when he moved back to France relatively recently, his French wasn't that great anymore. Funny how that happens :) But yeah that was a great experience!
The next night we had dinner with yet another American family! The dad is here working in the carbon fiber industry (super cool) and doesn't know how long he'll be here. Super nice guy, but it was super weird to have an American dinner in an American household with American nuances. I love my home country!
On Wednesday, we traveled north to Chalon (my farthest north point in the mission, been there a few times now) for district meeting. It was cool.
Okay, rewind. Tuesday morning was the day Elder Zhu and I got up early and hopped on a TGV to Valence, the furthest south I've ever been in the mission! Not actually that impressive, but it's an accomplishment for me. We arrived after about 40 minutes and looked around a bit, only to realize that we were not where we thought we should be. We'd gotten off at the right stop, but our tickets had brought us to the special TGV gare (train station), not the main gare in central Valence that we wanted. We had to get to Valence-même (basically downtown Valence) early enough to not get held up in a super long line at the prefecture, but here we were like 9 kilometers away from there. Our solution? Buy new tickets! We went to a billetterie and got a couple 1.20 euro tickets for a train from the TGV gare to the normal gare, not a problem. France is pretty good at getting people around without cars.
I'll send pictures, but the most important part was the miracles! If you've ever had to go to a government building to renew a visa in a foreign country/language and not actually had all the documents you needed to renew it, you'll know what I'm talking about. I said so many prayers during that process, and one by one they were answered! We had to run all around town to get photos, stamps, photocopies, give the right papers to the right people, and hope and pray that the things we flat out didn't have and couldn't readily obtain wouldn't be that important. Every time the lady went into the back room to check with her boss if such-and-such document would be sufficient, I prayed that it would all work out, and every time it did. She tried to speak English a couple times to help us out, bless her heart, but she didn't know very much. Thank goodness I get to do that again next transfer for my own legality...
Wish I had more time, but this will have to suffice! I'll finish with a theme I think I use about half the time, and that is that PRAYER WORKS! I know that it does, and I know that it can be easier to see when you're praying for specific miracles, but God hears all prayers. Try this: pray every night for specific people who have specific problems they need resolved, and pray for yourself to feel greater love for your fellow men. You might not notice any obvious changes, but trust in God's timing and trust that He will grant you according to your desires. Often He won't do it until you ask, so go ask and see what happens :)
Love you buckets,
A week ago, on Monday night, we went to President Léporé's (stake president) house down south of Lyon for dinner. His wife is American and he speaks impeccable English, so dinner and the ensuing Family Home Evening was all in English. He actually told us that with all the work he does for the Church and going back and forth to Salt Lake City, he's often more comfortable speaking to audiences in English. Also, other members have told us that when he moved back to France relatively recently, his French wasn't that great anymore. Funny how that happens :) But yeah that was a great experience!
The next night we had dinner with yet another American family! The dad is here working in the carbon fiber industry (super cool) and doesn't know how long he'll be here. Super nice guy, but it was super weird to have an American dinner in an American household with American nuances. I love my home country!
On Wednesday, we traveled north to Chalon (my farthest north point in the mission, been there a few times now) for district meeting. It was cool.
Okay, rewind. Tuesday morning was the day Elder Zhu and I got up early and hopped on a TGV to Valence, the furthest south I've ever been in the mission! Not actually that impressive, but it's an accomplishment for me. We arrived after about 40 minutes and looked around a bit, only to realize that we were not where we thought we should be. We'd gotten off at the right stop, but our tickets had brought us to the special TGV gare (train station), not the main gare in central Valence that we wanted. We had to get to Valence-même (basically downtown Valence) early enough to not get held up in a super long line at the prefecture, but here we were like 9 kilometers away from there. Our solution? Buy new tickets! We went to a billetterie and got a couple 1.20 euro tickets for a train from the TGV gare to the normal gare, not a problem. France is pretty good at getting people around without cars.
I'll send pictures, but the most important part was the miracles! If you've ever had to go to a government building to renew a visa in a foreign country/language and not actually had all the documents you needed to renew it, you'll know what I'm talking about. I said so many prayers during that process, and one by one they were answered! We had to run all around town to get photos, stamps, photocopies, give the right papers to the right people, and hope and pray that the things we flat out didn't have and couldn't readily obtain wouldn't be that important. Every time the lady went into the back room to check with her boss if such-and-such document would be sufficient, I prayed that it would all work out, and every time it did. She tried to speak English a couple times to help us out, bless her heart, but she didn't know very much. Thank goodness I get to do that again next transfer for my own legality...
Wish I had more time, but this will have to suffice! I'll finish with a theme I think I use about half the time, and that is that PRAYER WORKS! I know that it does, and I know that it can be easier to see when you're praying for specific miracles, but God hears all prayers. Try this: pray every night for specific people who have specific problems they need resolved, and pray for yourself to feel greater love for your fellow men. You might not notice any obvious changes, but trust in God's timing and trust that He will grant you according to your desires. Often He won't do it until you ask, so go ask and see what happens :)
Love you buckets,
江长老
Pics: sunrise, elevators and Valence!
Pics: FHE, Millery, and waiting for an early morning bus ride
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