The Setting Apart - El Apartamiento
President Manion's House, 27 June 2005
Nearly three months prior, I had received my mission call to be a missionary in the Mexico Tuxtla Gutierrez Mission. Over those three months, I worked a little bit more at a car washing center. All of my coemployees were Hispanics, save for one person, and all of them spoke Spanish. I would learn the language slowly with my fellow employees. One in particular, an older person from Guatemala, was surprised that I would be going down to Chiapas, a Mexican state that borders Guatemala, and others would ask me why was I going to go down there for two years.
I would simply answer, there are people that need God. And that God had called me to serve His children in that region of the world, and if God had called me to any other place, I would have happily accepted the call. I thanked my co-employees for the time that I had there, turning in my uniform.
I would simply answer, there are people that need God. And that God had called me to serve His children in that region of the world, and if God had called me to any other place, I would have happily accepted the call. I thanked my co-employees for the time that I had there, turning in my uniform.
I got home and showered and then put on my suit. Before a missionary can enter into the field of service, he must first be set apart as such by his local leaders, specifically a stake president, who would kind of have a similar function as a bishop in a Catholic diocese, overseeing some congregations in a local area.
So the Stake President let me and my parents in, and proceeded to lay his hands on me and give me a blessing. There were people already being prepared specifically for me. Through the works that I would do I would bless the people of southern Mexico. I would be preserved and return honorably as I served the Lord with all my heart, might, mind and strength. Though the first couple of parts of the blessing did come into fruition early and often, the third part had its moments where it appeared that it would be in doubt. But that in time came to pass.
Once a missionary is set apart, he has to follow the missionary rules to the letter, and one of those was I had to be in bed by 2230 hours. After eating dinner at a barbecue joint called Red Hot and Blue, one of my favorite places for Memphis pit barbecue, for what appeared to be the last time in two years, we returned home and I went to bed.
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So the Stake President let me and my parents in, and proceeded to lay his hands on me and give me a blessing. There were people already being prepared specifically for me. Through the works that I would do I would bless the people of southern Mexico. I would be preserved and return honorably as I served the Lord with all my heart, might, mind and strength. Though the first couple of parts of the blessing did come into fruition early and often, the third part had its moments where it appeared that it would be in doubt. But that in time came to pass.
Once a missionary is set apart, he has to follow the missionary rules to the letter, and one of those was I had to be in bed by 2230 hours. After eating dinner at a barbecue joint called Red Hot and Blue, one of my favorite places for Memphis pit barbecue, for what appeared to be the last time in two years, we returned home and I went to bed.
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Casa del Presidente Manion, 27 de junio de 2005
Casi tres meses antes, recibí mi llamado a la misión para ser misionero en la Misión México Tuxtla Gutiérrez. Durante esos tres meses, trabajé un poco más en un centro de lavado de autos. Todos mis compañeros de trabajo eran hispanos, excepto por una persona. , y todos hablaban español. Aprendí el idioma lentamente con mis compañeros de trabajo. Uno en particular, una persona mayor de Guatemala, se sorprendió de que iría a Chiapas, un estado mexicano que limita con Guatemala, y otros me hicieron preguntas de por qué iba a ir allí por dos años.
Simplemente respondería, hay personas que necesitan a Dios; y que Dios me había llamado para servir a Sus hijos en esa región del mundo, y si Dios me hubiera llamado a cualquier otro lugar, habría aceptado felizmente la llamada. Di las gracias a mis compañeros de trabajo por el tiempo que tuve allí, entregando mi uniforme.
Llegué a casa y me duché y luego me puse mi traje. Antes de que un misionero pueda ingresar al campo de servicio, primero debe ser apartado como tal por sus líderes locales, específicamente un presidente de estaca, que tendría una función similar a la de un obispo en una diócesis católica, supervisando algunas congregaciones en un área local.
Así que el presidente de estaca nos dejó entrar a mí y a mis padres y procedió a poner sus manos sobre mí y a darme una bendición. Ya había personas preparadas específicamente para mí. A través de los trabajos que haría, bendeciría a la gente del sur de México . Sería preservado y regresaría honorablemente mientras servía al Señor con todo mi corazón, poder, mente y fuerza. Aunque las primeras partes de la bendición se hicieron realidad temprano, y a menudo, la tercera parte tuvo sus momentos en que apareció que estaría en duda, pero que con el tiempo sucedió.
Una vez que se aparta a un misionero, el nuevo misionero tiene que seguir las reglas del misionero al pie de la letra, y una de ellas fue que tenía que estar en la cama a las 2230 horas. Después de cenar en un lugar de barbacoa estilo Memphis llamado Red Hot and Blue, uno de mis favoritos lugares para comer, por lo que parecía ser la última vez en dos años, volvimos a casa y me fui a la cama.
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