Monday, December 29, 2014

WEEK 72: Eggnog Miracle!

JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA
COMPANION:  ELDER CORDON
ASSISTANTS

Hi! MERRY CHRISTMAS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Was yours magical? Ours
was. I love Christmas. I got to talk to my family! Then I taught
second hour and the subject was "Families can be Eternal" and I was
all teary-eyed and it was marvelous. Guess what? I moved. Again. New
address:

Elder Joshua Jorgensen
8663 Baypine Rd. Suite 102
Jacksonville, FL 32256

Yep, goodbye St. Augustine, land of my heart, hello Jacksonville. This
is my first time serving in actual Jacksonville ("J-Ville" to the
people in Starke, J-town to the people in Gainesville, and "The City"
to the people of St. Augustine. The people in St. John's just called
it "Jacksonville". No fun.) There are many, MANY people here. Did you
know Jacksonville is the largest (geographically) city in the United
States? It is actually an entire county, that the city just decided to
swallow whole. Jacksonville is the most populous city in Florida,
and... those are all the fun facts I know.

There is a street that is sloped upwards that we just turned onto.
There is a large yellow sign next to it that says, "hill". Just to
give you a glimpse of how flat Florida actually is.

My new companion, companion number 10, is named Elder Joshua Cordon.
He is from New York, he loves football, he has already been in the
area for 6 months so he knows it like the back of his large hands
(he's 6'4"ish).

We had such a wonderful Christmas. We had breakfast, lunch, and dinner
with three separate recent convert families. Then on Sunday, we (Elder
Burton and I) were able to participate in the baptism of an entire
family. I baptized their son and daughter, Elder Burton baptized the
parents. It was phenomenal. It was a little breathtaking.

I love being a missionary. I love it. We got eggnog! Free eggnog!
President actually gave it to us. he is phenomenal. I have already
chugged about half. Yum.

Happy New Year!!!! What are your resolutions? I have some good ones.
One is to drink the rest of the eggnog. I'm optimistic about my
chances.

Love,

~Elder Jorgensen


JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA
COMPANION:  ELDER CORDON
assistants to the President

Monday, December 22, 2014

WEEK 71: Merry Christmas!

ST AUGUSTINE, FLORIDA
COMPANION:  ELDER BURTON
ZONE LEADERS

Story time:

1) There is a street here called St. George street in the middle of downtown on the waterfront. On one side is the cathedral, lit up by the nights of lights. On one side is the Matanzas River, crossed by the gorgeous Bridge of Lions. On one side are the shops (basically a smaller, more packed Marina Village) and on the fourth side is the grassy open area with the trees and pavilion and whatnot.

There are THOUSANDS of people there at night. THOUSANDS. We go and we talk to ALL of them. We bring HUGE stacks of He is the Gift pass-along cards and we go EVERYWHERE. It is a phenomenally good time. Holy cow do we talk to a lot of people. Probably I have talked to everyone in Florida by now. Yep. Probably.

2) The people here in St. Augustine have been incredibly generous in their gift giving. As you all know it is my birthday today, and Christmas on Thursday, and people have gone NUTS! We have fudge and food and candy and by noon 57 people had posted birthday wishes on my Facebook wall and I got emails from past companions and a text from my current bishop and an email from the mission office and a text from the mission president's wife and ward members gave us Christmas cards with beautiful compliments and sentiments and gift cards and money and the first presidency sent us a Christmas card and people are feeding us on Christmas and missionaries all over are calling and texting wishing happy Pday birthday! Pday Birthday for life!!! One special gift came from the bishop in the St. John's ward, which I left about 2 months ago to come to downtown St. Augustine. He is a brilliant man, and he and I share a great love for books. He walked into the church with a giant present in his hands. There was a wonderful card, and in the present was a book. Let me go into a little more detail here. It was a book by President Packer. Well, no, let's go deeper. It was a giant (at least two feet tall), leather bound (brown, soft, beautiful leather) collection of President Packer's instructions and thoughts and photographs complied and organized by topic. Limited edition (number 704 out of 775), huge, and 581 pages long, not including the index. Elder Burton says it is probably the coolest thing I will ever own.

All of this is in addition to the absolute flood of gifts and cards and emails and packages and love I have received from you my dearest friends and family. I have had the greatest birthday and Christmas season EVER. Holy cow. So many incredible gifts, so much time and attention and affection. I have been absolutely flooded in love and am soaking all of it in a little greedily. I love you and am so, so grateful.

3) More Elder Burton stories. To celebrate the magnificence of birthday Pday, we stayed up until midnight. Now, nobody panic. We were obedient. We were in bed, lights were out... But we DID talk about Star Wars. For hours. And then we celebrated the beginning of birthday Pday at midnight. It. Was. Grand. We definitely decided that we will have lightsabers in the celestial kingdom.

4) It is going to be Christmas on Thursday. I am so, so, SO EXCITED!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! OH YEAH!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

5) Elizabeth got confirmed on Sunday! She is now a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Glory. Glory. Hallelujah.

6) We just got back from district Pday where we played Signs and Ultimate frisbee on top of the hill next to the 400+ year old fort overlooking the ocean across the street from the downtown part of the city. The grass was green, we all wore shorts and tshirts... It was fantastic. This is our city! I have been technically in the city of St. Augustine for 6 months now and we are the only Elders downtown. This is our town, and I love it here. Being a missionary is stinking fun.

7) Yesterday at church, I taught a 40 minute lesson to an Elder's quorum from a manual I had never read! THAT was a good time. Every single person contributed at least TWO comments, and we did not read from the manual. All elders quorum teachers everywhere will REJOICE!!

8) I am just in a list-making mood. Merry Christmas, my wondrous family and friends. It is my absolute certainty that Jesus Christ, He who is Annointed to Deliver, was born at the meridian of time, and that He will still deliver me. I love you.

~Elder Jorgensen


ST AUGUSTINE, FLORIDA
COMPANION:  ELDER BURTON
zone leaders


Excerpts from Letters Home


To Mom:
First things first. Skype call!!!! We are planning on 2:30 our time, which would be 11:30 your time. Let me know if that does not work! Also let me know if it does work! Also send me the Skype name you will be using. The call will be approximately 45 minutes long. There is some flexibility but definitely shorter than 1 hour. I am so, SO excited.

IT'S MY BIRTHDAY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! PDay Birthday!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Good times. I have been overwhelmed by an avalanche of love from members, missionaries, and family. I love all of you so much. Connie, Scott, and Rob sent me a package! I am so excited to open it on Christmas! Janis and Aaron sent me a beautiful card with a gift and it has just been phenomenal. Wow. There will be other things I will discuss in my big letter. Big things.

I love you mama! I am so sorry. I did not get your Christmas package sent last week and so it will probably be late and then in my rush to send it I forgot to include the note explaining what everything in it is!!!!!!! Sorry!!!! And now I'm in an awkward situation where I can't explain because it will ruin the surprise but if I don't explain you won't know how awesome and special the things in there are!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

I'm 23!!!!! Thanks for having me. Good work on that. I have all my toes and everything! Elder Burton and I talk all the time about how phenomenal our mothers are. We also talk a lot about Star Wars. I love you!

~Elder Jorgensen

***********************

To Kent:
Happy Christmas Dad! Thank you for the sentiments you and mom expressed in the emails to the mission office! Those were printed out and given to us on Thursday. It was grand. I love You!

Monday, December 15, 2014

WEEK 70: Move #9

ST AUGUSTINE, FLORIDA
COMPANION:  ELDER BURTON
zone leaders

From Home to Valley Center, 
from Valley Center to Temecula, 
from Temecula to Home, 
from Home to the MTC, 
from the MTC to Gainesville
(by way of Jacksonville) 
from Gainesville to Starke, 
from Starke to St. John's, 
from St. John's to St. Augustine, and now 
from St. Augustine to another part of St. Augustine. 
That's a lot of moving for a missionary who still hasn't been out a year!

As I said, I did not get transferred. I am still in my same area. So we were going about our day as usual. It was Wednesday morning, the day of transfers, and my companion and I get a phone call. On the call, we are told that the Elders who live next door to us (we live in a quadraplex, so from the outside it looks like one medium-large house but it is really four three-room apartments) are being replaced by Sisters. There were some concerns expressed about our living next door (that phrase doesn't really do it justice. We would have been sharing a wall. We would have shared a washer and dryer. We would have shared a parking spot! Just... A lot of sharing) to a set of Sister missionaries.

So we moved! The two new sets of Sisters took the two elders apartments, and we took the old Sister's apartment, which is giant and ridiculously nice. We measured the bathroom. It's four times the size of our previous bathroom. Pray for the sisters. There are four of them sharing one washing machine. Neither companionship has a dishwasher.
And also, we took all of their stuff.

So this was not intentional, but it did work out this way. Missionary apartments, over time, accumulate an enormous amount of things. Missionaries are given or buy or are shipped clothes and supplies and whatnot, and it is HARD to take it with you when you are transferred and impossible when you go home. So. Apartments that have been missionary apartments for YEARS just have many, many things.

When you leave an apartment, it is supposed to be SPOTLESS. So we made ours and the other Elder's apartment SPOTLESS. It is a rule that you are not to leave ANYTHING in the apartment when you are moved out. We, trying to be as considerate as possible, giving the Sisters a clean, fresh start, left only a whiteboard filled with encouraging comments we had written, and a tiny Christmas tree with all the candy we could find stacked underneath. We took everything else. Everything. If it was small enough to fit into the car, we took it. Wednesday night, that was the cleanest apartment in the mission. We ALSO cleaned out the apartment next door to us since the elders were already in Jacksonville for transfer meeting. We were being very obedient and kind.

WELL! The sisters get back from Jacksonville and we have a dilemma. We cannot move in until they move out. So we wait for them to pack (because they didn't KNOW they were moving) and call us. They do not call us until 9PM and then it is to tell us that yes, they are out, but they forgot to leave the key. We drive across town to get the key and then start moving. Moving at least a decades worth of things out of two apartments across St. Augustine with only you, your companion, and your Ford Fusion takes some time. We got our stuff out onto the grass so the sisters could go inside and get to bed on time, but we did not finish the move until past 1 AM.

So that was an experience. Anyway. We arrive at our new apartment. It is great and spacious. We have a porch with a view and a bathroom you could fit our bedroom into. There is also about $2000 worth of electronics that no one is able to explain (three phones, a DVD player and flatscreen tv, chargers, wires, a hook up for xfinity, a cable box, other things.... What?) and SO. MUCH. STUFF.

Apparently, Sister missionaries are even bigger packrats than Elders, and they took NONE OF IT. Not the food, not their bedding, not their supplies or whiteboards or posters of ANYTHING. They didn't even take their own records! Their Ward list and area book was all on our shelf! They left a whole suitcase worth of clothes piled in the corner of their walk-in-closet! (They asked us before the move if WE had a walk-in-closet. We told them that you could walk in if you were a smurf, and you weren't claustrophobic. They did not laugh very much.)

So, we now have a great and spacious apartment and many, many, many possessions. Many. We have a panda beanie baby with a tiny bowtie. And a nerf gun with 13 extra darts. And nine pictures of Jesus hanging up in our study room. Nice ones! Oh wait, ten! I just saw another one. It was hidden between the third Joseph Smith portrait and the second poster of the Orlando temple. We also have two irons, an old timey alarm clock, four mirrors, a scale, five white boards, six drawers of pens, and 15 million hangars. And three rice cookers. And ten rolls of paper towels. And two light-up bouncy balls. And a cactus. And two bags full of ties. And 11 pairs of pants that fit reasonably well. And a briefcase. And three bags of bath soaps and a bubble-blower shaped like a rocket ship. And eight chairs. And a couch. And a weight bench.
And... Well, you get the idea.

So. We made a couple trips taking them stuff they needed. Like their area book and one of our three full-length body mirrors and their refrigerator magnets (their magnet was of a sister missionary saying "When life gets hard, I've found the answer to be a manicure and a cute helmet." Ours is of a pickle doing a cannonball shouting "I'm a big flippin' dill!") and a blanket. But the trips are over, and we come home and rejoice in our possessions. Life is pretty good.

New address is 420 Villa San Marco, Apartment 201, St. Augustine, FL, 32086.

Other notable events from the week... There were the two days it took to move. And then the next day we spent four hours on the phone with everyone from the mission president to the new individual missionaries (we have nine new missionaries in the zone) coordinating trade-offs, mileage limitations, Christmas things and meetings and how to report certain key indicators and WOW. Just a long phone continuous stream of calls. While I talked, Elder Burton cleaned. He unpacked the whole apartment! What a superstar.

Have you seen the He is the Gift Video? No????? It is fantastic! Go watch! It's only a couple minutes long and you are GUARANTEED to feel the spirit and want to watch it over and over again. Christmas.mormon.org. Try not to be distracted by how beautiful Mary is. They went a little overboard on the "most beautiful and fair above all" scripture in first Nephi. Well, they went way overboard. Come on people. We've got 1500 He is the Gift pass-along cards with her face on them and it's just ridiculous! Missionaries can't catch a break!
Anyway.

I had a couple of spiritualish thoughts this week. They occur to me occasionally. Sometimes I even write them down. This week I spent a LARGE amount of time pondering the lyrics to one of my favorite hymn lyrics. Savior, Reedemer of my soul. It is FILLED with gorgeous lyrics that resonate deeply with me, but for the sake of your time I will address only this one...

"Chasten my soul, 'till I shall be
In perfect harmony with Thee." 

These thoughts came as I read the institute commentary to Job in my personal time this week. Job proclaims, "Yea, if He kill me, yet still will I trust in Him." Probably didn't get that word-perfect. Do we have that sort of trust in the Lord? Do we look at our lives and the worth of things in them as did Job? Do we truly have an unconditional relationship?

That is what is required. Less is not acceptable to Him. That is the vision the lyricist captured when he asked for the chastening. To have your SOUL chastened. What accomplishes that? What does that feel like? I imagine and for a moment I tremble. But then I catch the vision! He is my one delight, my joy by day and my dream by night. The path to perfect, soulful harmony with Him is the one I desperately desire to tread. I love Him. And the hunger to be with Him again colors every emotion and event.

The purpose of life is to prepare to meet God! I am not more prepared as I grow richer, I am not more prepared if I do things faster or if people are kinder and gentler with me. I do not seek these things. I am not more prepared if I am in good health. My physical and emotional and intellectual comfort and ease do not contribute, nor do the absences of fear or pain. The length of my life is not even a variable in this eternal consideration. However, my opportunities to love, my willingness to sacrifice, my awareness of Him, my dedication and my desire all are very much tied to this preparation. My love for Him matters very, very much.

I had a heartbreaking moment this week when I was unable to read music. Once upon a time, I was quite the little musician. Once upon a time I could hear it. Just as clearly as I can hear English in my mind as I read it, I could hear the music with a glance. I could feel it in my bones. I could sit down on the bench and feel the muscles in my hands provoke sound from a keyboard as easily and as naturally as my throat could pull sound for speech from my body. During the time my mind slipped away, it was music that went last, and for which I grieved most. After reading became strenuous and then impossible, after focus had faded and vocabulary vanished and exercise evaporated and diction dissipated, I could still play that piano for hours without effort, and I could still sing! And I remember the week at the end of March, 2010, when it just... faded away. And so much has come back. I can read and memorize and speak and work and think again. But music hasn't. With practice and work and many, many hours it might, but it hasn't even begun yet. Before my mission I surrounded myself with music constantly, even while I slept. I needed it to come from without, because it no longer erupted from within.

So this week we were trying to help the ward choir, and people were being really nice about my singing, and they were SO surprised when it came out that I could not read even the simplest melody. When I look at sheet music, I might as well be looking at Korean for all the clarity I have as to what noise I am expected to make from the symbols represented on the sheet. When I hear notes, I can't even tell which is higher or which is lower, let alone what is sharp or flat! I can't hold my note against other harmonies, I just... Can't.

And it broke my little heart! Here I am trying to contribute to something beautiful, trying to worship my God and uplift my ward, and I CAN'T! And I can remember when I could have and the longing tears at my soul. This experience is representative of many that I have. And I just sat down on my little futon and got a little watery-eyed and said a prayer. It didn't have words, but if it has, it would have sounded like this: "Father. Daddy. Where are you? Why aren't you here? Why not Father? Why not a little song? Why not for Christmas Father? Why not for Thee?"

And I had the most MARVELOUS experience. Oh it was majestic. Again, it was not in words. I'm sorry. I really don't use words except to speak or write. We watch a lot of Mormon messages. One is from a talk where Elder Christofferson quotes Elder Hugh B. Brown. If my answer had had words, they would have come from that talk, and they would have been: "Look little currant bush, I am the Gardner here. I know what I want you to be."

I have been different since that experience. I have behaved, spoken, and reacted differently. It was that experience, and not the experience immediately afterwards where I found I could sing and understand and play that song as easily as if I'd written it myself, that changed me. Oh it was a thrill. I was known by Him. I was enough for Him. I had a glimpse of His care in my development. I had a gasp of His glory. I knew Him a little better, and for that I would have sacrificed all the talent that ever has been had by all the men in all the nations that ever have been! My soul was chastened. I had the opportunity to choose what was important to me, music or Father, and I got to choose to be THRILLED to choose Him. If it costs talent or music or inner-peace or memory or health or strength or WHATEVER, then
I will get to come closer to Him every time! Though He slay me, yet will I trust in Him. Chasten my soul, so that I will get to be in perfect harmony, the only harmony that really matters, with Thee.

Merry Christmas. If I had planned my Christmas, it would not have been half this good! If I had planned my life, it would not have been a fraction as gorgeously joyous as this.

~Elder Jorgensen

Wednesday, December 10, 2014

Week 69: Story Time

ST AUGUSTINE, FLORIDA
COMPANION:  ELDER BURTON
zone leaders

THIS week. Holy moly.

Quick aside (is it an aside if you haven't started?), if you know anyone else that wants to be on the list of people that gets these, you can just let me know.

Well from the pictures you know the story of finding the kittens, stalking the peacock, filling the font, and the Nights of Lights.  There are just too many stories. Some good highlights:

1) In testimony meeting, one of the members bore testimony of how they can move things with their mind.
2) A member of the bishopric taught the doctrine of exaltation at the baptism instead of doing the traditional welcome to the ward.
3) Our next-door neighbors (the elders) are being replaced by Sisters. This makes eight sister companionships for our zone. 16 Sister Missionaries in all. Zone Meetings are like Enrichment Nights but with more nametags.
4) I will be in St. Augustine at least another 6 weeks. It is living up to its reputation as the most sought after area in the mission. It is fantastic here. Hopefully I'll get to stay another 8 months! That's when the Pope visits to commemorate the 450th anniversary of the founding of the city. #BaptizethePope!
5) It's about 70 degrees.
6) I like lists.
7) Elder Neal A. Anderson is visiting our mission in January. That will make 4 visits from general authorities (2 being apostles) in 5 months. Outside of General Conference, I have now heard Elders Perry, Holland, Christofferson, and soon to be Anderson speak. I'm well on my way to Apostle Bingo!
8) Please don't judge me for playing Apostle bingo.
9) I have probably eaten cake, candy, and cookies for every meal since December began.
10) Elizabeth got baptized.

A lot of cool things happen as a missionary. We get to teach people.  We get to serve. We have crazy stories (the actually crazy ones we don't tell, so just take a minute to think about the degree of craziness that is really involved here) and laugh a lot and occasionally things go a little sideways and people throw radios while we pray. BUT! By far the most fun thing that we do as missionaries is administer in the ordinances of the gospel. Sunday, I got to baptized Elizabeth. It. Was. Awesome.

It was AWESOME! It does not get better! It is exactly as fun every single time and it is more fun than anything else I can imagine! Here is a scripture for the week:

"Behold, he changed their hearts; yea, he awakened them out of a deep sleep, and they awoke unto God. Behold, they were in the midst of darkness; nevertheless, their souls were illuminated by the light of the everlasting word..."

Changed hearts. Awakening. The illumination of the soul. It goes along well with last week's scripture:

"And I have been supported under trials and troubles of every kind, yea, and in all manner of afflictions; yea, God has delivered me from prison, and from bonds, and from death; yea, and I do put my trust in Him, and he will still deliver me."

Deliverance! That is what happened on Sunday! That is what has happened and is happening and will happen for me. I have been supported! I have been delivered! I have been awakened. I have been changed. I have been illuminated. No genius or falsity could manufacture these things in me. I am a witness of Christ, for He has worked in me.

I just... I just want everyone to know. Special chance for bonus points this week: who in the Book of Mormon uses the word "know" the most often? I know of these things myself. I do know. I know of their surety. I know these things of myself. I do know of myself. I know of myself. I know that Jesus Christ shall come.

I know! I remember what it was like in a deep sleep, in darkness, in prison, in bonds, and in death. I remember what it felt like to wake up. I have seen what deliverance and illumination look like, feel like, sound and taste and smell like. I can identify without a doubt the hand of the Lord because I have sought it from sea to sea, from the north even to the south, I have run to and fro and now finally I see it in my life. I hear it in my bones. I feel it in every unmapped depth of my soul. I know Him to be loving, trustworthy, real, present, and good. I know that my Redeemer liveth.

I love to celebrate Him. I imagine what it was like to watch from heaven as He entered the earth. I imagine I felt then much as I do now. I can almost remember straining against the veil and shouting with a voice of mute thunder:

"Turn ye about oh Jerusalem! Forsake ye your waste places, your heathen groves and idols made with your own hands! Cease to defile and come to adore! There is a King among you! There is a Prince born to Judah tonight! Cast your burdens, and your gifts, at His infant feet and wonder in silent peace at His marvelous condescension. Bring ye praise and works and adulation to the Most High! Dare not to demean, tremble to conceive to ignore. For unto you is born this day in the City of David, a Savior, which is Christ the Lord!

"Angels go and praise your God! Tear through this flimsy space and throw yourselves on, onward to command the captivation of this wayward, fallen man. Apostate nation come and kneel! And kiss the dust He one day will tread! And thou oh moon, and thou oh stars! erupt from celestial pedestal and race to shake the heavens with your hallelujah cries! And thou oh man, oh Israel, bend and bow before your benevolent Master. In this, His first innocence, crystallize the tendrils of your minds with but a glimpse of His incomprehensible glory. Sink into the unfathomable, and be filled with the oncoming ascension of His grace. Banished be thou sound, shade, and sensation. Let naught distract from
that focal point of all Creation, the inception of the life of our living Lord!

"All glory to our God and King! Let saints and angels sing! Let earth's upheaval justify and heaven's sanction testify that God's own Son will sanctify and save a destitute humanity! God bless that virgin Mary, pure and fairest above all other maidens who ever will live! God bless our faithful Joseph, noble in heart and by birth, step-father to He who will yet beget us all! God bless our sweet Immanuel! He fulfilled His promise! Unthinkably and yet most certainly, He has come
again! So then wonder at His mercy even in His infancy! Contemplate with the whole faculty of your souls upon His thrice blessed grace. He walks the earth and has accepted this sweetest tabernacle of flesh! Entering mortality, He comes as champion, riding wings of destiny against twins Death and Hell. And what then are ye doing? Where than shall ye go? He hath the words of eternal life! Do not miss, do not waste, do not squander this, the moment of the 
consummation of all existence! Come and sing Noel! Come and have the merriest of Christmases! Come and leave the putrid filth ye are want to wallow in, imagining we, the silent, unborn witnesses of heaven, do not see and know and record even the most fleeting ounce of your eternal shame! 

Come and kiss the air with your praise to the flesh of that man whose blood will wash your sins from even the mind of the Almighty God, and erase the impossibility of your ascent to Him! Look and live, oh rancid, captive Israel. Come and see where thy Master dwelleth! There is yet hope! There is yet light! There is yet a glorious, unspeakable, brilliantly, ecstatically, eternally, joyful gift to be given! Come and bathe your affections with you afflictions in the Fount of every blessing! Come and shout, and bring Him glory! and cry Hosanna! Or dear GOD at least let me! Dear God, at least let me go and shout and praise and comfort Him! Dear God, let me, let me!!"

And then I can imagine the steadying hand of Elder Burton on my shoulder, sturdily bringing calm to that first Christmas in another realm, in another life, as he does now. He is a wonderful blessing and example of moderation in my life. Just another thing to be thankful for.

This Christmas, though, is different. This Christmas, I am a missionary. I am an ambassador of that Jesus Christ whom we celebrate! I am a member of His Church! I have a knowledge of His name! I share a living, pulsating, everlasting covenant with Him! I will CELEBRATE! Oh will I celebrate. I will rejoice and laugh and weep and laud and SING. This Christmas, I DO have a body. I DO walk this gorgeous earth, the same one upon which Jesus Christ was born! I will not miss this opportunity. This Christmas I WILL shout, and I WILL give Him glory. This Christmas I will give Him my love and my attention and my heart and study and mind and prayers. This Christmas my dream of eons, my longing of ages, will be realized as I go forth and proclaim His Word! This Christmas will be the very best Christmas ever. It will be better for me than any April night was for shepherd pure or magi wise, for as we bring His sheep to His fold, we may yet approach His nativity in the most solemn, sacred way. In the name of Jesus Christ I testify, we have NOT yet missed our chance.

Merry Christmas.

~Elder Jorgensen






Monday, December 1, 2014

Week 68: Mother Dearest

ST AUGUSTINE, FLORIDA
COMPANION:  ELDER BURTON
zone leaders

This email will be mostly mother-themed. Today, December 1st, 2014, my mom turns 30. Ish. So it's a special day to get to write a letter.

This week was Thanksgiving! I am thankful for my mom. One of the things about my mom that I am so incredibly grateful for is her love for the commandments. It seemed like we were always the strictest family! My curfew was earlier, my chores were longer, my consequences harsher, our family home evenings longer, consequences prescribed were more exacting, Sunday activities more limited, family prayer unyielding... Such a BLESSING! My mom tried to teach me for 22 years to LOVE the commandments like she does.

And now I DO! I ADORE the commandments! There is no merciful bounty from our Father for which I am more grateful than the commandments. They have rescued my whole existence. What a filthy, hopeless addict I would have become without the word of wisdom to protect me! What a frantic, scattered, self-indulgent fool would have found residence in my flesh if not for the voice of God thundering from Siani, "Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it Holy". What an unvirtuous wretch would have evolved if not for the Law of Chastity! What an avaricious miser could have been, but for the redemption from such triviality provided by the law of tithing. Oh what filth I have been saved from, oh what marvelous, wondrous heights have been scaled, because of the commandments.

My mother loves the commandments. She WANTS to follow them not because she must, not because anyone is forcing her to. She did not create a mentality of adhering as little as possible, fulfilling some kind of mandatory minimum to the church before getting back to our normal lives. My childhood was built upon, around, and beneath the influence of the un-negotiable edicts of the Almighty, with the intent that we live them to the fullest conceivable extent. And we fell absurdly, laughably short. Of course we do. We always will. And so we laugh, and we fall a little more in love with the voice of the Lord, and we work a little harder tomorrow.


Someone else I'm grateful for is my companion, Elder Burton. I have complied some "Elder Burton Quotes" to give you sort of a feel for him:

In response to anything he likes: "That's what's up."

At lunch time, after listing all the things we needed to get done that day: "Ah forget it. I'm gonna eat this cake and lay on the ground."

To the person cutting his hair: "Just... Be aggressive with it."

After glancing at a picture of President Eyring speaking the Vatican: "He's a man among boys."

As we're sitting in Ward choir, trying to help them practice for their Christmas program: "The only songs I like are: 1) Praise to the Man. 2) The Star Spangled Banner. 3) Called to Serve. We should just sing those."

After a long day: Me: "What're you having for dinner tonight?"
Elder Burton: "Eggs, bacon, and cake."

During daily planning: "Let's go kick down the doors of a heroin addict. We could fight him.

After Ward correlation meeting: "The Sisters are just so... sistery."

Discussing our excitement to go to the temple after our missions: "If I saw Harry Reid in the temple, I don't know what I'd do. Probably spit on him."

In visible disbelief after being handed homemade lavender soap by a member: "You wash your body with this??"

Walking down the street knocking on doors: "I feel like wearing cowboy boots. And a snakeskin tie. And sayin' 'Howdy'"
(Note: He said howdy at every door the rest of the night.)

Member feeding us: "What do you want for Thanksgiving dinner? Do you have a favorite food?"
Elder Burton: "Bread. Just bread."

He's like a TV character. He is, in every respect, the stereotypical MAN. It is such a fantastic time being companions with him. Goodness gracious. Makes me want to fix things. Or cook outdoors.

One thing I love about my mom is her capacity to rejoice in the success of those around her. If life is a race, then the finish line is death. Why would you want to win THAT race????? Mom taught me to think like that. We are not here to race! We are here to get as many people into the celestial kingdom as possible. First ourselves, then our families, then EVERYONE! EVERYONE needs to go to heaven!!!!!!!!! Mom taught me that. Simultaneously, she taught me to WIN. It wasn't about being some kind of namby-pamby man! It was about correctly identifying the teams, and the terms of engagement. The teams are the human family and the godhead vs. the Adversary and his filth, and the terms are unconditional. VICTORY is the cause and I love to WIN! Mom was always the first to remind me what to love and what to abhor, the first to teach me who my teammates were, and against what I was competing. In every way she prioritized, she emphasized true value, and this gave her the gift of sharing in the success of all around her. Anything fun that happened to ANYONE, anything good that took place in ANYONE'S life, it was as if it happened to her! Now, surrounded by successful missionaries, I do not have to battle envy or the spirit of competition. What a gift that was to me.

Tuesday was a good day in the mission. We have a lot of meetings. So many. And there is a LOT going on in our area (we have Elizabeth being baptized on Sunday. It's be awesome if you kept her in your prayers) so we often miss out on my favorite part of missionary work: finding new people to teach.

There is just something special about standing in front of someone and declaring to the, the message of the restoration of the gospel of Jesus Christ! That is the most important moment of their entire lives!!!!!!!!! And most everyone misses it, but I try SO hard, and a light almost every time comes on in their eyes, and at least they know, at least they have an inkling that I know, something fantastic.

So on Tuesday we got to go tracting in a nice, upper-middle class neighborhood for hours. It was in the 40s with a lot of humidity. It did not stop raining for a single minute that entire day. We could not have been wetter. And in the several hours we worked, almost every single door we knocked on, someone answered. We talked to HUNDREDS of people. It was phenomenal. We got home and had to lovingly correct some missionaries that had decided the combination of wet, cold, and dark was sufficient reason to stay in their apartment. All I could say was, "You are missing out! There are souls to save! There are events of eternal consequence to be involved in! This is your only shot! This is all you've got! You are missing it! The plagues of Egypt could not keep you from throwing yourself out into the night if only you took a moment to grasp what we are DOING! So get up and grasp it!!!!!"

We just need more. We need a hundred million more members and two million more missionaries and jet packs to dart from door to door and megaphones and MORE. Sigh. Mom taught me about more. She taught me that "good enough" was beneath one who held the holy priesthood of the Lord. She taught that "fine" was NOT fine enough for a child of Heavenly Father. We practiced and we worked and there was a very well understood expectation of excellence. And sometimes, excellence for me would have been a source of outright embarrassment for my peers. And sometimes my "fine" would have been excellence for my peers. And that was never considered or discussed. I don't think I heard the words "good enough" from her mouth even once. You did your best. You paid your price in sweat blood and tears if that's what it folks but you did it! I don't think I ever got any "Most Valuable Player" awards, but I cannot count all the "Most-Improved" ribbons I have amassed. There was always a new concept to read, always another skill to acquire, there was an eternal potential for progression opened to me. And though I am RIDDLED with weakness, inadequacy, and defect, I still maintain an absolute freedom of vision. I am here to do the best I am capable of. I am here to wear myself out in the service of the Lord. My goal on my mission and after is to give every ounce of energy and capacity to the service of the Lord throughout a long, happy, healthy life. I call it the life of martyrdom. It is a concept taught to me by my angel mother.

We had an awesome thanksgiving. Ate with the ward mission leader and our recent converts. Also went out and knocked some doors! And contacted some less-active, part-member families. They were great. We had an interesting night a little bit ago! We walked up to a house that is LIT UP with Christmas lights and found a half-naked, 140 pound aging black man wandering around the front yard. He invites us into his home in a thick botswannan accent, sits us down, and then he leaves. We sit in his immaculately clean and tastefully decorated home (in the middle of the ghetto) for 20 minutes, alone. He finally shows back up. He had walked to the gas station, bought us drinks, and himself the single most giant can of beer I had ever seen. We could smell it from outside. It was huge. We said, "Brother, drinking that beer will kill you. We are here to talk about God. We can help you change."

Now he has a baptism date! Wooooooooo!

Did I tell you one of our investigators restores classic sports cars? THAT is a fun house. Did I tell you St. Augustine has a school for the deaf and blind so there are deaf people EVERYWHERE? Adds an interesting element. Wish I could sign.

One thing mom taught me was wishing. How many years did we wish for "mom's neck and back to get better"? How many years did we wish for a family, for siblings, for a mission? How many tens of thousands of prayers were offered for those? How much yearning, hoping, working, pleading, and wishing was done? Mom taught me to wish patiently, to be righteously ambitious, to ask of God.

I love my mom. I will include at the end of this letter some poems I cherish on the subject. They capture the spirit of her to me.

The work is going wonderfully well. This week I learned about priesthood power. Priesthood power is based upon personal righteousness. Early in the week, I acted as voice in two blessings. It was a hallowed experience. It was a breathtaking thing. People were sobbing, my hands were shaking, the spirit was palpable, the whole atmosphere electrifying. Later in the week, I acted as voice again. In the interim, I had become unfocused, rebellious, and lazy. The words came, smiles were seen. It was fine. I mean, it was done by priesthood authority, so of course it was fine. The difference, though, was shocking. And a little heartbreaking.

I missed that chance. I missed an opportunity for something marvelous to be done. I am embarrassed and ashamed. But I will repent.

That is probably the most valuable lesson I learned from my mama. We all need to just repent and forgive and move on! Alright, well, didn't nail it today. And that person hit me with their car, and life did not work out how I planned. I didn't stick the landing. I didn't get an answer. Or maybe my pants were just inside-out all day. Well that was then! Today things are going to be different! Today will be awesome! So there! If yesterday was incredible just think what today could be! If yesterday was a bummer than why would you dwell on it? Why would you force yourself to live there by talking about it, holding it as a grudge, reliving it over and over again?? Forgive! Repent. Move on.

Mostly repent. Repenting is important.

Sunday night we met a man who makes custom knives right there in his house! We were talking about materials. Apparently there is a company in Germany that own their own mahogany forest and ages their wood for 200 years before they sell it. There is another kind of wood called red spruce originally used to make Gibson guitars. He said certain guitars sell for tens of millions of dollars. I said, "Whoa! I wonder what kind of music you could make with that!" And then he said something significant. He said, "Any kind you want."

We have such unbelievable tools. We live in the last days, in a day of miracles, wonder, honor, priesthood, temples, scripture, truth, and glory. Science and technology and medicine and learning of every kind has exploded almost beyond our comprehension. I imagine sitting in heaven, looking down, and saying, "Whoa! I wonder what kind of life you could make with that!" Any kind you want. It can be a waste. It can be spent in trinkets and baubles and cyberspace. It could be spent in rebellion, laziness, pride, sin, and gluttony. Or not. Or the instrument you've been given could be worth far more than measly millions. We can make any kind of music we want! Let's make it AWESOME.

We're not allowed to say "cool" or "sweet" or any other words like it in our mission. We can only say "awesome". So everything is awesome. Not entirely sure why we have that rule. Anyway, it's my mama's birthday. It's a pretty awesome day. Next week is transfers so PDay will be on Tuesday. I will talk to y'all then.

Happy Birthday Mum.


~Elder Jorgensen



“The Name of Mother”    

“The noblest thoughts my soul can claim.
The holiest words my tongue can frame,
Unworthy are to frame the name
More sacred than all other.
An infant when her love first came,
A man, I find it just the same:
Reverently I breathe her name--
The blessed name of mother.”
--George Griffith Fetters

“They pushed him straight against the wall,
            The firing squad dropped in a row
            And why he stood on tiptoe,
            Those men shall never know.
            He wore a smile across his face
            As he stood primly there,
            The guns straight aiming at his heart,
            The sun upon his hair.
            For he remembered in a flash
            Those days beyond recall,
            When his proud mother took his height
            Against the bedroom wall.”
(From "Behold thy Mother)

I have a secret
known only by me.
It helps me, it holds me,
It keeps me happy.
You will not believe this,
but surely it’s true
‘It’ is my mother.
Yes, Mother, it’s you.

You, you are my secret strength
And to you I’ll always be true
And here is a message
Which comes from my heart:
Mother, I love you.

A mother’s inherent qualities of trust, courage, and faith lend strength to every member of the family.
The Family—A Divine Blessing

You may have riches and wealth untold
With baskets of jewels and caskets of gold
But richer than I you will never be
For I had a mother who read to me.
(From "Birth")