Showing posts with label missionaries. Show all posts
Showing posts with label missionaries. Show all posts

Sunday, May 10, 2009

Scott in the Italy Catania Mission!

Today after our stake conference, we hurried home as fast as we could so we could talk to Mark and Aersta in Utah, Kimberly in Milano, and Lisa in Kawagoe, Japan. After talking to the kids for a while (Kimberly and Lisa sound great, by the way), Scott opened his mission call which he had received in Utah last weekend.

We were so happy to hear that Scott will be serving in the Italy Catania Mission as of July 15, 2009!



Even though we won't see him while he serves, we consider it a real blessing to have him serving in the same country we are serving in. Such a blessing!

It was such a nice Mother's Day!

Saturday, September 27, 2008

Update & Kimberly's address

We had to say goodbye to a few of our missionaries as they returned home with honor this week. What a great group of missionaries -- we're going to miss them. (The man in the back right is Brother Calabrese who is our Stake Patriarch and right-hand man in the office. He volunteers his time to help with apartments, helps us work through Italian red tape, translates official documents, and so much more.)

I just had to add a couple of pictures from this transfer that require a bit of explanation. The missionaries are very busy, especially when they are getting ready to go home, so they might not have had the time or money for a haircut. (They usually cut each others' hair to save both time and money.)

Such was the case with this wonderful missionary who also served as a branch president in Olbia. He was so busy that we decided he deserved a little trim before meeting his parents at the airport.

These three Italian missionaries also served as branch presidents during their time here. The Elder in the middle is one of President Acerson's assistants and will be with us one more transfer.


The other two have something wonderful to look forward to when they get home: going to the temple in Spain with this sweet family who was in the branch where they each took a turn as their branch president. Just look at these beautiful children! In order to go to the temple, this little family had to take the overnight boat from Sardegna with their two small children, go to their separate embassies to get their visas and other documents in order (because they are from different countries in South America), and finally come to the mission home for their temple recommend interviews. They had not eaten all day so we were able to feed them and take them to the train to catch the boat that night. Such sacrifices. We pray for a temple here in Italy daily.

Here's a picture of our new group of missionaries! The three missionaries from the United States served with Kimberly (now known as Sorella Acerson) in the Missionary Training Center. The other two are Italians, and all of them are great! We're going to love serving with them.

Sorella Acerson's new companion is Sorella Sheffield and she is currently seving in the beautiful city of Como just north of Milan. (President Acerson is jealous as he always wanted to serve there!) Letters and packages can be sent to:

Sorella Acerson
Italy Milan Mission
Via Gramsci, 13/4
20090 Opera (MI),
ITALIA

(The address is also listed at the right under her picture in case you need to find it again quickly and don't want to scroll through the entire blog to find this message again.)

Also, Happy Birthday to Aersta! Thanks for all you do for us and for being such a sweet daughter-in-law.

Scott just returned from Sicily where he played (and won) volleyball, Marianne is diligently studying, and Stephanie and I took one of her new friends and the friend's mother with us as we visited Paestum, a well-preserved Greek city at the southern end of our mission. (We'll share more pictures on Paestum soon.)

President is in Milan for meetings (no, he's not going to see Kimberly while he's there) and we continue to miss all those who aren't with us.

Looking forward to church tomorrow. The talks and lessons are always so powerful and uplifting here. We have great members and they always show us a lot of love. Have a great Sabbath day!

Monday, September 15, 2008

Meet Artan and Jonathan

Artan (pronounced Ar-tahn) is from Albania. He was the Albanian and Italian weight-lifting champion at around age 18 but was not able to go to the Olympics at that time because of visa problems. He is now a world-class hair stylist and loves making people feel good about themselves. He had been meeting with the elders and coming to church for several months, but taking things slowly ("piano, piano" is what they say) until his sister died, leaving behind a husband and two young daughters. Artan returned to Albania to assist with the funeral and tried to tell his relatives what the missionaries had been teaching him: that there was life after death and that they would see her again. Because religion was banned in their country for many years, people there don't usually believe in God and, as he put it, his family "thought he was crazy." They said, "No, there is no such thing. It's over. She's gone."

It really made Artan think about the things he had been taught and he realized that he believed they were true. He came back a changed man and told the missionaries that he wanted to learn everything -- and he wanted them to move along more quickly.

A young man named Jonathan was getting baptized within a couple of weeks and one Sunday Artan and I were talking about it as I was preparing Sunday dinner at the mission home. I asked Artan, "So when are you getting baptized Artan?" (knowing that he hadn't decided). He said, "You pick the day, Sister Acerson, and I will get baptized." I was so surprised that I just said, "Oh, no, I shouldn't choose the date! You should talk to the missionaries and set the date with them." He continued to ask me to choose the day and so I suggested he get baptized with Jonathan. It actually worked out better to have it the week after Jonathan's baptism, and so it was. He asked President Acerson to baptize him, but President encouraged him to have one of the missionaries or members do it. When he found out that our son Scott, who holds the office of a Priest, could actually perform a baptism, he asked him to do it.

But first, we had Jonathan's baptism. Jonathan is from the Philippines (and yes, he really is that happy!). His baptism just happened to be scheduled for the night when we had new missionaries come into the mission, so we decided to have them attend a baptism their first night in Rome, Italy!

It was an amazing experience. The spirit was very strong and I remember watching Artan after the baptism as he wiped tears from his eyes and expressed his sadness that this opportunity was something that would be very difficult to bring to his family. He was especially sad because he knew he could be a positive influence on his nieces who lost their mother, but that it would be very difficult to convince the adults in their lives of that fact.

One of the most tender moments on this mission for me personally happened as we sang the closing song, "I Am a Child of God" in Italian. The love that I felt from my Heavenly Father was overpowering as I sang the words that were no longer just unfamiliar words in Italian, but words and phrases whose meaning was crystal clear to me and held such profound meaning. Because of the way the words are translated, they are a little different in Italian:

Guidami, aiutami, cammina insiema a me;
dimmi quel che devo far
per ritornare a Te.

Guide me, help me, walk together with me
Tell me that which I must do
So I can return to You.

What a beautiful song as we sing with the knowledge that we are truly a child of God and can ask Him for guidance and help as we make our way back to Him.

A week later, we returned to the church for Artan's baptism. Elder Johnson (our area president at the time) and his wife were visiting our mission and were able to attend. It was Scott's first baptism and he wanted it to be special for Artan so he memorized and said the baptismal prayer in Italian.



That was in May 2008. I have been anxious to tell you this story ever since. But because of the advantage of time passing, I have new news to tell you. Both Artan and Jonathan have received the Aaronic priesthood, have blessed and passed the sacrament, participated in blessing the sick, and have given talks in church. Jonathan is preparing to go on a mission and Artan continues to try to have a positive influence on his family in Albania and gives countless hours of service to the missionaries and others, mostly by giving them free haircuts! (The picture below is of Artan after he gave two of our sisters "makeovers" the night before they went home!)

When my sister came to Italy, we were not in town to receive her and wouldn't return until the next morning. Knowing that the train station would be a bit scary at midnight, I asked Artan if he could meet her and walk her and her luggage to the mission home and let her in. Artan is always willing to help others in need.

In fact, what finally prompted me to write this story was because I got a call tonight from Artan who was traveling on a train with his mother, his cousin, and the cousin's wife. He has been visiting in Albania for the past few weeks and he decided to bring them to Italy on their way to Greece. They needed a ride from the train station in the morning and a place to stay for a couple of days so of course, I said yes. It will be a great opportunity for us to do something nice for Artan and help his family understand why this gospel is so important to him. Wish me luck as they don't speak English or Italian and I don't speak Albanian. Could someone tell my next-door-neighbor and returned-from-Albania missionary Nelson Radmall that he is desparately needed here?

All our love from Rome.