Wednesday, April 24, 2013

The Bronson Prayer Challenge


     I know it's been awhile since my last post and many of you were probably wondering when I was going to make the last post about the third missionary farewell I attended on that Sunday over a month ago. Well, have no fear for this is it. I saved the best for last, and that's why I took me so long to actually get this post up. This post and the subject it covers means more to me than anything else, so I wanted to get it perfect. I can't tell you how many times I had this post ready to go and then decided to scrap it because it wasn't good enough. I finally feel confident enough about this one for all of you to read though.
     This mission farewell was the second of the three I attended that Sunday, and to be honest, I had forgotten about it completely when I woke up that morning. If it wasn't for my friends reminding me, I would have missed it completely. How grateful I am that I didn't miss it because the lesson I learned meant a lot to me. Now I'll be honest as he got up to start his talk, I had no idea what to expect, but I can honestly say that I was forever changed by the things I heard in that sacrament meeting. He stood up and gave a very good talk, but the thing that shocked me was when he stopped for a moment and began to tell the congregation about how he had never originally planned on serving a mission. I was speechless. I know there are many people out there just like him, but I didn't think he would ever be one of them. Then again, many of you know that a mission was not in my future plans originally either, and yet here I am with a mission call to the New York Utica mission. I can't explain the feelings I felt when I heard I wasn't the only one who had gone through most of high school with the idea of serving a mission already basically dismissed in my mind. I felt a sense of peace and comfort knowing I wasn't the only one who had struggled with this situation, but even more than that, I felt my testimony being strengthened.
     Now before you write me off on this one, hear me out. My testimony was strengthened because here was another living testament of the miracles God can work in ordinary people when they put all their trust in him. I don't know all the details of just what made this young man change his mind about serving a mission, but I know without a doubt that God's hand was working hard in this situation. I know this because it was the same for me. I allowed myself to trust in God completely, and He showed me the way. Now, this is where the title of this blog comes in. I know this young man and I are not the only ones with doubts about a mission. There are many people out there with doubts, and I want all of you to know there is no doubt in your mind that God can not help you with. You just have to trust in Him completely, and He will show you the way just like he did for me and my friend.
     What I'm about to give you is one way to help rid yourself of doubts and put your trust in God. I've decided to call it "The Bronson Prayer Challenge" naming it after one of my best friends in the whole world who was the one who originally presented this challenge to me when I admitted I had doubts about a mission. The challenge itself is quite simple. The difficult part comes in truly believing that it will work. Here's how it works.
The Bronson Prayer Challenge
#1) Take your doubts about a mission and get on your knees. God knows the hearts of all men which means he already knows you're having doubts, but He can truly help you once you come to Him for help. Present God with your doubts. Explain everything to Him. He's there to listen, and that is what He will do - listen.
#2) Tell God the desires of your heart. In other words, make up your mind, and give him a clear cut answer. We've been told many times by general authorities that this gospel is not for "fence sitters," and the same is true for this challenge. It is much harder for God to help you if you are "wishy-washy" on the subject. Be honest with Him. I told God: "A mission is not for me. As of right now, I am preparing my future plans, and a mission is not included in them. If I'm supposed to serve a mission, I have the faith that you will show me the way." Present Him with your choice, and if it's the wrong one, He will help you make it the right one just like He did for me.
#3) HAVE FAITH. There's an important line I wanted to highlight in step two which is why I had it italicized. "I have the faith that you will show me the way." In my opinion, this process draws many similarities to that which people go through when they seek to know for themselves if the Book of Mormon is true. The end of Moroni 10:4 reads: "...and if ye shall ask with a sincere heart, with real intent, having faith in Christ, he will manifest the truth of it unto you, by the power of the Holy Ghost." Those who desire to know the truth of the Book of Mormon must have faith that God will show unto them, and the same applies to you looking for your answer. God can only truly show you the way when you have faith.
#4) I can think of many times when I have heard that this gospel is not for the faint of heart, and neither is this challenge. I said earlier that the difficult part comes in truly believing that it will work. This comes from having faith but it also comes from continued diligence in seeking your answer. Once is never enough, and neither is twice, thrice, and so on. In other words, getting on your knees once isn't going to do the trick. God will see the strength of your faith through your continued diligence in searching for an answer. We're supposed to do our best to pray to God every day both morning and night, and there is nothing wrong with including something as important as this in every prayer you offer up to God. The more you pray to God about something, He will recognize and acknowledge your diligence. Don't get discouraged. Don't become fainthearted. Don't give up. God may decide to test your diligence like He did mine, but as long as you never quit praying, He will reward your diligence.

     I have a testimony that this process works, and I can't stress how much I believe in this process with my whole heart. When I overcame the barriers in my life and truly believed that this would work, it did. I got on my knees and told God about all of my doubts concerning a mission; I was completely honest with God and showed him the desires of my heart; I had faith that God would show me the way; and last but not least, I exercised diligence and never gave up. I know I quote her in almost every single one of my blogs, but this quote fits too perfectly not to use it. "We are blessed from our efforts of trying. Not perfection." - Al Fox. I know that this is true. God doesn't expect perfection in anything including this process. If He did, I wouldn't have gotten my answer. God gave me my answer because I tried. I truly believed God would give me an answer, and when I merely tried, God blessed me for it. This challenge isn't unique to just me. If you have doubts about whether or not a mission is for you, or doubts about anything else for that matter, I challenge you to just merely try "The Bronson Prayer Challenge," and I promise you God will bless you for trying.

Friday, April 5, 2013

A Change You Can See


     My last post (The Footprints in My Sand) was about one of three missionary farewells I had attended the past Sunday. I promised you I would write about the other two too, and this is the next post in the trilogy. This time I'm writing about the first farewell I went to on that Sunday. This farewell was really special to me. Throughout high school, I hung out with this big group of guys who are still my best friends today. They mean the world to me, and I wouldn't trade the friendships I have with them for anything in the world. The first farewell of this Sunday was for one of these guys. It was special because he is the first one out of this group to be leaving on his missions. Almost all of us have our calls now and we will all be leaving soon, but he was the first. It proved to be very hard for me to hold back a few tears as I sat there in that chapel listening to him speak. Sure, I had friends leaving on missions left and right every week, but this was different. It's as if everything was becoming so real now. I was no longer a sophomore in high school watching my older friends leave on missions; I was no longer a college freshmen just watching friends I had known throughout high school leave on their missions; this time I was a future missionary myself watching one of my best friends in this whole world give his farewell talk. He will be leaving for the MTC in 5 days, and the rest of us will be following him one by one as our departure dates get closer and closer too. All of this just began to sink in as I was sitting there in that chapel listening to him speak.
     I know that the Lord knew the feelings that were going to be running through me as I sat in that sacrament meeting that morning though, and He had also been listening to the prayers I had been giving for the past couple of weeks. What occurred in that sacrament meeting was a living breathing testament to the fact that Christ knows me, hears me, and answers prayers. My friend was not the only "missionary" speaking in that sacrament meeting that morning. There was also an elder returning from his mission who gave his homecoming talk right after my friend's farewell talk. As you listened to this elder talk about the experiences he had had while on his mission, the spirit completely enveloped the chapel. I could feel it all around me, and I could hear the words "Listen up. This is what you were looking for. This is what you need." The Lord was speaking to me, and I have no doubt he was speaking through that elder too. The words he spoke were just simple yet powerful stories about his mission, something you would hear in every missionary homecoming talk, but these simple words brought me so much comfort too. I could feel in my heart that I would be okay. The Lord knew about the nerves I had been feeling, and the nerves I was feeling that very morning while listening to my friend give his farewell talk. The Lord was quietly reassuring me that although it was going to be hard to watch as all of us slowly began to leave for our missions, we were making the right decision to serve the Lord and become a valuable part of his army.
     Other than bringing peace and comfort to my soul in a time where I needed it, the Lord also used this sacrament meeting to answer the prayers I had been offering up to him lately. A mission is no easy decision to make no matter what. I know that and so do others. My non-member roommates here at college ask me if I'm crazy sometimes, and to be honest, I don't blame them. Leaving everything you know for two years, journeying to a different state or even country, devoting your entire heart, mind, might, and strength to preaching the Lord's gospel, and paying for it yourself is not something every one would do. The idea of actually leaving has always made me nervous, and the closer I get, the more nervous I get. This was something I know every future missionary must feel every so often though, so I asked for the Lord's help. Every night I would pray. The one thing I felt myself saying more than anything else was "show me the difference, show me the difference between who I am now and who I can become by serving my mission."
     As I sat in that sacrament meeting and listened to this returned missionary speak, I knew the Lord was quietly answering those prayers. I had just watched my friend who was about to depart for the MTC get up and give his talk. You could tell he was nervous. Who wouldn't be? This was the last thing many people would hear from you until you gave your homecoming talk in two years. I could see me in him. In a few short months, that would be me. I'd be standing up in front of my ward, family, and friends, giving my farewell talk. I'd be nervous as can be thinking about how I would soon be leaving all of this for two years. That's when the returning missionary got up to give his talk. As he talked I felt the spirit, but I also saw in him the answer the Lord was giving me. It was right there in front of me. I had asked the Lord to "show me the difference," and here it was. Just like I said, my friend was me. The nervous future missionary who was only a few weeks away from entering the MTC, and the returned missionary was the future me. He was what I would become as I served the Lord for two years with everything I had. It wasn't just an answer to my prayers. It was a change you can see. 
     Yes, going on mission is a hard decision to make, but the blessings one can receive from it are incomprehensible. The Lord knows how hard it is, and He will be there with you every step of the way. You have him on your side, you have the constant companionship of the Holy Ghost with you, and you have the support of everyone back home too. You will grow and change on your mission in a way that you could never have imagined before your mission. The person you were versus the person you will become is the greatest change the Lord could ever evoke upon your life. I'm not crazy for choosing to serve a mission like my roommates might think sometimes. The only thing I am crazy about is the Lord and His gospel. That's why I've chosen to spend the next two years of my life sharing it with others. The Lord has blessings and promises reserved just for me, and I know going on a mission is the next step I need to make on the path to becoming closer to Him and receiving those blessings and promises.
      I want to close with a quote from Al Fox's most recent blog post. "This gospel is for you. These blessings & promises are for you. You belong to a part of this.  This- what we’re a part of- is real. What you do does make a difference. His ways- His promises- are worth it." The second half of the quote resembles the change I want myself and others to see in me after my mission. "And how grateful I am that I decided to keep going. How grateful I am that I made the decision to trust. The decision to have faith. How grateful I am for the decision to choose God. I do not have words adequate enough to express my gratitude I have for how I feel. For who I have become. For what my life is today. It would not be have I not made those decisions. Choose. Choose Daily. Choose God." As I future missionary, I chose. I choose daily. I choose God. I will always choose God.