Thursday, July 31, 2008

The Cell Phone Analogy

 

Dear MacPherson teenagers, and others,

 

I thought I'd share with you this analogy I came up with  for one of our recent Institute classes. I first asked the students these questions about their cell phones(called mobile phones here).

How many of you carry your cell phones almost everywhere you go?

How many of you check your cell phones many times a day for messages on them?

How many of you pull out your cell phones when you have nothing to do and use them?

How many of you tell others what you have just learned from your cell phones?

How many of you panic if you can't find your cell phone?

 

The answers where almost unanimous that they did all of the above!

 

I them asked the very same questions, except I substituted SCRIPTURES for cell phone?

Very few hands were raised!

I smiled and said, "Is there an important message here about where our hearts are?

 

I pointed our that in medieval times many regular members of the Catholic Church that were caught having or reading the bible would be imprisoned, excommunicated, tied to a stake, had their bibles  tied to and hung around their necks, and burned at the stake. Many good people died this way.

We take for granted the PRIVILIGE  we have to read and study the scriptures whenever we want to.   

 

I wonder what kind of people we would be like if we used our scriptures a much as we use our cell phone?

                                                       Love Elder Mac


Monday, July 28, 2008

More down under details

Dear Friends and Family                                                               7/27/08

The first week back to  school has come &  gone. Things are going good and time is flying by even for Mom. We have a new student from England who is studying  at Canberra University for a year. Her name is Anna Fletcher. She was born a member but her parents divorced about 8 years ago and she went inactive. She has only been active again for 10 months.

We have a possible new convert at Australian National University. Her name is Jennie. She is Australian, but has just come back from Germany where she lived for about a year. She is in her 4 year  of Uni., and going for a law degree. We received an e-mail from an Elder and Sister Tingey, who are apparently missionaries in Germany and they referred us to her.  We e-mailed her of our institute class and she appeared the end of our 1st class at ANU and said she would attend in the future.  All the other students we had last semester are back.

Last Friday we went to ANU to listen to a final concert  recital of one of the YSA.

Kylie Loveland is an accomplished concert pianist and is graduating with an equivalent of a Master's degree in piano. She had a back up of a string sextet and played in a concert theater where the BYU Young Ambassadors performed last May. It holds about 2000 people.  The performance was outstanding. She leaves next Sat.  for a month of further performance and study in Israel and then a few weeks in Austria.

It is incredible how much traveling the YSA do.  Two have bought round the world airline tickets that allow them to make 6 – 8 stops in certain cities as they circle the globe.  They have 2 to 3 months to circle the globe.  2 YSA took off for Japan for 2 weeks last Saturday. Two others just returned from a 3 & ½ week trip to Vietnam, Cambodia, and Thailand.  One just got back from the Torres Straits near New Guinea.  3 others have either just come back from the US or are still there.

They save their money and then literally blow it all on travel.

 

We went to the Sydney Temple last Saturday and took some YSA with us. The petrol (gas) is about $6.20 a gallon(sold in liters here) and it costs about $70 in petrol  to make the 600 Kilometer( 360 mile)  round  trip. We take our car and I have to do all the driving. We leave at 6:30 AM, do 1 or 2 temple sessions and then return, and get home at 5PM the same day.  It is a 600 k. round trip where close 600,000 words were spoken by the 3 women who rode with us. The male YSA  and I spoke about 60 words.

Even though this is the equivalent of your January, the trees are budding and flowering here. Sydney is even milder and you see  flowers, even at this of the year,  they are  everywhere.  As I have said before, many of the plants are entirely unique to Australia. 

All is well here and we miss you all!

                         Love Dad Elder Mac

 


Friday, July 18, 2008

Paddocks of Wallabies

This e-mail has been approved and recommended for all future missionaries. That means anyone who reads this!
 

Dear family,                                                                                         7/18/08

Well today we saw a mob of about 30-40 Wallabies (small species of kangaroos) grazing in a cow pasture( called a paddock here) right next to a suburb of Canberra.

One of our YSA is on holiday for 3 weeks up in Cape York, which is as far north as you can get in Australia, and is driving a 4 wheel drive jeep type vehicle. He called back on his mobile phone that he had hit and killed 3 kangaroos on his way up. Some of these kangaroos can weight up 400 lbs. Luckily he has "Roo bar" or some times called a "Bull bar" on the front of his car. This is a curved steel bar round in shape about 3 inches in diameter and chrome plated that is mounted in the front of many vehicles here. They save the vehicle from a lot of damage. 

We just fed two of our elders and they said that they saw mob of kangaroos on a hill, 2 days ago, right in Canberra about 1 mile from our flat.

 

Australians love their holidays ( we call them vacations). Almost everybody gets 4 weeks paid vacation each year even if you are part time worker. Men and women  get paid maternity leave and most get paid sick  leave that can be as long as 5 weeks per year. On top of that, Australia has more national holidays then almost any other country - about 12 per year. There is even a holiday for Good Friday and Easter Monday and Melbourne Cup Day – a horse race that is similar to our Kentucky Derby. 

We had our opening social for the 2nd semester Institute class this last Tuesday. We had it in one of the chapels because it is cold out. We played volleyball , had a karaoke machine which they call "Sing- Star" and then I had a Old Testament treasure hunt that was similar to my Easter basket hunts . They had to use their scriptures to look up OT verses to find the next clue. I. E. Exodus 17:6

"thou shall smite the rock and there shall come water out of it, that  the people may drink"  This clue led them to the chapel's water fountain where the next clue was.  There were 4 teams and each had 5 different clues that lead them to the treasure of a bag of Solomon's gold coins. (Chocolate, shaped like coins and covered with gold foil.) They really get into it, get very competitive, and really seem to enjoy it. We then had 16 Dominos pizzas and hot fudge sundaes. We closed the social with a testimony meeting in the primary room.  The other 2 Institute socials are outside in the autumn and summer ( remember we are in winter)  and we have a testimony meeting at the end of these socials around a campfire.  So I put about 20 chairs in a circle and borrowed 4 split logs from a member and cut out flames from red construction paper and taped them to the logs and then put a flashlight in the middle that shone through the red paper. I then turned the lights off. The effect was great and we had a great testimony meeting.

  Next week all the universities start up again so it is back to the usual schedule of 4 to 5 classes a week.

 Hope all is well with all of you.            

 

Love Elder Mac

 

P.S.  We went through a yet another mission transfer(companionships are split up and missionaries are transferred into different locations and paired up with a different elder or sister)    and I STILL have the same companion! I guess the mission president thinks we work well together. Now all I have to do is convince my companion of this.   


Tuesday, July 8, 2008

Missionary Story

Burr -  Send blankets and hot water bottles!  It dipped down to 29 degrees today.

 

Missionary Story from Down Under,

Last Monday we went to Family Home Evening with the YSA as we usually do. That night we had 2 full time missionaries there with their investigator with them. One was Elder Vhang  the 1st missionary ever from Burma and other Elder Kallaraga  from the South Pacific Island nation  of Kiribati or also known as the Gilbert Islands. He is black like the Fijians are. The investigator was Ong  who was a Burmese man in his thirties who has lived in Australia  for 14 years escaping Burma because of the same Military persecution that exists there today.

The FHE lesson was on the importance of Fasting and Prayer. It started off with the New Testament story of the apostles trying to cast out an evil spirit from a boy and having failed. Jesus came along and cast out  the evil spirit. Later the apostles asked the Savior why they could not do it and Jesus said "This kind can come forth by nothing, but by prayer and fasting." Mark 9: 17-29

One of the YSA, a returned missionary, then told of this experience he had on his mission while serving in Boston, Mass.

 A new convert sister of less than a year, and only member in her family, called them one day, and said  her grandfather was gravely ill and would they administer to him. The grandfather had some kind of cancer, and was in tremendous pain and was on a morphine pump that lessens the pain but also put him in a stupor unable to understand or speak.

 

Her family was very antagonistic toward the church, and had refused her requests to have her grandfather receive a priesthood administration of the sick. Finally after seeing him suffer so much they agreed to have the elders administer to him.

The elders agreed to administer to him, but only after a 24 hour fast, in which they did a lot of praying. When they arrived at the hospital the next day, some of the family was in the room with them. The member sister had told them that the elders would use their priesthood power and would heal her grandfather.

The YSA  RTM told us that he had the  felt spirit so strongly that he truly felt that the Grandfather would be healed.

His companion anointed the grandfather, and then this elder sealed the anointing and was about to say the words to heal the grandfather when the spirit stopped him and then told him through the still small voice, that he was to bless the grandfather that the severe pain would soon leave his body, but that he would die and not be healed, however he would be mentally cognizant for 1 week and then die a week from that day.

A sister of the member after hearing this, and expecting her grandfather to be healed, said "What the hell was that?" The elder answered and said "That was what the spirit told me to say."

A few hours later the grandfather's morphine pump was cut back, and eventually stopped because it became apparent that he was no longer suffering pain. He became alert and in the next week the family members were able to visit him and essentially say goodbye to him.  He died  exactly 1 week later just as the elder's blessing said he would.

The family had the grandfather buried in a town near Boston and asked that the elders attend the funeral which was conducted by a Roman Catholic priest. The family was catholic. At the end of the burial the priest came up to the grandmother and asked if he could be of any spiritual help. The grandmother at that time was standing next to the elder who had given the blessing, and said putting her hand on the elder's shoulder "No thanks we have all the help we need."

                                     Love Elder Mac

 


Saturday, July 5, 2008

Happy 4th of July

Hey Family: Not sure if this cute attached message that came from the states, will  bounce back to
the states, but see if you can bring up the attachment.
We celebrated July 4th, not, because it isn't Australia's indepence day; but yesterday, the 4th in Aussie
land, we attended a wonderful district/ zone missionary meeting. Then we taught an Eternal Marriage
class and had 6 couples attend and it was fun to see all the participation and hear all the thoughts of
these couples. Two of the couples have pregnant wives, and they have each just been married very
close to when we came over here, now 12 months ago. Gee, how time flies when you are having fun
being worked to death by Elder mac, the workaholic/ churchaholic that he is.
Hope you all had a great July 4th.
Enjoy the attachment if you can access it.
Love, Mom/ grandma mac aka sis mac