What is Your Best Missionary Story?

You probably had experiences on your mission that were incredibly spiritual, incredibly funny, moving, crazy, or just dumb.

You know when you got home from your mission that people were interested in your stories for the first week or two and then life entered in and they stopped being interested in the two best years of your life.

But, no matter whether you are 24 or 94, you will find yourself using the phrase, "when I was on my mission..." fairly often in Church or even just talking to strangers who are members.

Here is your chance to share your best stories.

Here are a few instructions:

Keep them to three short paragraphs if at all possible. They may be great stories but you aren't writing another bible. Keep them short and give us the meat. We'll catch on and enjoy them if they aren't long and drawn out.

One story per email please.

Send your story in an email to: create1631.ldsmissionarystories@blogger.com

Put the title of your story in the subject field of your email and put your first name and last initial at the end of your story.

Not every story will make it in. I'll have to look at each one and cut any that may be a problem.

With that said, SEND IN YOUR BEST STUFF!!

Amanda

Amanda has had a hard life. When she was 5 her Dad committed suicide. Her mom was an alcoholic and alcoholism took her life almost 2 years ago. Shortly after her mom passed away, Amanda decided she needed direction in her life and wanted to join a church, so she started searching. She had a friend in elementary school who was a member, so she started with the LDS church. She went online in the middle of the night and requested a Book of Mormon. The next morning the elders were on her doorstep.

Since Amanda was college age and female, the elders passed her off to us. She came to church that next Sunday where we met her. The night before she had gone to a post-season football game for Florida State and there had been fireworks after. She told us later that as she watched them, she knew that God loved her and approved of her decision to go to the LDS church the next day. The lessons that Sunday were perfect for her. Especially sacrament meeting. One of the members recently returned from his mission and was giving his homecoming talk. When the meeting was over she turned to me and said “I want to go on a mission. But I would probably have to get baptized first, huh?”. We were taken aback and very excited to start teaching her.

That week we taught her the first 2 lessons. Amanda just took everything in. For the next month we taught her, she became friends with the members of the ward and started coming to Family Home Evening, activities and institute. She started to change. Her eyes began to shine and her life was happier. Things were going great. One Saturday night before fast Sunday we were talking with Amanda about fasting and what to fast for. She was struggling in getting a confirmation to know if she should be baptized. We asked her to fast for a confirmation and that we would fast along with her. We knelt down and prayed together that she would receive an answer to her prayers.

The next day I sat next to Amanda in sacrament meeting and she was quieter than usual. She had her head down and seemed to be deep in thought. After, I looked over at her and her countenance had changed. I told her that she looked different and she looked at me a little confused, shrugged her shoulders then walked away. About ten minutes later she came up to me and said “Sister Benfield, I want to be baptized.” She had received her answer and was glowing with excitement.

She was baptized a month later on July 5th. She wanted the most important experience in her life to take place the day after there were fireworks so she would always remember that first confirmation she felt.

Amanda moved out to Utah 6 months later to attend BYU. Her family had a hard time supporting her decision to join the church and an even harder time when she moved west. She gradually fell away from the truth and moved back east where life was more familiar and easier. I know Amanda has a strong testimony and that one day she will look back and remember what had made her genuinely happy. Natasha B. - Utah

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