Tuesday, May 20, 2014

2nd week in Korea


This week's a blur. I'm stunned that I'm already two weeks in. Just 94 more, right? I loved getting to skype earlier; it was great seeing the family! The little ones are getting so big. It's ridiculous.
We had a miracle moment after we left the church to go do dry cleaning (which is dirt cheap here). As we were crossing the bridge by our house, a man walking past us stopped and asked us if we were Mormons. We obviously responded yes, and then he told us that he wants to become Christian, but he feels like all the churches in Korea are the same, so he wanted to learn more about ours. We're meeting with him tonight. It was so incredible. I'm really excited, and hope he remains as solid.
My embarrassing moment for this week is probably our visit with the Ward Mission Leader, when they mentioned that one of the Elders lost weight, they looked at me and said I'd probably lose 30 kilos. But you know what? Bring it on!
I found out my companion likes to write poetry, which was a little funny, since he's a football player. We're sharing little things like that now, and it's helped bond us. He's so hard working, I'm learning a lot.
It stuns me every time I receive revelation from 1 Nephi, but I was reading the passage about Zoram agreeing to go with Nephi and his brothers, and I started picking out all these parallels with Zoram being an investigator into the church. Coupled with my advancing Korean skills, I know that the Lord is blessing me greatly in every aspect of my life. The more I'm able to pick out little words and phrases, the more excited I get about being here, and learning Korean.
Grandma asked about food, so I thought I'd mention a few things here:
I can't even describe most of the food. Most of it is served with Kimchi, which can be tough sometimes. We like Omarisu, and Ijak Tosutu (Isaac Toast). Omarisu is rice with chopped up carrots, meat, and whatever else you want, with a big fried egg over it. It's easy to eat and delicious. Isaac Toast is an American company that makes various toasted sandwhiches, all of which are incredible, and make with a corporate secret sauce. It's awesome. Last night, at the Ward Mission Leader's house, we had "Kimchi Pancakes" which were actually easier for me to eat than actual Kimchi.
Charity asked what the biggest difference between America and Korea was, so I thought I'd share my initial thoughts. This is just what pops out at me when I think about it, because really, almost everything is different. My first few thoughts were:
To me, the biggest difference is that Korea's much cleaner, people don't just say hello to each other (it's considered odd that we say hello to everybody), and the way you speak -- literally, as in the forms you use and such -- are extremely important. Food is also vastly different.
It's funny how many Koreans want to learn English. Our free English classes are actually one of our most effective ways to find people interested in the church. Just the other day, we met with 3 Bangladeshlians who were interested in English. Two of them were Hindu, and the other was Muslim, but they were really down for meeting, and learning English for half an hour, then talking about our religious beliefs for another half hour. That's our preferred way to teach English, but we also have a general English class that we teach on Friday nights that isn't involved with the church in any way.
An Interesting Story for this week:
We talked to some foreigners outside of 7/11 the other day while looking for an inactive's house. We ended up talking to them for a good half hour, and got a return appointment! We're going to just talk about Christ with them, since they're both devout Catholics, but we love talking about Christ so it's cool. They both know Korean and teach English here, but one of them also teaches business, and he started telling us about the craziest thing!
Apparently, Harvard is allowing a Black Mass to be held in a couple months (it was actually called off). I guessed from the name, and he confirmed, that a Black Mass is a Satanist ritual. Satanism is obviously something awful, supporting all sorts of abominable beliefs, but Harvard's allowing it to be publicly held. From what our friend said, it's allll over the news apparently. That's pretty scary stuff. The Satanist belief set includes the abuse of children, anarchy of morals, and is basically the exact opposite of every one of Jesus Christ's teachings.
Crazy stuff back home. Crazyyyyy stuff. It's things like that that make me ponder the state of society, and how long the Lord will suffer the wickedness of the people here. He's said in the Book of Mormon, again and again, so long as we are righteous, the land will be blessed, but if we're wicked, then we'll be cursed. Of course, we also read about how the wicked are spared for the sake of the righteous, so I assume that's part of it. Regardless, there's one thing I'm certain of, and that's been reinforced again and again as I practice teaching the first lesson: God will always love us, and He does everything He can to help us make the right choices.
Gospel Analogy: I've been working on coming up with analogies for teaching to help investigators understand the gospel and its principles. One of my favorites right now is the one I used for the apostasy the other day:
Imagine that your children live far away from you, and you're trying to help them find their way back home. You keep sending them emails, texts, and letters with directions in them, but your children ignore them. You send friends, but they ignore them. How would you feel? That's how Heavenly Father feels during times of apostasy. He stops sending directions when His children respond that way, and waits until they'll listen again. But, because He loves us, He'll always continue trying to get us home, with Him again.
Love is, always has been, and always will be the most basic principle of God and the gospel. Of that, I am certain. Our Heavenly Father will always love us.
I hope you are all doing well. I can't wait for next week, and all the miracles in between!
 
Love,
Elder Austin Lynn

Saturday, May 17, 2014

1st Week in Korea!


I'm here! Our flight was alright, just a little long with a 5 hour layover in Dallas. Regardless, we made it! They had us start talking to people on the subway ride to the mission home, which was crazy. That brings me to another point -- we use public transportation allllll the time. We have what we call a "T-Money" card, and we use it for busses, subways, everything. They're really handy. We do tons of walking too. There's a big bridge next to our house, and I loathe it because it has soooo many stairs we have to walk up and down all day. That's a little rough. However, I'd rather do that than have a car. You wouldn't believe the traffic here. People will just drive, and park wherever they want. It's honestly a miracle that there aren't dead Koreans in the streets. Traffic is brutally nonsensical. It's so chaotic. Part of that is because if they don't see anybody walking across the street, they'll just go for it. I can't even explain how whacked out traffic is.
A typical day goes something like this
6:30 - Awake and arise.
6:40-7:10 - Exercise (we wlalk over to an exercise park -- basically a park but with exercise equipment all over. The parks here are really nice.)
7:10-8:05 - Shower, get dressed for the day.
8:05-11:00 - Studies (Personal, Companion, Language)
11:00-12:00 - Lunch (At the residence. We never really know what we're going to eat, haha)
12:00-1:00 - 12 Week (An extra companionship study; basically training)
1:00-9:00 - Missionary work! Appointments, street contacting, etc.
9:00-9:30 - Planning.
9:30-10:30 - Pre-Bed Stuff? Sort of personal time.
 
 Right now, the basic plan is to visit members and inactives, and we just talk to everybody on the way over. We've met some really cool people, and there are all sorts of little miracles happening already. As long as we have a plan, the Lord places people in our path. We're really working on gettting people to teach, and getting people out to the free English class the missionaries teach every Friday.
My companion is Elder W, and he's really knowledgable about Korean. He speaks it really well, and is continuing to learn and study it. He's really outgoing and hard-working, so we always meet our conversation goals. Since we got to this area (Yeonsu) we've had 95 conversations that involved an exchange of numbers or a gospel principle! Amazing! My journal is absolutely crammed, and I can't even get everything down. I know you want to hear more, but there's just so much happening, I can't possibly get it all down -- like in the scriptures!
Sunday I gave my first talk. It was really short, but I talked about faith, and how we can perform miracles through faith. I asked the members to pray for us, and that I want to do miracles for the people of Korea. I said we'd all do our best together, and that I know we can perform miracles together. My companion said some of the Sisters behind him were talking about how well I speak Korean, and that a lot of people were impressed, but it couldn't have been that good. I know that I didn't understand anything all day in church.
A cool thing about Korean: A way to say you like something is that it "enters your heart." I really like that.
A specific miracle: Last night, about 9:00, we were standing outside of our apartment, one conversation away from our goal. We decided to be stilll, and lo and behold, and old lady started walking down the road. We started talking to her, and it turns out that she's always gone to churches, but just moved here, and now lives too far away to go to her regular church. She was thinking about going to the church up the street from our apartment, which is some random Christian church, but now she'll consider our church, and she might go to church next week! The people here are so prepared for the gospel!
The days are so long, but at the same time we never have enough time. It's crazy. My area's official name is Incheon Yeonsu. Since we just got here, we have no investigators, so we're contacting like crazy.
Mom and dad - There wasn't any music on the SD card! Major bummer. If you set up a dropbox, I'm allowed to get on that though. I'm out of time for now, so send questions and I'll try to get to them next week.
Love,
Elder Austin Lynn