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missionary work

How to Reach African-Americans

TL:DR

TL:DR

This talk teaches that to effectively address concerns about race and priesthood in the Church, members must be honest about history, understand African-American perspectives, and rely on scripture rather than speculation.

It emphasizes that past priesthood restrictions were policy—not doctrine—clarified through the 1978 revelation and later scriptural updates. Passages about “skin” and “darkness” should be understood spiritually, not physically.

By teaching these principles clearly and compassionately, members can strengthen faith, improve missionary efforts, and help more people feel welcome in the Church.

Summary

Summary

The speaker begins by explaining that questions surrounding race and priesthood nearly prevented him from joining the Church, motivating years of personal study. He outlines a missionary-focused approach: understanding the language and culture of African-Americans, particularly the perception that the Church has a racist past.

He stresses the importance of acknowledging historical realities rather than denying them. Using statements from leaders such as David O. McKay, Dallin H. Oaks, and Bruce R. McConkie, he distinguishes between policy and doctrine and cautions against relying on speculative explanations for past restrictions.

The talk centers on the 1978 priesthood revelation as a turning point, accompanied by a “flood of light and knowledge” that reshaped understanding. The speaker points to 1981 scriptural updates—especially footnotes and wording changes—as key tools in clarifying previously misunderstood passages.

Focusing on scriptures such as 2 Nephi 5:21, 2 Nephi 30:6, and Jacob 3:8, he explains that references to “skin” and “darkness” should be understood spiritually rather than physically. This interpretation is reinforced through scriptural cross-references and teachings like 1 Samuel 16:7, emphasizing that God judges the heart, not outward appearance.

The talk concludes with practical outcomes: improved missionary efforts, increased retention, strengthened members, and greater inclusivity. The speaker testifies that teaching from scripture, combined with honesty and cultural understanding, can help bring more people—especially African-Americans—into and back to the Church.

Introduction

Introduction

Scott Gordon:

As a convert to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Marvin came to the Church after searching every religion he could find for over five years for what he called “the real Church.” Born and raised in Niagara Falls, New York, just 90 miles west of Palmyra, he had never heard of the Church or Mormons.

When one of his business associates wanted to see him perform, that desire set off the missionary experience that would lead to his baptism into the Church three months later.

Marvin, an MJM Records recording artist, has been singing professionally for over 18 years. He started as a studio vocalist, background and weather artist.

While doing a small showcase in Los Angeles in 1996, he launched his debut album, I’m So Glad. After many concerts, firesides, and conferences sharing the gospel, he slowed down long enough to put together a second musical project in 1997 entitled Hymns to Him, which was recently released.

As Director of African-American Relations on the Southern California Public Affairs Council, Marvin works closely with other religious leaders to bring service and support to those in need.

He was just recently called to serve as co-chair for Genesis Public Affairs, his responsibilities very similar to the calling of Director of African-American Relations on the national level. The Genesis Group is the branch of the Church designed to meet the unique needs of African-Americans.

He has also served as Gospel Doctrine and Seminary instructor and is well versed in the scriptures.

And we’re very, very pleased to have Marvin Perkins come and speak to us.

Opening Remarks

Good morning. (faint “good morning” echoed back from the audience) You guys learned a little bit from yesterday, President Darius’ talk. Good morning! (Good morning echoed back stronger.) There you go! I want to make sure you’re awake here. Aloha. Buenos dias and all that other stuff. O genkidesu-ka, for anybody Japanese.

I am grateful to be here today, especially to speak on this topic. This topic is one that actually almost kept me from joining the church. And I wanted to make sure that no one else left the church, would not join the church, or struggled in the church as a result of not having the information that I was seeking.

And so I thought, let me study this thing. So, I’ve been studying this subject for 17 years now. I am not by any means an expert on it. I just know what I know and what the Lord has guided me and directed me.

Purpose of the Study

I found that if we keep this talk to the scriptures, you get less people trying to refute what you’re saying. But the biggest reason that I study this is to help others into the gospel. There are many who won’t take the time to learn this information, and that’s all right for them.

But I want to help those who do want to have some of this information, and the church has given us plenty of guidance. So again, I’m no expert: I’m no scholar, I’m no scriptorian. I’m just a man who loves the Lord and will do anything he wants me to do.

And sometimes that finds me in trouble. But I’m willing to take it.

So, how do we reach African-Americans in and outside of the church? You have the formula down already, and you’re already doing it.

Understanding Culture and Language

You just have to apply it to this group of people. See, because when you go into the MTC, what do you do? You learn the language and the culture of the people you are going to serve. You learn Spanish. You learn a little bit about the Spanish culture.

You learn Japanese, a little bit about the Japanese culture. You go to an American or English-speaking mission, no language to learn, but you learn a little bit about the communication skills so that you don’t offend and turn people off from the church.

Well, that’s the exact same way that you would actually reach African-Americans. You need to learn and understand the language and the culture of the people. So, what is the language of African-Americans in regards to Latter-day Saints? Okay.

The Reality to Address

Now, the language—this is reality. This is what African-Americans feel and know. Most African-Americans believe:

  • that Mormons are racist
  • that they have a long history of racism
  • that they even have it built in the doctrine.

That’s what African-Americans feel.

If you want to reach them, you have to deal with that reality. You’ve got to get to the point where you can hear that. That’s what we feel.

What is the culture? Well, the culture is every African-American, regardless, is going to have to deal with this issue at some point.

  • Some of us deal with it before discussions,
  • some during the discussions, and
  • some after baptism,
  • sometimes many years after baptism.

But we do have to deal with it.

Real-Life Impact

I’m just working with a brother now who has been a member of the church for seven years and is just now dealing with it. He’s been inactive for the last year over this issue. And now since we’ve shared with him what I’m going to share with you today, he is back in the church.

So the fruits—by the fruits you shall know them. First of all, be honest. We know the first thing we can do with this issue is admit—we try to deny the history that we have.

We have a history in this country of inequality, of racism, of prejudice – and that includes the church members as well. Church members, church leaders—we have that.

Being Honest About the Past

Until 1964 and The Civil Rights Act, the law of the land was discrimination. So, we only varied in our degree of it. So, be honest.

No one is going to believe you have the truth if you can’t be honest about the past or your involvement.

Scriptural Parallel

It reminds me of the children of Israel. They were in bondage for 400 years.

And when they got out of bondage – when Moses and Aaron freed them, the instruments of the Lord to free them out of bondage – the Lord wanted them to get to know Him. To start serving Him more.

And it was so difficult for them to do that. So they had this law of Moses given to them, this simple law to help them to be able to abide the entire law.

And it would take them many years to be able to do it before Christ would come and fulfill and give them a new way of doing things.

The Great Commission

Also, we see this with the resurrected Savior, with the last command recorded in Matthew. The resurrected Savior stood before them. Ate with them, met with them, and said, “Take the gospel to all the world.” Okay.

Early Priesthood History

So, let’s talk a bit about priesthood. Many don’t know that when the church was first restored that anybody could hold the priesthood. And there were Black men holding the priesthood.

Joseph Smith gave it to Elijah Abel in 1836. Walker Lewis was ordained in 1844. William McCary. (Some people don’t like to mention William McCary because he didn’t do good things, but I’ll mention him.) William McCary got it in 1846.

William McCary might be the reason why Blacks didn’t hold the priesthood—and if you want to know about that, you go study it. William McCary or Black Pete. Enoch Abel received it in 1900. And that’s something.

And Elijah Abel, grandson of the first Elijah Abel, received it in 1934.

When Did the Issue Begin?

As a matter of fact, until about 1954, many people didn’t know there was an official policy on priesthood. I mean, many Blacks didn’t mix with the church, and it just wasn’t that much of an issue.

If Blacks are holding the priesthood, why was that? There wasn’t an issue. When did the issue begin? Well, let’s hear a few statements on priesthood that we have from our church leaders.

Statements from Church Leaders

David McKay. In 1954, David McKay is quoted as saying:

“There is not now and there never has been a doctrine in this church that the negroes are under a divine curse.There is no doctrine in the church of any kind pertaining to the negro.”

I’m going to repeat that. There is no doctrine in the church of any kind pertaining to the negro.

“We believe that we have a scriptural precedence for withholding the priesthood from the negroes. It is a practice, not a doctrine. And the practice will someday be changed. And that’s all there is to it.”

President George Albert Smith is also quoted as having said the same thing.

On Reasons and Revelation

Elder Dallin H. Oaks said in an interview,

“It is not the pattern of the Lord to give reasons. We can put reasons to the commandments.”

“When we do, we are on our own. Some people put reasons to the ban and they turned out to be spectacularly wrong. There is a lesson in that… I am referring to reasons given by general authorities and elaborated on by others.”

“The whole set of reasons seem to be unnecessary risk taking… Let’s not make the mistake that’s been made in the past …here and in other areas trying to put reasons to revelations. The reasons turn out to be man-made to a great extent.”

A New Day — 1978 Revelation

Elder Bruce R. McConkie, one of my favorite statements here:

“Forget everything that I’ve said or what President Brigham Young or President George Q. Cannon or whoever has said in the days past that is contrary to today’s revelation. We spoke with a limited understanding and without the light and knowledge that is now coming to the world. We get our light and truth line upon line, precept upon precept. And we have now had added a new flood of intelligence and light on this particular subject, and it erases all of the darkness and all of the views and all of the thoughts of the past. They just don’t matter anymore.”

So if you’re going to study this issue, you’ve got to forget everything you’ve heard and start from scratch. And where is the best place to start? Forget the philosophies of men and go straight to the scriptures.

Scripture Updates and Understanding

There’s enough guidance in the scriptures for you to understand this—for us to understand this.

“It doesn’t make a particle of difference what anybody has ever said about the negro matter before the first day of June of this year (1978). It is a new day and a new arrangement, and the Lord has now given revelation to shed light into the world on this particular subject.”

Now, we’re going to talk a great deal more about that light. Because with that light and that knowledge – that flood – it wasn’t just a revelation that reversed the priesthood. But it was a flood of intelligence that came, as Elder McConkie said, that helped correct the views and the thoughts of the past.

Continuing Revelation in Scripture

And the brethren actually did something with that flood. They actually updated our scriptures in 1981.

So if you look at an older version of your scriptures and then go to 1981, you’ve got a newer version with footnotes and word changes to help us to understand the issues that were misunderstood before, give us new guidance.

And every single scripture that I could find in the Book of Mormon and Doctrine and Covenants that we misunderstood regarding this issue, has a footnote. Giving clarification and new understanding.

Scriptural Foundation

Let’s consider D&C 36:4-5.

“And now this calling and commandment give I unto you…”

Concerning who?

“concerning all men (emphasis added) that as many as shall come before my servants Sidney Rigdon and Joseph Smith Jr. embracing this calling and commandment shall be ordained and sent forth to preach the everlasting gospel among the nations.”

D&C 36:7

“And this commandment shall be given unto the elders of my church, that every man which will embrace it with singleness of heart may be ordained and sent forth, even as I have spoken.”

D&C 63:57

“And again, verily I say unto you, those who desire in their hearts in meekness to warn sinners to repentance, let them be ordained unto this power.”

The Inclusive Nature of Priesthood

D&C 84:33–35

“And whoso is faithful unto obtaining these two priesthoods…

I mean, the Lord has plenty of time to give us a restriction, a division, but he doesn’t do it. He’s—it’s all inclusive. All right.

“And whoso is faithful unto obtaining these two priesthoods of which I’ve spoken and the magnifying their calling are sanctified by the spirit unto the renewing of their bodies.

“They become the sons of Moses and of Aaron and the seed of Abraham, with rights to the priesthood and the church and the kingdom and the elect of God.

“And also all they who receive this priesthood receive me.

Accountability and Scripture Concerns

We believe that men will be punished for their own sins and not for Adam’s transgressions.

2 Nephi 5:21 is a big one because that’s when most blacks, African-Americans, and a lot of other cultures stop reading the Book of Mormon. Like, “okay, what? You can’t believe this.” Because it looks like it’s right in the doctrine.

Understanding “Skin” and “Darkness”

And again, we’ll go back to Elder McConkie’s statement—that flow of light and intelligence on the subject. It’s going to help us to understand. They put new footnotes in here to help us to get past that.

Second Nephi 5:21.

“And he had caused a cursing to come upon them…”

Now, we understand the cursing—a separation from God because they were sinners, they wouldn’t live the law of God—

“…to come upon them, yeah, even a sore cursing, because their iniquity. For behold, they had hardened their hearts against him, that they had become like unto a flint. Wherefore, as they were white and exceedingly fair and delightsome, that they might not be enticing unto my people, the Lord God did cause a skin of blackness to come upon them.

Now, before 1981, there was no footnote on the word skin. The brethren put one in there. What do they want us to understand about skin? They directed us to 2 Nephi 30:6.

Clarifying Through Footnotes

2 Nephi 30:6 reads,

“And then shall they rejoice, for they shall know that it is a blessing unto them from the hand of God, and their scales of darkness shall begin to fall from their eyes, and many generations shall not pass away among them, save they be a pure and a delightsome people.”

And so what do they want us to know from skin? Well, some of us can get an impression that they’re talking about more of a spiritual darkness. But if you follow the footnote—you don’t even have to guess at it. They made it crystal clear.

If you follow the footnote for “scales” down to the bottom of the page, it says clearly “topical guide darkness—spiritual, spiritual blindness.”

Changes in Language and Meaning

So this is the direction that they are giving us. And notice the word pure. Before 1981, that word read white. And they changed it to pure, saying that it actually closer fit the meaning of the phrase.

All right. So, let’s get a little more scriptural support. Now, every scripture in the Book of Mormon that made you think that the Lamanites had a darker skin than the Nephites, it actually has a new footnote on it.

Now, I don’t know anything about the DNA and what color they were when they got here. I don’t know anything about that. Okay.

Judging by the Heart

All I know—and this is all I preach when we’re helping people in the church stay in the church—I just point to what the brethren have given us.

And in Jacob 3:8, you’ve got,

“O my brethren, I fear that unless you repent of your sins, that their skins,”

speaking of the Lamanites,

“will be whiter than yours when ye are brought before the throne of God.”

Brought before the throne of God to be judged. Here I am. What is he going to judge me on? Is he going to judge me on my physical appearance, my outer skin? Does that represent my righteousness? No. You know better than that.

The Lord Looks on the Heart

The Lord gave us, in 1 Samuel 16:7, direction on that.

“But the Lord said unto Samuel, Look not unto his countenance, or the height of his stature; because I have refused him: for the Lord seeth not as man seeth; for the man looketh on the outward appearance, but the Lord looketh on the heart.”

So if the Lord is going to judge us based on whiter and darker skins, it must be something other than a physical or literal skin.

And the guidance that the brethren have given us clearly in the scriptures is that they’re talking about a spiritual darkness.

Applying the Teaching

How do we reach African-Americans? We’ve got to understand the language and the culture of African-Americans regarding our LDS culture.

Number two, we need to understand that this is a culture of highly highly persecuted people that have plenty of written documentation that we need to explain somehow. We just can’t wish it away.

Teaching with Honesty and Scripture

We need to be honest and stop denying what everybody knows to be true. It’s like walking in with a milk mustache. “I didn’t have milk. I didn’t have any milk.”

Learn to teach what the Lord and the brethren have given us. You don’t need the philosophies of men on this issue.

You can go to the scriptures, study them out. I recommend that you don’t take my word for anything, but that you actually go to the scriptures and get on your knees for everything that you don’t understand. He’ll give it to us. He really will.

The Results of This Approach

And as a result of learning this information, what happens? Well, this is what we’ve seen when we’ve taught from the scriptures this new direction that the brethren have given us.

The discussions continue resulting in baptism.

Brothers and sisters of color—of all colors—come back into the church as a result of now feeling more comfortable.

Strengthening the Church

Members are strengthened and more active participants in their stakes and their wards.

Missionaries are armed and members are armed. They go out with knowledge on how to deal with these issues, and now they can actually help someone.

And finally, you are able to keep your covenant to feed the Lord’s sheep.

Final Warning and Testimony

Woe unto the shepherds who feed not the sheep. How do you think the Lord would feel if we as a church ignored these people?

Especially when we have the pattern—we have the pattern of studying the language and the culture of people before we go out to try to reach them—but yet putting no effort forth for this group of people, I think that he would be very displeased with us.

But I know that if we do this, if we study these things and just only study the language and the culture of the people and what the brethren have given us, that we will see a flood of African-Americans come in the church.

And I leave these things with you in the name of Jesus Christ. Amen.

Download Marvin Perkin's Paper on this Subject
Search topics Race; Priesthood; African Americans; Race and the Priesthood; Priesthood restriction; 1978 Revelation; Continuing revelation; Elijah Abel; David O. McKay; Dallin H. Oaks; Bruce R. McConkie; LDS doctrine vs policy; Scripture interpretation; Book of Mormon skin of blackness; 2 Nephi 5:21; 2 Nephi 30:6; Jacob 3:8; 1 Samuel 16:7; Spiritual vs physical skin; Church history race; Inclusion; Missionary work; Cultural understanding CES Letter; Mormon racism; Mormon Church racism; LDS racism history; Black members LDS Church; Priesthood ban controversy; Race criticism LDS; Faith crisis race issues; Church reputation race; LDS Church criticism race

From Anglican Minister to Relief Society Sister – Interview with Jennifer Roach

December 28, 2019 by NickGalieti

https://media.blubrry.com/mormonfaircast/www.ldsmissioncast.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/LMC-Jennifer-Roach-Interview.mp3

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Jennifer Roach podcast PromoEarly on in life, Jennifer Roach was raised in a broadly Evangelical Christian setting. Being taught the Bible early on, Jennifer has had a love for sacred scripture. Her inquisitive nature and her spiritual passion took her to Divinity School, where she earned a Masters Degree in Divinity. Through her studies, she became interested in the Anglican faith where she became an ordained Anglican Minister.

Through interactions with a Latter-day Saint reporter that was covering a story to which Jennifer was involved earlier in life, Jennifer would ask questions about the faith she was taught was evil and should be avoided. Her inquisitive nature brought her to ask several questions over email, and to begin a study of the Pearl of Great Price and Book of Mormon.

One day as she was driving to work, she stopped and saw some Sister Missionaries from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, walking the side of the road. She felt impressed to stop and connect with them. She took a selfie with the Sisters and sent it to her reporter friend, Garth Stapley, to show that she was actually going to talk with the missionaries.

This is the selfie she took with the Sister Missionaries – to prove to her friend Garth that she was actually going to talk to the missionaries. Sister Murdock and Sister Porter.

Later that week, Jennifer would receive another visit from some Elder’s at her home…in a different mission area.

Over the next 9 months Jennifer would go through some amazing experiences, address a number of questions both at Church and with the Missionaries, before being baptized a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Listen to this episode of the Latter-day Saint MissionCast to hear the full story.

Jennifer would encounter a number of online sources about the Church, some positive, some negative, including the CES Letter. She would use sources, like FairMormon and the Gospel Topics essays to help her navigate the many questions she had. Her research brought her to a faithful position, and one that has helped her endure the challenges that have come to her life as a result of her decision.

This episode is the first time that Jennifer has told this story to the general public in a podcast. If you want to follow her blog and connect with Jennifer, visit her blog myconvertlife.com

This episode was produced and first released on the Latter-day Saint MissionCast. The Latter-day Saint MissionCast is not a production of FairMormon.

Filed Under: Missionary Work', Nick Galieti, Podcast, Questions, Testimonies Tagged With: CES Letter, missionary work

Church Developments and Their Timescales

February 1, 2019 by FAIR Staff

I was recently thinking about some of the significant programmatic changes that have happened in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in the last few years. People have evaluated them in various ways and labeled them a success or failure, but popular opinion often swings on short-term thinking. For example, when, in October 2012, President Monson announced changes in the age limits for full-time missions, some made the coupled assumptions that this would either result in a proportional increase in convert baptisms or it should be considered a failure. It did not lead to a large increase in convert baptisms and some considered it only on that basis; however, this hasty act of labeling ignores a foundational bad assumption as well as a host of secondary effects that potentially act on a much longer time scale and are interesting in their own right.

The problem started with faulty assumptions. The first of these is that those who convert are in some sense “caused” by missionaries rather than merely facilitated. It is rooted at least partly in the experiences of a past era in which people in the United States and other sociopolitically similar areas could be reached by door-to-door salesmen and, correspondingly, that an increase in the number of people engaged in these activities would result in a proportionate gain in initial interest, teaching, baptisms and so forth. This assumption of course ignores years of entreaties that finding is the duty of the members of the Church while teaching is the responsibility of the full-time missionaries and that we should cease praying only that the missionaries find the honest in heart but rather that we should instead pray to be able to open our own mouths to share the gospel and invite others to come unto Christ. The reality is then that the model upon which the assumption (that more missionaries would lead to proportionately more convert baptisms) was based was largely invalid and the members of the Church should realize that missionary finding only ever constitutes a modest portion of the the success of the Church’s missionary efforts. The reality is members letting their light shine, setting examples of good works in the world and sharing the gospel in their individual circumstances, combined with a certain number who find the Church of Jesus Christ through their own individual searching are together a far more stable and effective source of interest.

[Read more…] about Church Developments and Their Timescales

Filed Under: Anti-Mormon critics, General, LDS Culture, Perspective Tagged With: anti-Mormonism, Eternal Marriage, families, LDS Temples, missionary work

Taking the Gospel to the “Ends of the Earth” (The Church in the DR Congo: A Personal Perspective, Part 7)

December 9, 2018 by Jeffrey M. Bradshaw

Emmanuel Issamba, an investigator from the remote city of Bunia, DR Congo. Left to Right: Elder Luzayadio, Emmanuel Issamba, Elder Lokpo, and Elder Ga.

In a presentation at the 2018 FairMormon Conference,[1] I shared stories of some of the faithful Saints in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (Kinshasa). In this new series of presentations, I would like to speak from a more personal perspective, reflecting on the meaning of that experience for Kathleen and me, and pondering some of the dynamics of numerical and spiritual growth of the Church in that country.

The series is organized into ten parts:

  1. Prologue: What brought us to Africa?
  2. Snapshot of the Church in the DR Congo
  3. The missionaries
  4. What attracts people to the Church?
  5. Building from centers of strength 1 — Kisangani
  6. Building from centers of strength 2 — Wagenya
  7. Taking the Gospel to the “ends of the earth”
  8. The temple 1: Turning the hearts of the children
  9. The temple 2: A light to the world
  10. “The labourers are few”

In this episode, I will tell the story of how a new branch came to be formed in Boma, and the situation of isolated members and investigators of the Church who live in cities where groups and branches have not yet been organized. Illustrating the challenges and opportunities of these individuals, we will share the story of Emmanuel Issamba, who traveled at great personal sacrifice a distance equivalent to halfway across the United States to learn more about the Church, only to be told that he could not be baptized because he was 436 miles away from the nearest organized Church unit. [2] We explore current efforts in social media to help such individuals stay in touch.

In his call for a “home-centered, Church-supported” approach to Gospel living,[3] President Russell M. Nelson has signaled the urgency of an oft-repeated theme while significantly expanding its rationale. He has made it clear that rebalancing our efforts to ensure a “home-centered, Church-supported” approach will not only increase the simplicity and effectiveness of Church programs, but will also be a key development that will enable the Gospel to be taken to the “ends of the earth.”

Complementing the policy of building up centers of strength geographically, we summarize the teachings of Elder Joni L. Koch of the Seventy, who explained to our missionaries how they should focus their finding efforts in light of the fact that we could currently teach only a fraction of those who were interested in the Gospel in the DR Congo. Echoing the promises of scripture and modern apostles and prophets, he testified that the day will eventually come when “the Gospel will have been preached everywhere, to all people; and this will occur before the second coming of the Son of Man.”[4]

 

[1]The video version of the entire FairMormon presentation is available on the FairMormon YouTube channel at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nJl9FvLKmjw. The seven segments of this presentation, in an edited and somewhat expanded form, are available for reading at Meridian Magazine(www.ldsmag.com) and the website of The Interpreter Foundation(https://interpreterfoundation.org). For more articles and videos by Jeffrey M. Bradshaw, see www.templethemes.org.

[2]Ibid., p. 7. See, e.g., D&C 1:11; 65:2; 72:21; 90:9; 105:39; 109:57;112:4; 133:3.

[3]R. M. Nelson, Opening Remarks (October 2018), p. 7.

[4]B. R. McConkie, Revelation on Priesthood.

 

Filed Under: Conversion, Power of Testimony, Testimonies Tagged With: Bunia, centers of strength, Church in Africa, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Elder Jony L. Koch, Emmanuel Issamba, Home-Centered Church-Supported, missionary work, President Russell M. Nelson

Building from Centers of Strength – Wagenya (The Church in the DR Congo: A Personal Perspective, Part 6)

December 5, 2018 by Jeffrey M. Bradshaw

Photo of a Wagenya fisherman taken by Irish photographer Andrew McConnell in 2010. To get a glimpse of the Wagenya fishermen in action, see McConnell’s video at https://vimeo.com/45188921

In a presentation at the 2018 FairMormon Conference,[1]I shared stories of some of the faithful Saints in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (Kinshasa). In this new series of presentations, I would like to speak from a more personal perspective, reflecting on the meaning of that experience for Kathleen and me, and pondering some of the dynamics of numerical and spiritual growth of the Church in that country.

The series is organized into ten parts:

  1. Prologue: What brought us to Africa?
  2. Snapshot of the Church in the DR Congo
  3. The missionaries
  4. What attracts people to the Church?
  5. Building from centers of strength 1 — Kisangani
  6. Building from centers of strength 2 — Wagenya
  7. Taking the Gospel to the “ends of the earth”
  8. The temple 1: Turning the hearts of the children
  9. The temple 2: A light to the world
  10. “The labourers are few”

In this episode, the theme of “building from centers of strength” is concluded. Among other things, I will discuss the creation of a second branch in Kisangani, near the traditional home of the famous Wagenya fishermen. As was the case with Jesus’ disciples, fishermen were among the first members of the Church in Kisangani. Through photos and videos, their unique lifestyle, their challenges, and their faith will be highlighted.

We will also introduce the story of Brother Wilfrid MALEO, the current president of the Wagenya branch. After his baptism, he resigned his position as a teacher and later refused a post at the university of his former church, one of many sacrifices that he and his family have made in behalf of his fellow branch members.

[1]The video version of the entire FairMormon presentation is available on the FairMormon YouTube channel at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nJl9FvLKmjw. The seven segments of this presentation, in an edited and somewhat expanded form, are available for reading at Meridian Magazine(www.ldsmag.com) and the website of The Interpreter Foundation(https://interpreterfoundation.org). For more articles and videos by Jeffrey M. Bradshaw, see www.templethemes.org.

Filed Under: Conversion, Power of Testimony, Testimonies Tagged With: Bandundu, Boma, centers of strength, Church in Africa, Democratic Republic of the Congo, fishermen, Melinda "Mindy" Webb, missionary work, Muanda, Stanley J. Webb, Wagenya, Wilfrid Maleo

Building from Centers of Strength – Kisangani (The Church in the DR Congo: A Personal Perspective, Part 5)

November 20, 2018 by Jeffrey M. Bradshaw

Little children at school for the poor in Kisangani, DR Congo

In a presentation at the 2018 FairMormon Conference,[i]I shared stories of some of the faithful Saints in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (Kinshasa). In this new series of presentations, I would like to speak from a more personal perspective, reflecting on the meaning of that experience for Kathleen and me, and pondering some of the dynamics of numerical and spiritual growth of the Church in that country.

The series is organized into eight parts:

  1. Prologue: What brought us to Africa?
  2. Snapshot of the Church in the DR Congo
  3. The missionaries
  4. What attracts people to the Church?
  5. Building from centers of strength — Kisangani
  6. Building from centers of strength — Wagenya and elsewhere
  7. The temple: A light to the world
  8. “The labourers are few”

Despite the great potential for explosive growth in the vast area covered by the DR Congo Kinshasa mission, the Church is organized in only a handful of cities. This is due in large measure to the general policy of building outward from “centers of strength.” Given its distance from Kinshasa, Kisangani provides an interesting case study in Church development in a remote area of the DR Congo.

In Part 5, I describe the challenges for dedicated leaders and members in this historic and rapidly developing area. We also highlight the work of Elder Stan and Sister Melinda Webb, who served as a Member Leader Support (or MLS) couple in Kisangani. During their mission, they were a tremendous support for the branch, for the missionaries, and in building friends for the Church in Kisangani. Videos and photographs of their enthusiastic work in teaching English to neighborhood friends and in schools for the poor give poignant evidence of the value of their service.

We will also meet Jean-Pierre GOIKABA, a kind and faithful member of the Kisganani Makiso Branch, who is the director of government efforts for disabled students in two provinces. With him and the Webbs, we will visit a school for blind children. We will witness their gratitude for the gift of basic learning materials, including five thick volumes of the Book of Mormon in Braille.

This video presentation is available on the Interpreter YouTube channel at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yD3c7iihmC4

 

[i]The video version of the entire FairMormon presentation is available on the FairMormon YouTube channel at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nJl9FvLKmjw. The seven segments of this presentation, in an edited and somewhat expanded form, are available for reading at Meridian Magazine(www.ldsmag.com) and the website of The Interpreter Foundation(https://interpreterfoundation.org). For more articles and videos by Jeffrey M. Bradshaw, see www.templethemes.org.

Filed Under: Power of Testimony, Testimonies Tagged With: Blindness, centers of strength, Church in Africa, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Disabilities, English classes, Humanitarian Service, Jean-Pierre GOIBAKA, Jeannot KIRONGOZI, Kisangani, Melinda "Mindy" Webb, missionary work, Stanley J. Webb

What Attracts People to the Church? (The Church in the DR Congo: A Personal Perspective, Part 4)

November 13, 2018 by Jeffrey M. Bradshaw

Neon Konde presents a man with a copy of the Book of Mormon

In a presentation at the 2018 FairMormon Conference,[i]I shared stories of some of the faithful Saints in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (Kinshasa). In this series of presentations, I would like to speak from a more personal perspective, reflecting on the meaning of that experience for Kathleen and me, and pondering some of the dynamics of numerical and spiritual growth of the Church in that country.

The series is organized into eight parts:

  1. Prologue: What brought us to Africa?
  2. Snapshot of the Church in the DR Congo
  3. The missionaries
  4. What attracts people to the Church?
  5. Building from centers of strength — Kisangani
  6. Building from centers of strength — Wagenya and elsewhere
  7. The temple: A light to the world
  8. “The labourers are few”

With an average of 1,800 new investigators a month, DR Congo Kinshasa mission has a hard time supplying the local demand for copies of the Book of Mormon. Part 4 begins with an explanation of why the Congolese feel such a spiritual kinship with the Book of Mormon peoples. Interesting conversations with villagers, chauffeurs, security guards, police officers, and others — each with their own interests in Church doctrines and practices — are described. For example, a local leader tells of how a government official’s going-in assumptions are shattered during an investigation of the finances of the Church. The Congolese are inspired by Church teachings about the central role of the family in the plan of salvation. A member artist who is passionate about the resisting the fragmentation of the family shows off his work. The blessings the Church brings to Congolese families witnesses the truthfulness of President Spencer W. Kimball’s well-known statement that “the Gospel solves [the] problems of the world.” Videos of enthusiastic singing by villagers and Primary children are also included.

This video presentation is available on the Interpreter YouTube channel at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s__4B9e4rOI

 

 

[i]The video version of the entire FairMormon presentation is available on the FairMormon YouTube channel at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nJl9FvLKmjw. The seven segments of this presentation, in an edited and somewhat expanded form, are available for reading at Meridian Magazine(www.ldsmag.com) and the website of The Interpreter Foundation(https://interpreterfoundation.org). For more articles and videos by Jeffrey M. Bradshaw, see www.templethemes.org.

Filed Under: Book of Mormon, Conversion Tagged With: Church in Africa, Democratic Republic of the Congo, families, missionary work, Neon Konde

The Missionaries (The Church in the DR Congo: A Personal Perspective, Part 3)

November 6, 2018 by Jeffrey M. Bradshaw

Elders Kouame and Tchare

In a presentation at the 2018 FairMormon Conference,[i]I shared stories of some of the faithful Saints in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (Kinshasa). In this series of presentations, I would like to speak from a more personal perspective, reflecting on the meaning of that experience for Kathleen and me, and pondering some of the dynamics of numerical and spiritual growth of the Church in that country.

The series is organized into eight parts:

  1. Prologue: What brought us to Africa?
  2. Snapshot of the Church in the DR Congo
  3. The missionaries
  4. What attracts people to the Church?
  5. Building from centers of strength — Kisangani
  6. Building from centers of strength — Wagenya and elsewhere
  7. The temple: A light to the world
  8. “The labourers are few”

By means of photographs and video segments, Part 3 shares stories about the young African missionaries who serve in the DR Congo Kinshasa mission. Unlike many developing areas of the world, the DR Congo sends half-again more full-time missionaries than it receives. Unlike other African missions where a mix of African and non-African missionaries serve, only African missionaries serve in the DR Congo. Many unimaginable situations arise because of the personal circumstances of these missionaries. There is much we can learn from their devotion, spirituality, enthusiasm, and faith.

This video presentation is available on the Interpreter YouTube channel at: The Church in the DR Congo: A Personal Perspective: Part 3, The Missionaries

 

 

[i]The video version of the entire FairMormon presentation is available on the FairMormon YouTube channel at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nJl9FvLKmjw. The seven segments of this presentation, in an edited and somewhat expanded form, are available for reading at Meridian Magazine(www.ldsmag.com) and the website of The Interpreter Foundation(https://interpreterfoundation.org). For more articles and videos by Jeffrey M. Bradshaw, see www.templethemes.org.

Filed Under: Conversion Tagged With: Church in Africa, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ginette Baehrel, Hervé Baehrel, missionaries, missionary work, Sedrick Tshiambwe

A Snapshot of the Church in the DR Congo (The Church in the DR Congo: A Personal Perspective, Part 2)

October 28, 2018 by Jeffrey M. Bradshaw

In a presentation at the 2018 FairMormon Conference,[i]I shared stories of some of the faithful Saints in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (Kinshasa). In this series of presentations, I would like to speak from a more personal perspective, reflecting on the meaning of that experience for Kathleen and me, and pondering some of the dynamics of numerical and spiritual growth of the Church in that country.

The series is organized into eight parts:

  1. Prologue: What brought us to Africa?
  2. Snapshot of the Church in the DR Congo
  3. The missionaries
  4. What attracts people to the Church?
  5. Building from centers of strength — Kisangani
  6. Building from centers of strength — Wagenya and elsewhere
  7. The temple: A light to the world
  8. “The labourers are few”

Part two begins with a description of some interesting and little-known facts about the DR Congo today, followed by a brief account of the beginnings and amazing growth of the Church in the country. Remarkably, even with the large number of baptisms in the mission, the retention rate of new converts is very high. Almost half of the entire membership are holders of the Melchizedek priesthood. The presentation closes with audio selections illustrating the marvelous musical talents of the people, born of their deeply felt faith, joy, and gratitude.

This video presentation is available on the FairMormon YouTube channel at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OSIS3U0g3cI

 

[i]The video version of the entire FairMormon presentation is available on the FairMormon YouTube channel at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nJl9FvLKmjw. The seven segments of this presentation, in an edited and somewhat expanded form, are available for reading at Meridian Magazine(www.ldsmag.com) and the website of The Interpreter Foundation(https://interpreterfoundation.org). For more articles and videos by Jeffrey M. Bradshaw, see www.templethemes.org.

Filed Under: Conversion Tagged With: Alexander B. Morrison, ANUNGA Shako Marceline, Biaya Shambuyi, Brother Mayele, Church in Africa, David M. Kennedy, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ginette Baehrel, Hervé Baehrel, Jean Hutchings, Joni Koch, Jr., Judith McConkie, Kinshasa, Lendo Van Dam, LIETE Bausu Shekina, LIETE Bien Venu Bolame, LIETE Ondelio Jeancy, LOKPO Hugues Anicet Madou, LUKUSA Ngangu Peter, Mansiku Mawangi, Marvin J. Ashton, Mbuyi Nkitabungi, Mbuyi Régine Banza, missionaries, missionary work, Mobutu Sese Seko, Mpunga Bofanga, Muciuko Banza, Music, Naomi Pitchou, NTUMBA Kadima Nene, OMBA Miriam, Oscar W. McConkie, R. Bay Hutchings, SHAKO Jonathan, UMBA Claudine Nkulu, Virgil Jon Parker, Wiyombo Ethendji

Jaxon Washburn – Interfaith Work, and Being called on a Mission

September 21, 2018 by NickGalieti

https://media.blubrry.com/mormonfaircast/www.ldsmissioncast.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/LMC-Jaxon-Washburn.mp3

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Jaxon Washburn is a remarkable young man that has done a great deal of outreach work as part of being on interfaith councils, and other organizations that support religious practice. His story is unusual in that, while Jaxon was raised for the first 12 years in what he describes as a traditional Latter-day Saint household, following his mother’s decision to leave the Church, he began to live a sort of double religious life studying and experiencing two different faith traditions on a regular basis.

Jaxon also shares how previous FairMormon Podcasts were instrumental in helping him to navigate his faith crisis and come to a testimony of the truth claims of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Having faithful and scholarly answers to critical questions provided him with a path through his questions, and have answers where anti-mormon literature was suffocating and depressing.

This unique experience led Jaxon to study many of the worlds religions, and, like Joseph Smith, found himself with the designs of finding out which of all the sects was the one God wanted him to align himself. Through considerable study, including listening to some past podcasts by host Nick Galieti for the FairMormon organization, Jaxon felt that he had gained a testimony of the truthfulness of the Restored Gospel, of its claims to prophetic leadership and the validity of the Book of Mormon as Scripture.

Arizona Interfaith Council - Jaxon Washburn
Some members of the Arizona Interfaith Council – including Jaxon Washburn

Jaxon came to the decision to place on hold his religious studies path in the halls of higher learning to serve a mission. In this episode he announces where he has been called, as well as some of the pilot program that he is involved with regarding language learning through the MTC. This episode features an powerful story of love, the importance of study in coming to a conversion, as well as the remarkable ways that life experience can guide us in the path that leads us back to our Heavenly Father.

Jaxon on the World Religion and Tolerance Club
Jaxon (and other students) in the World Religion and Tolerance Club

To learn more about the mission where Jaxon will be serving his mission – click here.

Filed Under: Apologetics, Conversion, Faith Crisis, Interfaith Dialogue, Nick Galieti, Podcast, Youth Tagged With: missionary work

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