Hi everybody!
This week has gone by in such a blur! I can’t believe we’ve already done two weeks in this transfer. That means Hermana Dabb only has four left before she’s sent off. Don’t worry, I’m sure she’ll get a proper burial.* The end of this transfer will also mean that I’ve basically been a missionary for six months. So we can wait to deal with that.
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| Here I am with a chunk of ice that we got off of our car. |
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| Trust me, there was a lot more where that came from. |
Hermana Stevenson and I have been working hard this week! We were stationed inside until Saturday because of the crazy weather. I’ve definitely seen much more snow in Utah, but the real problem was the solid layer of ice under it. But it seems like Tennessee has very willingly put all of that behind it, because the high for today is supposed to be 70°. I thought the climate here was supposed to be more temperate, but I guess nature has been trying to throw everybody curveballs.
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| Someone wanted to come to church, but because of the ice, our services were canceled, and they couldn’t figure out Zoom, so we called them on Messenger and filmed the screen. #innovation |
We talked to a couple of entertaining characters this week! There was this old Southern woman whose accent sounded so thick I thought it had to be fake, but it wasn’t! People actually talk like that, apparently! One of them was a New Yorker. Hermana Stevenson told him that his voice reminded her of “Cake Boss,” and he had never heard of it before, so we got to explain that show and the gospel. Covering all of our bases.
But the funniest was probably this rejection we had this week. We cold-called this old lady, and as soon as Hermana Stevenson started to say, “My name is Sister Stevenson,” this lady went (in typical Southern accent fashion):
“Oh, nooooooo.”
And then, before we could say anything else, she went:
“Please, don’t call me!”
And then she hung up! Hermanas Likes and Dabb heard it from the other room, and they started laughing so hard, because that’s the best thing you can do when faced with persecution.
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| I love Korea as much as the next person whose brother served a mission there, but last I checked, this was Franklin, Tennessee! |
We also had a Book of Mormon drop-off at the Columbia Mall, which was such a test of patience. Basically, we were supposed to meet up with the person we were giving the Book of Mormon to at 12. We got there, and stood outside and waited for them to show up. We called them at 12:05, and they didn’t answer their phone. At 12:15, we called again, and again, no answer. I was beyond ready to leave, but Hermana Stevenson said, “Let’s wait until 12:20,” and at 12:19, I kid you not, the person showed up. And they really appreciated the Book of Mormon! It made me realize how important it is that everyone has as much of a chance as we can give them to partake of this gospel.
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| Last Wednesday I got to talk to Grandma Reese, and we had a lovely chat about her mission in England and her speedy recovery from a nasty fall she had recently. She’s a tough old bird! |
Since we’re in the Bible Belt, we get a lot of Bible Bashers and headstrong Christians in general. The other day, while we were cold-calling, we ran into this lady who was convinced that she knew what we believed, even though she’s never attended our church and we’re literally representatives of our religion. Pretty classic. But she said she knew she was getting into heaven and I couldn’t say the same. So I told her that I did know where I was going after this life, too. She huffed something about how we were just saying things to make it sound like we aligned with others’ beliefs more than we actually did, and how she would never read the Mormon Bible, blah blah blah. And shortly after, the call ended.
The thing is, though, we do know that we have salvation. And you want to know how I know that we do? It’s because of a verse in 2 Nephi 25:
23 … for we know that it is by grace that we are saved, after all we can do.
We are saved, everyone! That doesn’t mean we stop growing and progressing. That doesn’t mean we stop trying, or that we point to a specific date in the ’80s when we were baptized so as not to worry about it. It means that every day, we get better, and every day, Christ’s Atonement covers for what we couldn’t manage to do ourselves. Don’t waste the Savior’s sacrifice by being a bad person, but learn to accept His grace as well! That’s the best gift we could ever give Him.
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| Speaking of birds, I’ve been crushing it on Duolingo, and the support from Duo the Owl was … unexpected. |
You all are a gift to me, and I treasure your prayers, your support, your part of my life. I hope you have a great week, and you’ll be able to see the miracles all around you. I know they’re there.
— Gracias por tu tiempo,
Hermana Newton
* Missionaries frequently refer to completing missionary service as “dying.”
















