Monday, April 11, 2016

For those who love music - 2nd week in Japan

Kirsten:  "There's this amazing song from the Japanese hymn book that we don't have in English. It's called, 'Waiting for the Reapers.'  During WWII, all missionaries were taken out of Japan, and the members wrote this song I believe."   [Since this song was found previous to WWII, I think what occurred was that the Japanese church members translated the song and adapted it to their hymn book.]


from books.google.com



Latter-Day Saints' Sunday School Hymn Book: The Word Companion of the Deseret Sunday School Song Book,

5th Edition, 1903.

No. 21 (page 30)  
                 VERSE 1
Waiting for the reapers' sickles,
Waves the whitened harvest field;
Harbingers of love and mercy,
Forward go and bind the sheaves.
Go, ye lab'rers, bold with courage,        [laborers]
Reap the golden-headed grain --
Ripened fields all waiting, waiting,
Since the Son of God was slain.

                  CHORUS 
Seize the torch, the torch, and wave it;
Zion's heralds loud proclaim;
Hallelujah! swell the chorus,
Jesus Christ our Lord shall reign.

                  VERSE 2
Waiting for the morrow's dawning,
Work ye while 'tis called today,
Lo, the harvest time now coming,
Jesus calls, make no delay.
Gather in the spacious garner
Seed-time harvest ushers in;
Wake the song, millennial glory
Dawns upon a world of sin.



(Sorry I couldn't get the hymn in any bigger)

(K-Mom here:  I looked for this song on You Tube and couldn't find it.   If anybody hears a "calling" and can find this hymn on You Tube, or even better, perform it in English or Japanese, and upload it, I'd love it!  I can fax it full size /the Japanese version/ since I have a paper copy.   Just email me at the email from which you get your weekly letter from me.)


Monday, April 4, 2016

First Week in Japan -- First Area in Japan

Sister Parker & Sister Riggs in front of a Shinto gate (the red structure) ("torii" in Japanese)

Hello Everybody!

So I am here in my new area, Okegawa, Japan, with my new companion, Sister Riggs!!!   Sister Riggs is from Idaho, She's so humble and has that mission fire.   As you see, I also got a new name tag which is the same as before, except it is 100% in Japanese now.

 Okegawa is about 27 miles northwest of Tokyo.    There are about 75,000 inhabitants occupying about 10 square miles.  It is in the Saitama Prefecture.   A prefecture is a local governmental area and roughly corresponds to what we think of as, a county.   Each one of those prefectures is then in a bigger region.  In the map below, there are 9 regions.  Think of a region as a little bit like a state, but the region is just a geographical area, not a political area.   The prefecture I am in, is in the light green region of the map just below:





A torii (the Shinto gate behind me in the picture at the top) is considered  a passage from the profane, to the sacred.  On a map, it marks the places where there is a Shinto shrine, or sometimes a Buddhist temple, or even a marker for a dedicatory spot of gratitude and offerings for good fortune received (such as a business man saying "thank you" to diety, "Inari Okami").  

There is a meaning though to these gates to those who possess a Christian - Hebrew understanding of very ancient Japanese cultural things:   "All Shinto shrines have a red gate before you enter.   This is the symbol of the blood of the Lamb, Jesus Christ.   When the Angel of Destruction came in the night in Egypt to take the life of the firstborn son of each family, it did not enter the homes that had lamb's blood on the door frames.   This is the same symbol.   There are many symbols in temples and traditions that Japanese people follow that resemble Jesus Christ's teachings!"  (Exodus 11 and 12)

For those who are interested, you can read up more on the Japanese - Israelite ancient connection:
http://www2.biglobe.ne.jp/~remnant/isracame.htm      There are probably other articles too.  This is just one.

As for my trip, it was really long, going on very little sleep the night before at the MTC (I went to bed at midnight and got up just before 3am).  Gratefully, they fed me good airplane food! There were snacks, dinner and breakfast,  I liked it.  Complimentary pillows and blanket, earphones, and a sleeping mask.  I couldn't see the ocean though, I was in a middle row far away from the windows. It was a nice flight,  I talked to some people about the church.  However, the last part of the plane ride (the landing) made me feel kind of sick.  For the next few days I felt a little bit nauseous, but I slept really well at night and still do.  I go out like a light.  The futon beds are really comfortable and everyone is so nice!   As we were driving from the airport, everything was like a dream, there's nature everywhere and it's beauuuuuutifuuuuuullllll. So beautiful!  And the buildings are like from a cartoon.  Since I was sleepy and a little nauseous, it felt like a dream kind of, haha.  It didn't feel like I left Utah yet though.  I slept at the Nagano's house with Sister Burke.   The Naganos fed us really yummy food and the next day we got our iPads and our new companion.  We took the train, got off a few trains and walked to Okegawa,  I think this place has the biggest ward in Tokyo mission (over 200 members).  I haven't been on a bus yet.

My companion, Sister Riggs, is so caring and considerate.  She's been slowly introducing Japanese food to me and so far I love it all!  She cooks simply, but it's really tasty. We ate at a members house for the first time yesterday and it was delicious!  We sit on the floor in people's homes.   Some people have said that my Japanese is good.  I don't know... maybe they are just being nice. 

Here's a funny video about my trying Natto for the first time.  

"Nattō (なっとう or 納豆 ?) is a traditional Japanese food made from soybeans, fermented with Bacillus subtilis var. natto.  Some eat it as a breakfast food. It is served with soy sauce, karashi mustard and welsh onion.  Nattō may be an acquired taste because of its powerful smell, strong flavor, and slimy texture."  (from Wikipedia)


I haven't done a lot of proselyting because transfer week is kind of crazy. I got my bike and stuff and it's nice. It was raining a little today. The weather was perfect when I got here. 

Here are a couple more photos:




BEAUTIFUL NATURE!







Wednesday, March 30, 2016

First Full day in the Japan Tokyo Mission (after getting some sleep)

Arriving Missionaries, their new companions, and President and Sister Nagano.  Notice that Sister Parker's former MTC companion, Sister Burke, is in the bright blue shirt.   Sister Pearson (also a former MTC companion) went to a different Japan mission in the north and is thus obviously not seen in this photo.

Sister Kirsten Parker, companion Sister Riggs, and President and Sister Nagano

Friday, March 25, 2016

March 25, 2016 -- Last Days at the MTC, Easter Message

These are my last days at the MTC.  Next week I will be in Japan.   I'm so excited!   I have already done some packing.  

In this past choir:

It was a powerful experience.. So during choir, Brother Eggett, the choir director, always tells spiritual stories with the song that we practice. We were singing Lead Kindly Light (hymn # 97) and the story behind it is really neat. The lyrics are written by John Henry Newman.  He was sailing on the sea for a while and the ocean was calm for a while but the waves were very big so the boat would move up and down constantly. John Henry Newman had malaria and so he though he was going to die from his malaria being effected by the motion. Days had passed and fog rolled in and it was dark and gloomy. He was convinced he would die. He didn't want to, however. All his life he was prideful and followed his own ways instead of God. 

"If God can save me from dying then I will follow him the rest of my life." He felt he should write down this commitment, so he grabbed a paper and pen and this is what he wrote:

"Lead, kindly Light, amid th'encircling gloom;
Lead thou me on!
The night is dark, and I am far from home;
Lead thou me on!
Keep thou my feet; I do not ask to see
The distant scene--one step enough for me.
 I was not ever thus, nor pray'd that thou
Shouldst lead me on. 
I loved to choose and see my path; but now,
Lead thou me on!
I loved the garish day, and, spite of fears,
Pride ruled my will. Remember not past years.
So long thy pow'r hath blest me, sure it still
Will lead me on
O'er moor and fen, o'er crag and torrent, till
The night is gone.
And with the morn those angel faces smile,
Which I have loved long since, and lost awhile!"

My mom gave me an Easter message which I will share with you:


  
  
    

    

    

NEW LIFE IS ABUNDANTLY BIRTHING -- THE SUN BEGINS TO SHINE AND THE GRASS IS TURNING GREEN 

HE IS RISEN!
THE BEST PART OF EASTER IS CHRIST'S PROMISE TO THE RIGHTEOUS FAITHFUL:  Verily, verily, I say unto you, He that believeth on me hath everlasting life.   John 6:47    The word "verily" means [truely, it is true].    Baptism by immersion is a symbol of this promise, that the righteous faithful will be raised from the dead and return to the Father.










In the last few years, I spent more time trying to understand the atonement.  I could not understand why God the Father would require His perfect Son to give his life  -- after all, he didn't deserve it.   Doesn't that seem cruel?   When I was younger, any time there was a short video about Jesus, by the time they got to the part where he was crucified, I would turn my eyes away and try to block out the sound in my mind, for several minutes.   I just didn't want to face that part.  With time, age-experience, and study, I have come to realize that Christ had to die for several reasons.

1.  God the Father is just; he is the Creator of a perfect creation.  We messed up His creation, as well as ourselves.  Justice says that you just don't let the guilty go free without no punishment of some kind.   Otherwise, we would never learn from our mistakes and deliberate wrong actions.   We do pay part of the price.   We do in fact, suffer and die.  We are not capable of paying the full price though of what we have done to this world and to ourselves, and continue to do everyday when wrong is done.  Having become unclean and imperfect, we cannot go to where the Father is.   We could not bear his presence.  Had we had the full weight of the price, we would be completely turned over to Satan because we had followed him.    However, out of love, there had to be a way made possible for us to return to our Heavenly Father.  Jesus Christ made that possible.   
The terms were, that we would have to turn away from the Adversary, and from our own carnal desires, and turn towards Him.  We would have to repent (and continue repenting throughout our life, seeking to perfect ourselves).   We would also have to have Faith in Him and become like Him, through the assistance of the Holy Spirit.   We would also have to forgive others, but still support righteous principles.   We would have to be peacemakers.  We would have to keep His commandments, and also share the gospel with others.

2.  Jesus Christ also had to die in order to descend below all evil, in order to spiritually fight it and overcome it.   If we could see it, we would realize that our sinful thoughts and actions have real effects which can't just be wished away.  He fought against spiritual evil.  Jesus has the Keys of Death and Hell and he started the process of setting us Free.    Had he not come when he did, our outcome would be different and there would've been no chance for us humans.   The weight of our spiritual and physical corruption would crush us.   Our planet and we all, would die eventually.  Jesus' atonement was eternal, because it corrected present, past, and future.  We were not strong enough to make a full atonement for ourselves and everyone we affect.   Jesus Christ was strong enough.   When he was done fighting Satan, he said, "It is finished" and he departed his tortured body and went to the Spirit realm.   There was a great earthquake then and the veil of the temple in Jerusalem was torn.

3.  Jesus Christ didn't come just to vanquish the Roman emperor as many of his people wanted him to do as Messiah.   Jesus came to vanquish the enemy of all enemies, Satan, who is the source of all corruption, suffering, blood, and horror on this earth.

4.  Jesus Christ came to prove his love.   He proved by giving his life like a lamb, over to torture and death by Satan as well as by the Roman soldiers, that he eternally loves us.   Everything that he did, qualifies him to be our world leader, Savior, Redeemer, and friend when he returns soon with power and with glory.  The marks and his loving spirit will prove it is the same person that we have heard about for over 2000 years.

Time for me to go dear daughter.   I hope you feel the appreciation of the promises that Jesus Christ gave to you when you were baptized in His Name.

Friday, March 11, 2016

45th day at the MTC - Origami dresses to deal with the stresses ;-)


The new missionaries ("Kohai") arrived, and they are all so awesome!  We have 7 sisters ("Shimai") and 4 Elders ("Choro").  We decorated the Sisters' doors with hearts and origami dresses that we folded. 

Decorating the doors may seem like a small gesture, but it is by small and simple means, sometimes, that we show love towards one another, in letting others know that they are wanted and appreciated.

Romans 12: 10   Be kindly affectioned one to another with brotherly [and sisterly] love; 

Love, Parker Shimai

Wednesday, March 9, 2016

March 4, 2016 -- 38th Day at the MTC


This week, more photos  ("motto shashin" in Japanese)
Sister Pearson ("Pearson Shimai") and I got these little origami hearts from the Japanese
Zone of missionaries. They are so sweet!! We put them behind our name tag, theeeere. My wrist looks weird, I don't know why!!

Our teacher was studying in a different classroom, and he looked out the
window and saw Elder Connover and Elder Hess studying. Hilarious!!!
Connover Chourou was taking a 6 minute power nap..
("Chourou" = Elder, an ecclesiastical title)

Saturday, February 27, 2016

February 27, 2016 Typical schedule at the MTC, and facilities


Front entrance of MTC with close up of landscape
Front Entrance of MTC

Aerial view of the MTC











Hello Friends,  

My typical schedule at the MTC is as follows (with some variation):

Monday - Tuesday - Wednesday - Thursday - Saturday

6:30am   Arise

7:15 - 7:45am   Breakfast @ cafeteria

7:45am - 10:50am  Classroom instruction / teaching investigators

11am - 12noon     Exercise

12:30pm - 1:10pm   Lunch @ cafeteria

1:10pm - 5:10pm   Classroom instruction / teaching investigators

5:10pm - 5:50pm   Dinner @ cafeteria

5:50pm - 9:30pm   Classroom instruction / investigators,  personal and companion language study, and 5 minutes of planning.

9:30pm   Return to headquarters

10:15pm  Quiet time in dormitory

10:30pm  Lights out promptly, sleep

NOTE:  Every Monday morning we do a service project (so far we have only done cleaning of the MTC facilities).     Wednesday night is TRC.    Tuesday and Sunday night we have a Devotional, along with some choir time.

Comments about the exercise facilities and cafeteria:  (when Kirsten's mom was at the MTC back in the dinosaur age, there was only one cafeteria, and a gymnasium (basketball court) for exercise, which was dominated by the Elders.  So she usually went on a walk on the MTC grounds or socialized with other missionaries.)  Now there are three cafeterias and several sports areas:

Sister Kirsten Parker:  "There are two gyms/gymnasiums here at the MTC.  One has a cardio section with free weights, and workout machines (like a real gym--it's not huge, but still it's a decent size) and then in another building there's the sport gym.  We can play volleyball, four square, basketball, and then upstairs are mats and a staircase.  Then on the next floor up, is a running track and it has a few workout machines on the curves of the track.  Bike machines, elliptical, pull-up machine, other diverse machines.  There are also a lot of food choices in the cafeteria.   I don't know if I mentioned that.   Oh yes-- and dessert, lots of desserts are here." 

Friday is P-Day  (Preparation Day)

6:30am  Arise

7:15am - 7:45am   Breakfast.   We either get a sack lunch or go to the cafeteria

8amish - 11:55am   Go to the Provo Temple which is a couple big blocks away from the MTC

12 noon   Lunch @ cafeteria

1pm - 5pm   Laundry and emails

5:10pm    Dinner @ cafeteria

5:55pm  Personal study

7pm   Study with missionary Companion(s)

8pm   Language study

8:55pm - 9pm   Planning

10:15pm   Quiet time at dormitory

10:30pm  Lights out promptly, sleep

Sunday

6:30am   Arise

7:15am - 7:45am   Breakfast @ cafeteria

8am-10am   Study / interviews with Ecclesiastical leaders

11am  - 4pm   Church, temple walk (exercise/fresh air), lunch.
Church consists of Relief Society (Sisters/women's meeting) [Priesthood meeting for the Elders], Missionary district meeting, Sunday School, then Sacrament Meeting.

4:10pm  Dinner @ cafeteria

5:15pm   Choir

7pm   Devotional/Fireside

8:15pm  Movies.   They play different, multiple, MTC talks from which to go to, talks that are awesome and also Church movies, often provided in English & other languages.   There was the Joseph Smith movie in Japanese a couple of weeks ago.   We didn't watch it though, because we couldn't follow the Japanese quite well.

10:15pm  Quiet time at dormitory

10:30pm  Lights out promptly, sleep


The following descriptions are from http://mtc.byu.edu/themtc-virtualtour.htm   (this is now a broken link, so I have substituted some new pictures from the MTC's updated website, as of 3/9/2016, as well as other photos from search engine results for the MTC )



Cafeteria




There are three cafeterias at the MTC with a combined seating capacity of 1,200 missionaries, serving approximately 8,000 - 10,000 meals per day. Our goal is to provide quality, nutritious, and appealing food to keep the missionaries healthy and happy.




Classroom


Missionaries study a majority of the day. Their curriculum includes gospel and scripture study as well as language courses.

Devotional


Weekly devotionals and firesides are held in which General Authorities, Missionary Department leaders, the MTC presidency, and their wives instruct and motivate missionaries.

Gymnasium



Each missionary is scheduled for five hours of supervised exercise each week. The gymnasium also doubles as an auditorium that seats over 2,000 missionaries for devotionals and other events.   
There are also opportunities to use an exercise - workout area, and in good weather, to do outdoor sports.


Large Group Meeting


Occasionally it is appropriate for several districts of missionaries to meet together in one large group meeting. This provides interaction between several missionaries under the supervision of one teacher.

Communicating with their families is very supportive for the missionaries. Often handing over 4,000 letters and 500 packages a day, we provide accurate, prompt, friendly and professional service.



View of the famous wall-sized map

Missionaries like to point to where their mission destination is. *************************************

Note:  Our district leader (another young missionary, an "Elder") picks up our regular mail ("snail mail") 6 days/week from the Mailroom.   So yes, I can receive regular mail or a package on any day.   P-Day though, is reserved for writing letters and checking emails and responding to them.