The
past few weeks have been rather uneventful but have still been full of miracles
and fun. Perhaps we are becoming casual when we say that miracles are
uneventful. But it has been a great few weeks with nothing too dramatic to deal
with or experience. We’ve had no evacuations or large groups of visitors to the
VC and no recent visits to London from family or friends. We have had a couple
of high profile visitors to the chapel but that has become somewhat
common-place. Last Sunday Mark Madsen, former player for and now assistant coach
for the Los Angeles Lakers, came to church with his wife. And Nancy Marriott,
wife of Bill Marriott, came to church at the chapel last Sunday.
Our
miracles mostly revolve around the number of visitors that we have seen come to
the chapel and the number of those visitors who have taken tours at the
visitors’ centre. January and February are generally much slower for the VC as
fewer tourists visit London during those months and the weather is generally
not very good. January had more visitors than expected but having 400 on one
day due to the Science Museum evacuation increased those numbers. Our sisters
set goals each month for the number of visitors and the number of tours. When
we set goals for February they were all very optimistic about those numbers but
we (Connie and Rod) were skeptical that we could achieve their lofty goals. But
after just 20 days of the month we are nearly at the numbers that they have
set. Last week alone we had almost 1,000 visitors to the VC.
Another
area of miracles have been baptisms. Last Sunday a young Chinese student who
has been meeting with our sisters since before we arrived here finally got
baptized. She had been scheduled for baptism many times over the last two years
but she finally did it. We’ve also seen three other VC baptisms this past month
of friends that our sisters worked with online.
The
online work that our sisters do every day still amazes us. They each have time
to go in the office and use the computers to pick up people’s requests to get a
copy of the Bible or the Book of Mormon or to be taught by missionaries or just
to chat. They have widely varied experiences with these interactions but it is
amazing to see how many requests there are every day and how many of those
requests our sisters are able to pick up. Because we are really the only VC
between New Zealand and the U.S. who are doing online work (the London Temple
VC is also in between those locations but they apparently aren’t doing much
online work) our sisters are the only ones in the world who are picking up
requests for certain hours each day (like from 9 am to 2 pm our time. New
Zealand is 12 hours ahead of us and U.S. Eastern Time is 5 hours behind us).
Requests are coming into Mormon.org 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. There are
those who come online only as a joke. There are those who come online to try
and make trouble. There are those who are members of the church who come online
to ask silly things like “can you tell me what time church starts?” But there
are a lot who are honestly seeking to know more. Our sisters are doing an incredible
job handling the many, many requests that are received. As a result we get to
see and hear about people being taught by missionaries all over the world.
We
had a request recently from someone in the U.S. to send missionaries to his
brother here in London. We gladly have done so and his brother is being taught.
The interesting twist is that the person sending the request lives in the
Rancho Cucamonga Stake right next door to Upland. Sometimes the world can be
rather small.
We’ve
managed to see a bit more of London having made a trip to Kew Gardens to see
the Orchid Festival and a trip to Greenwich to see “where time begins" (Greenwich Mean Time). The Orchid Festival is housed in a large greenhouse at
Kew Gardens but Spring flowers are also coming to London as the daffodils have
started to bloom in many of the parks. We are looking forward to some days of
more sunlight and the beauty of Spring.
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