I have been talking to a few of my friends about my extended family's experiences in Peru. for those of you who wanted to know more about this "Never a failure" missionary story here is a link to my Sister and Brother-in-law's blog "And It Came To Pass".
http://dougearlfamily.blogspot.com/2009/04/41-years-later.html
Showing posts with label missionary miracles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label missionary miracles. Show all posts
Friday, April 24, 2009
Thursday, November 13, 2008
Miracles
..."To cite another far-reaching miracle, there is no rational way to explain why young men and women give a year and a half to two years of their lives in the middle of their education and marriage eligibility to suffer the hardships incident to an inconvenient and highly disciplined pattern of missionary service to their fellowmen. Other miracles occur in funding missions by missionaries or families too poor to do so but who do so anyway.
Still another miracle is the way missionaries are protected during their labors. Of course we have fatalities among our young missionaries—about three to six per year over the last decade—all of them tragic. But the official death rates for comparable-age young men and women in the United States are eight times higher than the death rates of our missionaries. In other words, our young men and women are eight times safer in the mission field than the general population of their peers at home. In view of the hazards of missionary labor, this mortality record is nothing less than a miracle."
Dallin H. Oaks
Still another miracle is the way missionaries are protected during their labors. Of course we have fatalities among our young missionaries—about three to six per year over the last decade—all of them tragic. But the official death rates for comparable-age young men and women in the United States are eight times higher than the death rates of our missionaries. In other words, our young men and women are eight times safer in the mission field than the general population of their peers at home. In view of the hazards of missionary labor, this mortality record is nothing less than a miracle."
Dallin H. Oaks
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