Welcome

Hello and welcome,


Here you can follow the journey of Ryker and his family, as he prepares to serve a full time mission for The Church of JESUS CHRIST of Latter Day Saints. We invite you to comment and share your advice, insights, and stories with us as well. The Google Calendar listed here has daily thoughts, stories, and challenges for Ryker to participate in this next year.


You can engage with that calendar through the blog or by visiting the link https://www.google.com/calendar/embed?src=0gldgtsq7cb7v3b5hov183je3c%40group.calendar.google.com&ctz=America/Denver below.


You can also follow on facebook at https://www.facebook.com/rykercatchesthewave




CAL3

Catch The Wave

An unprecedented wave of enthusiasm for missionary work is sweeping the entire earth.

More of you young men and women will catch this wave as you strive to be worthy of mission calls. You see this as a wave of truth and righteousness. You see your opportunity to be on the crest of that wave.

You parents, teachers, and others, catch the wave as you prepare our rising generation to be worthy of missionary service.

You adults, catch the wave with help for the spiritual, physical, and financial preparation of future missionaries

This wave of truth and righteousness is wondrous! It is not man-made! It comes from the Lord, who said, “I will hasten my work in its time.”

I thank God and His Son, Jesus Christ, for the Restoration and its power to propel a magnificent wave of truth and righteousness across the earth.

(The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, General Conference April 2013 ELDER RUSSELL M. NELSON)

Preparing Missionaries

Sunday, August 18, 2013

Be Ready to Go

Dear Ryker,

Today I was thinking about the importance of always being prepared in everything we do.  President Henry B. Erying said this, “The destiny of the rising generation of priesthood holders is far more than to be ready to bring God’s power down to heal the sick.  The preparation is to be ready to go and do whatever the Lord wants done as the world is preparing for His Coming.

What you need when you are in a moment that you are not comfortable with is the steady performance of obedient service.  You need to have faith.   Faith that God lives and you have been given the Priesthood.  You also need to know the scriptures so that you can learn from men like Nephi.  Faith did not come in the moment when Nephi needed it, nor did God’s trust in Nephi.  He earned that great faith and God’s confidence by courageous and sustained Labor in the Lord’s service.  Ryker live so you are always prepared for whatever Heavenly Father calls on you to do.  You have such amazing potential and we love you so much.  You have wonderful parents and family that so care for you.  Be strong and keep our theme this year in mind as you “stand in Holy Places.”

I love you so much and know you can prepare to serve your Heavenly Father not only for your upcoming Mission but for your live.

Love,

Grandma Tamra

Saturday, August 17, 2013

NEWS STORY —  14 AUGUST 2013

Mormon Missionary Numbers Reach 75,000 Milestone

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Mormon Infographic
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SALT LAKE CITY — 
Since the October 2012 announcement that men can begin Mormon missionary service at age 18 and women at 19, the ranks of Mormon missionaries have swelled. Prior to the announcement, 58,500 missionaries were serving; as of this week, that number is now 75,000.
The following story and videos about the lives of Mormon missionaries provide insights into what these missionaries do and why they do it.
Life of a Mormon Missionary: Teaching Others About Christ
After the rains of Hurricane Sandy stopped in late October 2012, Elder Jordan Walton, a missionary in the New York New York South Mission of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, recalls driving with his companion, Elder Josh Munday, to affected areas such as Broadchannel and Rockaway to see the incredible devastation.
“I remember as [we] walked down those streets, [we saw] the look on these people’s faces and they did not know what to do,” Elder Walton says. “We started helping them. We started taking out their floorboards, we started taking out their sheetrock, their dirty couches — all the things that they couldn’t use.”
Over the next six weeks, the New York New York South Mission helped orchestrate over 120,000 hours of service from more than 11,000 volunteers. Although not all Mormon missionaries around the world participate in such extensive community service, the story is a reflection of the core purpose shared by each of the Church’s 75,000 missionaries in 405 missions: to invite others to come unto Christ through word and deed.
Following the pattern Jesus Christ established in the New Testament, full-time Mormon missionaries are sent out two by two (see Mark 6:7) to teach the gospel through lessons and service for 18 to 24 months. Men can serve at 18, women at 19; each funds his or her missionary service (an approximate cost of $10,000 to $12,000), sometimes with the help of family and friends. As Christ taught, these missionaries find greater purpose in their lives as they focus on the needs of others — a process that New York New York South Mission president Kevin Calderwood says “dramatically changes their hearts.”
A Typical Day
Missionaries are up by 6:30 every morning. They spend all day, every day with an assigned companion (companion changes occur every couple of months). Each companionship spends several hours every morning studying the teachings of Jesus Christ and discussing that day’s planned teaching appointments. “We’re really thinking about each of the people we’re going to see that day and how we can help them come closer to the Savior,” Elder Walton says.
The morning routine also includes language practice for those missionaries assigned to speak a second language. In the New York New York South Mission, Sister Kimberly Bradfield and her companion, Sister Shianne Allen, teach others in Spanish. Like many missionaries learning a foreign language, they didn’t know Spanish before their mission, creating a kind of baptism by fire in language learning.
“Neither of us knew Spanish prior to our mission, and so for nine weeks we studied Spanish [at a missionary training center],” Sister Bradfield says.
After the morning routine, missionaries meet with individuals in a wide variety of settings until 9 p.m., with a short break in between for lunch and dinner. Depending on location, they can travel by foot, bike, car, bus or other means. They talk with people on the street and in their homes, discussing basic Mormon beliefs and answering questions. And because many people prefer to connect online, missionaries also use the Internet and digital devices in their ministry.
Missionaries visit those of other faiths and Church members in need of an uplifting message. Sister Bradfield says missionaries don’t force their beliefs on others; rather, “[We] invite them to come unto Christ — not to change the faith they have, but to strengthen that faith.” Elder Munday adds, “[We’re] here to strengthen and give a little bit of hope to people. Our ultimate message to the world is that through the Savior Jesus Christ you can overcome trials.”
Missionaries provide community service such as disaster cleanup (like the aforementioned Hurricane Sandy effort), teaching English and visiting the elderly. “We help anybody and everybody,” Sister Allen says. After Hurricane Sandy, Mormon missionaries made an effort to not only help fellow Mormons but also, Sister Allen says, “to help their neighbors and to help anybody within their area.” The collective number of yearly service hours given by these 75,000 young men and women is in the millions.
Missionaries also take a few hours one day a week for personal tasks, such as laundry, cleaning, grocery shopping and writing to family via email.
Finding Themselves by Serving Others
Elder Munday says the beginning of his mission was perhaps the most difficult time of his life. He found himself far away from his home in England, struggling with homesickness. The turning point came when he began to look outside himself. “That’s when I was able to feel comfortable here, when I stopped caring about myself and start caring about others,” he says. “It helped me to grow so much.”
Focusing more on others is not easy for anybody, especially teenagers and young adults. “That’s usually a period of our lives when we’re quite self-absorbed,” President Calderwood says. “These missionaries give up all of that.”
This results in missionaries becoming more concerned about what’s happening to their fellow man than they are about themselves. Such service builds a “good foundation for their lives to become good spouses, good fathers, good mothers and very good in their communities,” President Calderwood says.
“It’s just one of the most rewarding things you can do,” Sister Bradfield says of missionary service. “True happiness is really in helping the people around you.” 
missionary number infographic

Monday, August 12, 2013

Grandma Day


Dear Ryker,  
     Fifty three years ago I was attending BYU. The announcement was made that young women could go on missions at 21 instead of 23. This really gave me the desire to serve a mission. My older two brothers had both served missions and my older sister had also served. But that was not why I wanted to serve. I knew that all the things I had been learning about Jesus Christ and His gospel were indeed true and I wanted to serve any where that I could. When I finished the summer quarter I was attending I went home to Snowflake, Arizona to prepare to go on a mission.
   In those days one had to have an interview with ones Bishop and Stake President and then an interview with a General Authority.   In September we had a stake conference in Snowflake and a general authority was visiting so I was able to get the necessary interviews. My papers were sent to SLC and the wait began. My call did not come until about two days before Thanksgiving. I was called to the Eastern Atlantic States Mission and was to report to SLC mission home on Dec 7. This gave me just about 10 days to prepare. Because the time was short I was unable to go to the Mesa Temple to receive my own endowments before I had to be in SLC.   My parents were unable to take me to SLC so I rode a bus there with my sister Patricia. We arrived in SLC at the mission home just in time to rush to the first class (for which I was late). While at the mission home I received my endowments at the Salt Lake Temple. My sister Patricia was able to go with me.
   This mission was one of the highlights of my earthly life. I served with seven different companions. Each one taught me new things to learn about. I also had the opportunity to see some wonderful people enter the waters of baptism. One of these was a young man named Dana Griffen. When we taught him about the gospel he was getting ready to attend the navel academy at Annapolis. He did not join the church for about two later as his parents were very much opposed to him joining. He later married and ended up teaching at BYU in the geology department. He and his wife have served a mission to Canada, and are currently serving in the Washington DC temple as temple missionaries.
   This mission also helped me to develop an even stronger testimony of our Savior and the truefulness of the gospel and the restoration of it through the prophet Joseph Smith.  
   As you know I also served in Ireland as a senior missionary and although I enjoyed serving there at that time in my life. I learned and grew the most when I was a young missionary.
   I hope as you prepare yourself to serve that you will be also strengthened in your testimony of the truth and learn to rely on the promptings of the Holy Ghost.
   I love to read the Book of Mormon. I try to read each day and I have found that the more I read the more I come to know out Savior. So Ryker study from the Book of Mormon each day and pray about what you are reading. If you do this I can promise you that you will have an even greater desire to serve as a missionary and represent the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
 
With Love, Grandma Day

Friday, August 9, 2013

Prospective Missionaries Finding Ways to Prepare to Serve

Church News and Events

Prospective Missionaries Finding Ways to Prepare to Serve

  By Suzanne Young, Seminaries and Institutes staff writer

  • 8 AUGUST 2013

Preparing for missionary service is a personal responsibility, but many resources are available to help on LDS.org and through mission prep classes.

With 29,000 new missionaries expected to report within the next few months, more prospective missionaries are focusing on ways to prepare themselves before entering the missionary training center. Even though preparation is an individual responsibility, many resources are available that can help.

LDS.org offers general missionary preparation information in its Gospel Topics section, as well as answers to frequently asked questions.

Missionary Preparation Resources for Personal Study, part of the new My Role in the Work of Salvation site, lists references to help you understand basic principles. It also includes lessons to study on your own as well as suggestions for how to act on what you learn.

There are also suggestions for parents and leaders and teachers, including learning/teaching outlines for a mission preparation course.

At the recent broadcast for seminary and institute teachers, Elder Russell M. Nelson said, “The recent adjustment in minimum age for full-time missionary service carries many implications for seminary and institute teachers,” he said. “The youth who are going on missions may have a little less time to prepare now. So the homes, seminaries, and institutes have a wonderful opportunity to assist in the preparation of missionaries.”

Missionary preparation classes, better known as mission prep, aim to help prepare potential missionaries to have successful missions. These classes are offered through local institutes, YSA stakes, and wards. Students hear real stories from the mission field, study Preach My Gospel, plan and prepare lessons on gospel principles, and even practice teaching these lessons to others—all before entering the Missionary Training Center.

Brother Grayson Butler teaches at the Salt Lake Institute, which has seen a dramatic increase in enrollment in missionary preparation classes since the announcement changing the minimum ages of missionaries. In fact, this summer the Salt Lake Institute is offering seven different mission prep courses compared to the one class it offered last summer.

Brother Randy Osborne, a mission prep teacher at the Sandy and Jordan institute programs in Utah, said the number of sisters attending his class has jumped from about 20 percent to more than 


Brother Butler starts each class with a letter or story from a missionary currently serving in the field to get his students excited. This is one of Johanna Tovar’s favorite parts of her mission prep class. “Hearing the stories is teaching me what it is that I need to focus on right now, while I have time to prepare,” she said.  Students in Brother Osborne’s mission prep class are asked to prepare a two- to three-minute lesson from anything on repentance to the Restoration. After they write their lesson down in a notebook that they keep throughout the semester, they get opportunities to practice teaching others. This gives them an opportunity to teach people they don’t know and to receive feedback about their teaching. The notebook they keep throughout the semester is filled with mini lessons they have prepared, which they take with them to the MTC.

Jessica Liening, who served in the California Long Beach Mission, said the missionary preparation class she took at Brigham Young University helped her prepare. “It got me in missionary mode and excited to go. It definitely got me thinking about my mission and different ways I could prepare. [The class] gives you that exposure and gets you thinking about teaching and sharing before you even have to do it.”

To find a mission preparation class near you, visit institute.lds.org or ask your local priesthood leaders.
 

 

Sunday, August 4, 2013

Be an EXAMPLE of the believers



Is it enough for me to just believe?  Paul during the difficulty of the apostasy that no we must be more, we must "be examples of the believers."  We never know who we may be effecting by not only our "conversations" or words but more importantly by our "charity" or deeds.  (1 Tim 4:12)

When we choose to serve a mission we help create a family legacy of missionary service.  My own grandparents and parents histories and stories from their missions helped spark a desire for me to serve.  It's not the reason I went but it is part of the reason I sought out my own testimony and desire to go.

This weekend as we walked to the Laketown rodeo I started to notice all of the similarities between Ryker and one of his younger cousins.  It really dawned on me how much the younger cousin looks up to the "oldest cousin" and what an example Ryker is setting for generations to come.

The photo is of Ryker teaching his little cousin his official work boot tying technique.