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As missionaries depart from the Tennessee Knoxville Mission, we invite them to share what they’ve learned about being a lifelong disciple of Jesus Christ.
#DiscipleOfChrist

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As missionaries depart from the Tennessee Knoxville Mission, we invite them to share what they’ve learned about being a lifelong disciple of Jesus Christ.
#DiscipleOfChrist
In 2019, the Cruz Family lost their home. Brother Cruz Sr. shared, “I sent my son, my daughter-in-law, and my two grand-daughters away to Virginia. I told them before they left, “Don’t worry about me, I’ll catch up.” I ended up being homeless and I lost everything I owned.”
“One night while homeless, I said to the Lord “If you want me, come get me. Otherwise, I am jumping in front of a bus at 9pm.” At 8:30pm that night, a man came up to me and asked me about what I was doing. I shared with him my plan. As we were talking he told me things that comforted me and told me he would miss me.”
“After talking so long, I looked up and saw that the 9pm bus had just zoomed by. I took this as an answer to my prayers and asked the Lord: “Tell me where to go and I’ll do it.” He led me to the Anaheim, California 4th ward of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.”
“After a while of going to the church, the members said they wanted to help me. The bishop asked what could they do and I asked for a one-way ticket to Jonesville, VA. My first missionaries and the bishop said goodbye and sent me off from Santa Ana, CA to Jonesville, VA. When I got to Jonesville, I met back up with my family and said “I told you I would catch up”. I kept going to church in the Powell Valley Ward and got baptized December 27, 2019.”

Brother Cruz Sr’s powerful testimony has had a huge impact on the rest of his family. Teaching Mia has been a special experience. As she read the Children’s Book of Mormon we had gospel discussions about the scripture stories found in its pages. Brother Cruz Sr. would tell his grand-daughters how much the gospel meant to him and how much it changed his life.

Mia was baptized by her grandfather on April 21, 2024. Now every first Sunday of the month during Fast and Testimony Meeting, Brother Cruz Sr brings his two granddaughters up to the pulpit with him to all bear their testimony of the restored gospel of Jesus Christ.

#TKMTenderMercies

As missionaries depart from the Tennessee Knoxville Mission, we invite them to share what they’ve learned about being a lifelong disciple of Jesus Christ.
#DiscipleOfChrist
Bobby was found when the missionaries we’re making phone calls on a park bench and he stopped by to use the restroom. He wasn’t planning on being there that day but the missionaries invited him to church and he said “YES!”
His best friend of 28 years and then fiancé hopped out of the car and it turns out she was a long-lost member from South Carolina who wanted to come back to church. She had just recently pointed the church building out to Bobby and said she wanted to go, but was really nervous. Bobby kept saying, “Wow, God knew I needed to come to this park tonight, and you guys just called after me, He is amazing!”
In our first lesson with Bobby, we taught the restoration and Jodi shared her testimony and insights too. As we shared Joseph Smith’s First Vision experience, Bobby immediately responded saying “I know that is true!” He was so aware of the spirit testifying of the truth of our message.
The missionaries recognized his tremendous faith and desire to follow in Christ’s footsteps and invited Bobby to be baptized right on the spot, and he happily accepted! He began reading the Book of Mormon every day and attending church every week. Mike n’ Ikes became his new best friend to help overcome an addiction he had, and he likes to joke that their trash can is only full of empty Mike n’ Ike boxes.
The branch and missionaries planned Bobby and Jodi’s wedding just 3 weeks out so that he wouldn’t have to wait any longer to be baptized. Their wedding was beautiful and they already look forward to the day they can be sealed.

Bobby never missed a lesson and was so excited when he understood what a covenant was. He loves to say “ahh that special promise!” And the day he was baptized he remarked that he finally got to make his special promise. Jodi’s Aunt and Uncle drove down from Kentucky to be able to attend and baptize Bobby, and the love and support from everyone in the branch was wonderful. He was baptized on June 23, 2024.

Bobby loves sharing his love for Jesus Christ with everyone around him, in every possible way. He is so excited to continue to learn and grow and says “Don’t forget enduring to the end!”

#TKMTenderMercies

As missionaries depart from the Tennessee Knoxville Mission, we invite them to share what they’ve learned about being a lifelong disciple of Jesus Christ.

As missionaries depart from the Tennessee Knoxville Mission, we invite them to share what they’ve learned about being a lifelong disciple of Jesus Christ.
On the May 11, 2024, Elder and Sister Christensen were knocking on the door of less active member. Without response, they started to return to their car. In the accompanying house, a man was sitting on the doorstep. With hope in her heart, Sister Christensen made her way to inquire of the whereabouts of his neighbor. While asking this question, Sister Christensen felt the strong impression to invite this man to church. Though they didn’t speak the same language, through Elder Christensen and modern technology, they invited him to come to church.
Rafael, hoping for something that could cure his emptiness, decided to accept the invite and try it out. Rafael quickly started meeting with the local spanish speaking missionaries, Hermana Arnold and Hermana Berrett. After meeting with them the first time, he had a good feeling that led him to come to church. His experience there filled him with a peace, different than anything he had felt before. He related it to feeling the presence of God. He felt healed from his emptiness and distance from God.
Following his church attendance, he continuously met with the missionaries and felt a change begin in his life. He shared, “I started to have a motivating faith in God to be baptized.” His thoughts, once dark and depressing, became focused on scripture and God’s plan for him.

In the third lesson, he asked how he could be baptized and what he needed to do to make it happen. After learning the necessary steps, he readily and happily accepted a baptism date, the gospel, and all it has to offer.
His original baptismal day was the week prior. His work situation as a construction worker had been unaccommodating to put it simply. Days or even weeks would go by without being called into work which made it imperative to take any project he was offered. Imperative not just for his financial security but for the health of his son.

Before his baptism, his son had been ill in the hospital for some time, and the money Rafael made here was then sent in order to pay for medical expenses in Venezuela. The week he was originally set to be baptized, he hadn’t been offered any projects in over a week. That Thursday night, he received a call from his boss with a project in North Carolina. Taking this project would prevent him from receiving his baptismal ordinances.

Out of pure necessity, he left for North Carolina. The baptism was quickly rescheduled for the following Sunday. Rafael was not offered any jobs that week, but at the last minute he was offered an opportunity to work. Though he needed the money to provide for his family, with faith he declined the offer and was baptized and confirmed a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints on June 23, 2024. The empty hole in Rafael was eternally filled. He said “before I met the missionaries I was depressed, I used substances to cope, but now, I don’t have these feelings anymore, and if I do, I turn to the scriptures.” Since his day of baptism, the peace he received has never left.

Rafael was blessed spiritually and emotionally by the covenants he made with God, but God was not yet satisfied with his work. After working for the construction company for 8 months, he started looking for a job that would pay and treat him honestly. The day after his baptism he was offered a position at a company which requires him to work Monday-Friday, giving him the weekend off. He then received other news. His son, who had been in the hospital for a long time, was due to finally be released. Though the sacrifice of work seemed impossible, outlandish, and a bit irrational, in turn the windows of heaven were opened, and blessings descended upon Rafael and his family.

Lili’s story begins when her mom, Tiffany, was found by missionaries and baptized last November. As Tiffany learned, she let her kids learn as well!! At first, Lili didn’t know if she believed it. But as she kept learning with the missionaries, and had various discussions with her mom, a seed of faith was planted.
She began to believe that this is the Gospel, but was unsure if she was ready to take the big step of baptism. To add to the her unsurity, she and her family moved, away from the ward they had grown to love. Even through this fear, she kept pressing forward in faith!!

As she was experimenting upon the word of God, she decided to go to Girls Camp with her sister, Alex! There, she experienced her first Girls Camp testimony meeting (tears and all) and she said that it was so powerful! The Spirit touched her, and when she got home, she surpirsed her mom with the exciting news that she was ready to be baptized!! That seed she had planted has now grown into a beautiful tree!
Working with our wonderful ward, Lili and her family were able to come and join us for a Linger Longer Sunday, and Lili was baptized after, on June 30th!! After she was Confirmed, she was positively glowing!!! She was excited to head to FSY the very next day, and test out how wonderful the Holy Ghost can truly be! We’re so happy for Lili, and excited to see her grow even stronger in her faith!! One of our members, Brother Boyer commented, “The [girls] camp wasn’t perfect, but it was for her.”

#TKMTenderMercies
After doing companionship study in the park on April 13, 2024, the missionaries introduced themselves to a group at an adjacent picnic table and shared a couple of verses from Enos with them. Lilly happened to be babysitting with the family at the time. While the family she was with wasn’t interested, Lilly piped up and said she might want to meet with us again.
A few months earlier, Lilly had prayed for some guidance and she thought that maybe this could be God’s way of answering her prayer.
She didn’t know much about the church, but she was an excellent researcher. She remembered a youth in our ward, Anderson Griggs, sharing his testimony with her when having a conversation about religion at a football game. She also recalled her fellow clarinetist, Lilly, being a member as well.
Before her first visit with the missionaries, Lilly had researched even as far as the Word of Wisdom, and she took a particular interest in God’s Plan of Happiness. The missionaries gave her a Book of Mormon, and she studied it. One of her favorite teachers caught her reading it in class and was sure to let her know that it was a, “good book!”

Her family was not very supportive of her decision to keep learning. She struggled to defend her newfound belief to them because it was simply a feeling. Nonetheless, she would come home after school to take a nap, pray, and read her Book of Mormon. She explained the feeling as happy, excited, and calm at the same time.
A few lessons later, the missionaries were teaching Lilly about the Restoration of the Gospel of Jesus Christ through the Prophet Joseph Smith. They stood in front of a painting of The First Vision, and despite not planning to invite Lilly to be baptized, the spirit was too strong not to. Lilly was beaming and so excited to be invited to make her first covenant.
As she was preparing, she found herself feeling down and alone in the band room at school. She remembered a song that she heard on a church video of the Knoxville, TN temple. She also heard it the first week she was at church. Hymn number two, The Spirit of God, had quickly become her favorite. She memorized the words, played it on her clarinet, and sang it on that hard day at school.

Her testimony grew day by day, and she could not wait for her baptism day. Lilly was baptized on May 24, 2024. On the day of her baptism, she beamed with pure joy as she listened to her good friend Lilly Jones give a talk on baptism. In her talk, Lilly said she had a thought several months prior to pray for Lilly despite not having talked to her in several months (she is a few years older than Lilly). Her first three missionaries gave her a Book of Mormon with their testimonies written inside.

Attending the temple to do proxy baptisms was another exciting day for her! Along with doing a few baptisms and confirmations, she got to watch someone be baptized on behalf of her grandfather. She said her favorite part was sitting in the lobby of the temple afterwards and just feeling peaceful and happy to be there.

#TKMTenderMercies
by Elder Duncan Lewis
Conversion: “Denotes changing one’s views, in a conscious acceptance of the will of God… Complete conversion comes after many trials and much testing.”¹
Whenever a story is told, or a piece of someone’s history is shared, it is important to reflect on the context of why it is being shared. For example, a parent might share a story of them being burned by a stove in the context of their children getting too close to a hot burner. A friend might share a fun memory from years ago in the context of the two of you reuniting and reminiscing after not seeing each other for a while. We have four different recorded accounts of Joseph Smith’s first vision, all with the same consistent story but with varying amounts of detail and depth due to the context of why and when he was sharing it.
I want to share my conversion with you. If you’ve served around me, you have probably already heard it before. However, whether you have heard it before or not, I share it in the context and hope that you too can know that God will succor and strengthen you through the “many trials and much testing” you will face on your path to true conversion.
I grew up in a mixed faith household. My mother was raised in the church and is still an active member. My father was raised Christian, joined the church, but overtime became Atheist. I can’t remember a Sunday where my father attended church with us, but my mother is a valiant woman and she took my sister and I every week to church on her own. She is an integral part of the reason I am on a mission and writing this conversion story.
At the age of six, I knew the Book of Mormon was true, and subsequently, I knew that I had a Heavenly Father who loved me. I had a very powerful experience with the Spirit after I prayed to know the truthfulness of the Book of Mormon. I like to say that it hit me like a bullet train. I went from kneeling down at the side of my bed, to crying because of the feeling the Spirit brought. Like Joseph Smith, from that moment on I felt I could say that “I had [felt the Spirit confirm the truthfulness of the Book of Mormon]; I knew it, and I knew that God knew it, and I could not deny it.”²
At the age of 8, I desired to be baptized because of the truth I knew. However, my dad did not give me permission to be baptized. He felt that 8 years old was not old enough to make such a lasting decision. Due to that fact, church policy would not allow me to get baptized until I had the permission of both of my parents, or until I was an adult.
At this point in my story, most people like to ask me about my relationship with my father or with him and my mother. I would like to assure you I love my dad and he has been a wonderful parent to me. He and my mother also love each other and he has been supporting her through some health troubles she’s been facing recently. While he and I disagreed on me being baptized, you can see it from his perspective, He was just a parent trying to make the best decision for his child and not wanting to let me make any hasty life choices that I wasn’t prepared for or had a full understanding of yet.
However, my inability to be baptized did cause some heartache. It was very hard for me to understand at that age why all of my other friends could get baptized and I couldn’t. Same with the sacrament and the temple. It was really painful at some points to see all of my friends get to pass the sacrament while I just sat with my mom and sister. Or when we went on a youth temple trip, I remember everyone else going inside, while I stayed outside with my mom and helped clean the grounds. The young men’s leaders did their best and tried to include me, but sometimes I honestly just felt more excluded when they did. They let me sit with the other deacons before the sacrament was blessed, but it just reminded me that I couldn’t participate like they did when they all stood up and took a tray while I was left alone in the pew. There were times I would have to leave cousins’ baptismal services crying because I wanted to be in the font so badly getting baptized myself. I couldn’t understand why if it was a commandment and I wanted to do it, I couldn’t.
Luckily, I had my mom, really great friends, and some amazing bishops and youth leaders who supported me through the ten years I had to wait to be baptized. When things were hard, they helped me out and kept encouraging me forward. I could also feel God’s love empowering me too. I knew baptism was something He wanted me to do, so I waited. Eventually, I turned 17, and close to turning 18 I went through all of the missionary discussions in about 3 weeks, I had my baptismal interview by a missionary over zoom, and eventually was baptized a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, on my 18th birthday.

Almost all of my extended family on my mom’s side showed up, and my dad even supported me as much as he could by making lasagnas for everyone (my extended family is pretty big, so we needed a lot of lasagna). The circle for the confirmation to give me the gift of the Holy Ghost was probably 25 people big. It was one of the best days of my life.
If you had asked me if I was going to get baptized when I was 8, or 10, or 14, or 17, the answer at each age would have been a resounding yes each time. Before my baptism, despite the hardships, I had no doubt in my mind that someday I would be baptized a member of the church. However looking back I see so many scenarios where it might not have worked out the way it did. Maybe my mom stopped going to church because it was too hard to do it on her own, and so I stopped going too. Or maybe if my friends had moved away or I hadn’t had their support for some reason and I strayed off the path during middle school or high school. Or maybe if my leaders just saw an unbaptized youth and treated me differently than everyone else to the point where I didn’t want to join the church anymore. Any number of different things could have happened in the ten year time period from 8 to 18 where I could have lost my desire to be baptized, and yet those things didn’t happen.

As a noun WordWeb defines succor as “assistance in time of difficulty.” And as a verb it defines it as “help in a difficult situation.” Alma 7:11-12 says, “And [Christ] shall go forth, suffering pains and afflictions and temptations of every kind; and this that the word might be fulfilled which saith he will take upon him the pains and the sicknesses of his people. And he will take upon him death, that he may loose the bands of death which bind his people; and he will take upon him their infirmities, that his bowels may be filled with mercy, according to the flesh, that he may know according to the flesh how to succor his people according to their infirmities.”
I’ve always interpreted that scripture to mean that Christ will empower us and help us through our trials by lending us His divine strength. And while that is true and I promise He will do that, I have come to realize that the Lord will succor us in more ways than that. He will provide family members to teach you and help you through the hardship. He will give you friends that will encourage you and help you maintain your standards. He will give you leaders to guide and support you. He will give you experiences with the Spirit that will strengthen your testimony to overcome the trial in front of you. And there are countless other ways He will succor you throughout your life. The Lord has succored me in many different ways throughout my trials, and without His help and other people being instruments in His hands, I don’t think I would have been able to make it to my baptism.
“And there was not a wicked man slain among them; but there were more than a thousand brought to the knowledge of the truth; thus we see that the Lord worketh in many ways to the salvation of his people.”³
I promise whether you are going through a trial right now, or one is awaiting in your future (because the trials will come), that the Lord is succoring you today, and He will continue to do so the rest of your life. He will be your “[H]elp in a difficult situation.” His succor will come in many different forms, because He “worketh in many ways to the salvation of his people.”

Some of the ways He has helped will not even be realized until you look back after your trial has ended and you can more fully see where His hand was assisting you. He will never forget you. You are known and watched over by the Almighty God Himself. The most powerful being in the universe is supporting and strengthening you. If you ever feel weak or downtrodden, the Savior of the world himself said, “I will not leave you comfortless: I will come to you.”⁴ Trust in that promise from Him to you.
Elder Holland stated “I testify that you have not traveled beyond the reach of divine love. It is not possible for you to sink lower than the infinite light of Christ’s Atonement shines.”⁵ No difficult situation, caused by an outside force or by ourselves, will “separate us from the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus our Lord.”⁶
You are and will be succored by Jesus Christ, the Lord Omnipotent. That is not a statement of belief, that is a statement of fact.
I testify to you that I know that my Savior and Redeemer lives. I have felt the succor He gives to me. I have been converted through my many trials and much testing to the Gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ, and know that you can be converted too. I have felt His love and know that I have a Father in Heaven. I know the Book of Mormon is the word of God, and that Christ’s church was restored through the Prophet Joseph Smith. I will follow Jesus Christ for the rest of my life.
In the name of Jesus Christ, amen.

¹ – Conversion definition, from the bible dictionary
² – JS-H 1:25
³ – Alma 24:27
⁴ – John 14:18
⁵ – The Laborers in the Vineyard, April 2012
⁶ – Romans 8:39 (35-39)
#TKMTenderMercies