Monday, October 29, 2018

Hello Everyone!!!!!!!!

What a week this week was! We had a lot of stuff happen this week. We thought that it was time to walk a marathon this week. We went to the end of our area this week. That was horrible... Walking in the hot sun of summer here in Campina Grande. It was a very tiring but a very rewarding experience. We found some really awesome people there who had never been visited by the missionaries or had never seen the missionaries pass there.

We met a really nice woman that gave us a really good juice with a really wierd name. But it tasted like limes and pineapple. Then sitting down with her, we told her who we were, we were looking for a road that she helped us find. Then she asked if she could have our number so we could visit there again. Reaching for the phone to give it to her, I stopped, then reached for a Book of Mormon that I was carrying with me to give to her. We then explained about the Book of Mormon and went into a 2 hour conversation about the gospel. It was a really awesome experience to have and we will visit her later this week. We also met someone else there who had agreed to meet with us later this week as well, who seemed really nice. She gave us soda, which was really nice of her, as well.

So my message this week is from the talk from Neil L. Anderson from this past General Conference. I think it is a very good talk that can help us to see the good out of our trials. So I hope you guys like it. That´s all for this letter. I hope you are all having good times there, and that you are finding the good out of your trials. I love you all, and pray for you all everyday! Thanks for all the confidence that you all give me here in the mission. That´s all for this email. Until the next one!

  • Elder Jacklin encourages us to read on lds.org the October 2018 General Conference talk given by Neil L. Anderson.


In the crucible of earthly trials, patiently move forward, and the Savior’s healing power will bring you light, understanding, peace, and hope.

Monday, October 22, 2018

What´s Up everyone!!!

Hey everyone hows it going. It has been a fantastic week this week. We have done a great work here in this ward.

To start off the week we had Zone Conference it was a really great experience and one of the best conferences that I have seen here in the mission so far. My Pai is an excellent AP!

Later in the week we did some reactivating with the inactives in our ward. We visited a lot of really great people who seem really excited to come back to church and they did. We also had great work with investigators, we met someone from Switzerland and from France. So that was a pretty wild experience, who would have thought that we would find people like this here in Brasil. We are teaching their families because they will be leaving for a little while, but when they get back they will also be taught, and we should be able to baptize everyone there.

We had great success with our inactives in the ward. It also helped the wards frequency go from 75 last week, to 92 the week after. So the work was fantastic with that. We had one who came back to the church after 7 years and another after 12! So it was a great success with them. So this week we had great success with the investigators and the inactives.

So my message today is another talk that I really loved from this conference that I would like to remind everyone about. It is from Elder Ulisses Soares. I love what it talks about and I feel that it can really help with all of us and our work of trying to help the new members stay active. So here it is. Enjoy! I love all of you and pray for all of you everyday. Tchau tchau por enquanto!

Elder Jacklin

Talk: Here is the talk title Elder Jacklin referenced above. You can view it on lds.org
One in Christ by Elder Ulisses Soares
"My beloved companions in the work of the Lord, I believe we can do much better and should do better in welcoming new friends into the church.

What´s going on everybody!!!-October 15th Letter

What´s happenin everybody! This week was a fantastic week to do a good cleaning of our list of Less Actives. We did good work with that this week. It´s a good thing to do as well, because we need to find these people and see what happened to them.

We had one really great experience this week as well. Last week we received a reference from Mexico! What are the chances of that! This person we were able to meet and teach this week, and she seems really interested in what we are teaching. I felt like Elder Rogers in The Best Two Years, when he taught about the Restoration to Kyle Harris and started crying at the end, the spirit was so strong in the room. The only thing is is that it is really difficult to meet with her, because she owns a hotel. But we´ll find the time to teach her.

One other awesome experience that we had this week was when we were doing our List Clean, we found a really awesome member that hadn´t been to church in about 7 months. Well we talked with her and helped her to come back, and she came to church yesterday. She is really happy to be back, and we´ll continue to visit her more and help her reactivate completely.

Well that´s all for this week. My message today is a scripture that I really enjoy from Alma, it´s such a great verse and I know that if we apply it in our lives we will find immense joy. It´s Alma 37:37. That´s all everyone. I´m going to start a new thing here. Humor. I hope you all have a good week full of Success, Happiness, and Sweet Dreams! That´s all from me. Eu amo todos de vocês, e eu vou orar por todos de vocês! Remember that when you are feeling alone, you have my Spirit with you! Tchau tchau!!!

Élder Jacklin

Monday, October 8, 2018

What a weak... but a fantastic weekend!

You guys might ask, why did I spell Week wrong. I didn´t. This week was very difficult for us. But remembering Helaman 5:12. If we hold fast to Christ, then we shall receive strength and have miracles. So the first 5 days of the week were weak. Not much happened, and a lot of our visits and investigators fell. But leading up to the end of the week things started to lighten up.

One of those being General Conference. I´m really excited to see how this whole 2 hour meeting thing will go down this next year. I´m also happy to see that we will start enforcing the name of the Church now. I feel that it is something that will really help the Kingdom grow here on the Earth.

We also had something awesome happen. We were trying to find investigators this week as I said, but weren´t finding any, so we prayed for a miracle from all of our difficulties, and yesterday we received a call from Sisters in Mexico, saying that they had a reference for us. We are going to call this reference today to try and set up an appointment with her. We hear that she is a fantastic person and wants to know a lot about the church. So the blessings at the end of the week were fantastic!

I feel that I shall leave a message bearing my Testimony about Prophets. I am so grateful that at this time in our lives, we have a man that is called of God to receive revelation and can help us to become better. I am grateful to President Nelson and the revelations he receives and I don´t have doubts about any of them. So this is my challenge to you all to find and study words from our prophets and I promise to you that you will find the answers to your questions that you are looking for. I am living proof that this has helped me and I know it can help you all too, with no doubt in my heart. I know that this church is true and that it is the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, not the Mormon Church, or the Latter Day Saint Church, but it is the Church of Jesus Christ, and I know it to be true and I close this my testimony in the name of Jesus Christ amen.

I love you all and pray for you all always. Have a good week everyone! Tchau tchau!

Élder Jacklin

Sunday, October 7, 2018

The Counting down of years, is months now!!!

I know that I haven´t been out for a year yet but, because of VISA´s and such. I guess I could say I hit my year mark, it´s because American Elders only stay in the mission for 22.5 to 23 months in the mission. So it´s kind of a weird thing for me to think about. But anyway.

I wouldn´t say that this week was the best we had a lot of good at the start of the week, but then at the end...

To start off the week we did a lot of contacting and we found many people to teach. We even made a few references to visit before this week so we were going to try and visit with them.

On Wednesday we had a Division with the District Leaders and that was really fun. When we were going home we had one of the coolest things happened. When we were going to teach one of their investigators we ran into the mother of the investigator. She is a Pastor in another church. She had a lot of questions for us. She had a lot of doubts about what we taught. Something really funny, she thought that the Church steals children, that we can have 10 wives or husbands, that we worship Satan but we say that it´s Jesus. Things like that. But that wasn´t acceptable for us to just leave her to think that. So we taught, and this almost sounds impossible and I´m being a little prideful saying this but it was a really cool experience. We taught all 5 of the lessons that we have to her in less than an hour. It was a true miracle that we were able to say what we said in that small amount of time. And we really left a mark on her mind. She said she never knew what we taught, but that she heard from other churches. Like always with everyone. It was a very Spiritual experience and the thing that makes it even more great is that I twisted both of my ankles when we were leaving... How´s that for a twist to the story. But yeah it was really funny and sad because it was very hard for me to leave the next couple of days and we lost a lot of our investigators. So that was a bummer, but I still had that really awesome moment to open the heart of someone to the church. What I hear now is that the missionaries there are teaching her and her son now. And they say things are going really well.

But that about raps up the week. Nothing else really happened. I´ll leave my message now. It´s another talk. I hope you guys like it and I hope it can be of help to all of you in your works. Eu amo todos de vocês e eu espero que vocês tem exito em seus trabalhos! Ter uma boa semana! Tchau tchau!

Elder Jacklin

Our lives of service and sacrifice are the most appropriate expressions of our commitment to serve the Master and our fellowmen.
The atoning sacrifice of Jesus Christ has been called the “most transcendent of all events from creation’s dawn to the endless ages of eternity.”1 That sacrifice is the central message of all the prophets. It was prefigured by the animal sacrifices prescribed by the law of Moses. A prophet declared that their whole meaning “point[ed] to that great and last sacrifice [of] … the Son of God, yea, infinite and eternal” (Alma 34:14). Jesus Christ endured incomprehensible suffering to make Himself a sacrifice for the sins of all. That sacrifice offered the ultimate good—the pure Lamb without blemish—for the ultimate measure of evil—the sins of the entire world. In the memorable words of Eliza R. Snow:
His precious blood he freely spilt;
His life he freely gave,
A sinless sacrifice for guilt,
A dying world to save.2
That sacrifice—the Atonement of Jesus Christ—is at the center of the plan of salvation.
The incomprehensible suffering of Jesus Christ ended sacrifice by the shedding of blood, but it did not end the importance of sacrifice in the gospel plan. Our Savior requires us to continue to offer sacrifices, but the sacrifices He now commands are that we “offer for a sacrifice unto [Him] a broken heart and a contrite spirit” (3 Nephi 9:20). He also commands each of us to love and serve one another—in effect, to offer a small imitation of His own sacrifice by making sacrifices of our own time and selfish priorities. In an inspired hymn, we sing, “Sacrifice brings forth the blessings of heaven.”3
I will speak of these mortal sacrifices our Savior asks us to make. This will not include sacrifices we are compelled to make or actions that may be motivated by personal advantage rather than service or sacrifice (see 2 Nephi 26:29).
The Christian faith has a history of sacrifice, including the ultimate sacrifice. In the early years of the Christian era, Rome martyred thousands for their faith in Jesus Christ. In later centuries, as doctrinal controversies divided Christians, some groups persecuted and even put to death the members of other groups. Christians killed by other Christians are the most tragic martyrs of the Christian faith.
Many Christians have voluntarily given sacrifices motivated by faith in Christ and the desire to serve Him. Some have chosen to devote their entire adult lives to the service of the Master. This noble group includes those in the religious orders of the Catholic Church and those who have given lifelong service as Christian missionaries in various Protestant faiths. Their examples are challenging and inspiring, but most believers in Christ are neither expected nor able to devote their entire lives to religious service.
For most followers of Christ, our sacrifices involve what we can do on a day-to-day basis in our ordinary personal lives. In that experience I know of no group whose members make more sacrifices than Latter-day Saints. Their sacrifices—your sacrifices, my brothers and sisters—stand in contrast to the familiar worldly quests for personal fulfillment.
My first examples are our Mormon pioneers. Their epic sacrifices of lives, family relationships, homes, and comforts are at the foundation of the restored gospel. Sarah Rich spoke for what motivated these pioneers when she described her husband, Charles, being called away on a mission: “This truly was a trying time for me as well as for my husband; but duty called us to part for a season and knowing that we [were] obeying the will of the Lord, we felt to sacrifice our own feelings in order to help establish the work … of helping to build up the Kingdom of God on earth.”4
Today the most visible strength of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is the unselfish service and sacrifice of its members. Prior to the rededication of one of our temples, a Christian minister asked President Gordon B. Hinckley why it did not contain any representation of the cross, the most common symbol of the Christian faith. President Hinckley replied that the symbols of our Christian faith are “the lives of our people.”5 Truly, our lives of service and sacrifice are the most appropriate expressions of our commitment to serve the Master and our fellowmen.
We have no professionally trained and salaried clergy in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. As a result, the lay members who are called to lead and serve our congregations must carry the whole load of our numerous Church meetings, programs, and activities. They do this in more than 14,000 congregations just in the United States and Canada. Of course, we are not unique in having lay members of our congregations serve as teachers and lay leaders. But the amount of time donated by our members to train and minister to one another is uniquely large. Our efforts to have each family in our congregations visited by home teachers each month and to have each adult woman visited by Relief Society visiting teachers each month are examples of this. We know of no comparable service in any organization in the world.
The best-known examples of unique LDS service and sacrifice are the work of our missionaries. Currently they number more than 50,000 young men and young women and over 5,000 adult men and women. They devote from six months to two years of their lives to teaching the gospel of Jesus Christ and providing humanitarian service in more than 160 countries in the world. Their work always involves sacrifice, including the years they give to the work of the Lord and also the sacrifices made in providing funds for their support.
Those who remain at home—parents and other family members—also sacrifice by forgoing the companionship and service of the missionaries they send forth. For example, a young Brazilian received a missionary call while he was working to support his brothers and sisters after his father and mother died. A General Authority described these children’s meeting in council and remembering that their deceased parents had taught them that they should always be prepared to serve the Lord. The young man accepted his missionary call, and a 16-year-old brother took over the responsibility of working to support the family.6 Most of us know of many other examples of sacrifice to serve a mission or to support a missionary. We know of no other voluntary service and sacrifice like this in any other organization in the world.
We are frequently asked, “How do you persuade your young people and your older members to leave their schooling or their retirement to sacrifice in this way?” I have heard many give this explanation: “Knowing what my Savior did for me—His grace in suffering for my sins and in overcoming death so I can live again—I feel privileged to make the small sacrifice I am asked to make in His service. I want to share the understanding He has given me.” How do we persuade such followers of Christ to serve? As a prophet explained, “We [just] ask them.”7
Other sacrifices resulting from missionary service are the sacrifices of those who act on the teachings of the missionaries and become members of the Church. For many converts, these sacrifices are very significant, including the loss of friends and family associations.
Many years ago this conference heard of a young man who found the restored gospel while he was studying in the United States. As this man was about to return to his native land, President Gordon B. Hinckley asked him what would happen to him when he returned home as a Christian. “My family will be disappointed,” the young man answered. “They may cast me out and regard me as dead. As for my future and my career, all opportunity may be foreclosed against me.”
“Are you willing to pay so great a price for the gospel?” President Hinckley asked.
Tearfully the young man answered, “It’s true, isn’t it?” When that was affirmed, he replied, “Then what else matters?”8 That is the spirit of sacrifice among many of our new members.
Other examples of service and sacrifice appear in the lives of the faithful members who serve in our temples. Temple service is unique to Latter-day Saints, but the significance of such sacrifice should be understandable to all Christians. Latter-day Saints have no tradition of service in a monastery, but we can still understand and honor the sacrifice of those whose Christian faith motivates them to devote their lives to that religious activity.
In this conference just a year ago, President Thomas S. Monson shared an example of sacrifice in connection with temple service. A faithful Latter-day Saint father on a remote island in the Pacific did heavy physical work in a faraway place for six years to earn the money necessary to take his wife and 10 children for marriage and sealing for eternity in the New Zealand Temple. President Monson explained, “Those who understand the eternal blessings which come from the temple know that no sacrifice is too great, no price too heavy, no struggle too difficult in order to receive those blessings.”9
I am grateful for the marvelous examples of Christian love, service, and sacrifice I have seen among the Latter-day Saints. I see you performing your Church callings, often at great sacrifice of time and means. I see you serving missions at your own expense. I see you cheerfully donating your professional skills in service to your fellowmen. I see you caring for the poor through personal efforts and through supporting Church welfare and humanitarian contributions.10 All of this is affirmed in a nationwide study which concluded that active members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints “volunteer and donate significantly more than the average American and are even more generous in time and money than the upper [20 percent] of religious people in America.”11
Such examples of giving to others strengthen all of us. They remind us of the Savior’s teaching:
“If any man will come after me, let him deny himself. …
“For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it” (Matthew 16:24–25).
Perhaps the most familiar and most important examples of unselfish service and sacrifice are performed in our families. Mothers devote themselves to the bearing and nurturing of their children. Husbands give themselves to supporting their wives and children. The sacrifices involved in the eternally important service to our families are too numerous to mention and too familiar to need mention.
I also see unselfish Latter-day Saints adopting children, including those with special needs, and seeking to provide foster children the hope and opportunities denied them by earlier circumstances. I see you caring for family members and neighbors who suffer from birth defects, mental and physical ailments, and the effects of advancing years. The Lord sees you also, and He has caused His prophets to declare that “as you sacrifice for each other and your children, the Lord will bless you.”12
I believe that Latter-day Saints who give unselfish service and sacrifice in worshipful imitation of our Savior adhere to eternal values to a greater extent than any other group of people. Latter-day Saints look on their sacrifices of time and means as a part of their schooling and qualifying for eternity. This is a truth revealed in the Lectures on Faith, which teach that “a religion that does not require the sacrifice of all things never has power sufficient to produce the faith necessary unto life and salvation. … It [is] through this sacrifice, and this only, that God has ordained that men should enjoy eternal life.”13
Just as the atoning sacrifice of Jesus Christ is at the center of the plan of salvation, we followers of Christ must make our own sacrifices to prepare for the destiny that plan provides for us.
I know that Jesus Christ is the Only Begotten Son of God the Eternal Father. I know that because of His atoning sacrifice, we have the assurance of immortality and the opportunity for eternal life. He is our Lord, our Savior, and our Redeemer, and I testify of Him in the name of Jesus Christ, amen.