Missionary work is essential to
the growth of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Any member of
the Church can do missionary work or share the gospel with other people, but
missionaries are officially called to serve the Lord and assigned a field of
labor.
Elder David A. Bednar of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles spoke about missionary calls in the April
2017 General Conference of the Church. He reminds us that there are thousands
of missionaries called each year – young men, young women, and senior couples.
Each new missionary receives a “special letter” postmarked Salt Lake City.
The letter is signed by the President of
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, and the first two sentences
read as follows: “You are hereby called to serve as a missionary of The Church
of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. You are assigned to labor in the
___________ Mission.”
Please note that the first sentence is a
call to serve as a full-time missionary in the Lord’s restored Church. The
second sentence indicates an assignment to labor in a specific place and
mission. The important distinction expressed in these two sentences is
essential for all of us to understand.
Some members of the Church believe
that a missionary is called to a certain place to labor as a missionary. This
is not the case as Elder Bednar explains above. He continues his explanation of
the differences between a call to serve and an assignment to labor.
Each mission call and assignment, or a
later reassignment, is the result of revelation through the Lord’s servants. A
call to the work comes from God through the President of the Church. An assignment
to one of the more than 400 missions presently operating around the world comes
from God through a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, acting with the
authorization of the Lord’s living prophet. The spiritual gifts of prophecy and
revelation attend all mission calls and assignments.
As further explanation, Elder Bednar
shares some verses of Doctrine and Covenant 80 to show how the call to serve
works. This section contains the missionary call to serve of Stephen Barnett
given by the Prophet Joseph Smith. Elder Bednar continues by explaining why he
chose to speak on this topic.
… My answer to this question is quite
straightforward: my experience has taught me that these principles are not well
understood by many members of the Church.
The single greatest reason for
addressing this matter is what I have learned over time about the concern, the
worry, and even the guilt felt by many missionaries who for various reasons
were reassigned to a different field of labor during their time of service.
Such reassignments sometimes are necessary because of events and circumstances
such as physical accidents and injuries, delays and challenges in obtaining
visas, political instability, creating and staffing new missions, or the
evolving and ever-changing needs around the world in the work of proclaiming
the gospel.
When a missionary is reassigned to a
different field of labor, the process is precisely the same as for the initial
assignment. Members of the Quorum of the Twelve seek inspiration and guidance
in making all such reassignments….
One additional reason I have felt
impressed to discuss this topic is my personal experience assigning
missionaries over many years. For the Twelve, nothing affirms the reality of ongoing
latter-day revelation more powerfully than seeking to discern the Lord’s will
as we fulfill our responsibility to assign missionaries to their respective
fields of labor. I witness that the Savior knows and is mindful of each of us
one by one and name by name.
Elder Bednar concludes his talk by
discussing the need for the personal preparation of each missionary to receive
a call to serve the Lord. He counsels every young man to fulfill his Aaronic
Priesthood duties and to live worthy to receive the Melchizedek Priesthood. He
continues by emphasizing the importance of worthily going to the temple to be
endowed with power from on high. Receiving the Melchizedek Priesthood and being
endowed in the temple are essential steps to preparing to serve in the mission
field. All three areas – priesthood, temple, and mission – require worthiness.
In order to be a true instrument in the hands of the Lord, we must be clean and
worthy to do so.
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