Thursday, January 25, 2018
Wednesday, January 24, 2018
Miskolc Primary
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| Racing to see who can either stack the cups or put the Article of Faith in the right order first. |
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| Watching "The Restoration" video in Hungarian |
Our Miskolc Primary is growing. We now have 8 members coming most of the time and last week a 10 year old boy whose family is investigating the church joined us. We are looking forward to having him continue to join us.
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| Sister Kucskár taught a great lesson on how it is important to build a strong foundation. |
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| Snack time |
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| Our special guest to keep our only boy company. Hopefully, our new investigator will continue to come and then there will be two boys and hoping to add more soon. |
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| Christmas lesson with a red bag which was full of treats at the beginning of Primary. |
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| Sunday practice for the Primary Sacrament Program |
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| The program is over - well done children!! Now it is time to relax, eat, and have fun! |
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| Hungarian sandwiches - open faced bread with butter and kolbasz or liver sausage and topped with ketchup. |
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| Of course, the after program sharing time would not be complete without glitter tatoos. |
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| Gospel pictionary |
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| He's a little too old for Primary, but still likes to join us to help translate for me (his mother is in the presidency) and I think he enjoys to fun and treats we have! |
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| Our fun Primary group. We sure love you and are so proud of you. |
Monday, January 15, 2018
Family Letter
Dear Family,
It was a great weekend. We spent a couple hours at the Red Cross Temporary Family Shelter on Friday night. This time we brought supplies for roasting hot dogs and making S'mores. Since there are no graham crackers in Hungary, we used sugar cones. By the way, it tastes great, and so much less messy to eat. Hungarian marshmallows are a little different. They don't puff up when they are toasted and they sweat instead of turn a golden brown. They taste about the same though. The children, and the adults loved them.

Most Hungarians have never roasted hot dogs. They usually just boil them. Their reaction - we like them, they taste much better this way. We had the biggest group since we have been meeting with them.


When the activity was over, we offered to help clean up. We were quickly told, "No. That is the mother's job." The mothers then came out with their brooms and started working so fast and furiously and had the job done in no time at all. It was fun to watch as they were having a great time sweeping and dancing and laughing.
Well, we have winter! It started to snow on our way back from Budapest
Saturday afternoon and snowed all night. The snow has stayed. The
forecast for Tuesday is snow again! So, our mild winter, like what they
are having in Salt Lake City is no longer!
We are now about 90/95% over the flu and chest colds that we had. I
actually set my alarm for 5:30 am this morning and got up! We still took
naps yesterday after church. But hey, we are old, what do you expect!
Two weeks ago, with a new district leader, he asked a very simple question,
“What does the Miskolc Branch need?” Now the answer to him was even
simpler, “Priesthood holders.”
So for the past two weeks, the four young missionaries have been focusing on
young adult males and families. (It is much easier talking to middle age
and older women. They are more receptive to talk to the missionaries, so
the missionaries have been focusing on them in the past.) The past two
weeks, the missionaries have found families to teach and young adult men to
teach.
Yesterday was the Primary’s sacrament meeting program. Just four months
ago, we had 1 child coming to Primary. Yesterday, 7 children from the
ages of 8 to 11 gave the complete Sacrament meeting program. They talked,
some about 4 minutes and they sang. At church was a family that just
started to investigate the church. They were very impressed. Their
10 year old son told your mom that he wanted to come to Primary. Their 15
year old was interested because the two priests blessing the Sacrament were his
approximate age.
Your mom and I have been preaching to the missionaries to use the Book of
Mormon more. In the past two weeks, they have been and have had
success. We have used large shipping labels and put the following message
on the inside cover of the Book of Mormon. The following is in English,
but we have the message in Hungarian:
“What is happiness?
Have you ever pondered these three
questions: 1) Where did I come from? 2) Why am I here? 3)
Where am I going?
The answers to those questions are the
basis for a life of happiness. This doesn’t mean that we won’t have
challenges. This doesn’t mean that we won’t have disappointments.
This doesn’t mean that we will not have times of sadness. But if we know
where we came from before birth, if we know why we are here on earth and if we
know where we go after death, the joy of that knowledge helps us through life’s
challenges.
This book is a story of two families who
sought to find a better life by praying to God and asking him for
direction. This book is about Jesus Christ. This book is a witness
that Jesus Christ is our Savior, our redeemer and our Lord. It is through
Jesus Christ that we can obtain eternal happiness and the strength to overcome
the trials of everyday life.
Please read this book. Pray to God
about what you have read. Ask God if the messages in this book are from
Him. God will tell you if this book is about His son Jesus Christ and if
the messages will bring you happiness. A simple challenge, “Ask God for
answers!” You will find happiness.
Please read Moroni 10:3/5 on page 627 of
this book.
If you would like to discuss this message,
please call 36-1-488-0660 (Budapest), 60-70-702-1645 (Miskolc), or email 2012782@ldschurch.org
and someone will contact you to discuss your questions.”
Last night, the district leader call and was excited to say that they met with
a family. When they gave them a Book of Mormon, the mother opened the
book and read the message that we had on the front page. She was
excited. Those were the questions that she was wanting to find answers
that were in a religion for her family. Another family investigating the
church!
If you don’t hear from us for a couple of weeks, you will know that we are snowed
in! We hope this week will be fruitful for you.
Love,
Mom and Dad
Monday, January 8, 2018
Bridging the Digital Divide
Click on the link for the entire PowerPoint or see a summary below:
Family Letter
Dear family and friends.
Well, the end of one year on our mission!
Tomorrow marks the one-year anniversary of being in Miskolc! We have been
asked to extend our mission for another month and a half, so we won’t be coming
home until around August 20th. We know that this next 8 months
will go very quickly due to the work that we have started and the work that we
need to do to prepare for the couple that will replace us.
First an update as to what has happened the past three weeks! It started
Monday December 11, 2017. We decided that it was time to start to pack to
go back to Arizona. We got everything packed and loaded in the car and
took off around 2:30 pm Monday afternoon for the airport hotel. After
checking in we went to our room and signed into the hotel’s Internet. The
first message that appeared was “Your flight has been cancelled!” We then
got a message that within 2 to 3 hours we would get our new travel plans.
(What we didn’t know is that if you use a discount online service, we have to
find another flight!) We stayed up until after midnight trying to get KLM
to answer emails, tweets, phone calls, hoping that the new schedule would come.
I woke up about 6:30 am, decided to go to the airport to be there when the KLM
office opened at 8:00 am. The smartest thing I did was to pack everything
I had, just in case we had to leave in a rush. I got the shuttle over to
the airport and was third in line when the office opened. They were
surprised that I was not informed that we had been assigned a flight with Delta
that left at 10:30 am. I called your mom and told her to shower and get
ready very fast. I took a taxi back to the hotel, ran upstairs and got
all of our stuff to get on to the van. I did not have time to shower!
The flight to Amsterdam, then on to Denver was not bad. But the 2.5 hours
of waiting in Denver then to be the last two seats on the plane in the very bad
very little leg room part of the plane was 2 hours of pure torture.
As we came down the walk way into the airport, we saw Ryan going back and
forth. We then saw Kate, bent over backwards looking at us upside
down! Only Miss Kate! It was good to see Mike, Marnee and the
kids. Then off to Anne and Dee’s.
With little sleep and errands to run and kids to taxi, I had an impression to
get as much of my to do list done the first day as possible. A trip to
Scottrade, to Chase Bank, to the ENT doctor for my ear, all in time to pick
Avery up at school!
We didn’t realize at the time, but TJ’s cough was a foreboding sign. Yes,
both of us came down with the flu! For over a week in Scottsdale and two
week in Hungary, we have been fighting the symptoms of the flu and bad
coughs! John Shaw got us flu medicine, just before all of CVS in the
valley ran out of it! I, then went to CVS’s urgent care, took a 4 hour
wait the day before we left to go back to Hungary to make sure that flying was
going to be O.K. I was given antibiotics to combat a bug I had.
The trip back to Hungary was a lot less eventful, other than the fact that the
flight got cancelled and we had to rebook at the last minute. The good
news, the total trip time on the new flight was about 3 hours shorter! But
about 10 miles away from Miskolc, I really got drowsy and am thankful for the
new alarm on the car that tells you that you have gone into another lane of
traffic!
Home (Hungary) has been spent mostly in bed and coughing! We were still
so sick that we didn’t go to church last week. New Year’s eve, we were
wide awake at midnight, due to the war going on outside. (Starting at about 8pm
the firecrackers and fireworks sounded as if cannons from an army were going
off.) There were so much of this that the air smelled of gun powder and
the sky was foggy mainly due to the smoke from the fireworks.
New Year’s Day, we took two of the Elders out of a falu (small village) for
them to teach a young family. The father works in Germany a month at a
time. The good news is that they live only two blocks from the train
station and can get to Miskolc very quickly and not too expensive to go to
church. We stayed in the car and read from the Hungarian Book of Mormon,
we didn’t want to go in and get everyone sick. Later, we learned that we
should have gone in, they got sick anyway!
The next day was transfer day. We lost Elder Lowe (pronouced la owl) from
Seattle Washington. He probably has the best Hungarian in the
mission. He is the new AP in the mission home. Elder Graham from
Utah got transferred to Budapest to be a new zone leader. So this week
was getting acquainted with two new elders, Elder Terry from Arm (Orem) Utah
and Elder Cushing from southeast Kansas. Elder Cushing is a cadet from
West Point, you wouldn’t want him anywhere else with that name!
We got the missionaries to commit to focus on young men and young families in
their efforts. And it has already paid off in finding new
investigators. With the steady brain drain to Germany, Britain and
America, the church is hurting big time for priesthood holders.
Someone asked me in Scottsdale what the church members were like in
Hungary. I said here is a quick description of the members of the church
here:
1.
Many people only stay for Sacrament Meeting.
2.
Many people only come once or twice a month.
3.
Home teaching and visiting teaching is a major problem.
4.
Visiting the sick members of the church is a problem.
5.
Helping those in need is a problem.
6.
The lessons being taught are not very good because the teacher starts to
prepare the lesson during Sacrament meeting.
7.
Very few will help the missionaries.
8.
Very few will help with church activities and parties.
The man I was talking to stopped me. He said, “Jon, you misunderstood
what I asked, I wanted you to tell me about how the members of the church were
in Hungary, not here in Scottsdale!”
So people are the same all over the world! President Monson, what a sweet
man, was the prime example of filling one’s life in the work of the Lord.
Always worrying about the poor, the sick, the needy. Always stopping off
at a hospital or a care facility or a home to visit someone who needed to know
that they were loved and that someone knew they were alive. How long of a
reception line do you think he had when he awoke in Paradise? Think of
the thousands and thousands of people whom he touched. Think of those who
wondered if they were worth anything and then have the prophet of God walk into
their room and say, “Hi, could I please visit with you?” Alma 5:14 “And
now behold, I ask of you, my brethren of the church, have ye spiritually been
born of God? Have ye received his image in your countenances? Have ye
experienced this mighty change in your hearts?” Thomas S Monson was the
epitome of such a person.
You ask what your mom and I are doing in Hungary. Simply trying to be
1/1000th of the person that Thomas S. Monson was. If we succeed, we will
have reached many people who wonder every day, “Does anyone know I am
here?” We have come to realize that the truly lonely and needy are not
the ones begging on the streets. It is the destitute trying to pay the
bills, make sure that heat in coming in the house, worrying about food for
their children. They are the silent ones. The problem, they are the
hardest to find. But those are the ones that Thomas S. Monson was able to
find. Those are the ones that we are attempting to find. Are we
having success, absolutely. We have been called of God to be the face of
Jesus Christ in helping the poor and the needy. We have been directed in
miraculous ways to find those that need help. It is not Jane and Jon
Moser being successful. We would have failed the first month a year ago
if it was left to us. With the Lords guidance and direction, all success
we have had and that we will have is because of Him whom we love, honor,
cherish, obey and serve.
We thank God for sending us Thomas S. Monson to set an example how we all
should deal with those in need. How we should treat all people, with
kindness and respect. May we never lose the memories of Thomas S.
Monson. May we always try to emulate his example of showing love to all
people. If we do, we are only in the service of our God and what could be
more rewarding than serving the Master?
Mom
and Dad
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