26 March 2013
Tuesday evening. About 20 and clear. This is the first day we have seen the sun in about a week. It has snowed constantly since Saturday evening. But life is good. The Area Presidency will head toward America tomorrow in preparation for general conference. That should allow me the opportunity to get caught up. I certainly hope so.
It has been a month since I have added to the pollution in the blogosphere and I feel overdue. Thomsen has been pestering me for more pictures and since I have now become so obedient and compliant I can do nothing except comply.
I must mention Joclynn, Nathanael's wife. We almost lost her about a month ago. She went into the ICU with acute respiratory problems, spent three weeks in the ICU and then two weeks (instead of a predicted two months) in in-hospital therapy. She has been home for about five days now and is doing remarkably well, compared to where she was five weeks ago. Marlene and I thank you for your prayers and fasting in her behalf. We give praise to God for her life.
Please try to make it to the end. There are pictures of a Baptist church where Elder E.T. Benson spoke on October 1, 1959 to a protestant congregation and preached the gospel to them in the midst of some of the worst of the Soviet-times, as our Russian friends call them. We visited the church last Saturday afternoon.
Yet more pictures.
Tuesday evening. About 20 and clear. This is the first day we have seen the sun in about a week. It has snowed constantly since Saturday evening. But life is good. The Area Presidency will head toward America tomorrow in preparation for general conference. That should allow me the opportunity to get caught up. I certainly hope so.
It has been a month since I have added to the pollution in the blogosphere and I feel overdue. Thomsen has been pestering me for more pictures and since I have now become so obedient and compliant I can do nothing except comply.
I must mention Joclynn, Nathanael's wife. We almost lost her about a month ago. She went into the ICU with acute respiratory problems, spent three weeks in the ICU and then two weeks (instead of a predicted two months) in in-hospital therapy. She has been home for about five days now and is doing remarkably well, compared to where she was five weeks ago. Marlene and I thank you for your prayers and fasting in her behalf. We give praise to God for her life.
Please try to make it to the end. There are pictures of a Baptist church where Elder E.T. Benson spoke on October 1, 1959 to a protestant congregation and preached the gospel to them in the midst of some of the worst of the Soviet-times, as our Russian friends call them. We visited the church last Saturday afternoon.
Some senior citizens at dinner at Dr. Smart's apartment. Smart/Sonda, Jensen's, Walker's, Jones', Johnson |
We were in the Metropolis mall, looking for a Wendy's hamburger and came across a 3-on- 3 basketball tournament. You can't have basketball w/o cheerleaders, even in Russia. |
A corner of the American Embassy where we went for a ward party. It really was a taste of America. |
Fruits and nuts. |
The mall near our flat has a food court and it is often crowded. We shared a table with Angelic, who was very nice and spoke a lot better English that we speak Russian. |
President Lawrence introducing me just before my stem-winder speech praising the sisters. |
Marlene, Sister Malm and Sister Lawrence. |
More dancers. I think that is Connie & Dave Peterson in the middle of the picture. |
Marlene has just made it out of an ice maze. She was lucky to find her way out. |
A fish that I thought I had seen previously outside the back door of our office building. |
Our next apartment unless we can get the kids to chip into our missionary fund. |
Free outdoor heating station. |
A crystal ball, predicting more cold weather. |
The center of the ice sculpture exhibition. |
Rachael posing for her own sculpture in Moscow. |
Skull. |
Sister J. with Marilyn |
Sister J. in love. |
Me or Axe man. |
The opposite of heated seats, but finally a chair worthy of me. |
How many amusement parks in America run in February at 20 degrees? |
More fun in the sun. |
The Fitzgerald's who had us to dinner. The other gentleman is from the ward they left in Provo. He is now the bishop in that ward. |
Some babe who just had dinner. |
Walking home from work about a week ago. |
A women's conference on a Saturday in the Central Building. |
O.K. being squeezed by Sister Murray. |
Back to Gorky Park, looking for the killer. Actually they Ruskies are celebrating pancake week, or Bliny week. |
Two bliny lovers. |
Stuff for sale, none of it any good. |
Another cute kid. |
The band, making lots of noise and some fun music. |
A couple looking to be photographed. |
A lady with hair to die for. |
A lady with a hat to die for. |
It's not enough that they can all skate. Some of them have to show off. American Christmas music was playing. |
The Ruskies have not heard that you are not supposed to wear fur. |
Andy Warhol is coming to town, or came to town. |
Child labor. |
For Rachael. |
For Carley. |
Yet more pictures.
Chloe, a friend of Sherice Lyman's from near Seattle. Chloe is here studying with the Bolshoi Ballet. |
Snow piled outside the back door of the of the office building. |
Coming home from Sunday dinner. You can't see it very well, but it is snowing and blowing. Boo hoo. |
One of our Russian PA men had to bring his daughter to work last week so she got to entertain herself with a little help from Marlene and Oh My. |
We attended a Russian folk music concert last Thursday evening. Pretty good if you can't get rock n roll. |
We are about 50 yards deep into the Metro tunnel entrances. These pigeons are looking for a little warmth. |
We are about to get inside. It was Saturday so Andrey had to arrange/schedule our visit around the services for the Seventh Day Adventists. We met some and they were very gracious. |
It is a lovely building, much prettier than the black and white picture below would lead you to believe. We are looking toward the front of the building. The pulpit is in the middle of the picture. |
There was a very nice choir practicing on the mezzanine level. The man in the blue shirt is playing a keyboard, not the lovely organ in the background. |
The podium from which Elder Benson spoke, 53 years ago in 1959. |
Earlier this month, the LDS Newsroom published a reprint of U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Ezra Taft Benson’s visit to Moscow’s Central Baptist Church in the midst of the cold war. According to an office memo from Grant Salisbury and Warren K. Leffler, the writer-reporter team who reported on this event:
Many of the reporters laughed about it on the way, because Mr. Benson, who is a leading Mormon, had arranged for us earlier to attend a service at the Latter-Day Saints Church in West Berlin, but all the newsmen found one excuse or another for not going. In Moscow, we had no choice because the cars picked us up at the hotel and stopped at the church on the way to the airport. It was around 7:30 o’clock on the chill, rainy evening of October 1.As the cavalcade of cars arrived at the Central Baptist Church, on a narrow side street not far from Red Square, somebody wisecracked, “Well, boys, you’re going to get to church whether you like it or not.”It turned out to be one of the most moving experiences in the lifetime of many of us. One newsman, a former marine, ranked it with the sight of the American flag rising over the old American compound in Tientsin, China, at the end of World War II.The small church was packed, with people standing wherever they could find room.Secretary Benson and his family were ushered to the rostrum. After a hymn, sung beautifully by the congregation, Mr. Benson began to talk, drawing on his experiences as one of the leaders of the Mormon Church in America. Watching the Russian congregation, you could see tears welling up in the eyes of people as the Secretary’s words were relayed to them through a translator.“It was very kind of your minister to ask me to extend greetings to you,” Mr. Benson began. “I bring you greetings from the millions and millions of church people in America and around the world.”A soft, fervent “amen” came from the congregation. The Secretary continued, “Our Heavenly Father is not far away. He can be very close to us. I know that God lives. He is our Father. Jesus Christ, the Redeemer of the World, watches over this earth. He will direct all things. Be unafraid, keep His commandments, love one another, pray for peace and all will be well.”By now there was scarcely a dry eye in the church. Even the few young people were weeping openly.“This life is only a part of eternity,” Mr. Benson went on. “We lived before we came here as spiritual children of God. We will live again after we leave this life. Christ broke the bonds of death and was resurrected. We will all be resurrected.”At the mention of the promise of life hereafter, muffled sobs could be heard in the small church. These people, after all, were sacrificing their chances of participating in the gains of the Communist society of Russia. Though worshipping God no longer is forbidden in the Soviet Union, those who do so usually find themselves cut off from advancement.Communism in Russia remains avowedly atheistic. In Moscow there is one other Baptist church; there are 23 Greek Orthodox churches, two synagogues and one Moslem temple. In a city of 5.4 million people, it’s a comparatively tiny crack in the godless society. The dedicated Communists, when talking to visitors about religion, usually claim that those Russians who do go to the few churches in the city do so out of curiosity – much as they would visit a museum – and not because of their devotion.“I leave you my witness as a church servant for many years that the truth will endure,” Mr. Benson concluded. “Time is always on our side. God bless you and keep you all the days of your life. I pray in the name of Jesus Christ.”As the Secretary returned to his seat, the congregation broke into the familiar hymn, “God Be With You Till We Meet Again.” They were still singing and waving their handkerchiefs as we followed Mr. Benson out of the church. All the way along the crowded aisle, hands were outstretched to shake our hands.On the drive to the airport one of the interpreters – a young Russian girl who has never known any life save that under Communism – said, “I felt like crying.”1
As backdrop to this event, some 21 to 22 years previous, the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics sought to eradicate the influence of religion in the country.
During these years [1937-1938] the authorities sought the “complete liquidation” (to use their own expression) of the last remaining members of the clergy. The census of January 1937 revealed that approximately 70 percent of the population, despite the pressures placed on them, still replied in the affirmative when asked “Are you a believer?” Hence Soviet leaders embarked on a third and decisive offensive against the church. In April 1937 Malenkov sent a note to Stalin suggesting that legislation concerning religious organizations was outdated, and he proposed the abrogation of the decree of 8 April 1929. “This decree,” he noted, “gave a legal basis for the most active sections of the churches and cults to create a whole organized network of individuals hostile to the Soviet regime.” He concluded: “The time has come to finish once and for all with all clerical organizations and ecclesiastical hierarchies.” Thousands of priests and nearly all the bishops were sent to camps, and this time the vast majority were executed. Of the 20,000 churches and mosques that were still active in 1936, fewer than 1,000 were still open for services at the beginning of 1941. In early 1941 the number of officially registered clerics of all religions had fallen to 5,665 (more than half of whom came from the Baltic territories, Poland, Moldavia, and western Ukraine, all of which had been incorporated in 1939-1941), from over 24,000 in 1936.2
Thanks for your post. We were grateful to hear of your daughter-ln-law's recovery. We can certainly relate to your weather. We still have three feet of snow on the ground and, according to the weatherman, more is headed our way . It was great to see Elder Malm again as he presided at our stake conference here in Green Bay. It sounds like you're deeply involved in the work and having a great time. We will see you again soon.
ReplyDeleteAnother Elder and Sister Johnson