If there are
problems in the mission that you can give me light on so that I can help your
president and help you, that's what I'd like. If there are situations that are
difficult, if there are problems that are unknown—let me give you one example.
In one of the
missions I found a bad situation. One or two missionaries had been breaking
rules (as the president has talked about this morning). They began to break
some rules, just—all they did was to just go over to a certain home every
Sunday night for a dinner. The president didn't know anything about it. It
wasn't very serious—they should have been home studying—but it was a regular
thing every week. After a little while these missionaries were bringing others
and pretty soon they were dancing on Sunday night, a few of them. And then they
were doing a little flirting and then a few of them of to playing cards there
every Sunday night. And then they were dancing in the dark with some of the Saints'
girls!
The next thing we
knew there was an excommunication. I came there and the things were revealed.
found at there was only one boy who had actually gone to the extreme where he
had to be excommunicated; ere were about eighteen missionaries in this area who
had followed like sheep over the ledge. They had not intended to do anything
wrong, but they had just kind of followed the leadership. They had gone there
to the meals, and they had gotten into little flirtations—not too deeply, but
the thing is that there were eighteen missionaries who knew that this boy had
gone too far. They knew that he was necking and petting, but not one of them
would ever tell!
When I
interviewed them and visited with them, I said, "Why didn't you tell the
president that conditions were bad?" One of them said, "Well, that's
none of my business! This elder can do as he pleases! If he wants to wreck his
mission, that's okay with me, it's his business, it's his mission! If he wants to
ruin his life that's up to him; it's his life!"
And then I said
to these elders, "Well, what about your mission? Isn't this your mission
too? Are you willing that one person will do more damage than you can repair?
Are you willing to have some missionary nullify all that you've done here?
You've spent twenty months here, Elder, and done remarkably good work. Are you
willing that one scandal—one scandal in this out-of-the world place should
neutralize all that you've done? All of your efforts? That's what happens! Are
you willing to do that?" He said, "Well, I hadn't thought of it like
that."
"But that's
what happened, isn't it, elders? This is your mission! This is your Church! One
scandal in a community is enough to annihilate the work of all of you, maybe
all the work you do cumulatively, for all your two years—neutralized by one
scandal in the community! Do you think that you have a loyalty? Where are your
loyalties? Are you loyal to yourself? Are you loyal to your companion? Are you
willing to let him go on, and on, and on until he breaks his neck?"
When he was
excommunicated, it was a sad day in that mission because he was a fine young
man and all the missionaries loved him; and some of them were weeping at day. I
remember! Some of them were weeping tears. Their brother was being excommunicated
from the Church and sent home in disgrace!
And then I said
to them, "Elders, do you know who excommunicated is boy? Not me, not your president,
not the elders' court. It was you! You excommunicated your brother. How? Well,
if you had gone to this boy when you saw him breaking mission rules and you'd
said, 'Elder, let's not do at. That disturbs our whole program. We lose
spirituality, all of us, when things like this happen!'" Now suppose that
he didn't yield, and you said to him again, "Elder, you shouldn't do that.
We can't be doing those kinds of things."
And then suppose
you'd gone a third time and said, "Elder, I'm sorry, but if you don't
desist I'm going to have to report to the mission president, because I'm not
going to have you destroy yourself. I think too much of you. I'm not going to
have you destroy this mission. I think too much of it. I'm not going to have
you destroy my work. I've worked too hard to have it all go to the wind. If you
don't desist I'm going to tell the president, not as a tattle-tale but so that
he can protect the whole program."
You see, there is
nothing ugly about that, is there? That's the way it should be because our
loyalty is first to the Lord, to the Church, to the mission, to the world,
isn't it?
One more little
incident that is connected: In one United States mission, one day a neighbor
came into the home of a new member. The neighbor was not a member, but she came
and she was just used to walking through the door—you know, she didn't always
knock. So she came over to this house one day and she saw her friend, the
Latter-day Saints sister, sitting on a chair here and an elder at her feet—this
will shock you—trimming her toenails or painting her toenails or something.
Well, now, that
isn't unpardonable sin, but it was indiscreet, wasn't it? Even if nothing else
happened, he was sitting on the floor and didn't have on his tie and coat; and here
was a woman partly dressed, and he was painting her toenails or something! Anyway,
that city was closed, absolutely closed to missionary work for twenty years! Do
you think missionaries could go into that city? Why, of course, they couldn't!
Because there w still the memory of this indiscretion. They hadn't committed
sin; at least, I' quite sure he had never committed an immorality. I think it
wasn't any more than an ugly indiscretion. It was ugly enough, wasn't it? It
was what it led to—you see.
That's why I say
this mission belongs to you. There are 150 of you, and this mission belongs to
all of you. If anything happens to any part of this mission it gets a black
eye. It makes it more difficult for us to get missionaries in. It makes it more
difficult to do anything! And it makes it more difficult for you to go into the
homes where they have heard ugly things about the Church. That's why one elder
isn't by himself. He can't be a loner. He has got to fit into the program,
hasn't he? And every one of you is interested. Every one! And you can't afford
to let your companion or anyone you know do anything very serious because it
all brings trouble to you and to the whole program.
Well, think about
that a little because some people say, "I'm not going to be a stool
pigeon! I'm not going to tattle. I'm not going to be telling on people."
It isn't that at all. It's a reporting, just as if you saw a couple of robbers
going into your neighbor's home. Would you say, "Well, I won't tell on the
robbers. I won't do anything about it. Let them go. It's up to them. It's up to
my neighbors." No! We do become involved. We'd rush to the
telephone, we'd call the police, in every case, wouldn't we?
If we saw
somebody being injured, being killed—in New York, some time ago, a girl was
stabbed and cut all to pieces by some maniac; and there were many people who
saw it and did nothing about it! She yelled for help, screamed for help, said,
"He's killing me," but nobody would move. They didn't even call the
police, and there she lay—finally dead on the street. Nobody would involve
himself.
It's time we
begin to get involved when involvement is proper. And when any missionary in any
mission begins to break mission rules, it's time that all his companions should
become involved. It doesn't mean that they take over. It doesn't mean that they
get ugly and mean. It just means that they are interested and involved. There
is a nice way to do it. I tell you that there wouldn't be very many broken
rules if one missionary would just say to the other, "Brother, let's not
do that. Let's not stand there and talk to those girls. That isn't good."
And if we stop it
when it's fresh—when it's young you can stop it, but when it gets deeply
entrenched, that sin is awfully hard to dig out. And many times we have to send
missionaries home to their families in disgrace, with excommunication
frequently because maybe their companions didn't love them enough. Maybe their
companions weren't helpful enough to say, "Well, now, you're getting off
the line just a little here. Let's not do that! Let's get busy and do this, and
this, and this."
This one program
we are all concerned about. These mission rules, you see, are very important.
We've had 137 years of experience. Now, that ought to be enough experience to
prove something, shouldn't it? Through 137 years we have come to the conclusion
that if two people will stay together, the chances for sin or serious trouble
are reduced about 98 percent. Once in a great while two companions will both go
sour at the same time, but it isn't the usual thing.
If missionaries
will, when they leave Salt Lake City, the Mission Home, the day they are set
apart—if they will just lock their hearts! If you've got a girl in there,
that's all right; lock her in. But if you haven't got one in, then lock it
against all other girls of every description! Though the same applies
for young women, I am talking mainly to you elders. You lock your heart and you
leave the key at home. And you never open it here. It's impossible to fall in
love with someone unless you open your heart. Your heart is the only organ that
has any ability to get into love, you see; and when a missionary says, "I
just fell in love with a girl," well, that's as silly as it can be. Nobody
falls in love unless they want to, unless they're trying to. Nobody does,
nobody ever did.
So we just don't
fall in love unless we are fooling around. We never fall in a crater unless we
are somewhere near the edge of it. I have been up to Vesuvius and on a number of
craters and volcanoes, and I know you just don't ever fall in a crater unless
you are on the edge of it. And so you just keep your hearts locked. I said lock
them in Salt Lake when you leave the Mission Home, and don't give a thought to
it. But if you go around and say, "Well, she is kind of a pretty girl. She
surely is a sweet little thing. She's a nice girl. I'd like to talk with her—I'd
just like to visit with her," well, you are in for trouble and that trouble
can bring you a lifetime of trouble, a lifetime of regrets if you continue on
with it.
So, can I impress
that again? Lock your hearts and leave the key at home! Wherever you live,
leave the key home with your folks. And your heart—it's only that part of it
that deals with people generally that you open up. We just can't
tolerate it, can we? We can't individually, we can't totally.
Someone said, "Well,
is ere any harm in marrying a Mexican girl if you are working in Mexico?"
No, that isn't any crime, but it proves that some missionary has had his heart
open. He has unlocked it. Is it wrong to marry a German girl when you have been
on a German mission? Why, no, there is no crime in that, if you met her some
other way. But when you meet her in the mission field and you have opened, I
tell you it isn't right! And you have shortchanged your mission.
Just keep your
hearts locked. Your whole thought should be missionary work. How can I make it
more plain and more important than that? I'd like to because there is no reason
whatever for any missionary to ever become involved, not even in a decent way,
with any girl in the mission field. It isn't the place! You guaranteed, you
promised. You went through the temple. You remember what you did in the temple?
Remember you promised you'd do all the things the Brethren request of you, to
live the commandments. That's one of the commandments when you go into the
mission field: "Thou shalt not flirt. Thou shalt not associate with young
women in the mission field, or anyone else, for that matter, on any other basis
than the proselyting basis." You promised, and you would not want to break
a promise you made before the Lord in the Holy Temple of the Lord. And when you
wrote your letter (of acceptance) to President McKay, that was implied in it.
You knew, of course—every missionary knows— that he isn't going out to court,
at he isn't going out to find a wife. He's got plenty of opportunity when he
gets home, and the mission field isn't the place.
Sometimes we find
a young man who has not been popular at home; he has been very, very backward
at home and he hasn't had many dates. And so when he gets out into the mission
field and somebody flatters him a little—some girl shows a lot of interest in
him—why, he's flattered. He thinks all at once, "Well, that's whom I should
marry." I say this once more by repetition and for emphasis: you lock your
hearts at home, and if you haven't done so, do it now and send the key back.
You will not permit any impression, any romantic thought or impression in your
mind. For two years you have given yourself to the Lord, totally to teach the
gospel to the world. When you have done this perfectly for two years and then
you go home, you are infinitely more attractive, more able, more dignified,
more mature to make those important decisions for your life in the matter of
personages to enjoy eternity with you.
Well, I didn't
intend to get on that, either, but I've been on it, and I hope I have not been
offensive in it at all. But I hope you got the spirit of it. And should
you know of any problems that are aborning, problems that are beginning to
develop, some missionary who is getting off the tract, some group that is
getting a little careless about mission rules, you can talk to them in a sweet,
kindly way. If they persist, then there is something else to do and you have a
loyalty to it.
God bless you,
missionaries, and I hope to visit with you a little longer later.
Sister Bryans told both Nathan and I to read and study this article. She recommends that any other future Missionary do the same.
Sister Bryans told both Nathan and I to read and study this article. She recommends that any other future Missionary do the same.
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