Monday, June 30, 2014

Panama Temple Compound

Panama Temple from the street

Jim (Elder Mathieson) in front of the entrance to the Panama Temple Compound

Cheryl (Hermana Mathieson) along side one of the driveways leading up to the Panama Temple

Elder Mathieson in front of the Panama Temple

View of the Panama Temple from the Missionary/Patron Apartments


Missionary apartments are on the left side of the entrance. The Patron Apartments are on the right. The building is twice as long as shown.


Tuesday, June 17, 2014

June 17, 2014

It was another week in Paradise, both Panama and the temple!  It really  is a privilege to be able to serve in the temple!  We truly appreciate our President an his wife!!

This week their daughter came for a visit.  She is such a nice person!  It's been nice for all of us!

A special experience that Jim had this week was while he was assigned to help out in sealings.  A sister who was acting as proxy started to cry after a particular sealing, and even the sealer got teary eyed and choked up.  Jim said the spirit was very sweet and felt that those for whom the dealings were being done had probably accepted the ordinance.  I know that the spirits of those whose work is being done are able to be in the temple.  I wish my spirit was more sensitive to them.

Yesterday after grocery shopping we went to a municipal park called The Summit.  It is funded by the municipality only and the funds generated by donations and the entrance fee to the park.  It is a conservatory for animals rescued, either from illegal exotic pet owners or from being orphaned or injured.  What a marvellous park!  All of the animals are indigenous to the Panama area.  They also have plant species throughout that are plants from Panama.  The park costs $2 for Panamanian citizens and residents, $1 for seniors and students and $5 for non-residents.  Jim and I had to pay $5 because we don't have our residency or our retirement card yet.  They are issued by the Panamanian government to all who are residents.  Women are eligible for the card when they turn 57 or 58 and men when they turn 62 years old.  It is quite a savings!  If you show it to your waiter they give you 25% off your meal.  All of the tourist venues are a definite savings!  The president told us he'll take us to the Miraflores Lock after we get our residency because it is only $1.50 for retired residents, but $15 for non-residents.

We met a lovely family, the Jensens, in church on Sunday.  The woman is originally from Panama and her husband is from the U.S.  They have four children, two girls and two boys.  The girls are 13 and 10. Boys are 6 and 3.  What a nice family!  We were visiting after church and everyone else had already left, when it began raining.  When it stopped the family took off down the hill to catch the bus.  They didn't get very far before it started raining again.  Before long the family returned. one by one, running.  Since it was the lunch hour Jim went upstairs to the apartment and brought them down snacks...chips, cookies and chocolates.  The woman said that she had told her husband it hadn't stopped raining but he thought he knew better.  She said that she had known because she grew up here and knows how to read the sky.  I wonder if we'll ever get to that point.

Apparently it rains for 9 months of the year, but only for short periods of time most days.  After the rain it gets really muggy, but never stops feeling hot.  Yesterday we had a very nice breeze that helped to cool off our sweaty bodies.

Well, Jim went to the temple to study and I told him I'd meet him there so I better get going!

I'm hoping to post pictures this week...

June 10, 2014

June 10, 2014

We can't believe how fast the time is going! We left home a month ago today (date wise)!

Jim is doing good at being able to read in Spanish. He's also beginning to understand some things and trying to speak Spanish. One of the major problems is that so many here want to practice their English.

We spoke in church this past Sunday. Our ward is quite unique. They do half of Sacrament meeting in Spanish and half in English. This made it easy for us. A new sister missionary, to the ward, spoke first. She spoke quite long so Jim and I had to altar our talks. I spoke next and gave my talk in Spanish. Jim was the last speaker and he spoke in English. 

I meant to mention that there's a couple here from Sweden who have come to adopt two children. The boy is 8 and his little sister is 3. What a blessing for all of them! The mother mentioned that the first time they took the children shopping the little girl was excited and ran from thing to thing asking if she could have everything. Apparently it was the first time the little girl had ever been out of the orphanage. I asked them on Sunday how things are going and I was told that they are all adjusting very well. The father's parents came from Sweden too and were at church this past Sunday. Not only do these children have a family now, but they will grow up in the church and will be thus blessed!

Yesterday was P Day, so after shopping for groceries we went for a drive on the Causeway. When they were digging boulders out of the canal they had to find a place to put them, so they decided to use them to connect the mainland with three islands that were offshore. It's a beautiful drive! There are also some very nice looking restaurants and hotels. There is a pathway that runs along the shoreline of the causeway. I told Jim we should take a taxi out there some day and go for a walk. 

President and Sister Boren also took us shopping to an artesian market yesterday. The Kuna Indians here do beautiful work called molas. There are a few Kuna women who belong to the church so I'm looking forward to one day getting a couple of molas made. Hermana Bjornason was shopping for something to send to her mother with one of the daughters of a family in our ward. This girl is a caregiver to Hermana Bjornason's mother who lives in an assisted living centre in Utah. What a small world!

While we were shopping at the artesian mall Jim had a conversation with one of the vendors. She asked him where he was from and when he said Canada she asked if he was a missionary. He told her he was a missionary for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and she responded that it's good to meet some else who loves Jesus as much as she does. She attends another denomination, but at least she's had at least a first contact now with the church. 

The Kuna Indians, yes they call them Indians, are from an island off the Caribbean side of Panama called San Blas. It is apparently still quite primitive. Hopefully we'll get out that way some day. 

The 6th of June marked 38 years ago that my companion and I were able to see the most prepared family be baptized. The children of the sons who were baptized are now serving missions. What a blessing this family have been in my life!!!

Lorraine Doig shared Lister's sister's letter with us this past week. She's serving in the Philippines on a Perpetual Education mission. She was telling about how grateful people are for the help the church provides for them to be able to improve their situations. The Bullock's are doing Humanitarian work in West Africa and are currently overseeing several boreholes to enable communities to have access to clean water. This past Saturday a couple with 2 small children were sealed to each other in the temple for time and eternity. The church blesses the lives of many people in a variety of different ways! The Church is true and is the Lord's Kingdom on the Earth!

Sunday, June 1, 2014

A New Beginning

Thursday, May 15, 2014

We had a wonderful time in SLC at the temple missionary seminar in the SL temple. Our trainers were President and Sister Walker. They have been assigned to be over the training of the senior missionary couples going on temple missions. They used to be the SL temple president and matron.

Sister Walker is one of President Hinckley's daughters. She is so effervescent and has a real fun sense of humour, just like her dad. They were such a fun couple to watch interact with each other!

There were 16 couples going to various places around the world. There was a couple going to Mexico, two going to Guatemala, one to Atlanta, two to Boston, one to Manhattan, two to Washington DC, two to London, two to Hong, Kong, one to Freiberg, one to Paraguay, and us to Panama.

Sister Willis is from Paraguay and I knew her family while I served there in 1976. In fact, one Christmas, while I was at BYU, I brought a friend from Paraguay home with me. Sister Willis is her sister. It's a small world!

A couple more stories to illustrate how small the world truly is. First, we met a Temple Square missionary who is from Taiwan. In talking with her I mentioned that we had the most wonderful elder from Taiwan who had helped to open the Mandarin work in Calgary and how much we all loved Elder Lin. She asked me if Lin was his first name and I replied that I thought so, but that I knew he owned a restaurant. She squealed and said that he was her friend from her YSA Ward. Incredible, eh?

Another experience happened yesterday just as we were leaving Temple Square. I saw a sister's flag and asked if it was Finnish or Swedish. She responded that it was Swedish. I mentioned that I had had a roommate at BYU who was Finnish, but from Sweden. I mentioned her name and the sister missionary said it was her aunt. I gave her my name and email so that perhaps we can get reacquainted.

After our training on the Monday we went to Cotton Creek Mall to do some shopping and to eat supper. While we were walking around a young man approached us to ask a question. He was from Italy and had come to Salt Lake from another part of the US and loved the spiritual feeling of the city, so decided he wanted to stay. He said he had been told that he could get help to find a job by going to the Church Office Building. He didn't know the name of the building, but just pointed towards it. We told him that that wouldn't be where he would go and helped him find the phone number and address for LDS Employment Services. He had been a lawyer in Sicily and felt there was too much corruption. He had already obtained a green card for the US, so I hope he's able to find a job and the gospel.

We offered to take a woman's picture yesterday and got to talking with her. She's from Florida and is going on a medical mission for her church to Peru. After a fairly lengthy conversation she gave us her business card and we're going to stay in touch.

We are now in the plane flying to Atlanta, Georgia where we'll be catching our flight to Panama. There is another missionary couple on the plane too. They're going to Peru as the Executive Secretary for that area.

May 25, 2014

We arrived in Panama at around 8:55 pm on May 15, 2014. It was fairly easy entering Panama. We were photographed and fingerprinted electronically, and then we went and picked up our bags. We thought we'd have to go through customs, but they just took our declaration form and waved us through.

We were met at the airport by President and Hermana Boren. The ride to the temple took around 40 minutes. The temple and it's compound is beautiful!

Our apartment is lovely! The stairway leading to the second floor is made of granite. It feels as though they used the same materials in the apartment complex as in the temple. Our apartment has a desk, a dinette suite with four chairs, a love seat and sofa, a beautiful coffee table and end table, and a queen sized sleigh bed. There are a couple of extra chairs in the bedroom too. They've provided us with a TV, DVD player, a CD player, a phone with a modem and 2 cordless phones. The kitchen has all the necessary appliances. Our apartment is at the back of the complex so our windows overlook the cemetery. It's a nice view and there's nobody around so we're able to keep our curtains open. It's a very comfortable apartment!

We went shopping for groceries our first morning so we could get a few things to tide us over until Monday. We met the Bjornasons. They are another couple who started their mission a month ago. They live across the hallway from us. There are three other couples too. One is from Argentina and the other two are Panamanian.

The President set us apart the first afternoon but told us we wouldn't start working a shift until the coming Tuesday. We studied the sacred cards on Friday and Saturday. I am now able to do anything that is required for a session. Jim has helped out in the baptistery, and been a patron for sealings, initiatory, and several sessions. He understands more than he can communicate.

My first assignment happened to be teaching a group of children, ages 3 to 11, who came with their families and were staying at the Patron apartments. President Boren asked if I would do a short presentation... between 15 to 30 minutes. I took some pictures from the internet and took one of the temple to go along with what I wanted to highlight. We sang a couple of songs from the Children's Sing. One called 'I Have a Family Here On Earth' and the other 'I Love to See the Temple'. The children were quite active until I gave them a pencil and paper to draw their eternal families. They settled down and worked vert hard. Everyone was keen to share their pictures with us. There was even one little boy that insisted I keep his picture. There were two very sweet sisters, one 7 and one 9. The seven year old worked so hard and put in a lot of detail. She even had her own pencil bag and coloured the picture and glued it to the temple pamphlet and temple schedule card I had given her. Afterwards President Boren told me the two girls had come to the temple to find their dad and he talked to them. They shared their pictures and told him what they had learned. I think, all in all, it was a success.

One day I was asked to sit in the Celestial Room and the first two people to enter were a mother and her son. It was beautiful to see the love and joy they both felt as they hugged each other! The boy was quite emotional throughout the entire time he was in the Celestial Room. He was quite overcome by the spirit. It was an honour to witness this!

I've already learned some of the ordinances in Spanish! Jim has participated in several sessions at the temple.

May 26, 2014

It seems that the usual thing to do on P Day is to go shopping for groceries first thing in the morning. Today we went to Price Smart, which is similar to Costco. We bought a few things there, and then went to Riba Smith, another grocery store to finish getting whatever else we needed. There were four couples groceries and only the back of the temple president's van. It was packed!

Later that evening we had a temple missionary FHE. My assignment was to bring dessert. I made peanut butter squares and Cora's brown sugar fudge. There are six temple missionary couples counting the president and his wife. There's a woman who seems to be living in the patron apartments. I'm not sure why. There's also a couple who are in charge of the apartments. Any patrons that show up for the temple on Tuesday are also invited.

Apparently we get together twice a month. The first Monday to have a spiritual get together and the fourth for fun.

June 1, 2014

This past week the coordinators have made more use of me, and on Friday and Saturday they began using Jim as an ordinance worker, not just a patron. He did really good! He had to read in Spanish and he did a good job! I've also learned how to do temple laundry. People who live here are supposed to bring their own clothing, but many are just coming and borrowing. They've started contacting the Stake Presidents to request they speak to the offenders. It takes the sister ordinance workers away from doing ordinances because we have more laundry.