President Thomas S. Monson
said: "Sometimes cities and nations bear special labels of identity. Such
was a cold and very old city in eastern Canada. The missionaries called it
“Stony Kingston.” There had been but one convert to the Church in six years,
even though missionaries had been continuously assigned there during the entire
interval. No one baptized in Kingston. Just ask any missionary who labored
there. Time in Kingston was marked on the calendar like days in prison. A
missionary transfer to another place—any place—would be uppermost in thoughts,
even in dreams.
While
I was praying about and pondering this sad dilemma, for my responsibility then
as a mission president required that I pray and ponder about such things, my
wife called to my attention an excerpt from the book, A Child’s Story of the Prophet
Brigham Young, by Deta
Petersen Neeley (Salt Lake City: Deseret News Press, 1959, p. 36). She read
aloud that Brigham Young entered Kingston, Ontario, on a cold and snow-filled
day. He labored there about thirty days and baptized forty-five souls. Here was
the answer. If the missionary Brigham Young could accomplish this harvest, so
could the missionaries of today.
Without
providing an explanation, I withdrew the missionaries from Kingston, that the
cycle of defeat might be broken. Then the carefully circulated word: “Soon a
new city will be opened for missionary work, even the city where Brigham Young
proselyted and baptized forty-five persons in thirty days.” The missionaries
speculated as to the location. Their weekly letters pleaded for the assignment
to this Shangri-la. More time passed. Then four carefully selected
missionaries—two of them new, two of them experienced—were chosen for this high
adventure. The members of the small branch pledged their support. The missionaries
pledged their lives. The Lord honored both.
In
the space of three months, Kingston became the most productive city of the
Canadian Mission. The grey limestone buildings still stood, the city had not
altered its appearance, the population remained constant. The change was one of
attitude. The label of doubt yielded to the label of faith."
President Monson's talk from October 1983 General Conference. "Labels"
President Monson's talk from October 1983 General Conference. "Labels"
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