Since the October 2012 announcement that men can begin Mormon missionary service at age 18 and women at 19, the ranks of Mormon missionaries have swelled. Prior to the announcement, 58,500 missionaries were serving; as of this week, that number is now 75,000.
- Missionaries from the South Pacific
- Samoa missionaries Cyclone Evan cleanup 1
- Missionaries interpret for Pacific Partnership 2013 Samoa
- Sister Missionaries Garden
- Books for Fiji (Missionaries)
- Elder Quentin L. Cook greets missionaries in Sydney Australia
- Over 52,000 missionaries serve around the world for no pay and at their own expense
- New Zealand Mormon bishop Matt Murray with young men preparing for missions.
- Sister Missionaries in Fiji
- Sister Missionaries
- Elder Kevin W. Pearson addresses new missionaries at the Missionary Training Centre in Auckland, New Zealand last week.
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The following story and videos about the lives of Mormon missionaries provide insights into what these missionaries do and why they do it.
After the rains of Hurricane Sandy stopped in late October 2012, Elder Jordan Walton, a missionary in the New York New York South Mission of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, recalls driving with his companion, Elder Josh Munday, to affected areas such as Broadchannel and Rockaway to see the incredible devastation.
“I remember as [we] walked down those streets, [we saw] the look on these people’s faces and they did not know what to do,” Elder Walton says. “We started helping them. We started taking out their floorboards, we started taking out their sheetrock, their dirty couches — all the things that they couldn’t use.”
Over the next six weeks, the New York New York South Mission helped orchestrate over 120,000 hours of service from more than 11,000 volunteers. Although not all Mormon missionaries around the world participate in such extensive community service, the story is a reflection of the core purpose shared by each of the Church’s 75,000 missionaries in 405 missions: to invite others to come unto Christ through word and deed.
Following the pattern Jesus Christ established in the New Testament, full-time Mormon missionaries are sent out two by two (see Mark 6:7) to teach the gospel through lessons and service for 18 to 24 months. Men can serve at 18, women at 19; each funds his or her missionary service (an approximate cost of $10,000 to $12,000), sometimes with the help of family and friends. As Christ taught, these missionaries find greater purpose in their lives as they focus on the needs of others — a process that New York New York South Mission president Kevin Calderwood says “dramatically changes their hearts.”
Read more at the global edition of Mormon Newsroom.