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Missionary (LDS Church) - Wikipedia. Missionaries of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter- day Saints (LDS Church)—widely known as Mormon missionaries—are volunteer representatives of the LDS Church who engage variously in proselytizing, church service, humanitarian aid, and community service. Mormon missionaries may serve on a full- or part- time basis, depending on the assignment, and are organized geographically into missions. The mission assignment could be to any one of the 4. The LDS Church is one of the most active modern practitioners of missionary work, reporting that it had over 7. Most full- time Mormon missionaries are single young men and women in their late teens and early twenties and older couples no longer with children in the home. Missionaries are often assigned to serve far from their homes, including in other countries.
Many missionaries learn a new language at a missionary training center as part of their assignment. Missions typically last two years for males, 1. The LDS Church strongly encourages, but does not require, missionary service for young men. All Mormon missionaries serve voluntarily and do not receive a salary for their work; they typically finance missions themselves or with assistance from family or other church members. Many Latter- day Saints save money during their teenage years to cover their mission expenses.
Throughout the church's history, over one million missionaries have been sent on missions.[2][3]Preparation to serve[edit]Significance and basic qualifications[edit]LDS Church president. Spencer W. Kimball said, "Every young man should fill a mission".[4] Completing a mission is often described as a rite of passage for a young Latter- day Saint.[5][6][7][8] The phrase "the best two years of my life" is a common cliché among returned missionaries when describing their experience.[9][1. Although Gordon B. Hinckley had suggested that a mission is not to be a rite of passage,[1. With the usual starting age of 1. Young men between the ages of 1.
This expectation is based in part on the New Testament passage "Go ye therefore, and teach all nations" (Matt. The minimum age had previously been age 1. October 6, 2. 01. Thomas S. Monson announced that all male missionaries, regardless of nation, could serve from age 1. Prior to the announcement, some countries held that male missionaries may be 1. It was also announced that young women may serve beginning at age 1.
In 2. 00. 7, approximately 3. LDS men became Mormon missionaries; from LDS families that are active in the church, approximately 8. In cases where an immediate family member dies, the missionary has the choice to travel home for the funeral or to remain on the mission.[citation needed] Missionaries can be sent home for violating mission rules, and occasionally missionaries choose to go home for health or various other reasons. However, the vast majority of missionaries serve the whole two- year (men) or eighteen- month (women) terms.[citation needed]As of 2. Mormon missionaries were young, single men, 1.
Women who would like to serve a mission must meet the same standards of worthiness and be at least 1. Women generally serve as missionaries for 1. Married retired couples, on the other hand, are encouraged to serve missions, but their length of service may vary from 6 to 3.
Any single retired person may also be called to serve in what is known as senior missionary service. In the last two decades, the LDS Church has stepped up its call for senior couple missionaries. Standards of worthiness[edit]All missionaries must meet certain minimum standards of worthiness. Among the standards that a prospective missionary must demonstrate adherence to are: regular attendance at church meetings, regular personal prayer, regular study of the scriptures, adherence to the law of chastity (sexual purity), adherence to the Word of Wisdom (code of health and nutrition), payment of tithing, spiritual diligence and testimony of God. Other exclusionary factors[edit]In addition to spiritual preparedness, church bishops are instructed to ensure that prospective missionaries are physically, mentally, and emotionally capable of full- time missionary work. In the same speech where he called for "every young man" to fill a mission, Kimball added, "we realize that while all men definitely should, all men are not prepared to teach the gospel abroad."[4] Apart from general issues of worthiness and ability, there are a number of specific situations that will disqualify a person from becoming a full- time missionary for the LDS Church. Those excluded include those who would have to leave dependent children in the care of someone else; young couples who are still of childbearing age; those who are in debt and have not made arrangements to meet these obligations; those who are on legal probation or parole; couples with serious unresolved marital problems; those who are HIV- positive; and those who have been convicted of sexual abuse.
Additionally, members who have submitted to, performed, encouraged, paid for, or arranged for an abortion (except in the case of rape, incest, or the mother's life is in danger) are usually excluded from missionary service, as are members who have fathered or borne a child out of wedlock; men under 2. From the beginnings of the LDS Church, people of black African descent could be members of the church, but up until 1. LDS Church did not call men of black African descent to serve on missions, due to the ban on blacks holding the priesthood. The priesthood ban was lifted during Kimball's presidency and since 1. Mission call[edit]After application to the church and the requisite approval, prospective missionaries receive a "call to serve"—an official notification of their location assignment—through the mail from the President of the Church. The mission call also informs the prospective missionary what language he or she will be expected to use during his or her mission.
Members of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles are responsible for assigning missionaries to a particular mission. A prospective missionary receiving the call to serve is generally considered to be a major event in LDS culture; family members, friends, and members of the prospective missionary's congregation often gather together when a call arrives, which the prospective missionary opens and reads aloud to the group.