(A mission president oversees the 200 or so missionaries within the mission boundaries. Katie will be one of the first missionaries to participate in this new program being launched worldwide throughout our church. There are currently 405 missions worldwide.)
Dear Sister Jacobson ,
We are pleased to extend to you the calling to serve as a Sister Training Leader in the Idaho Pocatello Mission.
You will have the opportunity to attend and participate in our monthly Missionary Leadership Council. Your role as a Sister Training Leader will also include training, encouraging, and watching over the sister missionaries assigned to you. Ever six weeks you will conduct a 24-hour exchange with each companionship of these sisters.
Heavenly Father will bless and guide you as you pray to Him in faith. We know the Lord qualifies those whom He calls
Thank you for your example and service in our mission. Your leadership will bless the lives of many sisters and help the work move forward as we invite others to come unto Christ.
Love,
Marvin T. Brinkerhoff
Mission President
(Please read the following article below for more information on the Missionary Leadership Council that Katie was asked to be a part of.)
April 5, 2013
Sister LDS
missionaries will have key role in new Mission Leadership Council
SALT LAKE CITY — With the recent surge in the number of young
Latter-day Saints choosing to serve as full-time missionaries, The Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints announced to general and area church leaders
during conference meetings Friday the creation of a new Mission Leadership
Council within each of the church’s 405 missions that will include an enhanced
role for the mission president’s wife and a new leadership position involving
sister missionaries.
According to a release posted on the church’s Newsroom website late Friday afternoon,
the old Zone Leader Council in each mission will be discontinued and replaced
by the Mission Leadership Council, which will consist of the mission president
and his wife, the assistants to the mission president, the zone leaders, and
sister missionaries holding a newly created leadership position called sister
training leaders.
“The role of sister training leader has been created as more
female missionaries serve in missions around the world,” said the release. Last
October, when LDS Church
President Thomas S. Monson announced the reduction in the minimum age for
missionary service for both young men and women, sister missionaries comprised
14 percent of the church’s total missionary force. Since Jan. 1, new mission
calls have been extended at a rate of about 1,400 per week, with 36 percent of
the calls going to sister missionaries.
Sisters will continue to participate in missionary districts and
zones, which will still be led by district and zone leaders. The sister
training leaders will be assigned to a certain number of sister missionaries
and will be responsible for their training and welfare in addition to
participating in the Mission Leadership Council. They will continue to
proselyte in their respective areas, but they will also spend time each week
training and evaluating the needs of the female missionaries assigned to them.
The sister training missionaries will report directly to the
mission president on sister missionary needs, the release noted. They will work
closely with the mission president’s wife, who is now being asked to play a
bigger role — depending on individual and family circumstances — in training
and caring for sister missionaries.
“We are
very excited about the new Mission Leadership Council and this role for sister
missionaries,” said Elder David F. Evans,
executive director of the church’s Missionary Department. “It will be a
blessing to both missions and missionaries throughout the world, and better
employ the remarkable faith, talents and abilities of all missionaries.”
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