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Missionary things

Posted: Mon Aug 13, 2018 7:15 pm
by Bremguy
Yesterday evening, around 9 in the evening, I had to help my son jump start his car at the Safeway parking lot.

I seen the missionaries out and about tracting or ending their day. What kind of organization would let 2 young guys that age wander around at that time of night ? I certainly would not allow that to happen. What sort of Mission President does that? They should be home, relaxing, just being young men. having some fun. I feel sorry for them. I know myself, I hate when people bother me after 8 in the evening, from then on, is time for me and my wife, and if family is here.

I wish I could do something about that. It just makes my blood boil, knowing there is a MP, living off the church dime while sending out young people late on Sundays. I can imagine that the time is largely wasted and only causes a few people to dislike the church.

Re: Missionary things

Posted: Mon Aug 13, 2018 7:32 pm
by mooseman
I thought they still had a curfew before then? When did they change it?

Re: Missionary things

Posted: Mon Aug 13, 2018 7:45 pm
by Phil Lurkerman
mooseman wrote: Mon Aug 13, 2018 7:32 pm I thought they still had a curfew before then? When did they change it?
It's been 30 years, but I seem to recall 9:00 or 9:30 as the time we were supposed to be in by. We usually quit tracting around 8:30ish because it annoyed people. Can't say I blame them.

Re: Missionary things

Posted: Tue Aug 14, 2018 10:20 am
by Corsair
There is a lot of social pressure to keep working right up to 9:30. I knocked on a few doors after 9:00 PM and never had anything other than annoyed people turning me down as politely as possible. I was always glad to have an appointment that would end around 9:00 so that travel time would remove any chance of feeling guilty about tracting at that time of night.

I imagine that this situation is starting to change. There are now Facebook missionaries who could reasonably talk to people later at night. I can't imagine that tracting has improved at all in the last 30 years since it was inflicted upon my daily routine. Perhaps I can ask the missionaries in my ward when I next see them.