Thursday, May 20, 2010

What Is My Purpose as a Missionary?

What Is My Purpose as a Missionary?

Your purpose:

Spread the teachings of the CREATIVITY religion unto your people and to help them to become loyal to their people. Help them to understand the importance of racial loyalty.

Consider this:

• What is my purpose as a missionary?

• What is White Racial Loyalty?

• Why do we preach Loyalty to our people?

• Why must I promote CREATIVITY in a positive way?

• What is the message of CREATIVITY? Why is it so important?

• What is my responsibility in helping others become converted?

• How will I know whether I am a successful missionary?

Your Commission to organize and mobilize the White Race

You are surrounded by people. You pass them on the street, visit them in their homes, and travel among them. All of the ones that are members of the White Race are your brothers and sisters. Many of these people are not thinking in terms for the betterment of their people. Some have personal problems in which they focus on, and others focus on meaningless things that they really should not be focusing on. Most with families are concerned for their families. They need the teachings of our religion in their lives and they need to know that they belong to the most unique and superior biological entity alive on the face of this planet, they belong to the elite- Nature’s Finest, Nature’s greatest creaton in all of the eons of time. They need a revolution of values through religion and they need to be taught that what is good for the White Race is the highest virtue and what is bad for the White Race is the ultimate sin.

The message of Nature’s Eternal Religion will lead to a Whiter and Brighter World. CREATIVITY can be a relief to some of our more racially aware brothers and sisters. When Ehite People encounter CREATIVITY for the first time, they are presented with something that they can dedicate their lives too. CREATIVITY has the FINAL PROGRAM, and the ULTIMATE SOLUTION.

We must as missionaries of The Church (of the Creator), take the Creed to all White peoples the world over. The more our books and literature are distributed, the more our brothers and sisters will come to the truth. You are called to present our religion in a positive way and to do good towards our people. To have faith in CREATIVITY, our people must know that what CREATIVITY teaches is true and then therefore, they must make necessary changes to live their lives according to the Creed and for the best interests of the White Race and the White Race alone.

Reflection Activity:

When you see pictures of castles and all the good places in Europe, you feel a sense of pride in your people and their achievements. Picture in your mind a Whiter and Brighter World. Read Credo one of the White Man’s Bible and write down your thoughts on how you are helping to build a Whiter and Brighter World by being a missionary to your people.

CREATIVITY helps build better families

The Creed and Program of CREATIVITY leads to a family and race-oriented life in which the sanctity of the family unit is protected and viewed as sacred. It is the avowed duty and holy responsibility of each generation to assure and secure the future existence of the White Race on the face of this earth. The greatest contribution one can make is to their White Race, and that contribution is to have children, Nature commands this. The highest law of Nature is the survival and continuation of the species by all means and at all costs! Through the teachings of CREATIVITY, families can resolve misundertandings, contentions, and challenges. Families stay united through TEAMWORK. The family is a unit and is to be held highly.

Missionaries must:

•Memorize the Creed and put it into their own words.

•Know how to answer questions in a correct manner.

•Be able to use examples in “showing” CREATIVITY.

•Discern the thinking and needs of the people he or she is teaching.

•Teach so that others understand your message and are edified.

•Be ordained Reverends.

Helping interested people

Help your people to qualify as CREATORS by inviting them to read the holy books for themselves and also to come to a Church service and to also ask any questions that they may have. The first thing you do when somebody tells you something that is not in accord with Racial Loyalty is act devastated! There simply is no time left in which one can wait and play games. This is important, darn it! If they do not understand why loyalty towards Nature’s Finest, their White Race is important, then teach them with power and authority, and act devastated if they act as if “so what.” Be bold and loving at the same time though. By inviting people to make commitments, you can effectively raise a voice of both warning and hope.

Bringing brothers and sisters into our religion is our central purpose as well as promoting White Racial Loyalty. Increasing membership numbers in The Church alone isn’t our central goal. Our central goal is the survival, expansion and advancement of the White Race. We promote White Racial Loyalty to our people.

A Successful Missionary

Your success as a missionary is measured primarily by your commitment to find, teach, convert and confirm people and to help them with being members of The Church. Avoid comparing yourself to other missionaries and measuring the outward results of your efforts against theirs. Remember, some will, some wont, so what, someone is waiting. Your responsibility is to teach correctly and powerfully so they can make a correct choice. Your responsibility is to teach clearly and powerfully so they can make a correct choice. Some may not accept your message even when they have been shown facts to support our positions and such. You will be saddened because you love them and desire for them to learn the truth. You should not, however, become discouraged; discouragement will weaken your faith. If you lower your expectations, your effectiveness will decrease, your desire will weaken, and you will become disheartened.

You can know you have been a successful missionary when you:

• Love people and desire their “salvation.”

• Live as a model CREATOR.

• Work effectively every day, do your best to help your people, and seek earnestly to teach as well learn and improve.

• Help build The Church.

• Warn about what happens when Nature’s laws are broken.

• Go about doing good and serving people at every opportunity, whether or not they accept your message or not.

When you have done your very best, you may still experience disappointments, but you will not be disappointed in yourself.

Work and Creativity are our genius. We regard work as a noble pursuit and our willingness to work as a blessing to our race.

Ideas for Study and Application

• Prepare a two-minute talk on the questions at the beginning of this chapter.

• Hear a personal testimony from another CREATOR.

• Discuss what it means to be a successful missionary. Invite missionaries to give specific examples of success.

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How Do I Use My Time Wisely?

Consider This

• How can goals help me be a more effective missionary?

• What should be the focus of my goals?

• What are my planning tools and resources, and how do I use them?

• How do I conduct weekly and daily planning sessions?

• How will I know if my goals and plans are helping to further The Church?

You are assigned to spread the Creed in a specific and planned area that is designated for that day. On your off-time, you can and must distribute religious literature. Your purpose as a Missionary and a Reverend is to help others come to understand loyalty towards their people and also to convert them to CREATIVITY. Do all that you can to leave the area stronger than you found it. Meaningful goals and careful planning will help you accomplish what is required of a missionary. As you care for your people in the designated area, you are making a difference!

Key Indicators to Record and Report

• Potential CREATORS considering converting

• Potential CREATORS reading the holy books

• New CREATORS who attend a Church meeting

• Lessons taught to potential CREATORS with a member present

• Other lessons taught

• Progressing CREATORS

• Referrals received and contacted

• New potential CREATORS

• Lessons taught to recent converts and less-active members

Referrals received and contacted: The total number of referrals you have contacted and either taught or asked for a specific return appointment. Once you contact a referral, the referral is moved from the referral pool and is considered a potential CREATOR, and is marked for further follow-ups, or is dropped if not willing to recognize the truth in which we teach. A referral is also considered contacted if after many attempts you cannot reach the person or you find that the address is incorrect. These referrals are sent back to the primary Church group office with a note describing why contact could not be made.

Total referrals received refers to all the referrals you received that have not yet been contacted (referrals from members, potential CREATORS, Church headquarters, and so forth). For reporting purposes, the number of referrals that have not yet been contacted carries over from week to week. Each new referral is added to this number and each referral contacted is subtracted from it. Remember, however, that “referrals contacted” refers to the number contacted in the week being reported.

Activity: Personal Study

In your study journal, list every proselyting activity you have done in your past. For each activity, determine if it had an influence. If it did, write yes beside it. If it did not, write no. For each activity with a yes, describe how it had an impact. For each activity with a no, decide why you did it and whether you will continue to do the activity in the future. Discuss your list with a fellow CREATOR companion, and explain why you marked some activities yes and some activities no. Discuss which activities you may need to stop doing.

You have been given tools to help you record important information about the people you teach. These tools also allow you to share the right amount of information with those who need it, as shown in the following illustration.

Missionary Planner:

• Area Map – Map of the area with an outline of the boundaries

• Progress Records– Progress Record forms

• Progressing Potential CREATORS– Teaching Record forms

• Information about the Area

– Information about the apartment

– Public transportation

– Barbershop

– Laundry

– Places to shop

– Places to avoid

– Contacts

Area Book

Every proselyting area has an area book, which becomes the lasting record of your day-to-day efforts. Update key information daily, and refer to it weekly during your weekly planning session.

Keep it neat, current, and accurate so that any future missionary can build on the inspired service you have given. As invited, take your area book to a Church service.

Record when and how the people were taught and also the person’s status and commitments.

Keep a section where you describe the background of the person or family. Do not include highly personal or negative comments.

Keep a section where you describe important information from teaching visits. You might include concerns people have raised, commitments they have struggled to keep, and successes they have had.

Keep a section where you can track follow-up visits if the person or family stopped wanting information from The Church.

Fill out the appropriate papers on each individual or family.

As a missionary, hit your target area, and then you can consider yourself finished for the day.

Accountability

• Set meaningful goals.

• Choose to be proactive in accounting for your work. Don’t wait to be asked. Don’t require others to follow up with you frequently.

Have a desire to account for your labor.

• Accept full responsibility for your efforts. Never blame others for difficult circumstances or lack of progress.

• Seek to learn from other Reverends, and invite them to suggest ways you can improve.

• Be motivated to do your best work.

You will be reporting what happens frequently to The Church Headquarters.

Focus on this:

• Focus your efforts on your purpose.

• Set goals according to the key indicators.

• Pray your goals and plans.

• Use the area book and the Missionary Daily Planner to help you daily.

• For each key indicator, set goals that help you stretch, exercise faith, and work effectively.

• Conduct weekly and daily planning sessions that focus on helping others progress in the Creed.

Personal Study

• In your study journal, write a one-sentence answer for each of the questions in “Consider This.”

• Take a few moments and think about your final day in the mission field. When that day comes:

– What do you want to say you have done as a missionary?

– What do you want to have become?

– What differences would you want others to notice in you?

In your study journal, write an answer to each of these questions. Determine what you need to do now to realize these goals. Write the plans that come to mind.

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Search, Ponder, Remember

• Be alert. Exercise your body physically before studying. Get up and take a walk before reading.
• Study at a desk or table where you can write (not lying down or sitting on your bed), organize your study materials, and remain alert.
• Study by topic.
• Ask yourself, “What is the author saying? What is the central message? How does this apply to me?”
• Visualize what you are studying. Picture in your mind what you are reading from Revolution of Values Through Religion for example.
• Write in your study journal questions you have, and use the books, essays by reverends, and other study resources to find answers.
• A single paragraph from a Credo may contain several ideas. Underline and mark words or phrases so that you distinguish between ideas in a single verse.
• Share what you learn with other missionaries. You can learn by explaining the Creed in your own words.
• Memorize text that explain and support the principles we teach.
• Use your study journal to record and organize what you are learning. Frequently review the thoughts you have recorded. Organize your journal so that you can easily recall what you have learned.
• Get an overview, either by reading the book, chapter, or passage quickly or by reviewing headings. Seek to understand the context and background.
• Try writing the main idea of the chapter or Credo or paragraph in a sentence or short paragraph.

Marking Pages
Marking pages in the holy books can assist you in thinking deeply about a paragraph or truths in the books. You can mark the pages in many ways. Find a method that works for you. Below are some guidelines for marking pages.

Use pencils or colored markers. Avoid using pens that bleed through the paper.
• Shade, underline, bracket, or outline part of a sentence, an entire sentence, or a paragraph.
• Avoid excessive marking. The benefit is lost if you cannot understand your markings because you have made too many notes, lines, and colors.
• Underline only a few key words to highlight the sentence, section, or chapter.
• Circle or underline key words, and then use straight lines to link closely related words.
• When a series of points in a verse or passage are related, number the points in the margin or text.
• Place a symbol (such as a check mark) on the side of a paragraph worth memorizing.
Marking the pages should help you focus on applying what you learn and on
teaching others. Develop an approach that is consistent and helps you accomplish your purpose as a missionary.

Rate Yourself (1=never, 3=some of the time, and 5=almost always).

– I think about the people I am teaching when I study.
– Throughout the day I think about what I have studied.
– As I study, ideas come to my mind that have not occurred to me before.
– I record ideas in an appropriate place.
– I fall asleep as I study.
– I look forward to individual study.
– I look forward to group study.

The Role of Memorization
Memorize parts of the Creed (as well as current events) to use in your teaching. Commit to memory the sequence of truth in the Credos. Missionaries learning a second language should focus their language study on preparing to teach about CREATIVITY. They should memorize vocabulary, phrases, sentence patterns, and brief statements of the Creed as they appear in the lessons, but only after these have become personally meaningful. Do not memorize entire lessons.

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