“Tanna’s Miracles,” For the Strength of Youth, Oct. 2023.
Tanna’s Miracles
A drowned truck, a stack of baptism interview forms, and a pair of dedicated missionaries—all were part of miracles in the South Pacific.
Mark J. Messick, president of the Vanuatu Port Vila Mission, got a phone call from the district president on Tanna Island asking that missionaries be sent there. They had 80 people waiting to be interviewed so that they could come unto Jesus Christ and His restored Church through baptism!
President Messick tried to send his assistants to conduct the interviews. They needed to travel from Éfaté Island, where the mission office is located, to Tanna, more than 130 miles (209 kilometers) away. But several serious challenges got in their way.
Delays Don’t Have to Derail
First, Tanna’s active volcano became more active. Then a small cyclone damaged much of Tanna. Finally, COVID-19 came to Vanuatu in 2022, and everything shut down. No one was allowed in or out of Éfaté or Tanna.
Months later, after things calmed down, Elders Brian Moses Nalin and Silas Toa arrived in Tanna, ready to interview people. President Messick feared that the number of people wanting to be baptized might have dropped since they had to wait so long.
When Elder Nalin, a native of Tanna, and Elder Toa arrived, there weren’t 80 people waiting—there were now 114.
Saetsiwi’s Rivers
To get to a remote branch in Saetsiwi on Tanna Island, Elders Nalin and Toa drove to and then hiked up a mountain for three hours, eating nothing but the coconuts they found along the way. But when they arrived at Saetsiwi, they couldn’t find the branch president. And then the rainstorm started.
Rain filled the rivers, which Elder Nalin knew would soon be impassable and dangerous. The elders got back to their truck as quickly as possible, knowing that they had to get off the mountain. The two missionaries crossed the first river safely, but at the second river, the truck got stuck. They pushed and even got others to help push, but the truck didn’t move.
“It Was Waiting”
Elder Nalin noticed another river flowing into theirs and just how much bigger it was. He later said, “Our river was still small, like it was waiting for us to get out.” But that wouldn’t last forever.
Both elders grew up in Vanuatu, where vehicles are usually rare and extremely expensive. So, for them, abandoning the truck didn’t seem like an option. But the water level was up to the door handles.
They called President Messick and asked what they should do.
President Messick replied, “Thank you for giving me a call. It’s OK! Leave the truck where it is and find a safe place now!”
Faith in God’s Power
Elder Toa, the last one out of the truck, later said, “I looked in the back seat for my scriptures and the baptismal forms, and there was nothing. And I thought maybe Elder Nalin already took them.” If the forms were lost, the missionaries would have to go back to Éfaté to get new ones.
Then one of the people who had come to help started shouting. Elder Toa did not understand what he was saying. But Elder Nalin did since it was his native language. He yelled to his companion, “Get out of the truck, something is coming!”
Elder Toa climbed out the back door because the water had already reached the window in the front. The moment he got out, the river swept the truck downstream. As they watched the truck flow downhill, they could see the scriptures and baptismal forms in the back seat.
Elder Toa later said, “While we were still in the river, we called on the power of God to protect our scriptures and baptismal forms. We had faith that He could save them according to His will.”
“After our prayer, we knew everything was going to be fine,” Elder Toa later said.
God Knows How to Save
The district president called and told Elders Toa and Nalin that the Saetsiwi branch president, the same man they couldn’t find earlier, had found their truck. The river had pushed it 820 feet (250 meters) from the main road, but while the engine was wet and the truck had to be towed for other repairs, the outside of the truck wasn’t dented or scratched. However, their lesson books, notebooks, and pamphlets were drenched and destroyed. “You could not read some of the words,” Elder Toa said.
But sitting on top of everything else, their scriptures and the interview forms were somehow dry and undamaged.
“Walk with Your Heart”
The elders traveled to all eight branches where they needed to conduct interviews on Tanna. Since the truck’s engine was damaged, they often walked. One of them later said to his fellow missionaries, “When your legs get tired of walking, you walk with your heart.”
In one branch alone, 48 people had faithfully waited to be baptized. Elder Nalin interviewed those who spoke the native languages of Tanna, and Elder Toa interviewed the Bislama speakers. When they finished, they were surprised to see the sun setting. The interviews had taken the entire day.
They baptized people across the island, many of them families, in rivers and the sea. There wasn’t enough baptismal clothing, so some new members handed their wet clothes to another person until all were baptized.
As the Prophet Joseph Smith said, “Our missionaries are going forth … ; … the truth of God will go forth boldly, nobly, and independent, till it has penetrated every continent, visited every clime, swept every country, and sounded in every ear, till the purposes of God shall be accomplished, and the Great Jehovah shall say the work is done.”1