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Chapter 11: Provident Living: Applying Principles of Self-Reliance and Preparedness
"Chapter 11: Provident Living: Applying Principles of Self-Reliance and Preparedness," Teachings of Presidents of the Church: Spencer W. Kimball, (2006)
From the Life of Spencer W. Kimball
As  a young couple, Spencer W. Kimball and his wife, Camilla, “knew they  weren’t rich. But they had work and ability. They knew how to manage  their own money, living within their income, saving for the future.”      1    
The  Kimballs lived through times of widespread economic difficulties—World  War I (1914–18), the Great Depression (1929–39), and World War II  (1939–45). Having experienced these challenges, President Kimball  concluded, “What I have seen with my own eyes makes me afraid not to do  what I can to protect against the calamities.”      2    
Among  the things he saw were the struggles of others: “All my life from  childhood I have heard the Brethren saying, ‘get out of debt and stay  out of debt.’ I was employed for some years in the banks and I saw the  terrible situation that many people were in because they had ignored  that important counsel.”
In  addition to his bank work, Spencer kept the account books for some of  the local stores. “One of the shocking things of my life was to find on  the books the accounts of many of the people in the community that I  knew. I knew them. I knew approximately what their income was, and then I  saw them wear it away. In other words, I saw they were buying their  clothes, their shoes, everything they had ‘on time.’
“And  I found that it was my duty to make the bills at the end of the month  for them. And many of them couldn’t pay at the end of the month. They  couldn’t pay even the installments that were arranged for them. And  having been reared in a home that took care of its funds, I couldn’t  understand it. I could understand how a person could buy a home on time  or perhaps could even buy an automobile on time. But I never could quite  understand how anybody would wear clothes they didn’t own. Or eat food  that they had to buy ‘on time.’”      3    
In  his teachings President Kimball addressed not only financial issues but  also other matters related to provident living, such as personal  responsibility, work, and home food production and storage. He said:  “Let us practice the principles of personal and family preparedness in  our daily lives. ‘If ye are prepared ye shall not fear’ (D&C 38:30).”      4    
Teachings of Spencer W. Kimball
We are responsible for our own social, emotional, spiritual, physical, and economic well-being.
The Church and its members are commanded by the Lord to be self-reliant and independent. (See D&C 78:13–14.)
The  responsibility for each person’s social, emotional, spiritual,  physical, or economic well-being rests first upon himself, second upon  his family, and third upon the Church if he is a faithful member  thereof.
No  true Latter-day Saint, while physically or emotionally able, will  voluntarily shift the burden of his own or his family’s well-being to  someone else. So long as he can, under the inspiration of the Lord and  with his own labors, he will supply himself and his family with the  spiritual and temporal necessities of life. (See 1 Timothy 5:8.)        5      
As  we travel and visit the people throughout the world, we recognize the  great temporal needs of our people. And as we long to help them, we  realize the vital importance of their learning this great lesson: that  the highest achievement of spirituality comes as we conquer the flesh.  We build character as we encourage people to care for their own needs.        6      
No  amount of philosophizing, excuses, or rationalizing will ever change  the fundamental need for self-reliance. This is so because:
“All  truth is independent in that sphere in which God has placed it, … as  all intelligence also; otherwise there is no existence.” (D&C 93:30.) The Lord declares that herein lies “the agency of man” (see D&C 93:31),  and with this agency comes the responsibility for self. With this  agency we can rise to glory or fall to condemnation. May we individually  and collectively be ever self-reliant. This is our heritage and our  obligation.        7      
We  have placed considerable emphasis on personal and family preparedness. I  hope that each member of the Church is responding appropriately to this  direction. I also hope that we are understanding and accentuating the  positive and not the negative. I like the way the Relief Society teaches  personal and family preparedness as “provident living.” This implies  the husbanding [prudent managing] of our resources, the wise planning of  financial matters, full provision for personal health, and adequate  preparation for education and career development, giving appropriate  attention to home [food] production and storage as well as the  development of emotional resiliency.        8      
We have been counseled to participate in home food production and storage.
The  Lord has urged that his people save for the rainy days, prepare for the  difficult times, and put away for emergencies, a year’s supply or more  of bare necessities so that when comes the flood, the earthquake, the  famine, the hurricane, the storms of life, our families can be sustained  through the dark days.        9      
We  encourage you to grow all the food that you feasibly can on your own  property. Berry bushes, grapevines, fruit trees—plant them if your  climate is right for their growth. Grow vegetables and eat them from  your own yard. Even those residing in apartments or condominiums can  generally grow a little food in pots and planters. Study the best  methods of providing your own foods. Make your garden as neat and  attractive as well as productive. If there are children in your home,  involve them in the process with assigned responsibilities.        10      
I  hope that we understand that, while having a garden … is often useful  in reducing food costs and making available delicious fresh fruits and  vegetables, it does much more than this. Who can gauge the value of that  special chat between daughter and Dad as they weed or water the garden?  How do we evaluate the good that comes from the obvious lessons of  planting, cultivating, and the eternal law of the harvest? And how do we  measure the family togetherness and cooperating that must accompany  successful canning? Yes, we are laying up resources in store, but  perhaps the greater good is contained in the lessons of life we learn as  we live providently.        11      
We  encourage families to have on hand this year’s supply; and we say it  over and over and over and repeat over and over the scripture of the  Lord where He says, “Why call ye me, Lord, Lord, and do not the things  which I say?” [Luke 6:46.]  How empty it is as they put their spirituality, so-called, into action  and call him by his important names, but fail to do the things which he  says.        12      
As  we become more affluent and our bank accounts enlarge, there comes a  feeling of security, and we feel sometimes that we do not need the  supply that has been suggested by the Brethren. … We must remember that  conditions could change and a year’s supply of basic commodities could  be very much appreciated by us or others. So we would do well to listen  to what we have been told and to follow it explicitly.        13      
We should work for what we receive.
With  regard to all phases of our lives, I believe that men should help  themselves. They should plow and plant and cultivate and harvest and not  expect their faith to bring them bread.        14      
Work is a spiritual necessity as well as an economic necessity.        15      
Work  brings happiness, self-esteem, and prosperity. It is the means of all  accomplishment; it is the opposite of idleness. We are commanded to  work. (See Gen. 3:19.)  Attempts to obtain our temporal, social, emotional, or spiritual  well-being by means of a dole violate the divine mandate that we should  work for what we receive.        16      
We  cannot be too often reminded that Church welfare assistance is  spiritual at heart and that these spiritual roots would wither if we  ever permitted anything like the philosophy of the dole to enter into  our Welfare Services ministrations. Everyone assisted can do something.  Let us follow the order of the Church in this regard and insure that all  who receive give of themselves in return. May we be on guard against  accepting worldly substitutes for the plan to care for his poor in this,  the Lord’s own way.        17      
The  Lord’s way builds individual self-esteem and develops and heals the  dignity of the individual, whereas the world’s way depresses the  individual’s view of himself and causes deep resentment.
The  Lord’s way causes the individual to hasten his efforts to become  economically independent again, even though he may have temporary need,  because of special conditions, for help and assistance. The world’s way  deepens the individual’s dependency on welfare programs and tends to  make him demand more rather than encouraging him to return to economic  independence.
The  Lord’s way helps our members get a testimony for themselves about the  gospel of work. For work is important to human happiness as well as  productivity. The world’s way, however, places greater and greater  emphasis on leisure and upon the avoidance of work.        18      
It  is right to work. Every man and woman and child should work. Even  little children should learn how to share, to help do the housework and  the yardwork, to plant gardens, to plant trees, to pick fruit, and to do  everything that needs to be done, because that makes strong characters  out of them and builds their faith and character.
We  want you parents to create work for your children. Insist on them  learning their lessons in school. Do not let them play all the time.  There is a time for play, there is a time to work, and there is a time  to study. Be sure your children grow up like you know they ought to  grow.        19      
We can become economically self-reliant by saving, avoiding debt, and living within our means.
Are  you prepared for and protected against death, illness, a  long-continuing, crippling illness of the breadwinner? How long can you  go if the income stops? What are your reserves? How long could you make  your many payments on home, car, implements, appliances? …
The  first reaction is: We just cannot do it. We can hardly get by using  every cent of income monthly. … If you can hardly get by when you are  earning increasingly, well employed, well, productive, young, then how  can you meet emergencies with employment curtailed, illness and other  unlooked-for problems arising?        21      
You  must not spend all you make. Money must be put aside for missions and  for schooling for your children. They can assume responsibilities and  take little jobs whereby they can also help to raise these funds and  instead of spending those little accumulations, they will save them for  these great purposes. It may mean that the parents of today will go  without many things that they would like, but tomorrow will come the  harvest.        22      
Avoid  debt. … Today everything is seemingly geared toward debt. “Get your  cards, and buy everything on time”: you’re encouraged to do it. But the  truth is that we don’t need to do it to live.        23      
We  wonder what our people will do who have been spending their all and  more. If employment and income should reduce, what then? Are you living  beyond your means? Do you owe what you cannot pay if times became  perilous? Are your shock absorbers in condition to take a shock?        24      
Plan  and work in a way that will permit you to be happy even as you do  without certain things that in times of affluence may have been  available to you. Live within your means and not beyond them. … Purchase  your essentials wisely and carefully. Strive to save a portion of that  which you earn. Do not mistake many wants for basic needs.        25      
Let  us as individuals, as families, and as wards and stakes learn to live  within our means. There is strength and salvation in this principle.  Someone has said that we are rich in proportion to that with which we  can do without. As families and as a Church, we can and should provide  that which is truly essential for our people, but we must be  careful not to extend beyond that which is essential or for purposes  which are not directly related to our families’ welfare and the basic  mission of the Church.        26      
Preparedness is a way of life that brings its own rewards.
Preparedness, when properly pursued, is a way of life, not a sudden, spectacular program.        27      
We  could refer to all the components of personal and family preparedness,  not in relation to holocaust or disaster, but in cultivating a  life-style that is on a day-to-day basis its own reward.
Let’s  do these things because they are right, because they are satisfying,  and because we are obedient to the counsels of the Lord. In this spirit  we will be prepared for most eventualities, and the Lord will prosper  and comfort us. It is true that difficult times will come—for the Lord  has foretold them—and, yes, stakes of Zion are “for a defense, and for a  refuge from the storm.” (D&C 115:6.) But if we live wisely and providently, we will be as safe as in the palm of His hand.        28      





Love, love, love, love, love this. Love it. Love.
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