This talk by President Spencer W. Kimball at the 1980 October General Conference is so prophetic. Families are being destroyed in the world and people don't even realize what a tragedy is happening all around us. Such an important talk!
From
the beginning, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has
emphasized family life. We have always
understood that the foundations of the family, as an eternal unit, were laid
even before this earth was created! Society without basic family life is
without foundation and will disintegrate into nothingness.
Therefore, whenever anything so basic as the
eternal family is imperiled, we have a solemn obligation to speak out, lest
there be critical damage to the family institution by those who seem to be
deliberately destructive of it.
The commandments and standards of morality set by
the Lord himself are under attack on every hand. There are false teachers
everywhere using speech and pornographic literature, magazines, radio, TV,
street talk—spreading heresies which break down moral standards.
Because of the seriousness of this matter, I have
prepared an article for the November 1980 Ensign and New Era magazines in which I
speak out frankly and at length on the subject of morality. This is a grave
responsibility, and not an easy one. I encourage all Latter-day Saints to read
this special message.
We are living in perilous times as more and more
individuals dishonor the marriage vow and as juvenile delinquency mounts.
Divorces in the United
States are up over 65 percent since 1970.
The number of unmarried couples living together has gone up over 157 percent
during the past decade. Many more children are growing up without having both
parents in the home. In 1979, almost one of every five families with children
was being maintained by one parent.
Abortion has reached plague
proportions. There have been, for instance, “more deaths from abortion in England in the
decade since the English Abortion Act than there were deaths in the First World
War.” Of this, Malcolm Muggeridge said:
“I was brought up to believe that one of the
great troubles of our Western world was that in the First World War we lost the
flower of our population. Well, now we have destroyed an equivalent number of
lives in the name of humane principles, before they were even born.” (Human Life Review,Summer 1980, p. 74.)
Furthermore, many of the social restraints which
in the past have helped to reinforce and to shore up the family are dissolving
and disappearing. The time will come when only those who believe deeply and
actively in the family will be able to preserve their families in the midst of
the gathering evil around us.
Whether from inadvertence, ignorance, or other
causes, the efforts governments often make (ostensibly to help the family) sometimes
only hurt the family more. There are those who would define the family in such
a nontraditional way that they would define it out of existence. The more
governments try in vain to take the place of the family, the less effective
governments will be in performing the traditional and basic roles for which
governments are formed in the first place.
Whether we like it or not, so many of the
difficulties which beset the family today stem from the breaking of the seventh
commandment (seeEx. 20:14). Total chastity before marriage and total fidelity
after are still the standard from which there can be no deviation without sin,
misery, and unhappiness. The breaking of the seventh commandment usually means
the breaking of one or more homes.
Delinquent adults still tend to produce
delinquent children, and that awful reality will not change simply by our
lowering standards as to what constitutes delinquency—either in adults, youth,
or children.
We of all people, brothers and sisters, should
not be taken in by the specious arguments that the family unit is somehow tied
to a particular phase of development a mortal society is going through. We are
free to resist those moves which downplay the significance of the family and
which play up the significance of selfish individualism. We know the family to
be eternal. We know that when things go wrong in the family, things go wrong in
every other institution in society.
Those who, whether in ignorance or malice, attack
the family are setting in motion an awful and needless cycle of misery and
despair, for they will search in vain and pain for substitutes, and the wisdom
of the worldly wise shall perish publicly for their folly concerning the family.
The decline in many of our families is occurring
at a time when the nations of the world are moving into some of the most
difficult times known.
Permissiveness will not pull us through such
crises. Materialism will not sustain us, for moth and rust will still lay waste
and corrupt all mortal treasures.
Our political institutions—parliaments,
congresses, and assemblies—cannot rescue us if our basic institution, the
family, is not intact. Peace treaties cannot save us when there is hostility
instead of love in the home. Unemployment programs cannot rescue us when many
are no longer taught how to work or do not have the opportunity to work or the
inclination, in some cases, to do so. Law enforcement cannot safeguard us if
too many people are unwilling to discipline themselves or be disciplined.
Rising generations who have been taught that
authority and loving discipline are wrong will not keep the fifth commandment,
honoring their fathers and mothers (see Ex.
20:12). How can the rising generations honor their parents if their
parents have dishonored themselves—especially by breaking the seventh
commandment?
Almost every array of statistics one sees with
regard to the family becomes a sad sermon in statistics, reminding us of the
need to stem and to turn the tide.
Let us be sure, in our Latter-day Saint homes,
that we do our part to stem and to turn the tide.
Again, I urge you to be diligent in recording
your personal and family histories. We are pleased with the success of the
recent World Conference on Records, where more than eleven thousand people from
over thirty nations around the globe gathered to share and learn concerning
personal record keeping. In this, let us be an example to others and reap the
benefits of stronger family units as we preserve our heritage.
We hope our parents are using the added time that
has come from the consolidated schedule in order to be with, teach, love, and
nurture their children. We hope you have not forgotten the need for family
activity and recreation, for which time is also provided. Let your love of each
member of your family be unconditional. Where there are challenges, you fail
only if you fail to keep trying!
We genuinely welcome help, real help, from
churches, schools, colleges, and universities, from thoughtful men and women of
every race, creed, and culture who care about the family. But, as indicated
earlier, if the supporting network of institutions does not function
adequately, then we will do our part anyway. There is no lack of clarity in
what the Lord has told us. We cannot shirk. He has placed the responsibility
directly where it belongs, and he holds us accountable with regard to the
duties of parents to teach their children correct principles and of the need to
walk uprightly before the Lord—and there is no substitute for teaching our
children by the eloquence of example.
Oh, brothers and sisters, families can be forever! Do not let the lures of
the moment draw you away from them! Divinity, eternity, and family—they go together, hand
in hand, and so must we!
I bear you my solemn witness that God lives, that
Jesus Christ lives, and that he is our Savior and Redeemer. I leave you my love
and my blessings, in the name of Jesus Christ, amen.
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