2012
Provident Living Prepares Us for the Future
October 2012


“Provident Living Prepares Us for the Future,” Liahona, Oct. 2012, 12–13

What We Believe

Provident Living Prepares Us for the Future

Latter-day Saints believe in being prepared and self-reliant. We believe in preparing educationally for employment, in preparing financially for a rainy day, and in preparing temporally for natural disasters or other challenges. Most important, we believe in preparing spiritually for the Second Coming of Jesus Christ and for living with our Father in Heaven again. This approach to preparedness is called provident living.

Living providently reflects our true eternal nature: we are “to act for [ourselves] and not to be acted upon” (2 Nephi 2:26). The Lord wants us to be responsible and independent (see D&C 78:14). He wants us to live providently because of who we become in the process: responsible, generous, mature, kind. For the more self-reliant we are, the better we can help our families and others. How can we feed the hungry if we ourselves are hungry? How can we impart knowledge if we ourselves lack knowledge? How can we build others’ faith if we ourselves lack faith?

Principles of provident living include the following:

  • Preparation. “Prepare ye for that which is to come, for the Lord is nigh” (D&C 1:12).

  • Industry. “Thou shalt not be idle” (D&C 42:42).

  • “Learning, even by study and also by faith” (D&C 88:118).

When Church members do all they can to provide for themselves but still cannot meet their basic needs, they turn first to their families for help. If this is insufficient, the Church can help. Bishops and branch presidents can use resources from “the Lord’s storehouse” to help members (see D&C 82:18–19). Any assistance from the Church aims to help members help themselves and to encourage work in their lives.

We can work to become self-reliant in the following areas:

  • Spiritual strength: Trust in the Lord; obey the commandments; pray and study the scriptures daily; serve others.

  • Physical health: Obey the Word of Wisdom; exercise; get adequate sleep; practice good sanitation and hygiene.

  • Education: Become literate; obtain job skills; study “the best books” (D&C 88:118).

  • Employment: Work to provide for your own and your family’s needs.

  • Home storage: Store clean drinking water and gradually build a supply of foods you eat on a regular basis and a longer-lasting supply of foods, such as grains and beans.

  • Finances: Pay tithes and offerings; avoid unnecessary debt; gradually build a financial reserve.

From left: The Second Coming, by Grant Romney Clawson © IRI; photo illustrations by Craig Dimond, Christina Smith, John Luke, and Robert Casey © IRI; photograph of cherries by David Stoker © 2008