The Liahona Children’s Foundation

The Liahona Children’s Foundation November 16, 2016

 

A scene in Belem, Brazil
Belém, Brazil, is one of the areas where the Liahona Children’s Foundation is working.
(Wikimedia Commons)

 

As we near the end of 2016, many of us (at least in the United States) will begin to think about year-end donations.  For active Latter-day Saints, of course, that thinking involves tithing, fast offerings, and other donations made specifically to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

 

But many will also want to give at least a little bit to one or more other causes.  I’ve already mentioned the Interpreter Foundation, which I have the honor to lead.  It’s a worthy cause, and I hope that some of you out there will consider helping us with donations, whether large or small, if you haven’t already done so.  I will, no doubt, mention Interpreter several more times before the start of 2017.

 

But there are many worthy causes.

 

There are so many, in fact, that it’s tempting to simply throw up one’s hands and forget about it.

 

But I would like to mention a few in which my wife and I take particular interest.  Our donations are small.  We wish they could be much larger.  But they’re something.  And many of us can give at least a little bit.  Even students can.  Even if it’s only the cost of one less hamburger, or one less meal out, or a few less soft drinks.

 

Today, I would like to mention the Liahona Children’s Foundation.

 

Approximately 100,000 Latter-day Saint children suffer from malnutrition.

 

This ought not to be.

 

The principal context of Doctrine and Covenants 38:27, which we often quote in the Church, is plainly economic:

 

 24 And let every man esteem his brother as himself, and practice virtue and holiness before me.

 25 And again I say unto you, let every man esteem his brother as himself.

 26 For what man among you having twelve sons, and is no respecter of them, and they serve him obediently, and he saith unto the one: Be thou clothed in robes and sit thou here; and to the other: Be thou clothed in rags and sit thou there—and looketh upon his sons and saith I am just?

 27 Behold, this I have given unto you as a parable, and it is even as I am. I say unto you, be one; and if ye are not one ye are not mine.

 

World poverty is a horrific thing, with many causes.  But it seems to me that terrible poverty and gross economic inequality within the Church are, or at least should be, a particular scandal to believing Latter-day Saints.

 

We should remember King Benjamin’s words:

 

And ye will not suffer your children that they go hungry, or naked; neither will ye suffer that they transgress the laws of God, and fight and quarrel one with another, and serve the devil, who is the master of sin, or who is the evil spirit which hath been spoken of by our fathers, he being an enemy to all righteousness.

 But ye will teach them to walk in the ways of truth and soberness; ye will teach them to love one another, and to serve one another.

 And also, ye yourselves will succor those that stand in need of your succor; ye will administer of your substance unto him that standeth in need; and ye will not suffer that the beggar putteth up his petition to you in vain, and turn him out to perish. . . .

I would that ye should impart of your substance to the poor, every man according to that which he hath, such as feeding the hungry, clothing the naked, visiting the sick and administering to their relief, both spiritually and temporally, according to their wants.  (Mosiah 4:14-16, 46)

 

This doesn’t, I think, mean that every Church member needs to live in a large, multi-story house and drive a new, high-end car.  But it does, I believe, mean that Church members shouldn’t go to bed hungry or lack adequate housing and clothes, that their children shouldn’t suffer permanent brain damage or stunted growth from lack of necessary nutrition.

 

As I understand its work, the Liahona Children’s Foundation doesn’t turn the children of non-members away.  But it does have a special mission to Latter-day Saint children.  And this is one of the several reasons that it has caught my attention.

 

Not that Latter-day Saint children are intrinsically more valuable, or more beloved in the eyes of God, than the children of non-Mormons.  Not at all.

 

No.  But another reason for simply throwing one’s hands in the air, despairing, and giving nothing to charity is the sense — all of us have felt it at some point or another — that the world’s problems are simply overwhelming.  That they’re too big.  That they cannot be solved.  That our little pittance, our pathetically small contribution, will make no difference.  It will be swallowed up, without trace or effect, in the unfathomable ocean of the world’s need.

 

And, truly, world hunger — for one — is a vast problem.

 

But the malnutrition of 100,000 Latter-day Saint kids?  That’s a finite problem.  It can be overcome.  It could be overcome in fairly short order, in fact.  Small donations can make a measurable difference.  And there’s satisfaction in that.

 

So, as this year winds to its close, I hope that you’ll consider making a donation to the Liahona Children’s Foundation.  At least look around their website.  I think you’ll be impressed and moved.

 

Perhaps it can be part of your response to the Church’s 2016 Christmas initiative:  Light the World.

 

 


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