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Almost four years ago in a Saturday evening session of a stake conference in New York, I listened intently to a young Hispanic sister bear witness of the promptings and feelings that occurred during her conversion. "As I listened to the missionaries explain the plan of salvation," she said, "I suddenly felt a confirming witness that I am more than a speck in the universe. My life is important not only to me but to a loving Heavenly Father and his Son. They know me! There is purpose to life, and God has a plan for me to achieve that purpose. I can never feel worthless again!"
The truth of that young sister's testimony burned within me that evening. The hope and joy she felt as she learned of God's plan are the hope and joy we each feel as we come to understand that we are part of God's eternal family. For us, his children, he has designed a plan of happiness that centers around and is made possible in families. The plan includes a premortal existence in which men and women were spirits, "born of heavenly parents, and reared to maturity in the eternal mansions of the Father, prior to coming upon the earth in a temporal body to undergo an experience in mortality" ("The Origin of Man," November 1909, in James R. Clark, comp., Messages of the First Presidency of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 6 vols. [Salt Lake City: Bookcraft, 196575], 4:205).
The plan also includes an earthly, temporal sojourn, during which we receive a physical body with procreative powers and the opportunity to form eternal families of our own. The formation of such families is a key purpose of God's plan. By creating our own families, it is possible for fathers and mothers to learn eternal lessons and develop Godly traits. It is within the family that exaltation is achieved.
The creation of the earth, the fall of Adam, and the atonement of Christ are essential elements or pillars in the Father's plan for the progression and development of his children--both as individuals and as families. The earth's creation provided a new state of existence apart from our spiritual home; as children and parents in this new family setting, we are able to love, trust, care, learn, and serve in a different environment. The fall of Adam made it possible for children to be born and, therefore, for families to be created (see 2 Ne. 2:23, 25). The atonement of Christ opens the doors of salvation for the individual and of exaltation for the family (see D&C 131:14, 132:22). These three doctrinal pillars of the plan of salvation are intimately involved in the creation of new eternal families and their extension into the eternities.
The family-oriented nature of God's plan is also reflected in God's kingdom on Earth. Church organization and gospel principles, when properly applied, strengthen us as families in our efforts to follow the plan of our Father. In addition the prophets of God have charged us--individually and collectively--to advocate, build, and support positive family relationships and environments.
In September 1995 the First Presidency and the Council of the Twelve Apostles issued "The Family: A Proclamation to the World" (Ensign, November 1995, p. 102). The statement is an extraordinary document outlining Church doctrine concerning the family and the relationships between husband and wife, parents and children. On a number of occasions during the past two years, President Hinckley has been asked why the proclamation was issued. Typical of his answers is the following:
Much of the world is in serious trouble over the disintegration of the family. The family is the basic unit of society. No nation is stronger than the homes of its people. . . .
Lawrence Stone, the noted Princeton University family historian, says: "The scale of marital breakdowns in the West since 1960 has no historical precedent that I know of, and seems unique. . . . There has been nothing like it for the last 2,000 years and probably longer." (Quoted by David Popenoe, "A World Without Father," The Wilson Quarterly, Spring 1996, p. 13.) You are familiar with the fruits of broken homes. I think the home is the answer to most of our basic social problems, and if we take care of things there, other things will take care of themselves.
We are trying to preserve the traditional family--father, mother, and children--working together in love toward a common goal. In large measure we are succeeding against great odds. [Washington, D.C., media luncheon, Dec. 2, 1996, quoted in Teachings of Gordon B. Hinckley (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 1997), pp. 20910]
Following the issuance of the proclamation, all members of the Church have been challenged to become familiar with its doctrines and to apply them. It is particularly revealing to compare the teachings of the proclamation with contrasting philosophies and practices of the world.