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Deseret News
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 Thursday, March 9, 2000
 Full text: President Hinckley's speech at the National Press
Club




President Gordon B. Hinckley
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints


National Press Club
Wednesday, March 8, 2000

Thank you for your generous introduction.
My thanks to all who are here today. I am deeply honored by your
presence. This is a very large gathering and it is somewhat intimidating,
particularly since I know who you are and what you do.
I have wondered about what to talk about here. I couldn't get any
help from anybody. I asked several people and just got a bland response. I
am not going to talk about my book, unless it comes up in the questions. I
am not going to talk about the election in California yesterday, unless it
comes up. I have chosen rather to speak on the Church, giving a sampling
of its operations.
We now have more members overseas than we have in the United
States and Canada and the percentage overseas is growing, although we are
growing significantly also in the United States and Canada. I believe that
no other church which has risen from the soil of America has grown so
large or spread so widely.
It was not many years ago that we were largely a Utah Church. Now
our people are found everywhere across North America, and beyond the seas
around the world. We are now operating in more than 160 nations. Our
worldwide membership is approaching 11 million,
Of these, approximately four million are women who belong to what
we call the Relief Society. I think it is the oldest women's organization
in the world, and perhaps the largest. It has its own officers and board
and these officers also sit on other boards and committees of the Church.
People wonder what we do for our women. I will tell you what we do. We get
out of their way, and look with wonder at what they are
accomplishing.
I think I might capsulize what we are doing across the world by
telling you of an experience I had. I was in Mexico City to speak to the
graduating class of the school which we operate in that area. I was
introduced to one of the graduates, a young woman. Her mother and her
grandmother had come for the exercises.
The grandmother had lived in the bush. She had never learned to
read or write. She was totally illiterate. Her daughter had received a
little schooling, not very much. She could read a newspaper headline or
something of that kind. Now came this beautiful young woman. She was in
the graduating class. I asked her, "What are you going to do now?"
She replied, "I have received a scholarship to the medical school
of the National University."
That to me was a miracle. From the bush and total illiteracy, to
refinement and medical school in three generations. She spoke not only her
native Spanish, but English as well. She gave full credit to the Church
and its programs for what had happened to her.
We all know that education unlocks the door of opportunity. And
so we pour large resources into educating our youth. Brigham Young
University in Provo, Utah, is our crown jewel. It is the largest
church-sponsored private university in America, with an enrollment of more
than 28,000. Its graduates are now found across this nation, and even
across the world. They serve on the faculties of nearly every large
university in America. They are in business, the professions, and in
almost every honorable vocation. A substantial number are here in
Washington, some of whom are here today. We operate other schools. But we
cannot accommodate all who might wish to attend these. And so we operate
institutes of religion contiguous to the campuses of colleges and
universities throughout the land. Here our youth are involved in religious
studies and have a wonderful time socializing together and this
socializing frequently leads to marriage.
In the early days of the Church, when our people were gathering
from the British Isles and Europe, our leaders set up what was known as
the Perpetual Emigration Fund. The Church loaned money to those who did
not have sufficient so that they might gather to Utah. As they were
employed, they repaid the loan, and this became a revolving fund for so
long as it was needed.
We face a new challenge today. In the underdeveloped countries we
have young men and women, many of them of capacity, but without
opportunity to improve themselves. They cannot do so without help. We are
now assisting some and are working on plans to assist many more to acquire
education in their own lands. Through this revolving prepetual education
fund we are providing a ladder by which they can climb out of the
impoverishment that surrounds them to make something better of their
lives, to occupy places of honor and respect in society and to make a
contribution of significance to the nation of which they are a
part.
We are already engaged in micro-credit undertakings, whereby
small amounts are loaned to those for whom a hundred or two or three
hundred dollars can spell an actual change in their future. When given
such credit these people become entrepreneurs, taking pride in what they
are doing and lifting themselves out of the bondage that has shackled
their forebears for generations. From a bread shop in Ghana to a
woodworking business in Honduras, we are making it possible for people to
learn skills they never dreamed of acquiring and to raise their standard
of living to a level of which they previously had little hope.
As the Church moves out across the world and into the future we
face two very serious problems. The first is the training of local
leadership. All of our local congregations are presided over by local
people, volunteers who work at their regular vocations, and carry on as
they are called to serve, in capacities as bishops, for instance with
local congregations.
I have just been down in Mexico, and I am amazed at the quality
of leaders we are developing. These are men and women of strength and
capacity. They are quick learners. They are devoted and faithful. They
have become better husbands and fathers and wives and mothers under the
family-strengthening programs of the Church. They are an asset to the
society of which they are a part, as will be the generations who come
after them. That is the beauty of this work. When you touch the life of a
man of this generation that influence is felt through generations yet to
come.
The second problem we face is providing places of worship as we
grow so rapidly in these areas. We are constructing nearly 400 new houses
of worship each year. It is a huge task. It is a tremendous
responsibility. But we must accomplish it and we are doing so. Some of
these houses of worship are relatively small, and many of them are large.
They are all attractive. They are well kept. They have beautiful
landscaping. They are a credit to every community where they are found.
And they become a wonderful example to the people.
Thirty years ago I had responsibility for our work in South
America. I recall the first time I went to Santiago, Chile. There were
perhaps a hundred members of the Church in the entire nation. We had a
little school of about ten students who met in a tiny building that was
little more than a shed. A short time ago I was back in Santiago, and
spoke to a congregation assembled in a large football stadium with 57,500
in attendance. I could scarcely believe what I saw.
They were well dressed, clean and attractive. They did not smoke,
not one of them. They did not drink, not one of them. They were there as
families for the most part, fathers and mothers and children. There is no
generation gap among such people. There is love and honor and respect in
the family circle. This is the result of Church teaching and Church family
programs.
Every good citizen adds to the strength of a nation. With that
assumption I do not hesitate to say that the nation of Chile is better for
our presence, and the same thing is happening in every other nation where
we are operating.
It is my philosophy that everyone who comes into this Church
should immediately have a friend who can help him make the adjustment, and
also a responsibility in the Church under which he can grow.
The genius of our work is that we expect things of our people.
They grow as they serve and there are numerous opportunities to challenge
them.
We do not have a professional priesthood. None of us who serve as
officers of this Church was ever trained in a religious seminary. We may
not have the polish of those who have been, but we bring to our service an
enthusiasm for the work and a love for the people that are wonderful to
witness and inspiring to experience.
We believe in the old adage that many hands make light work. We
have a lay priesthood and every worthy man is eligible to receive this
priesthood. Each bishop of the Church has two counselors, devoted and able
men, to assist him. None is a professional, but all are dedicated. Bishops
serve for a period of about five years, then they are released and others
take their place. The result is a constant development of leadership, and
a renewing strength of direction. Those who are released as bishops go on
to other responsibilities. There is opportunity for everyone to serve
according to his or her capacity.
Our tremendous missionary program builds leaders while men and
women are still young. We now have nearly 60,000 missionaries serving
throughout the world, every one on a volunteer basis. Most of them are
young men, some are young women, and we have a few retired couples. They
serve from 18 to 24 months.
I met two young women recently. They are both from Mongolia, and
they are missionaries of this Church serving in Salt Lake City. We send
missionaries from Salt Lake and elsewhere in the states to Mongolia and
other places, and some come here from such places and partake of the
culture which we have here. They learn English. They see the Church at its
strongest. They will return to their native lands greatly transformed from
what they were when they came here.
As you know the Winter Olympics are coming to Salt Lake City in
2002. If requested, we shall have no trouble in offering capable
translators and interpreters for the many languages that will be
represented.
I can walk down the streets of Salt Lake City and meet people who
speak a score or more of languages{151}Spanish, Portuguese, German,
French, Italian, Danish, Dutch, Swedish, Norwegian, Finnish, Russian,
Albanian, Czech, Slovak, Serbian, Japanese, Chinese{150}both Mandarin and
Cantonese, Mongolian, Estonian, various dialects of the Philippines, and
whatever you wish to have. I think it is a tremendous phenomenon. All have
learned these languages while serving as missionaries. And as they have
learned the language of the land in which they have served, they have had
companions in missionary service who are natives of those lands and who in
turn have learned English from them. This cross-fertilization of languages
and cultures is a tremendous thing. Conflict grows out of ignorance and
suspicion. As we learn to know and appreciate those of various cultures,
we come to appreciate them. The cause of peace is strengthened in a very
real sense, by this tremendous program.
We now have 333 missions across the world. Each becomes a bridge
to better understanding among people, to greater appreciation for other
cultures.
Now another thing. For a long time we have tried to take care of
our own who find themselves in distress. We operate large farming
projects, not only in the United States, but in other nations as well, to
insure against times of economic distress and catastrophes of one kind or
another. In our Church Welfare Program we have dairies, bakeries,
canneries, meat packing plants and other facilities, modern in every
respect, to meet the needs of those in distress. We have bishops{146}
storehouses that resemble supermarkets, but they have no cash registers.
They are to serve the poor. We also are trying to reach out to those who
find themselves in terrible trouble because of war, earthquake, flood,
drought, and other disasters. Human suffering anywhere and among any
people is a matter of urgent concern to us. We have our own Latter-day
Saint Charities organization, and we have worked with other
non-governmental agencies in extending humanitarian aid. These include
Catholic relief services, Mercy Corps International, the American Red
Cross, the Red Crescent, The Salvation Army, Habitat for Humanity and
other groups across the world.
Today, this very day, as they have been during previous days, two
helicopters have been flying rescue and mercy missions over the flood
waters of Mozambique and Zimbabwe. When governments in that part of the
world said they could do no more, we rented two helicopters at great
expense to fly rescue missions. Additionally, we have sent cash, and food,
clothing, and medicine are on their way to these suffering people. Those
helped are not our members. Our humanitarian efforts reach far beyond our
own to bless the victims of war and natural disaster wherever they may
occur.
Last year alone we sent humanitarian aid to assist with 829
projects in 101 countries, giving $11.2 million in cash and $44 million in
material resources for a total $55 plus million. I would like to suggest
that this is no small effort. And the costs would have been much higher
had it not been for the voluntary services of the very many who packed the
goods in our warehouses in Salt Lake City and to those who unpacked them
at the points of distribution.
We have dug wells in African villages, fed people and supplied
them with clothing and shelter. We have given aid in the Mexico fire of
1990, in the Bangladesh cyclone of 1991, in the China earthquake of 1991,
in the Bosnia civil conflict of 1992, in Rwanda in 1994, in North Korea in
1996-98, in Central America in 1998, and in Kosovo in 1999, and today we
are assisting substantially in Venezuela, Mozambique, and
Zimbabwe.
Time will not permit me to speak of the many efforts we have made
to assist those of this nation who find themselves in difficulty. Suffice
it to say that we have been pleased to reach out to many Americans who
have been victimized by flood, hurricane and tornado.
One more item. Our Family History archives in Salt Lake City are
now the largest in the world. Satellite libraries are found in this land
and others. They are open to everyone regardless of faith or religious
affiliation. More than half of the people who use them are not of our
faith. People everywhere desire to learn of their roots. Our Family
History web-site receives about eight million hits per day. I think we
would have genealogical information on every man and woman in this hall.
We invite you to visit our Family History resources right here in the
Washington area. They are found in the chapel near our temple in
Kensington, and in other locations. You will be made to feel
welcome.
As you look into the microfilm reader you may be surprised to
find the names of your parents, of your grandparents, of your
great-grandparents, and of your great-great-grandparents, those who have
bequeathed to you all you are of body and mind. You will feel a special
connection to those who have gone before you and an increased
responsibility to those who will follow.
We are now completing in Salt Lake City a great new conference
center. Brigham Young built the famed Tabernacle on Temple Square. It was
a bold undertaking to construct so large a hall in that remote pioneer
community. But now it has become inadequate to our needs. For the first
time our world conference in April will be held in a magnificent new hall
which seats 21,000. I know of nothing to compare with it as a house of
worship and a place for cultural presentations. It is beautiful and it is
magnificent, and from its pulpit our message will be carried by satellite
around the earth.
Now, I have had time to touch on only a few of the very many
things we are trying to do but I hope that I have given some small
indication of our activities as we move this work forward. Our desire
everywhere is to make bad men good and good men better. Wherever we go, we
go in the front door. Our representatives honor the laws of the nations to
which they go and teach the people to be good citizens. We teach, we
train, we build, we educate, we provide opportunity for growth and
development. We give hope to those without hope, and there is nothing
greater you can give a man or a woman than hope.
You ask how all of this has been accomplished. It takes money,
you say. Where does it come from?
It comes from observance of the ancient law of the tithe. Just as
Abraham paid tithes to Melchizedek, the great high priest of the Old
Testament, so do our people contribute their tithes to the work of the
Lord. They do so cheerfully with faith in the promise of Malachi that God
will open the windows of heaven and shower down blessings upon them. We do
not pass the plate. We do not play bingo. We pay our tithing, and can
testify to the goodness of the Lord.
This law is set forth in 35 words in our scripture. Compare that
with the rules and regulations of the IRS.
We are a church, a church in whose name is the name of the Lord
Jesus Christ. We bear witness of Him and it is His example and His
teachings we try to follow. We give love. We bring peace. We do not seek
to tear down any other church. We recognize the good they do. We have
worked with them on many undertakings. We will continue to do so. We stand
as the servants of the Lord. We acknowledge that we could not accomplish
what we do without the help of the Almighty. We look to Him as our Father
and our God, and our ever-present helper, as we seek to improve the world
by changing the hearts of individuals.
Thank you very much, my dear friends. And now if you have
questions we would be happy to entertain them.
 

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