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Topic: Free Agency, Matches 41 quotes.
Two Antagonistic Forces At War
These great present-day battles, to which I have referred, the greatest of all time, are contests between two forces which are utterly antagonistic. One of these is impelled by the despotic passion to rule mankind and rob human beings of their free agency, and the other has for its cherished ideal the right and ability of man to rule himself. The one contemplates government dominated by dictators; the other is the plan of the Almighty who created men free and equal and endowed them with the right and the intelligence to be their own sovereigns. The Creator never intended that a tyrant should assume the role of dictator and lord it over the sons and daughters of God under the despotic motto: Might makes right.
Source: Elder Richard R. Lyman General Conference, October 1940
Topics: Free Agency; Tyranny
To every man, says Joseph Smith, is given an inherent power to do right or to do wrong. In this he has his free agency. He may choose the right and obtain salvation, or he may choose evil and merit abomination.
A man may act as his conscience dictates so long as he does not infringe upon the rights of others. That is the spirit of true democracy, and all government by the Priesthood should be actuated by that same high motive.
Source: President David O. McKay General Conference, October 1938
Topics: Free Agency
The fostering of full economic freedom lies at the base of our liberties. Only in perpetuating economic freedom can our social, political, and religious liberties be preserved.
Source: David O McKay Church News, 12 Mar. 1952, p. 2
Topics: Economics; Free Agency
These two things [The Free Agency of Man and The Knowledge of Good and Evil] are God-given attributes. We inherited them from our divine parents. They are not the gift of any governmentthey are our inalienable rights with which we have been endowed by our Creator and we may not rightfully be deprived of them by any human power.
Source: Elder Rulon S. Wells General Conference, April 1935
Topics: Free Agency
Discrimination
Many of the leading problems of our day, I believe, stem from a thought-disease about discrimination. It is well known that discrimination has come to be widely scorned. And politicians have teamed up with those who scorn it, to pass laws against itas though morals can be manufactured by the pen of a legislator and the gun of a policeman . . . .
If a man is to continue his self-improvement, he must be free to exercise the powers of choice with which he has been endowed. When discrimination is not allowed according to ones wisdom and conscience, both discrimination and conscience will atrophy in the same manner as an unused muscle. Since man was given these faculties, it necessarily follows that he should use them and be personally responsible for the consequences of his choices. He must be free to either enjoy or endure the consequences of each decision, because the lesson it teaches is the sole purpose of experiencethe best of all teachers.
Source: F. A. Harper As quoted in The Freeman, March 1991, p.85
Topics: Free Agency
The Only Route to Personal Security
If the less productive members of a society truly seek security, let them rally to the defense of the freedom of choice and freedom of action of those who work for a living and who are personally productive. Let them voluntarily deal with one another in a marketplace kept free of compulsion. Such voluntary trading directs the instruments of production and the means of economic security into the hands of those most capable of serving all mankind. It promotes mutual respect for life and property. It stimulates every individual to develop his own talents to their maximum productivity. It encourages saving instead of squandering. The free market, and not its displacement by governmental controls, is the only route to the kind of personal security which makes for harmonious social relationships.
Source: Paul L. Poirot
Topics: Free Agency; Free Market
[A]ny system which deprives men of their free agency, which weakens the home and family, which depends on butchery for power, which denies all moral responsibility, which holds that man lives by bread alone, and which denies the existence of God, is of the devil.
This is the communist philosophy. There is no real evidence that it has been changed in the last forty years.
Knowledge of the enemy and knowledge of ourselves give us the strength to fight the good fight for freedom and world peace.
May it never come to pass that My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge, (Hosea 4:6).
Source: Elder Ezra Taft Benson General Conference, April 1960
Topics: Free Agency; Freedom, Loss of
But there are developing tendencies, sponsored by selfishness, greed, and ambition that, if unchecked, will soon or late bring sorrow and ruin to our country. Among these tendencies is that of something for nothing, at least more and more for less and lessmore pay for less work. And as I see it, in whatever words these tendencies are expressed, they all lead to some type of national socialism. And generally, socialism is an enemy of free enterprise in the development of which, I repeat, this country has become the greatest on earth. Then why does any honest, patriotic, intelligent citizen of America prefer socialism to free enterprise? Is it not in free enterprise that free agency, a divine gift to every human being, finds an environment favorable to growth and development and to living in harmony with our beautiful doctrine of eternal progression?
Source: Elder Joseph F. Merrill General Conference, April 1950
Topics: Free Agency; Socialism
Economic Peace Through Application of the Golden Rule
If a full sense of brotherhood, actuated by the real spirit of the Golden Rule, were in the mind and heart of every employer and of every employee in America, and of every one else who has any kind of relations with his fellow men, then industrial, social, and economic peace in America would be born in a day. But alas this ideal condition is not in the offing. Instead we are faced with reality and a condition so pregnant with evil that we can save ourselves only by immediate, unceasing, wise, and powerful efforts. The preservation of our inherited liberties and of our God-given free agencies is worth every thing necessary for us to give in order that we might repossess and maintain them. Otherwise, will not the America of the future be devoid of the essentials that have made the America we inherited, a land of glorious promise?
Source: Elder Joseph F. Merrill General Conference, October 1941
Topics: Free Agency; Freedom, Threats to
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