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January 27, 2012 at 9:31 pm #206419
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GuestIf the Church teaches people to be self-sufficient, out-of-debt, not into vanity or selfishness, in the world but not of the world, then why doesn’t the Church just have it’s people live completely off the land or off the grid like in much of the ancient times and when the Church tried to establish Zion in Jackson County, Missouri. I know according to the Church history it didn’t work because of selfishness or whatnot, but with too many stresses that are caused by our materialistic society, why doesn’t the prophet ask the Lord to get the Church to make this drastic change, like the Lord did with Lehi moving into the wilderness, Noah building the ark, and Brigham Young moving the Saints to Utah? Hear me out: I have be fighting Social Security to get Medicare back for several months now, but the office in Illinois has things so screwed up that it’s taking forever to get it activated. I can’t even get Medicaid because according to the Public Aid office I have too much money in my bank account. I know that living off the land carries its own stresses as well, but with the way other things are getting worse, why doesn’t Thomas S. Monson plead to the Lord to make the move to Zion more drastic like in the ancient times and the days of Brigham Young? I just have to vent. Your thoughts? January 28, 2012 at 4:47 am #249623Anonymous
GuestHonestly, I think it would be next to impossible right now for the entire church membership – both economically and socially – especially with regard to conversion rates. I think we’d wind up fairly quickly like the Amish – a small sect isolated in rural areas and relying almost exclusively on internal birth rates to survive. January 28, 2012 at 5:29 am #249624Anonymous
GuestYeah, you’re probably right. I was just thinking about that today after having a stressful day. January 28, 2012 at 4:01 pm #249625Anonymous
GuestThis is a good question. We teach self-sufficiency, but where I live, just about everything I have runs off gas or electricity. I couldn’t install a real fire anywhere in this place.
Actually I’d be interested to know how many churches have generators etc.
January 28, 2012 at 4:07 pm #249626Anonymous
GuestI should have added that I have nothing at all against the idea – in theory, generally, or in practice, for individual families. My own grandparents kept their family of nine kids alive for three years during a time of unemployment because of their 40-ish acres that included a 2-acre garden and various farm animals. I respect them for that – deeply. January 28, 2012 at 4:50 pm #249627Anonymous
GuestWe used to grow a lot of our own vegetables, some fruit, and kept a few goats, sheep and chickens. I miss that, although sending one goat off to the abattoir was kind of harrowing, as I was kind of attached to it. January 28, 2012 at 10:00 pm #249629Anonymous
GuestWe all have the choice to “live off the grid” at any time in our lives. If I arrive at the place where I believe it is a sound decision for me, I would put my rear in high gear to see that it happened. I don’t agree with making it an all encompassing church direction. We are a worldwide church. We know that not all programs can be designed the same and have the same impact on members. Individual, family, cultural, and country differences mean adaptation. I long for peace and calm within my soul. However that comes to me is not as important as the fact that it comes. I don’t believe it has much to do with where I live. I do believe it is more an issue of how I live.
January 28, 2012 at 10:55 pm #249630Anonymous
GuestLets just all be hunter gatherers. I read an article that there is no depression and little anxiety among such people. January 29, 2012 at 5:05 am #249631Anonymous
GuestCadence wrote:Lets just all be hunter gatherers. I read an article that there is no depression and little anxiety among such people.
or let’s grow up and realize that this age: the here and now is the ideal time to live.Nostalgia for the past and the simpler life reminds me of… woody allen’s “Midnight in Paris’.
January 29, 2012 at 6:12 am #249632Anonymous
GuestI just went 24 hours with my well pump out – no water. It sucks. Period. Living off the grid had not validity – imo. Once again, do it, and then have an opinion. Out. January 29, 2012 at 11:29 am #249628Anonymous
Guestcwald wrote:I just went 24 hours with my well pump out – no water. It sucks. Period. Living off the grid had not validity – imo. Once again, do it, and then have an opinion. Out.
+1. humans seem to take for granted so much. we are really quite domesticated…January 29, 2012 at 9:36 pm #249633Anonymous
GuestThanks the comments. Sorry if it seemed off in some way. I was just venting because with me trying to get Medicare started up again which I do need really badly. January 29, 2012 at 9:50 pm #249634Anonymous
GuestI know what you mean, Cadence. I read an article about hunter gatherers in Raw-Food-Health.net. January 29, 2012 at 10:30 pm #249635Anonymous
GuestIlovechrist77 wrote:Thanks the comments. Sorry if it seemed off in some way. I was just venting because with me trying to get Medicare started up again which I do need really badly.
Please forgive me, I don’t understand: you say you want to live off the grid, but you say you need medicare started up? Aren’t these kind of mutually exclusive?January 30, 2012 at 4:17 am #249636Anonymous
GuestWayfarer, I’m not going to actually live off the grid. I was just asking the question hypothetically with our strong reliance on the government, but yet the government is hanging by a thread and you will probably fall eventually. This is just a hypothetical question. I will continue working on getting Medicare with patience, persistence, and prayer, so I don’t plan on living off the grid now or anytime in the future. -
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