“There is no substitute under the heavens for productive labor. It is the process by which dreams become realities. It is the process by which idle visions become dynamic achievements.”
Gordon B. Hinckley, “I Believe,” Ensign, Aug. 1992, 4
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Above: Who Can Find a Virtuous Woman? II, by Louise Parker
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Left: The Pavers, by Mahonri M. Young, 1877-1957 Brigham Young University Museum of Art
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Left: A Late Feeding, by Robert Duncan
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Above: Gardening in the Rain, by Brian Kershisnik
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Above: To Work, by Julie Rogers
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Below: Melon Patch, by Gary Smith
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Above: The Calf, by Edwin Evans, Brigham Young University Museum of Art
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Above: Apple Pie, by Walter Rane
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Above: Eve’s Daughter, by Lee Udall Bennion
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Above: A Day of Work, by Greg Newbold
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Above: Sweat of the Brow, by Gary Smith
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Above: The Face of New England, by Robert Duncan
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Below: Spring Plowing, by Greg Newbold
“Self-reliance is a product of out work and undergirds all other welfare practices. It is an essential element in our spiritual as well as our temporal well-being.”
Thomas S. Monson, “Guiding Principles of Personal and Family Welfare,” Ensign, Sept. 1986, 3
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