- Budgeting
- Cash Management
- Consumer and Mortgage Loans
- Debt and Debt Reduction
- Time Value of Money 1: Present and Future Value
- Time Value of Money 2: Inflation, Real Returns, Annuities, and Amortized Loans
- Insurance 1: Basics
- Insurance 2: Life Insurance
- Insurance 3: Health, Long-term Care, and Disability Insurance
- Insurance 4: Auto, Homeowners, and Liability Insurance
- The Home Decision
- The Auto Decision
- Family 1: Money and Marriage
- Introduction
- Ten Key Principles of Money and Marriage
- 1. The family is ordained of God
- 2. Your spouse has first priority
- 3. Marriage partners are equal
- 4. Marriage partners should seek the “best interests” of the family.”
- 5. Financial problems are usually behavioral problems, not money problems
- 6. Change is necessary to improve.
- 7. Money spent on things you value leads to satisfaction and accomplishment.
- 8. Financial freedom is more the result of decreased spending than increased income
- 9. Spouses are to leave their parents and become one
- 10. The best things in life require no money
- Understand Why Money May be an Issue in Marriage
- Recommendations for Money and Marriage
- Summary
- Assignments
- Family 2: Teaching Children Financial Responsibility
- Family 3: Financing Children’s Education and Missions
- Investments A: Key Lessons of Investing
- Investments B: Key Lessons of Investing
1. The family is ordained of God
"The Family: A Proclamation to the World" states:
The family is ordained of God. Marriage between man and woman is essential to His eternal plan. Children are entitled to birth within the bonds of matrimony, and to be reared by a father and a mother who honor marital vows with complete fidelity. ("The Family: A Proclamation to the World, " Ensign, Nov. 1995, 102)
President Hinckley also stated:
We must work at our responsibility as parents as if everything in life counted on it, because in fact everything in life does. If we fail in our home, we fail in our lives. No man is truly successful who has failed in his home. (Gordon B. Hinckley, “Each a Better Person,” Ensign, Nov. 2002, 99.)
Clearly the family is our highest priority or responsibility as parents. As such, we should give it the time and attention necessary.