“We are our brother’s keeper, even in the marketplace. … We cannot allow ourselves to do less for our partners, our customers, our employees, and others with whom we deal in the marketplace. What a beautiful and happy world this would be if all of us would strive to live these principles to the fullest. Our efforts and influence would affect millions. Examples improve society more than sermons. … In those brilliant generations that followed the appearance of the resurrected Christ in the New World, ‘there were no contentions and disputations among [the people], and every man did deal justly one with another’ (4 Ne. 1:2)” (Oaks, “Brother’s Keeper,” 22–23).