General Conference
The Eternal Gift of Testimony
October 2025 general conference


12:16

The Eternal Gift of Testimony

Every son or daughter of God can gain a deeper, firmer, and surer knowledge for themselves.

My dear brothers and sisters, lately I have been reflecting on three powerful truths from the Restoration. These truths have profoundly blessed my life. Today, I would like to share with you how these truths have guided me on my journey toward a sure witness of the gospel of Jesus Christ.

1. God Is Our Loving Heavenly Father

He is omniscient and omnipotent. Through the Light of Christ and the ministration of the Holy Ghost, His influence is everywhere. It is in His nature to bless us.

He sees our past, present, and eternal destiny. Nothing can be hidden from Him.

President Russell M. Nelson’s invitation to “think celestial” encourages us to emulate our Heavenly Father’s vision and nature.

Because of His divine attributes, our Heavenly Father gives us every good gift, each with His eternal perspective and vision in mind.

2. Agency Is the Gift to Choose and Act for Ourselves

It is also the responsibility to choose well.

Jesus Christ paid the ultimate price for that privilege with His precious blood.

Sometimes we might believe that agency means doing whatever we want. But the fact that the price was paid means agency is a sacred gift.

We are agents, and agents are responsible for something. In this case, we are responsible for the choices we make based on the knowledge we have and the gifts we are given. We cannot make a choice without being responsible for the consequences.

Why do we have agency?

To choose good.

To choose Christ.

To choose eternal life—again and again.

3. Our Testimony Comes Through the Power of the Holy Ghost

A witness from the Holy Ghost is greater than sight. He is the preeminent witness of the Father and the Son. President Nelson taught, “In coming days, it will not be possible to survive spiritually without the guiding, directing, comforting, and constant influence of the Holy Ghost.”

Brothers and sisters, this is why we each need the power of the Holy Ghost today.

A testimony through the Holy Ghost can come in many ways. Like a light bulb in a dark room, it can come on dramatically and suddenly. It can come like the sunrise gradually and over time. It can come like rays of light, intermittent exposure to pure intelligence. Whatever the way, it comes through the Holy Ghost.

Finding Testimony in Jamaica

I grew up in beautiful Jamaica; it was fun and wonderful. However, when I started high school, some classmates and friends could not understand my decision to be a member of the Church of Jesus Christ. “How could you join that church?” they would ask. “How could you believe that story?”—referring to the First Vision. “How could you read that book?”—referring to the Book of Mormon. “Do you really believe all that?” And “Why are you wasting your life away?”

The Salt Lake Temple
The Sacred Grove
The Book of Mormon

It was painful, especially when it came from people I cared about.

But what they didn’t know was this: I had an experience with the Holy Ghost. As that testimony filled my heart, it dulled the pain of days, and “for one brief moment, heaven’s view [appeared] before my gaze.”

Perhaps you have been asked some of these questions. Perhaps even now you are being bombarded as I was.

The gift and witness of the Holy Ghost are available to everyone.

Jamaica is to me like Palmyra was to Joseph Smith. It is my Sacred Grove. I do not know the exact spot where Joseph knelt to pray in the Sacred Grove, but I know exactly where I was when my Sacred Grove became a reality. It happened at Four Grove Road, Mandeville, Jamaica, in my bathroom, at 6:00 a.m. on a Wednesday three years after my baptism. This sacred experience happened because two weeks earlier an inspired sister missionary invited me to read the Book of Mormon. Sister Audrey Krauss is attending this conference today with her family, and I forever love her.

Young Elder Brown with sister missionary

That experience changed me.

Brothers and sisters, a testimony is not given for temporary use. This gift from our loving Heavenly Father is meant to be eternal because the giver is eternal. A testimony should not have an expiration date. It should not weaken or diminish because something in my life has changed or something in the world has changed. It should get stronger because, like the servant’s talents in the parable of the talents, my personal testimony is a gift to be multiplied—not buried.

Looking back on those difficult days of testing and persecution that I went through as a child has helped me get to the place where I now know for myself. I not only believe, hope, or trust, even though these are significant particles of faith on the pathway to a sure witness. I commend you for making your own way by asking questions, studying, praying, fasting, and pondering. Please don’t stop. It is worth every effort to pursue this path to testimony. Who or what will you allow to take that away? “What greater witness can you have than from God?”

Every son or daughter of God can gain a deeper, firmer, and surer knowledge for themselves. Like Joseph Smith, who affirmed his testimony despite opposition, we can boldly say, “I knew it, and I knew that God knew it, and I could not deny it, neither dared I do it.”

My dear brothers and sisters, let the small seedling of testimony work in you until it springs up to an everlastingly glorious sure knowledge.

If you are a baptized and confirmed member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints but still struggle with “I am not sure if I know,” please remember this promise in the sacrament prayer: “That they may always have his Spirit to be with them.” Because of this promise, each of us can pursue the path to testimony and a sure knowledge.

Take Charge of Your Testimony

Now here is a grand truth: In whatever way a testimony is given—whether it is distilled like the sunrise or comes in a glorious vision—it still requires a choice to receive this precious gift.

Saying “I choose to believe” makes it easier to receive a witness from God. If we find our testimony weakening, remember that it is the choices we make that diminish the power of the testimony. But the testimony has not gone anywhere. We just need to choose to reconnect with it.

Choosing to believe is a wise and powerful way to use our agency.

I cannot see a better way to use my agency than in defense of my testimony.

President Nelson taught: “I plead with you to take charge of your testimony. Work for it. Own it. Care for it. Nurture it so that it will grow. Feed it truth.”

To me, the words take charge, work, care, own, nurture, and feed sound like an agent given stewardship for something precious and important.

In the early Church, Parley P. Pratt felt disgruntled with the Prophet Joseph Smith and chose to criticize him and the Church. When John Taylor, whom Parley taught the gospel, came to town, Parley took him aside and warned him not to follow Joseph. John Taylor said to Parley:

“Before you left Canada, you bore a strong testimony to Joseph Smith being a prophet of God, … and you said you knew these things by revelation and the gift of the Holy Ghost.

“… I now have the same testimony that you then rejoiced in. If the work was true six months ago, it is true today. If Joseph Smith was then a prophet, he is now a prophet.”

I testify that Joseph Smith was a prophet of God and that the prophetic mantle he received continues today. Jesus Christ directs this work.

I invite you to think about your path to a sure witness of Jesus Christ and His gospel. Take charge of your testimony; use your agency wisely and acknowledge the giver and all His glorious attributes. I bear witness that the power is within you. No one can choose for you. No one can take this gift away. You can choose to believe.

I promise that as you do this, your testimony will be a “well of living water, springing up unto everlasting life.” It will be an anchor and a motivator, and it will sustain you through difficult times. It will enable you to develop spiritual gifts. It will help you in your personal ministry and service. It will be a weapon against Satan and your adversaries. Your testimony will be a joy as you see it replicated in your children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren and in those you love and serve. It will be powerful when you share it and use it to testify.

If you know, you know. I know that I know. We need more sure witnesses of Jesus Christ and His gospel. Get there! Seek it! It is urgent! This is the final dispensation—the dispensation of the fulness of times.

Jesus Christ declared this truth: “Heaven and earth shall pass away, but my words shall not pass away.”

Brothers and sisters, a testimony of Jesus Christ was never meant to be a temporary gift. Nothing about it is temporary—not the giver, not the gift itself, not the deliverer of the gift, not who the gift is about. May your testimony be described in this same way. Though “heaven and earth shall pass away,” your testimony and witness of the gospel of Jesus Christ will not pass away. Now is the time to lay hold on this precious gift. In the name of Jesus Christ, amen.

Notes

  1. “God is our Heavenly Father, and we are His children. He created us in His image. He has a glorified, perfected ‘body of flesh and bones as tangible as man’s’ (Doctrine and Covenants 130:22).

    “God knows us personally, and He loves us more than we can comprehend. He understands our trials, sorrows, and weaknesses, and He offers to support us through them. He rejoices in our progress and will help us make right choices. He wants to communicate with us, and we can communicate with Him through prayer” (Preach My Gospel: A Guide to Sharing the Gospel of Jesus Christ [2023], 33).

  2. See Doctrine and Covenants 84:46–47; 88:12–13.

  3. “Just because God is God, just because Christ is Christ, they cannot do other than care for us and bless us and help us if we will but come unto them, approaching their throne of grace in meekness and lowliness of heart. They can’t help but bless us. They have to. It is their nature” (Jeffrey R. Holland, “Come unto Me” [Brigham Young University devotional, Mar. 2, 1997], 4, speeches.byu.edu).

  4. See Luke 12:2; Moroni 7:22; Abraham 2:8.

  5. “I invite you to adopt the practice of ‘thinking celestial’! Thinking celestial means being spiritually minded. We learn from the Book of Mormon prophet Jacob that ‘to be spiritually-minded is life eternal’” (Russell M. Nelson, “Think Celestial!,” Liahona, Nov. 2023, 117).

  6. See Topics and Questions, “Agency and Accountability,” Gospel Library; see also 2 Nephi 2:11, 16.

  7. See 1 Peter 1:18–20; Abraham 3:22–28.

  8. See 1 Corinthians 6:20.

  9. See Doctrine and Covenants 101:78.

  10. “The gospel of Jesus Christ is a plan that shows us how to become what our Heavenly Father desires us to become. …

    “… This spotless and perfected state will result from a steady succession of covenants, ordinances, and actions, an accumulation of right choices, and from continuing repentance” (Dallin H. Oaks, “The Challenge to Become,” Ensign, Nov. 2000, 32, 33; Liahona, Jan. 2001, 40, 41; emphasis added); see also Moses 7:33.

  11. See Moroni 10:4–5.

  12. “The Spirit does not need to be limited to words; He can communicate Spirit to spirit with a language that is unmistakable because it has no words. It is a communication of pure knowledge and intelligence from the Spirit, and I have come to know that it truly is the best way to acquire knowledge. It is stronger and longer lasting than touching or seeing; we can come to doubt the physical senses, but we cannot doubt when the Holy Spirit speaks to us. It is the surest witness. Because of this, the unforgivable sin is to deny the Holy Ghost or the testimony of the Holy Ghost” (D. Todd Christofferson, “Strong Impressions of the Spirit,” New Era, June 2013, 3; Liahona, June 2013, 49).

  13. See John 5:32; 2 Nephi 31:18; 3 Nephi 11:36.

  14. Russell M. Nelson, “Revelation for the Church, Revelation for Our Lives,” Ensign or Liahona, May 2018, 96. In that same talk he said:

    “I urge you to stretch beyond your current spiritual ability to receive personal revelation. …

    “Oh, there is so much more that your Father in Heaven wants you to know. As Elder Neal A. Maxwell taught, ‘To those who have eyes to see and ears to hear, it is clear that the Father and the Son are giving away the secrets of the universe!’ …

    “… Choose to do the spiritual work required to enjoy the gift of the Holy Ghost and hear the voice of the Spirit more frequently and more clearly” (95, 96).

  15. See David A. Bednar, “The Spirit of Revelation,” Ensign or Liahona, May 2011, 87–90; Alexander Dushku, “Pillars and Rays,” Liahona, May 2024, 14–16.

  16. “Testimony,” Hymns, no. 137.

  17. See Numbers 11:29; James 1:5.

  18. See Doctrine and Covenants 20:28; Moses 1:3.

  19. See Matthew 25:14–30. “The spiritual witness I gained from the Holy Ghost … has not passed away. In fact, it has grown stronger. The things I learned in my youth about the fundamental principles of the gospel of Jesus Christ have been my firm foundation throughout my life” (Dieter F. Uchtdorf, “Nourish the Roots, and the Branches Will Grow,” Liahona, Nov. 2024, 101).

  20. Doctrine and Covenants 6:23.

  21. Joseph Smith—History 1:25.

  22. See Alma 32:27, 30, 37–38, 41.

  23. See Doctrine and Covenants 20:77.

  24. See Doctrine and Covenants 88:33.

    “Then there is perhaps the most important part, the receiving of the gift. … To truly receive a gift, we come to value it for ourselves, put it to full use in our lives, and then remember with thankfulness the giver.

    “Receiving a gift is not passive but an intentional and meaningful process that goes far beyond merely opening a package. To receive is to appreciate and connect with both the gift and the heart of the giver in a way that strengthens the bonds between the giver and receiver” (Patrick Kearon, “Receive His Gift,” Liahona, May 2025, 121–22).

  25. Russell M. Nelson, “Choices for Eternity” (worldwide devotional for young adults, May 15, 2022), Gospel Library.

  26. See Doctrine and Covenants 70:3–4.

  27. Saints: The Story of the Church of Jesus Christ in the Latter Days, vol. 1, The Standard of Truth, 1815–1846 (2018), 280–81.

  28. See Mosiah 4:9–12.

  29. Doctrine and Covenants 63:23; emphasis added.

  30. See Alma 5:46–48. Joseph Smith taught that “salvation cannot come without revelation. It is vain for anyone to minister without it. … No man is a minister of Jesus Christ without being a prophet. No man can be the minister of Jesus Christ except he has the testimony of Jesus, and this is the spirit of prophecy” (The Joseph Smith Papers, History, 1838–1856, volume C-1 [2 November 1838–31 July 1842] [addenda], 12, josephsmithpapers.org; spelling, capitalization, and punctuation modernized).

  31. “We stand on the summit of the ages, awed by a great and solemn sense of history. This is the last and final dispensation toward which all in the past has pointed” (Gordon B. Hinckley, “At the Summit of the Ages,” Ensign, Nov. 1999, 74; Liahona, Jan. 2000, 90).

  32. Matthew 24:35.

  33. See Moroni 10:30.