Contributed by: Ann Resource
Guide, 2001
For Lesson 1- (New Era, Apr. 1999, 4-7)
Words of the Prophet - Building Your Testimony
by President Gordon B. Hinckley
The marvelous and wonderful thing is that anyone who desires to know the truth may
receive that conviction.
This thing which we call testimony is the great strength of the Church. It is the
wellspring of faith and activity.Wherever the Church is organized its power is felt. We
stand on our feet and say that we know. We say it until it almost appears to be
monotonous. We say it because we do not know what else to say. The simple fact is that we
do know that God lives, that Jesus is the Christ, and that this is Their cause and Their
kingdom. The words are simple; the expression comes from the heart.
It is something that cannot be refuted. Opponents may quote scripture and argue
doctrine endlessly. They can be clever and persuasive. But when one says, "I
know," there can be no further argument. There may not be acceptance, but who can
refute or deny the quiet voice of the inner soul speaking with personal conviction? (from
Ensign, May 1998, 69-70).
Read, serve, pray
The acquisition of understanding and enthusiasm for the Lord comes from following
simple rules. I should like to suggest three.
The first is to readto read the word of the Lord. I know that with the demands of
your studies there is little time to read anything else. But I promise you that if you
will read the words of that writing which we call scripture, there will come into your
heart an understanding and a warmth that will be pleasing to experience.
The next is to serveto serve in the work of the Lord. Spiritual strength is like
physical strength; it is like the muscle of my arm. It grows only as it is nourished and
exercised.
The cause of Christ does not need your doubts; it needs your strength and time and
talents; and as you exercise these in service, your faith will grow.
The third is to pray. Speak with your Eternal Father in the name of His Beloved Son.
It is unlikely that you will hear voices from heaven, but there will come a heaven-sent
assurance, peaceful and certain.
If you will read the word of the Lord, if you will serve in His cause, if in prayer you
will talk with Him, your doubts will leave [and] the witness of the Holy Spirit that Jesus
is in very deed the Son of God, born in the flesh, the Redeemer of the world resurrected
from the grave [will come]. It is your opportunity so to know. It is your obligation so to
find out (from Conference Report, Apr. 1966, 87).
Seek anxiously
Passive acceptance is not enough. Vibrant testimony comes of anxious seeking. Strength
comes of active service in the Masters cause. Jesus said, "Learn of me."
He further declared that he that doeth the will of the Father "shall know of the
doctrine whether it be of God, or whether I speak of myself" (John 7:17).
And so, while you read math and physics and chemistry, read also the Gospels of the New
Testament. And read the testament of the New World, the Book of Mormon, which was brought
forth by the power of God "to the convincing of the Jew and the gentile that Jesus is
the Christ" (from Conference Report, Oct. 1964, 118).
The Book of Mormon
Each time we encourage a man to read the Book of Mormon we do him a favor. If he reads
it prayerfully and with a sincere desire to know the truth, he will know by the power of
the Holy Ghost that the book is true. And from that knowledge there will flow a conviction
of the truth of many other things.
For if the Book of Mormon is true, then God lives. Testimony upon testimony runs
through its pages of the solemn fact that our Father is real, that He is personal, that He
loves His children and seeks their happiness (from Conference Report, Apr. 1958, 123).
Testimony and conviction
When I was a boy, 12 years of age, my father took me to a meeting of the priesthood of
the stake in which we lived. At the opening of that meeting, the first of its kind I had
ever attended, three or four hundred men stood and sang "Praise to the Man."
Something happened within me as I heard those men of faith sing. There came into my
boyish heart a knowledge, placed there by the Holy Spirit, that Joseph Smith was indeed a
prophet of the Almighty. In the many years that have since passed, years in which I have
read much of his words and works, that knowledge has grown stronger and ever more certain.
Mine has been the privilege of bearing witness across this nation from sea to shining sea,
and on continents north and south, east and west, that he was and is a prophet of God, a
mighty servant and testifier of the Lord Jesus Christ.
That testimony I reaffirm to you this day and I leave my testimony in the name of Him
of whom Joseph Smith was a witness and of whom I also am a witness, even the Lord, Jesus
Christ (from Ensign, May 1977, 66).
It takes work
The marvelous and wonderful thing is that any individual who desires to know the truth
may receive that conviction. The Lord himself gave the formula when he said, "If any
man will do his will, he shall know of the doctrine, whether it be of God, or whether I
speak of myself" (John 7:17).
It will take study of the word of God. It will take prayer and anxious seeking of the
source of all truth. It will take living the gospel, an experiment, if you please, in
following the teachings. I do not hesitate to promise, because I know from personal
experience, that out of all of this will come, by the power of the Holy Ghost, a
conviction, a testimony, a certain knowledge. There must be effort. There must be
humility. There must be prayer. But the results are certain and the testimony is sure
(from Ensign, Nov. 1981, 8).
Do not be ashamed of your testimony
And now I come to the Apostle Pauls great statement:
"For God hath not given us the spirit of fear; but of power, and of love, and of a
sound mind.
"Be not thou therefore ashamed of the testimony of our Lord" (2 Tim. 1:7-8).
It is not God who has given us the spirit of fear; this comes from the adversary. So
many of us are fearful of what our peers will say, that we will be looked upon with
disdain and criticized if we stand for what is right. But I remind you that
"wickedness never was happiness" (Alma 41:10). Evil never was happiness. Sin
never was happiness. Happiness lies in the power and the love and the sweet simplicity of
the gospel of Jesus Christ. We need not be prudish. We need not slink off in a corner, as
it were. We need not be ashamed. We have the greatest thing in the world, the gospel of
the risen Lord (from Ensign, May 1997, 49).
To every young man and woman I commend this stirring injunction"Be not thou
therefore ashamed of the testimony of our Lord"This is the spirit that will
reform the world (from Conference Report, Oct. 1964, 118).
Gospel topics: prayer, scripture study, service, testimony, values