Testimony
At less than five years old, I was instructed to stand in front of my primary class and say that I knew the church was true. This experience was repeated for years. Sometimes I wonder if I really knew what I was talking about. I wondered if kids had some kind of spiritual gift that helped them know the truth.
One memory affirms that I did not actually understand what I was asked to testify of. When I was six, my family moved to a new ward. I remember feeling confused in a primary class. My old primary teachers always used to say, âI know that this church is the only true church.â So when we went to a new building (a new church, as I remember understanding it), I was distraught to hear my new primary teacher say, âI know that this church is the only true church.â We were going to a new church, I thought, and both cannot possibly be true.
I once told this story at a youth activity and got a few laughs. Itâs always felt like a cute anecdote about a confused kid. But Iâve realized its significance: when I was asked to âburyâ my testimony in primary, I was given a script to repeat. I was taught to say what I believed until I finally actually believed it. The churchâs claims were required to be my ground truth for years.
Shared Identity
As a teenager, I was still conflicted. My friends in seminary would talk about having amazing spiritual experiences. People shared how they felt like God was speaking to them when they read the Book of Mormon. I never had these experiences, but I felt like I had to share them to fit in. So when a seminary teacher asked us to share our experience with the Book of Mormon with a neighbor, I made one up. When I was asked to speak in church, I concluded my talk with a template that I still have saved on an old hard drive:
I know with all my heart that the church is true. I know Joseph Smith was a prophet of God and that he translated the Book of Mormon by the power of God. I know the church is led by a prophet today. I know the scriptures are true. In the name of Jesus Christ, amen.
It was made clear to me that to be accepted in the church, you had to have a testimony, and you had to repeat it often. I remember hearing the parable of the ten virgins and being chastised in Sunday School because I wouldnât stand up in testimony meetings. I was told that when Jesus came, I had better have enough testimony (or oil in my extended-metaphorical lamp).
When I was a missionary, I was told to testify regularly. Even if I was doubting something, I must have repeated thousands of times the same testimony over and over. In the MTC, I practiced using tone and inflection to sound sincere when I bore a testimony. I spent hours practicing âYo se que la iglesia es la unica iglesia verdaderaâ (I know that the church is the only true church). Throughout my mission, I learned from mission companions and the mission president that changing my voiceâs tone made a testimony sound more convincing. I practically mastered the whispery âtestimony voiceâ that so many of us are familiar with.
Having a testimony to share gave me a sense of shared identity. I was part of an “in-group” who could talk about spiritual experiences and bear testimony of them. This shared identity can be valuable; it was nice to believe I had support from my church community if I needed help.
Pressure to Testify
However, this shared community created a sense of constant pressure. If I were to stand in front of a congregation and say “I’m not sure whether or not the church is true”, there would likely have been people whispering to each other in the pews, and I would probably have subtly become less welcome in the community. I was chastised as a teenager because I didn’t go up to the microphone during testimony meetings.
I was good at giving a fake testimony, but I wanted to have the spiritual experiences other people kept talking about. I prayed several times a day on my mission to feel that the church was true. I prayed for some sort of confirmation that the Book of Mormon was true or that Joseph Smith was a prophet. I occasionally felt relaxed and peaceful, and I thought that might be good enough. I thought that if so many other people had impactful, significant spiritual experiences and could testify of truth, so could I. I lied through my teeth and it worked. People could not tell I was lying, or they at least never called me out for it. Mission companions would say they felt the spirit when I testified about the church. I am now deeply remorseful that many people were (at least partially) converted and baptized on the basis of my phony testimony.
Eventually, I could not tell what I believed and did not believe anymore. Memorizing and repeating my testimony dozens of times every day for two years eroded at any sense I had of what I really believed. When I got back from my mission, I knew all the right lines to say. I was congratulated for giving an impressive, eloquent talk (which was a translation of a talk I gave in the last week of my mission). Even though it felt gimmicky and repetitious to me, people said they felt the spirit when I shared my testimony in Spanish at the close of the talk.
Eventually, I was asked to give a talk in sacrament meeting themed âWhy I believeâ. I started writing the talk by scribbling âWhat do I believeâ on the top of a ledger notebook. I was stumped. I wanted to say I believed the church was true, but Iâd never really received a spiritual confirmation of it. So after spending several hours trying to piece together any scraps of testimony I actually had into a talk, I ended up talking about believing that it is valuable to believe in a chance to correct mistakes. I talked about how the Jesus story was useful, and how we should love all of Godâs children. I somehow managed to squeeze out a 10-minute talk. Had I not felt pressure to testify of what everyone expected, I could have given a much more meaningful talk, but I couldn’t bring myself to show any doubt in front of my community.
My New Testimony
After my talk, I started seriously researching the churchâs truth claims. For the first time in my life, I let myself read âanti-mormonâ literature, like the Gospel Topics Essays on the church website. I spent a good deal of time on the Mormon Stories website and reading Letter for my Wife. Finally, I was starting to read logically consistent arguments. It was terribly unfortunate that these arguments contradicted everything Iâd been taught to believe, but they finally worked in my mind.
Over the next few weeks, I read antagonistic work followed by apologist rebuttals (usually from FAIR). The apologist arguments were, in my opinion, incredibly weak and involved a great amount of speculation, while antagonistic work was usually evidence-based and logically sound. I wanted so badly for the church to be true, so I prayed over the course of several days. Eventually, I told God I had no testimony and experienced abuse from the church, and unless I received a spiritual confirmation the church was true, I was going to leave. I told Him I respected Him and wanted to follow His will, but that He had not yet given me enough information to believe that meant staying in the church.
I felt very little. So I prayed again. âDear Heavenly Father, should I leave the church?â I asked. I felt more peace and calm than I had felt during any other prayer. My mind felt clear. I felt everything church leaders had identified to me as signs of the spirit. I couldnât believe it. âIâm interpreting this feeling as a sign that I should leave the church,â I confirmed. I still felt what I identified as the spirit, so later that day, I let my wife know I was leaving the church.
I can now say with more assurance than I ever had as a member of the church that the church is not true. I know with all of my heart that if there is a God, it is not through Russell Nelson or any other rich white man in a suit that He directs His work. I know Joseph Smith was not a prophet. He deceived, abused, and manipulated swaths of innocent people. Above all else, I know that leaving the church has made me happier, healthier, kinder, more hopeful, more generous, more tolerant, more understanding, and overall better than staying possibly could.
I learned in the church that while people can refute facts, they cannot refute spiritual experiences. So I humbly and vulnerably share this in hopes that it might help someone avoid the abuse thousands of church members have survived and continue to experience every day. The church is not true; it is not what it claims to be.