Gladys
Knight Tells Floridians, “This is the Light”
By Geoffrey Biddulph
Gladys Knight and her 60-person choir
of Latter-day Saints gave four performances for more than
5,000 people in southern Florida last week.
“This is the way, this is the light,”
she said in teary testimony regarding The Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints.
Gladys Knight is famous worldwide for
such songs as “I Heard it Through the Grapevine”
and “Midnight Train to Georgia.” Over the weekend,
she, along with her choir and a three-person band gave four
shows to thousands of members and non-member investigators,
who crowded into the Fort Lauderdale Florida stake center
building. They heard Knight’s renditions of “Because
I have been Given Much” and “I am a Child of God,”
as well as several Gospel songs that are not in the Church
hymn book.
Knight sang several solos, but she also
directed several choir members who also took the stage alone.
They sang songs such as “Uphold Me with Thy Sweet Spirit”
and “Oh, How I Love Jesus” with a swelling choir
behind them.
The highlight of the evening was certainly
when the famed singer and her husband both gave their testimonies
of the restored gospel.
“It is indeed a miracle that I belong
to this church,” Sister Knight said. “The image
of the Church in the past has not been conducive to my being
here. It shows His hand in motion. An African-American woman:
Who knew I would have a calling such as this?”
Knight has indeed been given a special
calling by the Brethren to travel throughout the world giving
her testimony both in speech and through song. Given her fame
and her reputation, she may be a vessel for bringing thousands
of tens of thousands to investigate the Church.
Several years ago, Gladys Knight’s
son was the first member of her family to look at the Church.
After he got baptized, her daughter came next.
Sister Knight described her search for
God’s true church, which came after the baptism of her
children:
“I was raised in a Baptist home.
We spent all day on Sunday at church. I was kind of all over
the place religiously. I was a Baptist and then a Catholic
and then I went to several other churches. I was seeking.
There was something good in every one of those churches, but
I thought there’s got to be more. My daughter Kenya
said, ‘talk to the missionaries.’ I fell in love
right away. They were respectful, and the first thing they
said was, ‘Can we pray?’ I believe in the power
of prayer. They told me, ‘You check it out.’ I
got on my knees and asked the Lord, and I got my answer. I
couldn’t wait for my next lessons. I said I wanted to
get baptized tomorrow.”
Very soon after that, she was baptized.
Her husband, William McDowell, gave an
eloquent and humor-laced testimony about his courtship and
marriage to one of the most famous singers around.
They met because he was the manager of
a spa in San Diego. “As Gladys kept traveling around
the world, and I kept on traveling around San Diego, it was
common knowledge Gladys has lost her mind and had joined those
Mormons,” Brother McDowell said.
He would go to visit her in Las Vegas
and, “There were a lot of young men on bicycles who
kept on visiting — hungry young men on bicycles.”
McDowell added, “They kept on saying
they belonged to the truth church of Jesus Christ. I was raised
very Baptist by god-fearing people, my grandparents. How could
they not be members of the true church?”
But McDowell said he went to seminary
and read The Book of Mormon and then got on his knees and
asked, and “I received the answers. My grandparents
had prepared me to recognize the Truth when I saw it.”
He acknowledged his brother, who was in
the audience, and said, “This is the first time he has
heard my testimony. Hopefully I can bring my family to a truth.
The Church of Jesus Christ has been restored. It was restored
by a young boy, Joseph Smith, who in a field saw God the Father
and Jesus Christ.”
McDowell continued, “Take the time
to research and find out for yourself. Take the time to pick
up The Book of Mormon. Ask whether it is true. If you want
to see a miracle, just think that Gladys Knight is running
a choir in the Mormon Church.”
He then introduced his wife as “Gladys
Knight McDowell,” and she sang a song to which Brother
McDowell wrote the lyrics — “He Lives.”
It was a very moving song about the Savior that Knight sang
to a misty-eyed crowd.
“I have to give this testimony of
mine,” Knight said. “I have no other choice. Sometimes
the truth is right before you and you don’t see it.”
Knight said that it has sometimes been
difficult for her to tell people she is a Mormon. “But
this is the true church. It has the 12 apostles, just like
Jesus’ church. Just like the people in Jesus’
day, we need to look farther for the truth. The people in
those days got the same ridicule we get today. I was willing
to risk that for the honor of serving him.”
She asked non-members in the audience,
“At least see for yourselves. At least be obedient to
that end.” She then went into the audience to shake
hands and give hugs to the many people who adore her.
Mission President Noel Reynolds said his
missionaries received 425 solid referrals from the event.
“The missionaries from the Haitian
branch brought 17 people, and one young lady asked to be baptized
right away after hearing Gladys Knight’s testimony,”
President Reynolds said. Another ward mission leader had been
asking his father, a Baptist, to hear the discussions for
year. His father finally agreed with enthusiasm after attending
the Gladys Knight event.
Geoffrey Biddulph is a member of the
Homestead stake in Miami, Florida.