2025
What Joy the News Brought
June 2025


“What Joy the News Brought,” Liahona, June 2025.

Stories from Saints, Volume 4

What Joy the News Brought

illustration of Joseph William Billy Johnson

Joseph William Billy Johnson: Holiness to the Lord, by Emmalee Glauser Powell

One evening in June 1978, Billy Johnson returned to his home in Cape Coast, Ghana. He and other members of his congregation had been fasting, as they often did, but the fast had done nothing to lift his spirits. He was tired and discouraged because more believers had stopped worshipping with him and returned to their old churches.

Billy longed to feel spiritually and emotionally strong again. A couple of months earlier, a member of his congregation had told him about a revelation she had had. “Very soon the missionaries will come,” she had said. “I have seen white men coming to our church. They embraced us and joined us in worship.” Another woman announced that she had received a similar revelation. Billy himself had dreamed of some white men entering his chapel and saying, “We are your brothers, and we have come to baptize you.” Afterward, he had dreamed of Black people coming from far and wide to join the Church.

Still, Billy could not shake his discouragement.

It was getting late, but he couldn’t sleep. A strong impression overtook him to listen to the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) on the radio—something he hadn’t done in years.

He found the radio, a brown model with four silver knobs near the base. The radio crackled to life as he turned it on. He fiddled with the knobs, and the red pointer glided back and forth across the dial. But he couldn’t find the broadcast.

Then, after an hour of searching, Billy finally made out a newscast from the BBC. The reporter announced that the President of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints had received a revelation. All worthy men in the Church, regardless of race, could now hold the priesthood.

Billy collapsed, bursting into tears of joy. Priesthood authority would finally come to Ghana, bringing all the blessings of the gospel to his people.

Missionaries arrived in Cape Coast later that year, baptizing Billy Johnson and hundreds of other believers. Since that time, the Church has spread rapidly throughout Ghana and neighboring countries in West Africa. The Cape Coast Ghana Temple was announced in October 2023; it will be the third temple in the country.

Notes

  1. Acquah and Acquah, Oral History Interview [2018], 16; E. Dale LeBaron, “Steadfast African Pioneer,” Ensign, Dec. 1999, 49.

  2. Acquah and Acquah, Oral History Interview [2018], 16; Joseph Johnson, Oral History Interview [1988], 22–23, 43–45. Quotation edited for readability.

  3. E. Dale LeBaron, “Steadfast African Pioneer,” 49; Joseph Johnson, Oral History Interview [1988], 22–23; Kissi, Walking in the Sand, 28.

  4. Joseph Johnson, Oral History Interview [1988], 43; E. Dale LeBaron, “Steadfast African Pioneer,” 49; Kissi, Walking in the Sand, 27–28; “Race and The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints,” Gospel Topics Essays, Gospel Library.