| Jeffrey R. Holland | |
|---|---|
| President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles | |
| October 14, 2025 (2025-10-14) – December 27, 2025 (2025-12-27) | |
| Predecessor | Dallin H. Oaks |
| Successor | Henry B. Eyring |
| Acting President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles[1] | |
| November 15, 2023 (2023-11-15)[2] – September 27, 2025 (2025-09-27) | |
| Called by | Russell M. Nelson |
| Predecessor | M. Russell Ballard |
| End reason | Death of Russell M. Nelson |
| Quorum of the Twelve Apostles | |
| June 23, 1994 (1994-06-23) – December 27, 2025 (2025-12-27) | |
| Called by | Howard W. Hunter |
| LDS ChurchApostle | |
| June 23, 1994 (1994-06-23) – December 27, 2025 (2025-12-27) | |
| Called by | Howard W. Hunter |
| Reason | Death ofEzra Taft Benson; reorganization ofFirst Presidency |
| Reorganization at end of term | Clark G. Gilbert ordained |
| First Quorum of the Seventy | |
| April 1, 1989 (1989-04-01) – June 23, 1994 (1994-06-23) | |
| Called by | Ezra Taft Benson |
| End reason | Called to the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles |
| 9th President ofBrigham Young University | |
| In office | |
| September 1980[3] – 1989 | |
| Predecessor | Dallin H. Oaks |
| Successor | Rex E. Lee |
| Personal details | |
| Born | Jeffrey Roy Holland (1940-12-03)December 3, 1940 St. George, Utah, U.S. |
| Died | December 27, 2025(2025-12-27) (aged 85) Salt Lake City, Utah, U.S. |
| Education | |
| Spouse(s) | |
| Children | 3; includingMatthew andDavid |
| Signature | |
Jeffrey Roy Holland (December 3, 1940 – December 27, 2025) was an American educator and a religious leader. He waspresident of theQuorum of the Twelve Apostles ofthe Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from October 14, 2025, until his death. He was theninth president ofBrigham Young University (BYU) and wasacting president of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles[2] from November 15, 2023 until September 27, 2025, when theFirst Presidency was dissolved as a result ofchurch presidentRussell M. Nelson's death.
As a member of the Quorum of the Twelve, Holland was accepted by the church as aprophet, seer, and revelator. At the time of his death, he was the church's second most senior apostle.[4]
Holland was born and raised inSt. George, Utah. After graduating from high school, his college education began atDixie College and he also served as an LDS Churchmissionary in Great Britain. After returning from his mission, he transferred to BYU and graduated with abachelor's degree in English. He later earned amaster's degree (MA) in religious education at BYU. Holland received a second master's degree and later aPhD in American studies atYale University. In 1974, Holland was appointed BYU's dean ofreligious education. Two years later he was appointed the eleventh commissioner of theChurch Educational System (CES), replacingNeal A. Maxwell. In 1980, Holland became BYU's ninth president, replacingDallin H. Oaks.
Holland was born in St. George, Utah,[5] on December 3, 1940. His father, Frank D. Holland, was a convert to the LDS Church, while his mother, Alice, came from a long line ofLatter-day Saints.[6] As a youth, he worked as a newspaper carrier, a grocery bagger, and a service station attendant.[7] As a young man, Holland served in what was then known as the BritishMission. Hismission president wasMarion D. Hanks, a churchgeneral authority. He andQuentin L. Cook were missionary companions.[8]
He graduated fromDixie High School in 1959, and he helped the Flyers capture state high school championships in football and basketball.[6] He began his college education at Dixie College before his mission. After returning from his mission, he served as co-captain of the Dixiebasketball team.[7] In 2011, the school broke ground for the Jeffrey R. Holland Centennial Commons Building, a building to honor both Holland and the school's 2011 centennial.[9] The completed building was dedicated in September 2012.[10]
Holland transferred to BYU, where he graduated with a bachelor's degree in English. He did graduate study in religious education, receiving an MA in 1966 with a thesis on selected changes to the text of theBook of Mormon,[11][12] while also teaching religion classes part-time.[6] After earning his master's degree, Holland became anInstitute of Religion teacher inHayward, California. He later worked as an institute director inSeattle, Washington. Holland then studied American studies at Yale University, where he received a second MA, and a PhD in 1972.[13] At Yale, Holland studied with American literary scholar and criticR. W. B. Lewis and authored a dissertation on the religious sense ofMark Twain.[14] He was an instructor at the church's institute inHartford, Connecticut while a student at Yale.
While studying at Yale, Holland served as a counselor in thepresidency of the church'sHartfordConnecticutStake.[15]
Holland served as an institute director in Salt Lake City after earning his PhD. He also served as the LDS Church's director of theMelchizedek Priesthood MIA and as chair of its Young Adult Committee.[7][16] In 1974, at age 33, Holland was appointed BYU's Dean of Religious Education. As dean, he founded BYU'sReligious Studies Center and became its first director.[17] From 1976 to 1980, he was the eleventh commissioner of CES, replacing Neal A. Maxwell, who wascalled to theFirst Council of the Seventy.[18]: 40–42 [19][20] During this time, Holland also served on the board of directors of bothLDS Hospital and thePolynesian Cultural Center.[21]
In 1980, Holland was appointed to succeed Dallin H. Oaks as BYU's president. After a search committee was formed, as a favorite candidate ofN. Eldon Tanner, first counselor in the church's First Presidency, and the protégé of the chair of the executive committee of the BYU Board of Trustees,Gordon B. Hinckley, Holland was appointed less than two days later. As the church's commissioner of education at the time Oaks was released, Holland was supposed to compile a list of candidates to be the next BYU president. Instead, he was unexpectedly notified of the First Presidency's intention to make him president. After his appointment, rumors on campus cited the decision as "politically motivated".[18]: 40–41 Before he arrived at BYU, Holland reduced the number of vice presidents to four and increased the number of assistant and associate vice presidents over academics.[18]: 42
Holland easily transitioned into the role of president. He was familiar with the president's duties, since he had worked closely with Oaks as the commissioner of education.[18]: 41 He placed emphasis on upgrading programs and improving relationships with faculty rather than focusing on physical expansion of the campus.[18]: 42 In order to supplement the school's funds, Holland launched a fundraiser called "Excellence in the Eighties" which sought to raise $100 million from 1982 to 1987.[6] Specific funds were raised for student scholarships, academic programs, faculty salaries, and extension programs. He emphasized hiring more qualified faculty and purchasing more library and research materials. He supervised the building of the Crabtree Technology Building but did not promise more than ten new buildings during his presidency.[18]: 43
A significant achievement during Holland's presidency was the founding of theBYU Jerusalem Center.[22] Also during his presidency, the BYU Center for International Studies was renamed theDavid M. Kennedy Center for International Studies and had its role at BYU re-emphasized.[23] There had been a large amount of debate about BYU's dress code throughout the previous administration. Holland clarified his support for dress code rules.[18]: 115 Holland also instituted a policy requiring that students seeking to remove their name from records of the LDS Church must receive special permission from the board of trustees in order to remain enrolled in school.[18]: 122–23
During Holland's presidency, the weekly independent student newspaperThe 7th East Press was shut down due to writing about controversial topics. However, student editor, Dean Huffaker, believed that Holland had tried to prevent them from being banned because Holland was conscious of public relations and didn't want to cause controversy. The students stated that they believed the ban came from one of the church's general authorities.[24]
Holland had the re-establishment of religious instruction as the "hub" of BYU's academics as one of his significant administrative goals. While he did not initiate any significant changes along these lines, his public communications regularly emphasized the importance of religious education.[18]: 91 As BYU's president, Holland encouraged academic excellence in an atmosphere of faith. Holland emphasized that BYU could not do everything but would seek excellence in what it did choose to do.[22]
Holland served as the president of the American Association of Presidents of Independent Colleges and Universities and as a member of theNCAA's presidents' committee. He also received the "Torch of Liberty" award from theAnti-Defamation League.[25]
Prior to his call as a general authority, Holland served asbishop of asingle adultward in Seattle, as a counselor in the presidency of the Hartford Connecticut Stake,[6] and as aregional representative.[26] He also served in the presidency of two other stakes and as a stakehigh councilor.[16]
Holland was called as a general authority and member of theFirst Quorum of the Seventy on April 1, 1989, bringing an end to his term as BYU's president.[26] As a member of the Seventy, Holland was a counselor in the general presidency of the church'sYoung Men organization from 1989 to 1990.
From 1990 to 1993, Holland and his wife lived inSolihull, England, where he served as president of the church's Europe NorthArea.[27]
On June 23, 1994, Holland was called and ordained as an apostle by new church presidentHoward W. Hunter. The vacancy was created by the death ofEzra Taft Benson and subsequent reorganization of the First Presidency. This timing differed from the typical sustaining of new apostles in ageneral conference and ordaining them afterward. Holland met with the media on the day of his ordination.[28] His call to the apostleship was subsequentlyratified by the church during its October 1994 general conference.
In 2000, Holland became the chair of the Missionary Curriculum Task Force which worked to developPreach My Gospel.[29] Holland lived inSantiago and served as president of the church'sChile Area from 2002 to 2004.[30][31]
In the church's general conferences in fall 2007 and spring 2008, Holland gave sermons that directly answered accusations that Latter-day Saints are not Christians. At the April 2009 general conference, Holland gave a sermon about thecrucifixion of Jesus Christ and the importance of Christ's saying, "My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?" This talk was later reformatted with music and put on a church website where it had been viewed over 500,000 times by August 2009.[32][failed verification]
In 2012, Holland was the member of the Quorum of the Twelve with responsibility for the affairs of the church inAfrica. Early in that year, he went toSierra Leone,Liberia, andGhana to meet with members and missionaries. He also met with the vice president of Sierra Leone,Samuel Sam-Sumana.[33] In December 2012, Holland organized the church's 3,000th stake, located inFreetown, Sierra Leone.[34][35] On March 12, 2012, theHarvard Law School hosted Holland for a "Mormonism 101" series.[36] On June 10, 2015, he addressed the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Foreign Affairs in the House of Lords at the UK Parliament.[37] In 2016, Holland was keynote speaker at theBoy Scouts of America's (BSA)Duty to God breakfast, as part of his assignment as the church's chief BSA representative.[38]
From 2015 to 2023, among his other assignments, Holland served on theChurch Board of Education and Boards of Trustees, where he also served as chairman of the Board's Executive Committee from January 2018 to May 2023.[39]
In November 2018, Holland spoke at a major inter-religious conference atOxford University.[40] During the same trip, Holland met withTheresa May, prime minister of the United Kingdom. This may have been the first official meeting of a church apostle and a British prime minister.[41]
In January 2019, Holland presided at the groundbreaking for the church'sUrdaneta Philippines Temple. He also spoke at a multi-stake conference in the Philippines that week.[42] In 2020, as chairman of the executive committee of theBYU-Hawaii board of trustees, he announced the appointment ofJohn S. K. Kauwe III as the institution's new president.[43][44]
In August 2021, Holland spoke at BYU's annual conference for faculty and staff, which sparked controversy within theLGBTQ+ community.[45] In the address, Holland asked the faculty to defend the doctrine of the LDS Church, BYU's institutional sponsor, to be like the temple builders in Nauvoo, a trowel in one hand, and a musket in the other, to both build and defend, adding that this was not only meant for marriage between a man and a woman, but for broader issues within the church as well.[46][47] In the speech, on the subject of same sex attraction, he also called for balance between commandment, love, and condoning behavior, stating that it is a "sensitive, demanding balance".[46][48] Holland said that Christ never once withheld love from anyone, but Christ "also never once said to anyone, 'Because I love you, you are exempt from keeping my commandments'".[49][46][48] Holland stated in the same speech that other church leaders, including himself, had shed tears, and with "scar tissue of our own", wanted to avoid language symbols and situations that were divisive, instead to show love for "all of God's children".[48][46]
In April 2023, the church reported that Holland would take a two-month hiatus from service to focus on his health. He had been undergoing dialysis for a kidney issue and had also contractedCOVID-19.[50] In early June, Holland began to gradually return to church service.[51]
After the death ofM. Russell Ballard on November 12, 2023, Holland wasset apart as the acting president of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles on November 15, 2023,[2] where he served until the death of church presidentRussell M. Nelson on September 27, 2025. On October 14, 2025, the First Presidency was reorganized, and Holland was set apart as quorum president by new church president Dallin H. Oaks.[52]
Holland and his wife,Patricia Terry, were married on June 7, 1963, in theSt. George Temple.[53] They were the parents of three children.[54] Their oldest son,Matthew S. Holland, served as president ofUtah Valley University from 2009 to 2018[55] and has been a general authority since April 2020.[56] Their youngest son,David F. Holland, is the John A. Bartlett Professor of New England Church History, and interim dean ofHarvard Divinity School.[57] Patricia Holland died on July 20, 2023.[58]
On December 24, 2025, the church announced that he was hospitalized due to "ongoing health complications".[59] Holland died from complications of kidney disease in Salt Lake City on December 27, 2025, at the age of 85.[60][61] According to theDeseret News, it is anticipated that church president Dallin H. Oaks will callHenry B. Eyring as president of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, withDieter F. Uchtdorf assuming the role of the quorum's acting president.[62]
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| Preceded by | President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles October 14, 2025 – December 27, 2025 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by | Quorum of the Twelve Apostles June 23, 1994 – December 27, 2025 | Succeeded by |
| Academic offices | ||
| Preceded by | President of Brigham Young University 1980–1989 | Succeeded by |