March 22, 2026
BECOMING BRAVE
MACK WILBERG
Conductor
RICHARD ELLIOT
Organist
DERRICK PORTER
The Spoken Word
BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY SINGERS
ANDREW CRANE, Conductor
I THINK THE WORLD IS GLORIOUS
Music: Alexander Schreiner
Text: Anna Johnson
Arrangement: Mack Wilberg
RISE! UP! ARISE! (EXCERPT)
from Saint Paul
Music: Felix Mendelssohn
Text: based on scripture
THERE IS SUNSHINE IN MY SOUL TODAY
Music: John R. Sweney
Text: Eliza E. Hewitt
Arrangement: Mack Wilberg
COME, THOU FOUNT OF EVERY BLESSING (ORGAN SOLO)
Music: John Wyeth
Arrangement: Dale Wood
REJOICE, THE LORD IS KING
Music: Malcolm Archer
Text: Charles Wesley
HAIL, GLADDENING LIGHT
Brigham Young University Singers
Music: Charles Wood
Text: trans. John Keble
THE SPOKEN WORD
“Becoming Brave”
SALMO (PSALM) 150
Brigham Young University Singers
Music: Ernesto Herrera
Text: based on scripture
REDEEMER OF ISRAEL
Music: Freeman Lewis
Text: Joseph Swain; adapted by William W. Phelps
Arrangement: Mack Wilberg
BECOMING BRAVE
The Spoken Word, March 22, 2026
By: Derrick Porter
WE’VE ALL HEARD a well-intentioned adult tell a child to “be brave.” And often, we benefit from encouragement and support when trying new things or when facing something that stirs uncertainty or even fear.
But being brave is more than simply summoning courage in a single moment. Instead, it’s often developed quietly, long before the time of need, when no one is watching. We become brave by the choices we make today—before tomorrow’s test ever comes.
I recently read again the account of David slaying Goliath. In the past, my attention had always centered on the outcome of that remarkable story—David prevailing with only a sling and a stone.
But this time, my thoughts were drawn to what came before the victory. In a moment of urgency, David told King Saul, “Let no man’s heart fail because of him; thy servant will go and fight.”
Saul replied, “Thou art not able to go against this Philistine to fight with him: for thou art but a youth, and he a man of war from his youth.”
And then, in that moment, David shared the reason for his confidence. He told of earlier encounters with a lion and a bear while tending his father’s sheep. Protecting the flock, he went after the predators, and when they rose up against him, he caught them and struck them down.
In a remote place, with few—if any—watching, David faithfully defended his father’s sheep, and the Lord delivered him from the attacking animals. Those unseen experiences strengthened him. They gave him assurance that the same God who delivered him from the paw of the lion and the paw of the bear surely would deliver him from the Philistine who had “defied” the living God. And He did.1
David did not simply wake up that morning “being brave.” Instead, he had become brave by being faithful in challenging earlier moments.
And the same can be true for us. As we work to become brave, we can be armed with faith that runs deep. Faith sustains bravery. And sometimes the bravest people are the ones who unconditionally accept the will of God.
So when courage is required, may we look back and acknowledge the moments when we saw the hand of God in our lives. Then, acting in faith, we can bravely go forward, entrusting the outcome to Him.
1. See 1 Samuel 17:32–50