SEPTEMBER 14, 2025
THE ASPEN GROVE
MACK WILBERG
Conductor
ANDREW UNSWORTH
Organist
DERRICK PORTER
The Spoken Word
GLORY TO GOD ON HIGH
Music: Felice de Giardini
Text: James Allen
Arrangement: Mack Wilberg
CALLED TO SERVE
Music: Adam Geibel
Text: Elsie Duncan Yale
Arrangement: Mack Wilberg
FINALE, FROM SYMPHONY NO. 6 (ORGAN SOLO)
Music: Charles-Marie Widor
ALLELUIA, AMEN (AIR IN G)
Music: Johann Sebasian Bach
Arrangement: Mack Wilberg
TUYA ES LA GLORIA (“TO THEE BE THE GLORY”)
Music and Text: traditional Latin American
Arrangement: Mack Wilberg
THE SPOKEN WORD
“The Aspen Grove”
OH, PETER, GO RING THEM BELLS
Music and Text: African American spiritual
Arrangement: Howard Helvey
THOU GRACIOUS GOD, WHOSE MERCY LENDS
Music: English folk tune
Text: Oliver Wendell Holmes
Arrangement: Mack Wilberg
THE ASPEN GROVE
The Spoken Word, September 14, 2025
By: Derrick Porter
NOT FAR FROM HERE lies the world’s largest aspen tree. It’s known as Pando, and if you were looking for it, you very well would miss it. Instead of seeing what you might expect, one massive and sprawling large tree, what you would find is a large grove of aspen trees, numbering more than 40,000, each appearing to be separate but actually sharing a single root system.1
The strength of an aspen grove is not found in any one tree but in the community of trees that share roots and support one another.
Likewise, the communities we find ourselves in today also matter. It may be tempting to think that the size and spread of our individual tree is more important than those of our neighbors. But just like the aspen grove, we thrive when we nurture the health and vitality of our collective roots. We are all connected, and when we work together, magnificent things happen.
The Old Testament account of the prophet Nehemiah teaches this truth. Though he lived far away, Nehemiah learned of the vulnerability of his people in Jerusalem, dwelling in jeopardy with their city’s protective wall in ruin. He wept, mourned, fasted, and prayed for guidance.
When the king noticed his sorrow, Nehemiah boldly requested permission to return home and rebuild Jerusalem’s walls. Miraculously, the king agreed and not only granted him permission but offered resources to assist Nehemiah in building the wall.
Nehemiah did indeed rebuild the wall of Jerusalem, but success came not because of his efforts alone but rather because of the community of families that lived along the outskirts of the wall. Nehemiah implored, “Ye see the distress that we are in … : come, and let us build up the wall of Jerusalem, that we be no more a reproach.”2 The people responded, “Let us rise up and build.”3 And together against great odds, each family rebuilt a portion of the wall, the entire work being completed in just 52 days.4
There is power in community; there is strength in connection. When we work selflessly together, we each are part of something far larger than ourselves.
References
- See friendsofpando.org.
- Nehemiah 2:17.
- Nehemiah 2:18.
- See Nehemiah 1–6.