Videos

December 13, 2020 - #4761 Music & the Spoken Word

The Music & the Spoken Word broadcast airs live via TV, radio, and internet stream on Sunday at 9:30 a.m. mountain time. For information on other airtimes, visit “Airing Schedules” at musicandthespokenword.org

This encore performance of Music & the Spoken Word has been specially selected for airing while the Choir and Orchestra are practicing social distancing.

Music

Conductor: Mack Wilberg
Organist: Brian Mathias
Announcer: Lloyd Newell
With special guest Kristin Chenoweth

“Hark, the Herald Angels Sing”1
Music: Felix Mendelssohn
Lyrics: Charles Wesley
Arrangement: Mack Wilberg

“O Holy Night”1
Music: Adolphe Adam
Lyrics: Placide Cappeau
Arrangement: David T. Clydesdale
Featuring Kristin Chenoweth

“Bring a Torch, Jeanette Isabella” (organ solo)
Music: French carol
Arrangement: Keith Chapman

“Somewhere in My Memory” from Home Alone1
Music: John Williams
Lyrics: Leslie Bricusse

“Silent Night”2
Music: Franz Grüber
Lyrics: Joseph Mohr
Arrangement: Mack Wilberg

“Hymn of Praise”1
Music: Mack Wilberg
Lyrics: David Warner

  1. On the CD Angels Among Us.
  2. On the CD A Merry Little Christmas.

The Spoken Word

“Tidings of Great Joy”

Some years ago, a group of friends were eating dinner together at Christmastime, bemoaning the busyness of the season. With exasperation and perhaps a little resentment, they spoke of hectic schedules and heavy burdens. After listening patiently, one wise, seasoned woman humbly offered her opinion. “I love Christmas,” she said. “It is the most joyful of all seasons. I love seeing the eyes of little children light up on Christmas morning. I love giving gifts. I love being with my family. We just need to simplify and remember what we are celebrating.”1

Like magic, her words changed the tone of the conversation—and the hearts of her friends. Many of us can relate to those who feel overwhelmed at Christmas. But we can also benefit from the optimism of this wise woman. There is, after all, a lot to love about Christmas—the lights, the decorations, the music, the gifts, and the gatherings can inspire joy if we allow them to point us to a silent night in Bethlehem, to “shepherds keeping watch over their flocks by night,” to a “babe wrapped in swaddling clothes, lying in a manger,” and to the angel who announced His birth.2

In many ways, that cheerful woman who shared her feelings about Christmas was a lot like that angel. On another occasion she said of the Christmas season: “I love everything about it. … Through it all there is an escalating awareness of the Savior. We will, sure as anything, read again about His birth in Luke. We will sing and listen to all kinds of music about Him. But what does it all mean if it doesn’t do something to us inside?”3

The angel on that silent, holy night declared Christmas to be a time of “good tidings” and “great joy,” meant for “all people.”4 We follow Him whose birth we celebrate when we share that joy with family, friends, even strangers. Thus we, in our small way, join the “heavenly hosts” who “sing Alleluia! Christ, the Savior, is born!”5

  1. In Virginia H. Pearce, ed., Glimpses into the Life and Heart of Marjorie Pay Hinckley (1999), 79.
  2. See Luke 2:8–12.
  3. Marjorie Hinckley, in Glimpses, 213–14.
  4. Luke 2:10.
  5. “Silent Night,” Hymns, no. 204.