The Music & the Spoken Word broadcast airs live via TV, radio, and internet stream on Sunday at 9:30 a.m. mountain standard time. For information on other airtimes, visit “Airing Schedules” at musicandthespokenword.org.
Music
Conductors: Mack Wilberg and Ryan Murphy
Organist: Andrew Unsworth
Announcer: Lloyd Newell
“Standing on the Promises”
by Russell K. Carter
Arrangement: Ryan Murphy
“The Lord Is My Shepherd”1
Music: Howard Goodall
Lyrics: Psalm 23
“My Shepherd Will Supply My Need” (Organ solo)
American folk hymn
Arrangement: Dale Wood
“Lift Up Your Heads, O Ye Gates”2 from Messiah
Music: George Frideric Handel
“Be Still My Soul”3
Music: Jean Sibelius
Lyrics: Katharina von Schlegel; translated by Jane Borthwick
Arrangement: Mack Wilberg
“Oh, What a Beautiful Mornin’” from Oklahoma
Music: Richard Rodgers
Lyrics: Oscar Hammerstein II
Arrangement: Arthur Harris
“O Praise Ye the Lord”
Music: C. Hubert H. Parry
Lyrics: Henry W. Baker
Arrangement: Mack Wilberg
- On the CD Heavensong and in the CD set Bravo! The #1 Albums.
- On the CDs Messiah—Complete Oratorio and Messiah—Highlights.
- On the CD Peace Like a River and in the CD set Anniversary Collection.
The Spoken Word
“The Lesson of the Mismatched Shoes”
All of us like to succeed at what we do—and we especially like it when others notice how successful we are. But success comes with risks. When the applause is loud and the spotlight is bright, it’s harder to see who we really are. Fortunately, life has a way of reminding us.
So it was with a well-known news broadcaster who anchored the evening news for 24 years. Years before he made it big, while his star was still rising as a reporter, he received the coveted assignment to cover a presidential election. Eager to make a good impression, he rose early the morning of the election, dressed in the dark, and took a shuttle to New York City. Before going to the studio, he sat down for a shoe shine when the shine man said, “It’s been a [long] time since [I’ve] seen that!”
The journalist looked down. To his horror, he realized he was wearing one black shoe and one brown shoe.
There was no time to buy a new pair of shoes. His only hope was to slip in quietly and get seated behind the anchor desk before anyone noticed. But when he opened the door to the studio, there were the president of the news division, the president of the company, and the chairman of the board waiting to greet him. Sheepishly he made the long walk to his desk, his footsteps echoing throughout the studio. He was certain everyone saw his mismatched shoes.
He later wrote, “Whenever I begin to feel any confusion about who I am, or I find myself taking the star treatment seriously, I remember the black shoe and the brown shoe.”1
There’s nothing wrong with holding our heads high, but let it be not for applause or recognition but rather for the personal satisfaction that comes from integrity, hard work, acts of kindness, and doing what we know is right. And before we kick up our heels for a job well done, we might pause to make sure our shoes match.
- See Dan Rather and Mickey Herskowitz, The Camera Never Blinks: Adventures of a TV Journalist (1977), 311–12.