May 12, 2019 - #4678 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 standard time. For information on other airtimes, visit “Airing Schedules” at musicandthespokenword.org.
Music
Conductor: Mack Wilberg
Organist: Brian Mathias
Announcer: Lloyd Newell
With Bells on Temple Square, LeAnna Wilmore, conducting
“All Things Bright and Beautiful”1,3
Music: John Rutter
Lyrics: Cecil Frances Alexander
“My Mother’s Love”
by Janice Kapp Perry
Arrangement: Nathan Hofheins
“Jesus Loves Me” (Organ solo)
Music: William B. Bradbury
Arrangement: Brian Mathias
“Canticle”
Music: Matthew Compton
Featuring Bells on Temple Square
“Home Is a Special Kind of Feeling”2,3 from The Wind in the Willows
Music: John Rutter
Arrangement: David Grant
“Fill the World with Love” from Goodbye, Mr. Chips
by Leslie Bricusse
Arrangement: Mack Wilberg
- On the CD Peace like a River.
- On the CD Love Is Spoken Here.
- In the CD set Anniversary Collection.
The Spoken Word
Charity: The Greatest Reward of Motherhood
Much of the world’s most important work is done by people who don’t get much recognition. Teachers, farmers, laborers, military personnel, emergency responders, and so many others all play such vital roles in our society, and yet they often do it quietly, without the appreciation they deserve. And for no one is that more true than for mothers.
Pausing once a year to give mothers much-deserved thanks is completely appropriate. And yet, maybe instead of being our annual day to honor mothers with flowers and cards, Mother’s Day should be our annual reminder to honor them every day—in whatever way will help them feel loved. When children (young and old) spend time with their mothers, to listen and learn from them, to remember something their mothers taught them, and to wrap their arms around their moms and express love—these are the love notes that mean the most to mothers.
Every day of the year, mothers worry about whether they are good enough, loving enough, firm enough, involved enough—or involved too much. We can help them see that they are just right. Every mother knows she cannot solve all the problems her children face. But that will never stop her from trying to help, even when her efforts seem to be neither noticed nor appreciated. But along the way, she learns how to listen more than speak. She learns to understand more than correct. She learns to see possibility when others lose hope. In short, she learns how to love.
In the end, when a mother stops to evaluate her life’s work, her satisfaction comes less from flowers and cards—as nice as such things are—and more from the love that has flowered in her soul: the love she feels for her family and the love they return to her. A mother is a living example of the kind of love that the Apostle Paul called charity: She suffers long. She is kind, humble, and unselfish. She rejoices in truth, bears all things, believes all things, and endures all things (see 1 Corinthians 13:4–8). And she didn’t get that way by being a mother one day a year. Every day, she can receive and give charity, the greatest reward of motherhood.