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September 06, 2020 - #4747 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 is an encore performance of Music & the Spoken Word with a new “Spoken Word” specially selected and recorded while the Choir is practicing social distancing. 

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Music

Conductors: Mack Wilberg and Ryan Murphy
Organist: Andrew Unsworth
Announcer: Lloyd Newell

“Let All the World in Every Corner Sing”
Music: Ryan Murphy
Lyrics: George Herbert

“Tell Me the Stories of Jesus”1
Music: F. A. Challinor
Lyrics: W. H. Parker
Arrangement: Ryan Murphy

“Achieved Is the Glorious Work” from The Creation
Music: Franz Joseph Haydn

“Prelude on ‘Middlebury’” (organ solo)
Music: Dale Wood

“I Whistle a Happy Tune” from The King and I 2
Music: Richard Rodgers
Lyrics: Oscar Hammerstein II
Arrangement: Sam Cardon

“I’m Runnin’ On”
Music and Lyrics: African-American spiritual
Arrangement: Mack Wilberg

“Thou Gracious God, Whose Mercy Lends”3
Music: English melody
Lyrics: Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr.
Arrangement: Mack Wilberg

  1. On the CD Teach Me To Walk In The Light.
  2. A portion of this song will be included on the new CD Christmas Day in the Morning to be released in October 2020.
  3. On the CD Peace Like a River.


The Spoken Word

To Build a Brighter Future

You’re probably familiar with the old saying “The best things in life come to those who wait.” Sometimes that’s called delayed gratification: the decision to forego something you want now so that you can have something better later. It’s not hard to see the benefits of this philosophy, but it can be hard to practice it—especially in today’s world, where so many voices say, “Why wait? You deserve to have it now! This will make you happy.”

But is happiness what they are selling?

The ancient Greek philosopher Aristotle is one of many who have observed that pleasure, with its instant gratification, is not the same as happiness.1 Building a life of true happiness takes time and patience. It involves living “a life of purpose.”2 And most often, that purpose is not to satisfy our own wants but to bless the lives of others. 

You might say that pursuing happiness is an act of faith—faith that plodding along in school will lead to skills that can equip you to make a meaningful difference in the world; faith that doing without some luxuries now will allow you to take care of your family and loved ones later; faith that any personal sacrifice you make to serve others cannot compare to the joy of making someone’s life better. The principle, then, is to not give up what you really want in life for something you think you want now.

Of course, sometimes we forget that principle. We all know what “buyer’s remorse” feels like—the regret that follows an impulsive purchase or a hasty decision. We can learn from those mistakes. We also know the satisfaction that came when we waited, held out for something better, and kept working and saving so that we could build a brighter future. We can learn from those experiences too.

Yes, you do deserve to be happy. You deserve the kind of happiness that doesn’t come cheap and isn’t available “for a limited time only.” You deserve happiness that lasts more than an instant—it lasts forever.

  1. See The Nicomachean Ethics of Aristotle, translated by J. E. C. Welldon (1912), 332–35.
  2. Ilene Strauss Cohen, “The Benefits of Delaying Gratification,” Psychology Today, Dec. 26, 2017, psychologytoday.com/us/blog/your-emotional-meter/201712/the-benefits-delaying-gratification.