Tuesday, May 25, 2010

The Bridge of Love--Spoken Word Delivered by Lloyd D. Newell

The Bridge of Love Delivered By: Lloyd D. Newell

Some of the most recognizable structures in the world are bridges. They connect islands to mainlands; they span rivers, streams, and vast caverns. Bridges, whether new or old, come in all kinds of configurations: a log thrown over a brook, a maze of vines spanning the forest floor, a footpath of rocks, a landmark on a country road, an ancient succession of arches, or an architectural wonder that is as much a work of art as a useful road from here to there.

There are bridges in our lives as well. They are not shaped of steel, rock, or timber, nor are they always prominent or even visible. Bridges in our lives are often quiet acts that make connections and help us cross over obstacles in our paths.

The story is told of a man who arranged for Korean children to come to his community for needed heart surgery. He spoke no Korean, so when the first little girl arrived, he used hand signs and drew pictures to help the frightened six-year-old feel comfortable. When the nurses came to take her to the operating room, tears filled her eyes, but she lifted her arms up to her new friend, as if to request that he take her wherever it was she was going. He did just that—carrying her down the long hall, her arms wrapped tightly around him and the orderly pushing an empty stretcher behind them. There were many differences between them—culture, language, race, and age—but in those few precious moments, love bridged them all.1

What a lesson for us. There are bridges that connect us one to another, just as there are cables and concrete that reach across otherwise impassable chasms. We connect with kindness and trust, with generosity and sheer goodness, with concern for others. This kind of bridge is built on the firm foundation of love.
1. See Bill Halamandaris, Be the Light: A Blueprint for a Happy and Successful Life (1999), 87–88.
Program #4210
Musical Selections:
1. Praise to the Lord, the Almighty
Stralsund Gesangbuch 1665; arr. Mack Wilberg; Oxford University Press
2. For the Beautiy of the Earth
Conrad Kocher; arr. Mack Wilberg; Arrangement Unpublished
3. Land Sighting (Discovery)
Edvard Greig; Oliver Ditson
4. Simple Gifts (Organ solo)
Shaker Melody; arr. Richard Elliott; Jackman Music
5. Never Never Land from Peter Pan
Jule Styne; arr. Mack Wilberg; Edwin H. Morris & Co.
6. Spoken Word
7. How Firm a Foundation
J. Ellis; arr. Mack Wilberg; Arrangement Unpublished

The Silver Lining--Spoken Word Delivered by Lloyd D. Newell

The Silver Lining Delivered By: Lloyd D. Newell

An old proverb reminds us to look for the silver lining in every cloud. But are the cloudy periods of our lives really lined with silver? Can something good and hopeful really be found in a setback or disappointment? Sometimes it’s difficult to find those silver linings. It may not be until later, even many years later, that we see the good that came from a hardship or trial.

Who has not had a dream dashed or felt rejected or disheartened at times? “What happens to the dreamers, all those people whose lives haven’t turned out as they hoped and planned?” asked Rabbi Harold S. Kushner. “The question is not, Can I get through life without some failures and rejections? because you can’t, and the more you aspire to in your life, the more you yearn for, the more scars you will accumulate along the way. The real question is, How will you respond to those disappointments? Will you respond with bitterness, envy, and self-doubt, or with resilience and wisdom?”1

For example, a college student felt distressed when he wasn’t admitted to the graduate school he wanted, but in retrospect, he feels that he found more satisfaction in his second choice. Similarly, a young girl lost a school election but developed inner strength as she learned to pick herself up and try again. A middle-aged man laid off from his job enjoyed spending more time with his family while working to retool and shift careers. All these, in time, found the silver linings.

Looking for a silver lining means choosing how we will respond to the dark clouds that come into our lives. We can hold on to hope and faith; we can decide to move forward; we can change for the better as we look for silver linings.
Overcoming Life’s Disappointments (2006), 50.
Program #4209
Musical Selections:
1. Brethren, We Have Met to Worship
William Moore; arr. Mack Wilberg; Arrangement Unpublished
2. My Song in the Night
American Folk Hymn; arr. Mack Wilberg; Oxford University Press
3. Amazing Grace, How Sweet the Sound (Organ solo)
Southern Harmony, 1835; arr. Robert Hebble; Sacred Music Press
4. Gloria in Excelsis
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart; Public Domain
5. The Morning Trumpet
B.F. (Benjamin Franklin) White; arr. Mack Wilberg; Oxford University Press
6. Spoken Word
7. Look for the Silver Lining
Jerome Kern; arr. Arthur Harris; Manuscript
8. Thou Lovely Source of True Delight
Mack Wilberg; Oxford University Press

Priceless to Her Children--Spoken Word Delivered by Lloyd D. Newell

Priceless to Her Children Delivered By: Lloyd D. Newell

Whenever a camera scans a cheering crowd at a ballgame, very often an excited fan will wave and shout, “Hi, Mom!” When a young man holds open a door for an elderly couple, he is likely to be told that his mother obviously raised him well. And countless individuals daily catch themselves repeating Mother’s words: “Better safe than sorry.” “Waste not, want not.” “Money doesn’t grow on trees,” and so on.
Mothers have such tremendous influence in our lives that it’s no wonder we frequently hear stories, poems, and songs idealizing motherhood. Some mothers may feel that they don’t measure up to that high standard, but if only they could see themselves the way their children see them, they might realize how valiant they truly are, despite their imperfections. Mothers have accepted the most important job on earth: to train and nurture precious children. Surely our Maker sees their efforts, hears their prayers, and counts their tears.

A young mother expressed her worries about her two little boys to an older woman whose children were grown. The experienced mother smiled and shared this wisdom: “When children know they are loved, it covers a host of parenting mistakes.” Twenty-five years later, the once-insecure mother has seen that this is absolutely true. Her now-grown children, happy and secure in their mother’s love, overlook her shortcomings. She is their mother, she loved them, she tried to do her best, and in the end that’s all that really mattered.
Every mother needs to hear that every once in a while—especially from her children. Perhaps today we can take a moment to mother our mothers a bit and assure them that they’re wonderful—just as they have told us so many times in our moments of self-doubt. Not just today, but every day, they need to know that a mother is a precious jewel, each one different, but each one priceless to her children.
Program #4208
Musical Selection:
1. Morning Has Broken
Traditional Gaelic Melody; arr. Mack Wilberg; Oxford University Press
2. Evening Prayer, from Hansel and Gretel
Engelbert Humperdinck; arr. Wallingford Reigger; ad. by Michael Davis; Arr. Harold Flammer; ad. Unpublished
3. All Through the Night (Organ solo)
Traditional; arr. Clay Christiansen; Jackman Music
4. Hush Little Baby
American Lullaby; arr. Mack Wilberg; Arr. Unpublished
5. I Often Go Walking
Jeanne P. Lawler; arr. Nathan Hofheins; Arr. Unpublished
6. Spoken Word
7. You Raise Me Up
Rolf Loveland & Brendan Graham; arr. Nathan Hofheins; Arr. Unpublished
8. It's a Grand Night for Singing from State Fair
Richard Rodgers; arr. Arthur Harris; Arr. Unpublished

Fight the Good Fight--Spoken Word Delivered by Lloyd D. Newell

Fight the Good Fight Delivered By: Lloyd D. Newell

Some see life as a battle, with competitors on every side. They fight for parking spaces and places in lines, for jobs and opportunities, for advancement and recognition. Each day seems to be a fight to stay ahead and win at all costs.

Yes, life can be competitive—but it doesn’t have to pit us against each other. The fight of life is most often against discouragement and fear, against tragedies and setbacks—and these are enemies that we all face at one time or another.

In this battle, we are not competitors but teammates. To be successful, we need each other. Even the most challenging trials seem more manageable when a friend or loved one stands beside us. Sometimes just knowing that we’re not alone is enough to help us stay hopeful.

Some 2,000 years ago, the Apostle Paul said toward the end of his life, “I have fought a good fight, I have finished my course, I have kept the faith” (2 Timothy 4:7). Paul’s life was not without tribulation and suffering, but at the end of it all, his faith and hope were strong with the sweet assurance that he had fought a good fight. However, Paul did more than just fight his own good fight. It was just as important to him to strengthen others in their struggles, encouraging them, as he did in a letter to his young friend Timothy, to “fight the good fight of faith” (1 Timothy 6:12).

Whenever we see those who live for many years with disabilities and disadvantages and yet do the best they can, we gain courage to face our own trials. We’re inspired by others who, while experiencing their own heartache and sorrow, somehow find a way to reach out to others in love and kindness. We draw strength from so many who every day are fighting the good fight of faith and hope despite overwhelming challenges. They refuse to become bitter and have chosen instead to become better and, in a remarkable way, to help those around them become better too.

These are difficult days for many. Today, more than ever, we need to help each other fight the good fight with all our might.
Program #4207
Musical Selections:
1. Rejoice, the Lord Is King
John Darwell; arr. Mack Wilberg; Oxford University Press
2. Let the Whole Creation Cry
Robert Leaf; Augsburg Publishing
3. Pilgrim's Chorus from Tannhauser
Richard Wagner; G Schirmer
4. Aria on "Jewels" (Organ Solo)
Dale Wood; Sacred Music Press
5. Spoken Word
6. Fight the Good Fight with All Thy Might
John Gardner; Oxford University Press
7. Come to My Garden from My Secret Garden
Lucy Simon; arr. Kurt Bestor; ABCDE Publishing; arr. Pinnacle Music Group
8. The Lord Bless You and Keep You
John Rutter; Oxford University Press

Blessed with the Sound of Music--Spoken Word Delivered by Lloyd D. Newell

Blessed with the Sound of Music Delivered By: Lloyd D. Newell

Arturo Toscanini, famed music director of the New York Philharmonic Orchestra, was well known for his weekly broadcasts that carried beautiful music into the homes and hearts of millions. One of those was a lonely sheepherder in the desolate mountains of Wyoming. One day Toscanini received a rumpled note from this far-off listener with an unusual plea. “I have only two possessions,” the man wrote, “a radio and an old violin. The batteries in my radio are getting low and will soon die. My violin is so out of tune I can’t use it. Please help me. . . . When you begin your [next] concert, sound a loud ‘A’ so I can tune my ‘A’ string; then I can tune the other strings.”

As requested, the next week Toscanini had his orchestra sound a perfect A just for that listener so he might tune his violin and, when his radio batteries died, he could still have beautiful music.1

We need and love music. We may sing along with the radio in the car, whistle while we work, or even sing in the shower. Words put to music seem to say more than they do without it. And when we hear good news of any kind, we declare that it’s “music to our ears.”

Music is more than just entertainment. It is a good friend and companion; it can bring us peace when we are grieving and hope when things are hard. How that happens we don’t exactly know, but something about music reaches into our souls and heals, lifts, and inspires us.

A few of us may remember playing tunes on a gramophone; today it might be a cell phone, but the result is the same—a lift in our step, a light in our eyes, and a sense that we may, at any minute, break into song, filled with gratitude that our hearts are “blessed with the sound of music.”2
1 See David B. Haight, “People to People” Ensign, Nov. 1981, 54.
2 Oscar Hammerstein, “The Sound of Music,” 1959.
Program #4206
Musical Selection
1. Saints Bound for Heaven
Walker's Southern Harmony, 1835; arr. Mack Wilberg; Oxford University Press
2.Gloria from Lord Nelson Mass
Franz Joseph Haydn; Public Domain
3. All Things Bright and Beautiful (Organ solo)
English folk tune; arr. DAle Wood; Sacred Music Press
4. The One Hundred Fiftieth Psalm
Howard Hanson; Carl Fischer, Inc.
5. Be Thou My Vision
Traditional Irish Melody; arr. Mack Wilberg; Oxford Univeristy Press
6. Spoken Word
7. The Sound of Music from The Sound of Music
Richard Rodgers; arr. Arthur Harris; Arrangement Unpublished
8. The Morning Breaks
George Careless; arr. Mack Wilberg; Arrangement Unpublished

Timeless Values--Spoken Word Given by Lloyd D. Newell

Timeless Values Delivered By: Lloyd D. Newell

Tough economic times can teach us great truths. They give us opportunity to reflect on our values and what’s most important in life. One columnist observed that tough times raise important “questions about our … priorities; our habits of the heart; our measures of success; the values of our families and our children; our spiritual well-being; and the ultimate goals and purposes of life—including our economic life. … We don’t want to miss the opportunity to rediscover our values.”1

It may seem unusual to call economic hardship an opportunity, but many people are finding that it’s true. They’re learning that while financial security doesn’t seem that secure, certain moral values are. One man who struggled to find employment said, “I’ve learned . . . who I can count on and how much I love my family; I’ve learned to live more modestly, that integrity and honesty matter, that when everything seems dark, there’s always hope.”

Periods of financial difficulty remind us of the value of thrift, or the ability to be frugal and live within our means. When we’re feeling the effects of someone’s dishonesty, we see more clearly the importance of integrity, or the alignment of our beliefs with our actions. When the outlook seems bleak, that’s a good time to rediscover hope, to believe that things will get better.

Timeless values like these don’t go out of fashion or change with the shifting winds and changing fads of the season. Like giant granite boulders, they stand strong and true in all generations, places, and circumstances. But sometimes we don’t recognize their importance until we have to rely on their strength.

Tough times come and go, but these timeless values do not. They keep us steady and hopeful. Now might be a good time to seriously consider again, to discover anew, the values that stand the test of time. Don’t miss this opportunity to rediscover what matters most.
1. Jim Wallis, “Good News about a Bad Economy,” AARP Bulletin Today, Mar. 1, 2010, http://bulletin.aarp.org/opinions/othervoices/articles/opinion_good_news_about_a_bad_
economy.html.
Program #4205
Musical Selection
1. Guide Us, O Thou Great Jehovah
John Hughes, arr. Mack Wilberg; Jackman Music
2. Ave Verum Corpus
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart; Public Domain
3. Fidelis (Organ solo)
Percy Whitlock; Oxford University Press
4. Let Us with a Gladsome Mind
Alan Ridout; Stainer & Bell
5. Spoken Word
6. Look to the Day
John Rutter; Collegium Music
7. Ride the Chariot
Spiritual, arr. Wm. Henry Smith; Max T. Krone
8. Bring, O Morn, Thy Music!
Howard Helvey; Alfred Publishing

LDS.org - CES Fireside - The Road of Life

LDS.org - CES Fireside - The Road of Life

CES Fireside for Young Adults • May 2, 2010 • Brigham Young University–Hawaii

Aloha, brothers and sisters! Sister Burton and I are delighted to spend a few minutes with you this beautiful Sabbath day here on the campus of Brigham Young University–Hawaii along with young adults from many nations. It is exciting to see and experience the many cultures represented on this campus and in this very audience. We wish we could personally look in on the many other audiences in stake centers and institutes of religion around the world who have gathered together to take part in this CES fireside broadcast.

I love the sound and the meaning of the word aloha! You may know that aloha in the Hawaiian language means a variety of things, things like affection, love, peace, compassion, sympathy, pity, mercy, kindness, or grace. Over the past 150 years it has also been used in the same context as the English words hello and good-bye. These sentiments make it a lovely common greeting and a deep expression of farewell.

We Live in a Time of Conflicting Values

The concept of aloha is so important in Hawaii that the “Aloha Spirit” is defined and contained in the Hawaii state statutes. Aloha means displaying warmth and affection without obligation in return. It means acknowledging the importance of each person for the collective existence of the community. It also means “to hear what is not said, to see what cannot be seen and to know the unknowable.”1 The Aloha Spirit encompasses beautiful gospel principles—principles of faith, principles surrounding “judge not, that ye be not judged” (Matthew 7:1). It stresses the importance of the individual and compassion. Wouldn’t it be a wonderful world if we all were to fully embrace the spirit of aloha?

Recently General David H. Petraeus spoke at Brigham Young University–Provo. He displayed his wonderful sense of humor when he started his message by listing 10 reasons why Brigham Young University graduates make good soldiers. A few of the reasons he included were: “It’s not a problem if they don’t know what rank someone is, they just refer to them as Brother or Sister so-and-so.” “They never go AWOL [absent without leave]. They just call it being less active.” “They will seize any objective swiftly if you tell them refreshments will be served.” “They have innovative ideas for handling insurgents—like assigning them home teachers.” And finally, and perhaps the most important: “They are the world’s most reliable designated drivers.”2 There’s something therapeutic about smiling about one’s foibles.

It is a singular privilege to be sons and daughters of a living Heavenly Father and have the opportunity given to us to communicate with Him and thereby invoke His Spirit in our meetings and our personal lives. I am sure we all recognize there is a vast difference between giving a prayer and praying. St. Augustine is said to have counseled: “Pray as though everything depended on God. Work as though everything depended on you.”3 An old saying I really like is “A lot of kneeling will keep you in good standing.” I find it incredulous that a few days ago a federal judge in the United States ruled that calling for a voluntary observance of a National Day of Prayer is in fact unconstitutional.

In many parts of the world, including the United States, praying in public gatherings and displaying any kind of religious symbols in a public place are deemed to be unconstitutional or against the law. Considering this, I find a little-known fact very interesting: In Washington, D.C., there can never be a building of any kind of greater height than the Washington Monument. The aluminum tip of the monument is 555 feet 5.125 inches above the ground. Etched on the top of that monument, in the aluminum skin where few can see, are the Latin words Laus Deo. Laus Deo! Two seemingly insignificant, unnoticed words placed at the highest point overlooking the capital city of an important nation. What do these two Latin words, composed of four syllables and only seven letters, mean? Simply, they mean “praise be to God.” Several other references to deity and to our Father in Heaven adorn this magnificent structure.

Praise be to God. Laus Deo! As we offer our individual and collective praises to a loving Father in Heaven, may we remember the true spirit of aloha as we petition Him for wisdom and judgment and as we express to Him our appreciation for His goodness and His mercy that He displays as a wise and loving Father in Heaven. President Thomas S. Monson often reminds us that “when we remember that each of us is literally a spirit son or daughter of God, we will not find it difficult to approach Him in prayer. He knows us; He loves us; He wants what is best for us.”4

Abraham Lincoln, the 16th president of the United States, is quoted as saying, “When I get ready to talk to people, I spend two thirds of the time thinking what they want to hear and one third thinking about what I want to say.”5 Using the Lincoln preparation method, I have prayed and anguished over what you may want and what you may need to hear and what I should endeavor to impart to you. I have tried to place myself in your shoes and imagine what it is like to walk the paths you are walking in 2010. I suppose many of you can rightfully ask, “What does this man, 50 years our senior, know about the issues facing the youth of today?” That is a great and very appropriate question! Truthfully, the answer is probably “Not a great deal concerning the day-to-day activities and the temptations and all that you go through.” There are, however, important aspects of our lives that are constant, have always been constant, and will never change. Perhaps my experience may give credence to a few observations gleaned from the school of hard knocks. When I consulted my college-age grandchildren about what they thought I should talk about, their responses were: “Grandpa, keep it simple.” “Grandpa, tell it like it is.” And perhaps most important, “Grandpa, please keep it short.” I’ll do my best to meet their very, very high expectations.

May I share some perceptions that may be obvious to virtually all of us? We are living in a time when there is turmoil flourishing between nations and cultures of the world; they are in conflict. The future course of mankind is unclear. Too often, fear permeates the souls of young people. Many are losing faith in the Lord Jesus Christ, and for many others hope is only a fleeting dream. Satan’s never-ending pursuit for the hearts and souls of men continues unabated. The so-called “X” generation seems a little uncertain and perhaps a bit confused because of the mixed signals extended to it by society in general.

We Know the Road We Must Take

After I contemplated what I could say and inquired of the Spirit, the Spirit whispered, even shouted, that Latter-day Saint young people need to be reassured that they are literally sons and daughters of a loving, caring, and benevolent Father in Heaven. They need to be reassured that faith in the Lord Jesus Christ is important. They need to know that there is absolutely no reason for fear or despair if we follow the word of the Lord. They need to know that hope is and can be a reality, opportunities abound, and obedience is a prerequisite for happiness—that there is a great and eternal purpose in this life and Satan and his followers will be silenced. The gospel of Jesus Christ is true. Prophets abound in the land.

I’m a subscriber that the glass is indeed half full rather than half empty. My young friends, it’s a tremendous time to be alive. We have a great mission to perform and a divine destiny. All this and much more we know because we have been blessed to understand our Father in Heaven’s plan, the plan that He designed specifically for our happiness as we fully vest ourselves in the gospel of Jesus Christ.

Charles Dodgson, a 19th-century English author, mathematician, and logician, who wrote under the pseudonym of Lewis Carroll, wrote Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland and its sequel, Through the Looking Glass. He was also known for his many crisp quotes, one of which is “If you don’t know where you are going, any road will get you there.”6 Much the same idea is expressed in the thought-provoking Robert Frost poem “The Road Not Taken”:

Two roads diverged in a yellow wood,
And sorry I could not travel both
And be one traveler, long I stood
And looked down one as far as I could
To where it bent in the undergrowth;

Then took the other, as just as fair,
And having perhaps the better claim,
Because it was grassy and wanted wear;
Though as for that, the passing there
Had worn them really about the same,

And both that morning equally lay
In leaves no step had trodden black.
Oh, I kept the first for another day!
Yet knowing how way leads on to way,
I doubted if I should ever come back.

I shall be telling this with a sigh
Somewhere ages and ages hence:
Two roads diverged in a wood, and I—
I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference.7

Because we have been blessed with a knowledge of God’s plan for His children’s eternal happiness, we Latter-day Saints know our ultimate destination, or which route to take in order to safely arrive. We know where we are going because we know from whence we came and where we are going.

God’s Plan Is a Plan of Happiness

A brief review of Heavenly Father’s plan may be helpful. We are all God’s children, and we existed before we came to this earth. The plan is designed to bring immortality and eternal life. There was only one eternal plan, and when Father expressed that plan we all shouted for joy. It was the plan presented by God Himself. There were not multiple plans, as we sometimes are led to believe. Elements of the plan included gender. Indeed, gender is an essential part of the plan. The plan was ordained before this world was created and provided a way for all to, potentially, be exalted. Families are ordained of God and are paramount to the plan. Our Father in Heaven speaks to His children through living prophets. Temples, along with their saving ordinances, connect us to the eternities. The plan called for one to show us the way and be our advocate with the Father. The Savior, Jesus Christ, responded with exactness and offered Himself so we could have agency to act for ourselves. Lucifer (or Satan) rebelled and sought compulsion rather than agency for God’s children. In our shouting for joy, we rejoiced when Jesus Christ was chosen and we were given the opportunity to come to earth, to gain a body, to acquire experience, and to prove ourselves.

As we walk the road of life, we expect to follow the rules and road signs that are there. The Book of Mormon prophet Alma explained: “Therefore God gave unto them commandments, after having made known unto them the plan of redemption, that they should not do evil, the penalty thereof being a second death, which was an everlasting death as to things pertaining unto righteousness; for on such the plan of redemption could have no power, for the works of justice could not be destroyed, according to the supreme goodness of God” (Alma 12:32).

If we are obedient and faithful in holding to the iron rod and traveling the prescribed road, we can expect the grand and glorious opportunity to once again return and live eternally with our Father in Heaven, enjoying all the blessings He has identified for those who graduate this mortal existence with excellence. By holding fast to Church standards, you will have greater happiness in your life and be a positive example to those around you. I quote from the family proclamation: “Happiness in family life is most likely to be achieved when founded upon the teachings of the Lord Jesus Christ. Successful marriages and families are established and maintained on principles of faith, prayer, repentance, forgiveness, respect, love, compassion, work, and wholesome recreational activities.”8 Interestingly, these simple truths, founded on our Heavenly Father’s plan of happiness, are largely misunderstood by many not of our faith.

We need time to contemplate, time to study, time to meditate, and time to ponder that marvelous plan. We need to think about the happiness that our Father in Heaven has in store for us as outlined in His plan for His children. Remember, the Lord’s plan is a plan of happiness. I love the way President Gordon B. Hinckley put it: “The way will be lighter, the worries will be fewer, the confrontations will be less difficult if we cultivate a spirit of happiness.”9

“In 2007 two large U.S. media organizations surveyed young people ages 12 to 24 to find what makes them happy.

“The study presented these findings, among others:

  • “• Youth ‘depend on parents as a vital source of security and happiness.’

  • “• ‘Youth will increasingly seek happiness via spirituality and faith.’

  • “• ‘A resurgence of interest among youth in traditional family structures will gain momentum.’

“One of the summary statements from the study said, ‘While our initial research did find that today’s youth are more traditional than previous generations, we were surprised to find the extent to which youth anticipate their own marriages and families with great joy.’”10

We Can Successfully Travel the Road of Life

I love to travel, particularly when there’s enough time to travel by automobile across the country on the ground. Perhaps a travel example will help us better understand the road of life we are all traveling.

If, as an example, you determined that you would like to travel from Vermont on the east or Atlantic Ocean coast of the United States to San Francisco on the west or Pacific Ocean coast and exclusively travel the interstate freeway system, MapQuest tells me that the most direct route would be 3,073 miles and require nearly 48 driving hours in an automobile. Along the way there are hundreds of opportunities to change routes, each time adding a few more miles to the trip. To aid you in arriving safely at your destination, there are road signs, warnings, speed limits, markers, and perhaps even a global positioning system in the automobile. Each mile of travel is noted on the automobile’s odometer, and progress is measured mile by mile and hour by hour. Periodically, as we travel, it is necessary to rest, refill the gas tank, and seek nourishment to body and mind.

In life’s journey from birth to death, we also have many choices to make. Our progress is measured in part by age and accomplishment. We have the scriptures to give us direction, warnings, and encouragement and a map to pattern our lives after. President James E. Faust often referred to the Book of Mormon as the “text for [our] dispensation.”11 I think he was suggesting that the Book of Mormon constituted the instruction manual for putting together a successful journey in life. Just as we need to have confidence in the validity of the information we gain from the road signs along the interstate highway, we need to have a personal testimony of the scriptures.

Nephi reminded us of why the scriptures are important for life’s journey when he wrote for readers of our day:

“And I know that the Lord God will consecrate my prayers for the gain of my people. And the words which I have written in weakness will be made strong unto them; for it persuadeth them to do good; it maketh known unto them of their fathers; and it speaketh of Jesus, and persuadeth them to believe in him, and to endure to the end, which is life eternal.

“And it speaketh harshly against sin, according to the plainness of the truth; wherefore, no man will be angry at the words which I have written save he shall be of the spirit of the devil” (2 Nephi 33:4–5).

These are among the last words that Nephi penned in this portion of the Book of Mormon. In these two verses Nephi outlined at least five reasons for us to study the scriptures, just as we would study a road map in preparation for a long cross-country journey.

Similarly, the last prophet to contribute to the Book of Mormon explained how we can acquire that much-needed testimony concerning the truthfulness of the Book of Mormon when he reminded us, “And when ye shall receive these things, I would exhort you that ye would ask God, the Eternal Father, in the name of Christ, if these things are not true; and if ye shall ask with a sincere heart, with real intent, having faith in Christ, he will manifest the truth of it unto you, by the power of the Holy Ghost” (Moroni 10:4).

The process Moroni outlined includes first, study; second, ask the correct question. In this case the question is not if it is true but rather if it is not true. Third, manifest a genuine desire to know the truth. Fourth, have enough faith to know your inquiry will be answered. And fifth, prepare to receive an answer from the Holy Ghost.

Because our highway journey takes us through large cities, with a maze of roadways going in every direction and heavy traffic zooming by, it is easy to take a wrong turn and become lost or even stopped at a dead end. Fear, even despair, can set in as we search for the safe haven or the desired safe road. So it is, my young friends, with life: we can become lost souls, succumb to temptation, and over time lose sight of our original destination.

Along the road of life, a benevolent Father in Heaven in His wonderful plan made provisions for these detours. He sent His Only Begotten Son to be our Redeemer and our Savior. Make no mistake about it, sin requires penitence. The prophet Alma reminded us that “the Lord cannot look upon sin with the least degree of allowance” (Alma 45:16). Like the insurance we purchase to protect our automobile in case of damage or liability that may occur as we travel along the highway, we can receive, with sincere and complete repentance, the blessings associated with the Atonement of Jesus the Christ. He also provided divinely appointed “rescuers,” whom we call bishops, to assist us to once again find the correct course. Remember, the Lord has promised that “though your sins be as scarlet, they shall be as white as snow; though they be red like crimson, they shall be as wool” (Isaiah 1:18). In this dispensation the Lord pronounced:

“Behold, he who has repented of his sins, the same is forgiven, and I, the Lord, remember them no more.

“By this ye may know if a man repenteth of his sins—behold, he will confess them and forsake them” (D&C 58:42–43).

If you have taken a shortcut or deviated from the prescribed course of life, your wonderful bishop can help. Seek him out; he loves you!

As we cross the country, various government agencies offer incentives and privileges if our vehicles meet certain standards. These standards can be of performance, including safety requirements. Sometimes there are weight restrictions. Obviously we have to have license plates. And in some places preference is given if we achieve certain levels of miles per gallon in our vehicle. As we agree to comply and demonstrate responsibility, we may be able to use special lanes to avoid congestion, to fly through toll booths, or to receive some other special consideration.

In life, our Father in Heaven expects us to enter into agreements we call covenants. Throughout history our Father in Heaven has dealt with His children by making covenants. You’ll recall that covenants were made with Adam, Abraham, and Moses. Today, as part of the covenant-making expectation, we make baptismal covenants, we make priesthood covenants, and we make temple covenants. We refer to these covenants collectively as the “new and everlasting covenant.” Each covenant mentioned is associated with a sacred ordinance necessary for our exaltation. As we honor sacred covenants, our Father in Heaven extends blessings as He has promised. We should not take our ordinances and covenants lightly.

Elder Russell M. Nelson reminded us of our Father in Heaven’s promise: “His hope for us is eternal life. We qualify for it by obedience to covenants and ordinances of the temple—for ourselves, our families, and our ancestors. We cannot be made perfect without them. We cannot wish our way into the presence of God. We are to obey the laws upon which those blessings are predicated.”12

My young friends, we know not the duration or length of the road of life, but it is only by enduring to the end with lives that have been firmly planted on gospel soil, staying in the mainstream of the Church, humbly serving our fellowmen, living Christlike lives, and keeping those sacred covenants that we will succeed to find happiness within the framework of our Father in Heaven’s plan.

In order to receive the maximum enjoyment from a long automobile ride, we must have a few stops to enjoy local culture and points of interest. They all add awareness and zest and enhancement to the trip. The marvels of nature have been created for us to appreciate and enjoy, and as we are observant, much may be learned.

To successfully navigate the road of life, take time to serve and reach out to others. Former First Lady Barbara Bush said: “At the end of your life, you will never regret not having passed one more test, not winning one more verdict or not closing one more deal. You will regret time not spent with a husband, a child, a friend, or a parent.”13

Just as you need a license to drive an automobile, you need a recommend in order to enjoy the blessings available in serving in the house of the Lord.

God’s Guidelines Enable Us to Succeed

Albert Schweitzer, the noted theologian, medical missionary, and philosopher noted: “Success is not the key to happiness. Happiness is the key to success.”14 Happiness comes as a result of following the precepts found in our Father in Heaven’s eternal plan for His children. As we daily live out our lives, keep in mind the divine purpose of our creation.

A short while ago a very wise mother in our ward helped the congregation understand why the Lord gives us bounds to manage our lives. In a sacrament meeting she asked us to close our eyes and imagine a tranquil scene. I am going to ask each of you to do the same. Close your eyes. Now picture a beautiful scene: It’s a sunny day on a beach with the waves gently rolling onto the white sand. It is springtime, and the sand is not too hot. You can run barefoot and squish the sand between your toes. There is a nice breeze blowing, perfect for flying kites. The kite is homemade, made out of tissue paper, sticks, and string. Attached is a brightly colored tail to give it stability. You have chosen your kite string very carefully. This is a great kite, and you don’t want to lose it. You also want to fly it as high as possible.

Now hold up your kite and run down the beach, letting the wind catch the fabric of the kite and draw it up into the sky. It’s a little unstable at first, so it dips and dives a little until you can get it high enough to catch a good breeze. Then it begins to rise easily as you let out your string. Pretty soon it is so high that it is just a speck in the beautiful blue sky.

Can you see it? Can you feel the tug on the string as the wind catches it again and again? You can make it dip. You can make it twirl. You can make it dive and soar by manipulating the string. That thin, strong string controls and anchors your kite to the ground. Just enjoy the feel of the control and the beauty of the day.

Now I have a question for you. Just what is holding up the kite? Is it the wind? It sure looks like it. Now I’m going to ask you to do something that may be hard for you to do. Quickly cut the string. Let the kite go. Give it freedom to fly farther and higher. The wind is surely in control and will keep it safe.

But what happens now that the string is cut? The kite begins to dip and dive, wiggle and waggle, and eventually falls back to earth. The wind carries it over the land, and as it loses altitude you lose sight of it, but you know that the ultimate outcome is that it is falling to the earth. That beautiful kite you spent so much time assembling is no longer heaven bound but has fallen to the earth, and no wind is going to lift it up again. Do you feel a sense of disappointment and loss?

You can open your eyes now. The reality is that although it looks like the string is controlling the kite, it is really giving the kite the ability to soar and be what it was meant to be.

I have endeavored to paint a word picture in your mind of a gospel truth that is the key to our salvation. The kite represents each of us. God created us in His image, and we are beautiful in His sight. He did a great job, but He does not force us to do anything. What He did give us was a strong tie to Him, as the string is to the kite. The string represents the guidelines for happiness and eternal life as contained in His marvelous plan.

Stay Focused on the Ultimate Goal of Eternal Life

Every journey has a beginning, an ending, and usually a few stopovers along the way. Hopefully, breakdowns and mechanical failures will be few and far between. Wherever you presently find yourself on life’s highway, it may be helpful and wise to objectively assess the health and vitality of your spiritual life, just as you would check the air pressure in your tires and the level of fuel in your tank before you commenced your journey. If your spiritual well-being is hampered by sin, procrastination, indifference, lust, drugs, immodesty, or any other malady, now is the time for resolution. I like the advice of Mother Teresa. She said: “Yesterday is gone. Tomorrow has not yet come. We have only today. Let us begin.”15

Let us all begin. Let us all begin right now! Let’s not defer the opportunity to participate fully in the happiness that comes from living a righteous and contributing life.

Over the years I have had the great privilege of playing a few holes of golf, at different times, with Jack Nicklaus, Johnny Miller, Mike Weir, and Arnold Palmer. Each of these individuals is a very impressive man and a superb golfer. A seemingly unimportant event occurred while playing with Arnold Palmer that has had a lasting and profound effect on me. Some of you may recall this story I have shared before from my mission to Australia.

After hitting our drives, I was standing near Mr. Palmer as his young caddy was describing some of the hazards of the hole we were playing. The conversation went something like this:

Young caddy to Mr. Palmer: “Sir, near the green and just to the left there is a small creek, which is just out of view, and they have let the rough on the right grow an additional two inches.”

Mr. Palmer to caddy—firmly, succinctly, but nicely: “Please, young man, do not plant in my mind what is on the left and what hazard I may face on the right. The only piece of information that is important is the distance from this ball to the flag stick.”

Too often in life we focus on what is on the left and what is on the right rather than what is straight down the middle. Former Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare John W. Gardner pointed out, “What we have before us are some breathtaking opportunities disguised as insoluble problems.”16 Solving our spiritual challenges is an opportunity we can all be successful in accomplishing.

It has been said that “what we do in life echoes in eternity.”17 My young friends, may we be successful in traveling the highway of life and be the recipients of the happiness that comes from fully vesting ourselves in our Father in Heaven’s plan for us. It is a marvelous time to be alive!

I express my love and respect for each of you and invoke the blessings of heaven that you may be blessed with happiness in your personal lives as you faithfully follow God’s plan, that you may be blessed with discernment to identify that which is good and shun that which is bad, and that you may have the ability and receive abiding joy from serving in His kingdom, as well as finding success in your educational or vocational pursuits.

I know that Jesus lives. I know that He is our Savior. I know that He atoned for our sins. I’m grateful that He is our advocate with our Father in Heaven. I know the words contained in the scriptures, and particularly in the Book of Mormon, give us direction in our lives that we might negotiate life’s journey and return to our Father in Heaven with a full measure of happiness. I’m grateful and express gratitude for living prophets. I know that we’re blessed this day with a living prophet, Thomas S. Monson. These things I know and testify to you in the holy name of Jesus the Christ, our Redeemer and Savior, amen.

© 2010 by Intellectual Reserve, Inc. All rights reserved. English approval: 10/09. PD50021016

Notes

1. See “Aloha Spirit,” Hawaii Revised Statutes 5-7.5, http://capitol.hawaii.gov/hrscurrent/vol01_ch0001-0042f/hrs0005/hrs_0005-0007_0005.htm.

2. David H. Petraeus, in Sara Israelsen-Hartley, “General Petraeus: Top 10 Reasons BYU Grads Make Great Soldiers,” Deseret News, Mar. 26, 2010, http://deseretnews.com/article/print/700019691/General-Petraeus-Top-10-reasons-BYU-grads-make-great-soldiers.html.

3. St. Augustine, see “QuotationsBook,” http://quotationsbook.com/quote/31904/.

4. Thomas S. Monson, “Three Ways to Build a Strong Testimony,” Friend, May 2009, 2.

5. Abraham Lincoln, see “UpLifts: Motivation in Thought,” Apr. 20, 2010, http://uplifts.us/?cat=5.

6. Lewis Carroll, see “QuotationsBook,” http://quotationsbook.com/quote/46342/.

7. Robert Frost, “The Road Not Taken” (1915), in The Poetry of Robert Frost, ed. Edward Connery Lathem (1970), 105.

8. “The Family: A Proclamation to the World,” Ensign, Nov. 1995, 102.

9. Gordon B. Hinckley, in Conference Report, Oct. 2002, 109; or Ensign, Nov. 2002, 100.

10. “18 Ways to Stand Strong: Family,” New Era, Oct. 2008, 20; see Associated Press/MTV Research and Strategic Insights, Happiness, Aug. 20, 2007.

11. See James E. Faust, “Joseph Smith and the Book of Mormon,” Ensign, Jan. 1996, 7.

12. Russell M. Nelson, in Conference Report, Apr. 2005, 17; or Ensign, May 2005, 18.

13. Barbara Bush, “Remarks of Mrs. Bush at Wellesley College Commencement,” http://www.wellesley.edu/PublicAffairs/Commencement/1990/bush.html.

14. Albert Schweitzer, see “QuotationsBook,” http://quotationsbook.com/quote/37770/.

15. Mother Teresa, In the Heart of the World: Thoughts, Stories, and Prayers, ed. Becky Benenate (1997), 17.

16. John W. Gardner, in Lee S. Shulman, “A Response to the Final Report of the Commission on the Future of Higher Education,” http://carnegiefoundation.org/print/6068.

17. See James E. Faust, in Conference Report, Apr. 2002, 56; or Ensign, May 2002, 48.

Saturday, April 17, 2010

A Step at a Time--Spoken Word Delivered by Lloyd D. Newell

A Step at a Time Delivered By: Lloyd D. Newell

Years ago, a single mother faced what seemed like an overwhelming future. Her children were young, their challenges great. Though our personal trials may be different from hers, we can sympathize with her distress. Who among us has not faced a challenge or difficulty with some uncertainty and misgiving? Are we strong enough, wise enough, brave enough to carry on?

It’s been said that “old age is not for the weak,” but neither is young or middle age. Whatever you face right now, remember, you’ve faced other problems, and you made it past them; you’ve gone through trials before, and you came out stronger on the other side; you’ve learned and grown, and now you have the wisdom that comes of experience.

And you’re not the only one. Most everyone you see has had to face trouble and adversity. What you’ve witnessed your whole life, whether you know it or not, is courage and strength and faith. And none of it was acquired in a day or month or year. It comes little by little, over time.

Eleanor Roosevelt, one who was resilient in the face of heartache, said: “Courage is more exhilarating than fear and in the long run it is easier. We do not have to become heroes overnight. Just a step at a time, meeting each thing that comes up, seeing it is not as dreadful as it appeared, discovering we have the strength to stare it down.”1

Usually, what seems difficult just takes some time. What seems impossible takes a little more time. Courage is often demonstrated by those who are stronger than they think, more resilient than they once imagined.

With faith, hope, courage, and some help from kind people, the young single mother made it. Her children are now grown, those difficult days now past. Like so many others all around us who face challenges and problems, she became a hero one step at a time.
1. You Learn by Living: Eleven Keys for a More Fulfilling Life (1960), 41.
Program #4204

Light of Life--Spoken Word Delivered by Lloyd D. Newell

Light of Life Delivered By: Lloyd D. Newell

Something within us loves light. We need light for life. Both physically and spiritually, we thrive when we see and feel the light. Who doesn’t feel drawn to a window, not just for the view it affords, but especially for the light it invites?

The natural world shows how essential light is to life. Delicate flowers push their way through the darkness of the cold, hard soil just to drink from the sun’s warm light. Spring’s bold display of blossoms is a direct response to longer days of more direct light.

In ancient times, people were more dependent on natural light than we are today. And when the sun went down, they could not simply flip a switch or press a button to illuminate their dwellings.

Long ago, early on that first Easter morning, “it was yet dark” when Mary went to the garden tomb (see John 20:1). The darkness in the world around her was likely easier to bear than the darkness and emptiness she felt in her heart. Soon the sun would rise, however, and soon the Light of Life would illuminate her soul.

In a sense, each of us walks a part of life’s journey in the dark. But each step of faith leads to more light, more reason to believe, greater cause to hope, until we finally find the Light of Life. As the Psalmist said, “Thy word is a lamp unto my feet, and a light unto my path” (Psalm 119:105).

The more we yearn for the Light of Life, the more our spirits, like the flowers of spring, blossom with the fruits of faith: peace, joy, love, and hope. Without the light that shines in darkness, we could not gather “fruit unto life eternal” (John 4:36). We could not feel the light of everlasting life.
Program #4203
Musical Selection:
1. Hail the Day that Sees Him Rise
2. God So Loved the World
3. The Lord My Pasture Will Prepare
4. Jesus, the Very Thought of Thee
5. Spoken Word
6. O Light of Life!
7. Hallelujah Chorus

The Right Person at the Right Time--Spoken Word Delivered by Lloyd D. Newell

The Right Person at the Right Time Delivered By: Lloyd D. Newell

Think for a moment of someone who made a difference in your life. Maybe it was a family member, a friend, a coach, a teacher, a neighbor. It may even have happened a long time ago, but you still remember and cherish that person’s influence upon you.

A young teenage girl thinks of a basketball coach who saw her potential, cared about her, and told her not to quit. A boy thinks of a teacher who helped him believe he was smart and could succeed in school. A new father thinks of a brother who encouraged him though the challenges of parenthood. A middle-aged woman thinks of a neighbor who reached out to her during a heartbreaking time of loss. A thousand other examples could be given of simple moments when the right person at the right time made a big difference in someone else’s life.

A song from the Lerner and Loewe musical Brigadoon pays tribute to the influence one person can have on the life of another:

I saw a man with his head bowed low.
His heart had no place to go.
I looked and I thought to myself with a sigh:
There but for you go I. . . .
Lonely men around me, trying not to cry,
Till the day you found me, there among them was I.1

It’s humbling to think what our lives might be like without those earthly angels who spread goodness and kindness along life’s pathway. They come into our lives at crucial times to set an example, to give us counsel or encouragement, or simply to be a loyal friend when we need one the most. Without them, we know we would not be quite the same.

All around us are people who need that kind of friend—people “with [their heads] bowed low,” whose hearts have “no place to go.” Now could be someone’s crucial moment, when just the right words or even just the right warmth of friendship might make a difference. To them, you can be the right person at the right time.
1. “There but for You Go I” (1947).
Program #4202
Musical Selections:
1. Praise Ye the Lord
2. Lord, Make Me to Know, from A German Requiem
3. How Bright Is the Day
4. Morning Has Broken (Organ solo)
5. Spoken Word
6. There But for You Go I, from Brigadoon
7. When the Saints Go Marching In
8. A Gaelic Blessing

Saturday, March 27, 2010

The Good Fortune of Others--Spoken Word Delivered by Lloyd D. Newell

The Good Fortune of Others Delivered By: Lloyd D. Newell

A high school senior answered her phone, just hours before she was to address her graduating class as valedictorian. On the other end she heard a voice she recognized. It was Sandy. She and Sandy often vied for the same honors and positions. Sandy usually took second. But that day, Sandy was first in the eyes of her rival, because of what she said: “I hope you do well today. I know you can do it. I’ll be right there cheering you on.”

Who succeeded that day? Certainly the young woman speaking from the podium was touted as a success. But that afternoon she had learned the lesson of a lifetime from second-place Sandy. Someone wisely said that “one of the sanest, surest, and most generous joys of life comes from being happy over the good fortune of others.”1

How often do we support or applaud those who have succeeded, even if it came at our own expense? Or do we complain and cast a sour comment at their accomplishment? Do we offer true congratulations, or do we enviously shrink from the moment, wishing we had done so well?

It’s easy to extol the success of someone who comes from behind—unless they come from behind us. In our success-driven world we sometimes revel in comparisons and judgments; we seem to think that discounting another’s advances will somehow make us feel better about ourselves.

But life is not a pie with only so many pieces. Celebrating the success of others takes us closer to, not farther from, our own victory. When we invest attention and energy in the people around us, their accomplishments become ours and we’re more likely to fully see and appreciate true greatness.

So the next time a friend or associate is enjoying good fortune, be the one to say, “I’m behind you, and I’m cheering you on."
1 Attributed to Archibald Rutledge; see http://quotationsbook.com/quote/2798
Program #4201

Give To Live--Spoken Word Delivered by Lloyd D. Newell

Give To Live Delivered By: Lloyd D. Newell

Every Tuesday for months, writer Mitch Albom met with his old professor Morrie Schwartz to talk about life. Morrie was dying, but he taught his former student profound lessons in living. Considering his physical condition, Morrie could have easily accepted pity, but he didn’t. “Why would I ever take like that?” he said. “Taking only makes me feel like I’m dying. Giving makes me feel like I’m living.”¹

It may sound ironic, but it’s true. The people who seem to get the most out of life are those who aren’t focused on getting it all. They give, and they find that giving sweetens and enriches their lives.

Indeed, we live by giving. We each have something to give. And it doesn’t have to be something grand; it just needs to come from the heart. It may be our time, our interest or concern, or resources, our skills, or our talents. It could be the willingness to listen, the patience to truly understand, the selflessness to think of others before ourselves. A smile and a sincere word of praise may be worth more than gold to one who is discouraged. An extended hand of friendship and an offer to help may be just what’s needed to get someone through the day. Unlike the material gifts that wear down and run out, these more precious gifts are inexhaustible. In fact, the miracle is that the more we give such gifts, the more we have to give.

Think of those you know who freely give. Their generosity sometimes makes them busy, and yet they always seem to have time for you. They’re interested in you. They make efforts to lift your spirits and encourage you, even when they’re carrying burdens that may be heavier than your own. They generously share their wisdom, experience, and life lessons. Because they are willing to give, they live. And in a sense, they and their gifts will live forever.
1. In Joseph M. Dougherty, “Feel most alive by giving, author Albom says at WSU,” Deseret Morning News, Mar. 29, 2007, B5.
Program #4200
Musical Selection:
1. Laudate nomen
2. Tis Winter Now
3. A Song of Praise
4. Spitfire Prelude (organ solo)
5. Spoken Word
6. Have I Done Any Good?
7. Didn't My Lord Deliver Daniel?
8. From All that Dwell Below the Skies

The Roots of Meaningful Relationships--Spoken Word Delivered by Lloyd D. Newell

The Roots of Meaningful Relationships Delivered By: Lloyd D. Newell

The weather began to change, and a man felt inclined to plant something outside in the cold earth. After a hard winter of dark skies and icy storms, the prospect of digging in the ground warmed his heart. So he did some homework, researched the best tree for his chosen spot, and went to see an expert.

The master gardener had this counsel: “Don’t plant a hundred-dollar tree in a ten-dollar hole! The roots of the tree,” he explained, “must have room to expand and to absorb the nutrients from the soil. Also, the tree must be planted deep enough so that the roots can move into the soil and give the plant stability. If it’s planted right, you can expect it will grow into a beautiful tree and last a long time.”1

Good advice—not just for planting trees but also for building relationships. Both trees and relationships grow best in an environment that has been carefully prepared and is constantly nurtured. Occasionally a seed may fall on uncultivated soil and spring up as a sapling, but such trees rarely last long enough to bear fruit. Likewise, lasting relationships don’t just happen. They must be fostered by love and attention, cultivated by care and concern, and fed by kindness and generosity. It doesn’t happen in one day of intensive attention; it happens over time, in countless small moments, as gradually as a tree grows.

Meaningful relationships are worth more than hundred-dollar trees, and they deserve all the time, effort, and energy they need to become strong and beautiful. Then, once the roots are well established, such relationships can continue to grow—even under difficult circumstances. Trust and understanding will nurture the relationship, and eventually, the flowers of love will blossom and bear sweet fruit.
1. See Carlos E. Asay, Family Pecan Trees: Planting a Legacy of Faith at Home (1992), 228.
Program #4199
Musical Selections:
1. Glory to God on High
2. Zadok the Priest
3. He Leadeth Me; O Blessed Thought! (Organ solo)
4. Peace Like a River
5. Spoken Word
6. Somewhere, from West Side Story
8. Redeemer of Israel

Musical friends team up to share testimony

Church News

Musical friends team up to share testimony

By Elder David Robertson

Asia North Area public affairs missionary


Published: Friday, March 19, 2010

TOKYO, JAPAN

Well-known LDS songwriter Janice Kapp Perry teamed up with her friend and popular Japanese LDS singer, Nobuaki Irie, to share music and testimony in a whirlwind 10-day, eight-city tour of concerts and firesides from Japan's northern island of Hokkaido to Okinawa in the south. The tour ended March 14 in Tokyo.

In snowy Hokkaido, they performed in the Sapporo Japan Stake Center. Sister Perry, who was joined on the tour by her husband, Doug, shared some of her background in music and sports and how a basketball accident in which she broke her ankle when she was nearly 40, permanently changed her focus from sports to writing music. Her husband suggested she find "a safer hobby." What started as a hobby became much more. Once she began, she related, "I knew I wanted to start writing gospel music."

Japan Sapporo Mission President Lee Daniels said, "It was entertaining and uplifting as Brother and Sister Perry and Brother Irie shared not only their musical talents, but also their testimonies and gospel insights."

Photo by Elder David Robertson
Popular Japanese LDS singer Nobuaki Irie, left, joins with the LDS singing group "Bless Four" during rehearsal for a concert in Osaka, Japan. Janice Kapp Perry, joined by Nobuaki Irie, did concerts and firesides in eight cities over 10 days in Japan.

More than 700 attended a concert in an Osaka public hall. The Perrys and Brother Irie were joined by Bless Four, a Japanese LDS singing group popular among youth and young adult audiences. The four siblings; Akashi, Kanasa, Akino and Aiki Kawamitsu from Kawasaki, Japan; have been performing professionally for eight years, since they were in their early teens.

They said it was exciting to perform with the composer of many of the Primary songs they have known and loved since they were very young.

Photo by Elder David Robertson
Janice Kapp Perry, joined by her husband, Doug, leads the audience in singing the medley "As Sisters in Zion" and "We'll Bring the World His Truth" during a fireside.

With her husband, Bless Four, and Brother Irie as backup, Sister Perry delighted audiences by singing nine of her own songs in Japanese. With the help of Brother Irie and others, she had made a special effort to learn the Japanese words that have touched the hearts of so many Church members in Japan. The audience joined in many of the songs, prompting Sister Perry to declare, "Thank you! You sound like the Mormon Tabernacle Choir."

Photo by Elder David Robertson
Janice Kapp Perry accepts a thank you note from young Karen Akemi in Tokyo as Elder Samuel Lloyd looks on.

Sister Ryoko Higa of the Ginowan stake in Okinawa said of Sister Perry, "She gave her talk with humor and also shared the experiences of challenges she had overcome. We all felt the Spirit."

One such personal experience, involving one of her own compositions, occurred following a serious automobile accident, she said. Sister Perry was required to undergo an extremely painful procedure to determine the extent of damage to her neck. She said, "Four short lines from one of my own Primary songs came to my mind, and I closed my eyes and repeated them over and over for 30 minutes during the test.

"Pray, He is there.

"Speak, He is listening.

"You are His child,

"His love now surrounds you."

She testified of the power of music to sustain her in a very difficult moment and added, "That is why we want our families to sing the hymns and children's songs often."

She encouraged those in attendance to develop their natural talents by telling her story of joining the Mormon Tabernacle Choir at age 55. For Sister Perry, with the training and experience she had by this time, the written music-skills test and taped home audition were not particularly difficult. But she had great fear of the in-person audition. Despite those fears, she went and, to her surprise, was accepted into the choir, she said.

She noted, "My fears almost caused me to miss five years of the most glorious musical experience you could have on this earth." She added, "It is through our talents that we find happiness and focus in our lives, and give service to others."

Brother Irie has been a family friend of the Perrys for almost 20 years. A gifted musician, he visited the Perrys while he was a student at BYU and inquired about the possibility of making an album of her songs in Japanese. That was not something she had ever considered but, discussing it with him, she felt impressed to move forward.

Brother Irie concluded by saying, "I will be forever grateful to her for changing my life."

Brother and Sister Perry were called in 2002 to serve as missionaries in the Chile Santiago West Mission. Sister Perry told of how difficult it was for her to learn Spanish and her initial concerns about contributing in the mission. She went on, "Still, I could assist [my husband] by doing all the things I had learned in the MTC: singing hymns, praying, reading scriptures and bearing my testimony in the homes where we taught."

Ultimately, their mission consisted of "leadership, visiting inactive families, developing choirs, and teaching conducting and keyboard lessons."

As they were preparing to return home, they realized how the little things they had done for people had made such a difference in their lives; "a hug, a smile, a song, a shared testimony, a kind word." After their return, she captured these thoughts in a song, entitled "By Small and Simple Means." The song was particularly enjoyed by audiences on the concert tour.

Many commented that the Spirit was especially strong during two final numbers in which the audience and full-time missionaries joined in. The first was a medley consisting of "As Sisters in Zion" and "We'll Bring the World His Truth," with Sister Perry leading all of the women and girls and Brother Perry leading all of the men and boys.

The second was a song, originally written for the Japan Kobe Mission, titled "No Greater Joy." It tells of the fears experienced by members in attempting to share the gospel with loved ones and friends, but testifies of the joy that comes to those who overcome those fears. It has become a well-known song in many of the Japanese missions, so full-time missionaries or others familiar with the song were invited to join the performers in presenting this testimony to the audience.

© 2010 Deseret News Publishing Company

Saturday, March 20, 2010

Janice Kapp Perry: Songwriter's life captured in film

Janice Kapp Perry: Songwriter's life captured in film

By Molly Farmer

Mormon Times
Published: 2010-01-27 12:00:41

A film chronicling the life of songwriter Janice Kapp Perry made it to the LDS Film Festival this January after airing on BYU TV for more than a year.

"Janice Kapp Perry: A Life of Service and Song," takes the viewer behind the sheet music and into the life of the accomplished composer. Directed by Clinton Baxter, the 60-minute documentary includes interviews from Perry's family as well as Craig Jessop, the former director of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir, and Utah Sen. Orrin Hatch, among others.

Most church members -- especially out of Perry's state of Utah -- have likely never heard Perry's name, but they certainly have heard her music as evidenced by the touching footage of 800 children in Accra Ghana singing Perry's "I Love To See The Temple," at the temple dedication there in 2004. Kathleen Hinckley Barnes, former President Gordon B. Hinckley's daughter, recounted how emotive that experience was as she was there with her parents at the time of the dedication.

"It was a very powerful moment," she said.

Perry's repertoire includes the popular children's titles "I Pray in Faith," "Love is Spoken Here," "We'll Bring the World His Truth," and Kapp's personal favorite, "A Child's Prayer."

For members whose memory of Primary is a little foggy, they will certainly recognize "As Sisters in Zion," from the LDS hymn book. What's more, Perry's sheet music is popular for youth conferences and special musical numbers.

The most compelling aspects of the film is the love and support that is so evidently shared among Kapp's family. Her children each praise her as both a mother and a songwriter, and her husband, Douglas, is beyond proud of his wife's accomplishments.

Those familiar with Perry's works may be surprised to learn that her first love was sports -- not music. In fact, it wasn't until she was 38 and laid up at home after having broken her ankle while playing basketball that she started seriously writing, with the encouragement of her husband.

"Is there something safer (than sports) that would give you fulfillment?" he asked.

Perry soon sat down and wrote "I'll Follow Jesus," and then performed it for her family.

"It was very much like the sun coming up in the morning," said Douglas of the sweetness he felt as hearing it for the first time.

"There will probably never be another moment quite like it," added her son Steven Kapp Perry, a fellow songwriter following in his mother's footsteps.

The film dicsusses the broad reach of Perry's music, as one of her most famous songs is more patriotic than religious. Sen. Hatch and Perry collaborated on the song "Heal Our Land," which was sung at the second inauguration of George W. Bush by Pastor Wintley Phipps, and later on the Oprah Show by Phipps following the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

Perry says in the film that her testimony is what gives her inspiration.

"I think anything good that I have written has sprung from my testimony," she said.



E-mail: mfarmer@desnews.com



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Wednesday, March 3, 2010

The Untold Olympic Stories--Spoken Word Delivered by Lloyd D. Newell

The Untold Olympic Stories Delivered By: Lloyd D. Newell

From perfect 10s and world records to stunning athletic accomplishments and heartbreaking defeats, we marvel at the drama of the Olympic games. Something stirs in our souls as we witness the pageantry, the inspiring sportsmanship, and the extraordinary achievements on a world stage.

But it may be that the greatest story of the Olympics is the story that’s never fully told or appreciated. Behind every athlete is a saga of endless hours of dedicated effort, of perseverance in the face of setbacks and disappointments, of hope of victory that motivates each athlete to keep going, keep striving, keep trying despite the odds. For every round of applause, there are countless hours of quiet toil; for every ovation, there are untold days of devoted practice; for every moment of coaching, there are continual months, even years, of solitary, lonely work.

Such stories are not unique to Olympic athletes. Indeed, one powerful message of the Olympics is that excellence is all around us. Most of it is never acknowledged with gold medals and elaborate ceremonies—in fact, it may never be acknowledged at all. But the truth is that countless ordinary people everywhere deserve the gold of praise and thanks for living quiet lives of decency and honor and goodness.

They may not compete on the world’s stage, but they bless their loved ones and families; they may not perform in front of millions, but they reach out to help and improve the life of someone in need; they may not grab headlines, but they make meaningful contributions in their communities and nations. Long after the Olympic torch is dimmed, these stories of dedicated work, sacrifice, and excellence can be as inspiring as the feats that thrill us during the Olympics.
Program #4197
Musical Selection:
1. The Last Words of David
2. Brother James's Air
3. Praise the Lord with the Drums and Cymbals
4. On a Clear Day You can See Forever
5. Organ Interlude
6. Spoken Word
7. Call of the Champions

Talents to Share--Spoken Word Delivered by Lloyd D. Newell

Talents to Share Delivered By: Lloyd D. Newell

We all have special aptitudes, skills, or gifts. Some people can sing or play an instrument; some are athletic; others can write or draw. Some are especially friendly; some are good listeners; others can solve problems. Whatever our gifts may be, they are best expressed when we use them to help other people.

A Chinese folktale, “Ma Liang and His Magic Brush,” tells of a poor orphan boy who had a gift for drawing. He had no paintbrush or even paper, so he used broken twigs to draw in wet sand or pieces of charcoal to draw on smooth stones. The more he drew, the more lifelike his sketches became. He longed for a paintbrush but barely earned enough money to survive.

One night while Ma Liang slept, an apparition rose from the ocean and gave him a magic paintbrush. The spirit warned the boy: “If used to help others, it will bring joy and prosperity. If used unwisely, it will bring disaster.” Ma Liang soon learned the truth of those words. Whatever he painted with his new brush literally came to life. As long as he painted to help others or to fill a need, the brush blessed his life. But when others tried to take it from him or make him use it for selfish purposes, he met with disaster.1

Like Ma Liang, when we use our gifts for the benefit of others, we find joy and fulfillment in them. Recently, a widower decided that rather than staying home and feeling lonely, he would visit a retirement center and share his talent for singing. His performance touched those who listened. Some wiped tears from the corners of their eyes. No one wanted to leave when he finished. Something special took place that night because he was willing to share.

We can all share something, so don’t hide your gifts. No matter your circumstances, use your skills and talents to bless other people. You’ll find that doing so not only multiplies your ability to give but also deepens your joy in giving.
1 See Yin-lien C. Chin, Yetta S. Center, and Mildred Ross, eds., Traditional Chinese Folktales (1996), 143–53.
Program #4198
Musical Selections:
1. Fill the World with Love, from Goodbye, Mr. Chips
2. Scenes from the Miao Mountains
3. Festive Trumpet Tune (Organ)
4. Encircle the Child
5. Horses on the Grasslands (instrumental)
6. Spoken Word
7. Mo Li Hua
8. My Favorite Things, from The Sound of Music
9. Let There Be Peace on Earth

About Me

我是在1996年12月29日受洗加入耶穌基督後期聖徒教會. 我在此留下我對這復興的福音的見證,我知道約瑟斯密確實是神的先知; 藉由約瑟斯密,神復興了耶穌基督的教會即耶穌基督後期聖徒教會; 摩爾門經是耶穌基督的另一部約書,與聖經共同見證耶穌是基督.而我們今日仍有一位活著的先知,多馬孟蓀會長 I joined the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints on December 29, 1996. I know that Joseph Smith was and is a prophet of God. The Book of Mormon is indeed Another Testament of Jesus Christ. We have a living prophet today, even President Thomas S. Monson.

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