The Art of Making It Happen | Delivered By: Lloyd D. Newell |
In November 1899, Wilbur Wright queried the United States Weather Bureau to find a rural area with high wind conditions so he and his brother Orville could test a glider. The answer came back, “Kitty Hawk, North Carolina.” History was in the making. For the next four years, Orville and Wilbur experimented with flight, as did renowned scientists from Germany, France, and Brazil. But these two intrepid owners of a bicycle shop in Dayton, Ohio, were the first to fly. The date was December 17, 1903. What distinguished them from their illustrious rivals? Perhaps it was their sheer doggedness. When they weren’t out testing a glider on the sand dunes, they were reconstructing it in the living room of their father’s home. These self-taught engineers figured out how to fly by breaking down the task into pieces and attacking one at a time. They made hundreds of glides, slowly increasing their distances from 300 to 400 to 500 feet in the battering Atlantic winds. The flights were not spectacular, but with each one they drew closer to their goal. Wilbur wrote, “Skill comes by the constant repetition of familiar feats rather than by a few overbold attempts at feats for which the performer is yet poorly prepared.”1 The lesson is a good one for us all. Most problems that seem big and unsolvable are really made up of several small, manageable problems that we must face patiently. Orville and Wilbur watched many a glider nosedive into the dunes, but they never lost hope. To some, the task of conquering flight may have seemed too big for these two unlikely innovators and aviators. But Orville and Wilbur Wright, through hard work, optimism, and resilience, had perfected an art we can all master—the art of making it happen. 1 In James Tobin, “To Fly!” Smithsonian, Apr. 2003, http://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/fly.html?c=y&page=5. Program #4179 Musical Selection: 1. The Heavens Are Telling, from The Creation 2. Lead, Kindly Light 3. God of Grace, and God of Glory (Organ solo) 4. The Spoken Word 5. For I Am Called by Thy Name 6. Sunrise, Sunset, from Fiddler on the Roof 7. O Come, Ye Nations of the Earth |
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About Me
- ldsesther
- 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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