Music & the Spoken Word Thanksgiving special broadcast with The Tabernacle Choir and Orchestra at Temple Square. Conducting today’s program is Mack Wilberg, with the Bells at Temple Square and guest artists the Gabriel Trumpet Ensemble, organist Andrew Unsworth, and the spoken word by Lloyd Newell.
Opening Credits (0:00)
1) “Prayer of Thanksgiving” (01:10)
Music: Edward Kremser
Lyrics: Theodore Baker
Arrangement: Nathan Hofheins
2) “For the Beauty of the Earth” (04:40)
Music: John Rutter
Lyrics: David Grant
3) (Organ Solo) Prelude on “Simple Gifts” (08:10)
Music: Shaker Tune
Arrangement: Franklin Ashdown
4) “I Think the World Is Glorious” (10:42)
Music: Alexander Schriener
Lyrics: Anna Johnson
Arrangement: Mack Wiberg
5) “Home is a Special Kind of Feeling” from The Wind in the Willows (13:06)
Music: John Rutter
Lyrics: David Grant
6) “Now Thank We All Our God” (16:15)
Music: Johann Crüger
Lyrics: Martin Rinkhart
Arrangement: Mack Wilberg
7) (Spoken Word) “A Virtue for Every Season of Life” (19:40)
Narrator: Lloyd Newell
8) “Come, Ye Thankful People, Come” (22:37)
Music: George J. Elvey
Lyrics: Henry Alford
Arrangement: Mack Wilberg
The Spoken Word: “A Virtue for Every Season of Life”
By: Lloyd Newell
Isn’t it interesting that sometimes those who have the least are the most grateful, and yet there are others who seem to have everything—except gratitude? As religious leader Henry B. Eyring observed: “We so easily forget that we came into life with nothing. Whatever we get soon seems our natural right, not a gift. And we forget the giver. Then our gaze shifts from what we have been given to what we don’t have yet.”
Gratitude—for life, for blessings, for the Giver of this beautiful world and everything in it—is a timeless and timely virtue. People like to be around grateful people. They like to help grateful people. They don’t soon forget grateful people.
One woman fondly remembers an elderly friend named Dorothy, whom she visited to help her with some tasks that age had made difficult. After each little act of service, Dorothy would say, “Do you know how grateful I am?” During the visit, the power went out, and when Dorothy looked out the window and saw the workers restoring her power, she said, “I hope they know how grateful I am.” When it was time for Dorothy’s friend to leave, she whispered the prayer she learned from Dorothy: “Do you know how grateful I am?”
It’s worth pondering—do others know how grateful you are? Better yet, do you know? Many express their thanks in gratitude journals, counting their blessings as they respond to the prompt “How did God bless me today?”
“If you do that long enough and with faith,” Henry B. Eyring taught, “you will find yourself remembering blessings. And sometimes, you will have gifts brought to your mind which you failed to notice during the day, but which you will then know were a touch of God’s hand in your life.” And think of the joy your family will someday feel as they look at this record of thankfulness.
So many other virtues we seek flow from gratitude. Without gratitude, we become self-focused and insecure, wondering if someone somewhere has more or better. Gratitude, on the other hand, opens our hearts to God and to others. It blesses us in seasons of scarcity and seasons of plenty. Indeed, gratitude is a virtue for every season of life.
Episode aired November 21, 2021, Broadcast Number 4810.
Subscribe to our channel for the latest videos: http://www.youtube.com/thetabernaclechoirattemplesquare
Note: A prerecorded countdown video begins one hour prior to the live broadcast.
Subscribe to “Choir Notes” the Choir’s official newsletter
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Follow The Tabernacle Choir at Temple Square
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Opening Credits (0:00)
1) “Prayer of Thanksgiving” (01:10)
Music: Edward Kremser
Lyrics: Theodore Baker
Arrangement: Nathan Hofheins
2) “For the Beauty of the Earth” (04:40)
Music: John Rutter
Lyrics: David Grant
3) (Organ Solo) Prelude on “Simple Gifts” (08:10)
Music: Shaker Tune
Arrangement: Franklin Ashdown
4) “I Think the World Is Glorious” (10:42)
Music: Alexander Schriener
Lyrics: Anna Johnson
Arrangement: Mack Wiberg
5) “Home is a Special Kind of Feeling” from The Wind in the Willows (13:06)
Music: John Rutter
Lyrics: David Grant
6) “Now Thank We All Our God” (16:15)
Music: Johann Crüger
Lyrics: Martin Rinkhart
Arrangement: Mack Wilberg
7) (Spoken Word) “A Virtue for Every Season of Life” (19:40)
Narrator: Lloyd Newell
8) “Come, Ye Thankful People, Come” (22:37)
Music: George J. Elvey
Lyrics: Henry Alford
Arrangement: Mack Wilberg
The Spoken Word: “A Virtue for Every Season of Life”
By: Lloyd Newell
Isn’t it interesting that sometimes those who have the least are the most grateful, and yet there are others who seem to have everything—except gratitude? As religious leader Henry B. Eyring observed: “We so easily forget that we came into life with nothing. Whatever we get soon seems our natural right, not a gift. And we forget the giver. Then our gaze shifts from what we have been given to what we don’t have yet.”
Gratitude—for life, for blessings, for the Giver of this beautiful world and everything in it—is a timeless and timely virtue. People like to be around grateful people. They like to help grateful people. They don’t soon forget grateful people.
One woman fondly remembers an elderly friend named Dorothy, whom she visited to help her with some tasks that age had made difficult. After each little act of service, Dorothy would say, “Do you know how grateful I am?” During the visit, the power went out, and when Dorothy looked out the window and saw the workers restoring her power, she said, “I hope they know how grateful I am.” When it was time for Dorothy’s friend to leave, she whispered the prayer she learned from Dorothy: “Do you know how grateful I am?”
It’s worth pondering—do others know how grateful you are? Better yet, do you know? Many express their thanks in gratitude journals, counting their blessings as they respond to the prompt “How did God bless me today?”
“If you do that long enough and with faith,” Henry B. Eyring taught, “you will find yourself remembering blessings. And sometimes, you will have gifts brought to your mind which you failed to notice during the day, but which you will then know were a touch of God’s hand in your life.” And think of the joy your family will someday feel as they look at this record of thankfulness.
So many other virtues we seek flow from gratitude. Without gratitude, we become self-focused and insecure, wondering if someone somewhere has more or better. Gratitude, on the other hand, opens our hearts to God and to others. It blesses us in seasons of scarcity and seasons of plenty. Indeed, gratitude is a virtue for every season of life.
Episode aired November 21, 2021, Broadcast Number 4810.
Subscribe to our channel for the latest videos: http://www.youtube.com/thetabernaclechoirattemplesquare
Note: A prerecorded countdown video begins one hour prior to the live broadcast.
Subscribe to “Choir Notes” the Choir’s official newsletter
http://www.thetabernaclechoir.org/connect
Download the The Tabernacle Choir App
iOS: https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/id958738521
Android: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=org.lds.motab
Follow The Tabernacle Choir at Temple Square
Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/artist/1GRl6sRyLg9ToOohIE2wW5?si=hPvSsRifSxG3shHwtJOufQ
Facebook: facebook.com/thetabernaclechoir
Twitter: twitter.com/thetabchoir
Instagram: instagram.com/thetabernaclechoir
Pinterest: pinterest.com/thetabchoir
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