New Year's Special (12/27/20, Live Stream) | Music & The Spoken Word HD
Music and the Spoken Word broadcast with The Tabernacle Choir and Orchestra at Temple Square, and guests artist Dallyn Vail Bayles. 1. “This Little Light of Mine” 2. “Arise, O God, and Shine” 3. “The Ash Grove” (Organ Solo) 4. “Vivace con Spirito” 5. "Great Expectations" (Spoken Word) 6. “I’ll Begin Again,” from Scrooge 7. “Hold On,” from The Secret Garden 8. “Let There Be Peace on Earth” Great Expectations With a new year on the horizon, it’s traditional to reflect on the year that has passed. And what a year it has been! A global pandemic, natural calamities, social unrest, political turmoil—so many problems and protests, disasters and disagreements have swirled around us. At the same time, we’ve also had moments we will forever cherish. As we look back on 2020, we see good and bad, ups and downs, things we’d like to forget, and things we hope to remember. Even so, most of us feel like we’re ready for a fresh start, a new beginning. That’s the beautiful thing about a new year. It’s full of possibilities, full of hope—or, as Charles Dickens might say, full of “great expectations.” In his novel by that name, Dickens chronicles the lives of characters who endure many injustices. Pip is orphaned, betrayed, jilted, and humbled. Estella likewise endures cruel manipulations, heartache, and disappointment. In the end, after these two characters have grown older and wiser, Estella reflects on their experiences. “Suffering has been stronger than all other teaching,” she says. “… I have been bent and broken, but—I hope—into a better shape.”1 We all face challenges that shape the course of our lives. But that shape and that course are still ours to choose. Will we be hardened or softened by our hardships? Will our difficulties drive us to seek better things in this new year, or will they drag us down, causing us to turn our back on belief and hope? In the wake of sharp contentions, will we work toward reconciliation and peace or wallow in division and anger? When we feel bent and broken under the weight of life’s heavy burdens, will we, like Estella, be bent and broken into a better shape? To be sure, this past year has been a struggle, a great sorrow for far too many of us. But through it all, we carry on, we hope on, we trust in God and find comfort and strength in Him. That is our “great expectation”—to bear with perspective and courage whatever the future holds, trusting that if we are bent and broken, we will emerge from it “into a better shape.” Charles Dickens, Great Expectations (1881), 523. Episode 4763 - Aired December 27, 2020. 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/a