July 14, 2024 - Winners and Champions

Music

Conductors: Mack Wilberg and Ryan Murphy

Organist: Joseph Peeples

Announcer: Derrick Porter

“O Clap Your Hands”
Music: John Rutter
Lyrics: Based on Psalm 47

“If the Savior Stood Beside Me”
Music and Lyrics: Sally DeFord
Arrangement: Sam Cardon

“I Sing the Mighty Power of God”
Music: English Melody
Lyrics: Isaac Watts
Arrangement: Mack Wilberg

“Fanfare” (organ solo)
Music: Jacques Lemmens

“Down By the Riverside”
Music and Lyrics: African American Spiritual
Arrangement: Ryan Murphy

“Hold On” from “The Secret Garden”
Music: Lucy Simon
Lyrics: Marsha Norman
Arrangement: Ryan Murphy

“Call of the Champions”
Music: John Williams

The Spoken Word

Small Gestures of Kindness

July 14, 2024
Delivered By Derrick Porter

It’s been said that “life does not determine winners. Winners determine life.”2 Most true winners have “lost” at some point in life. They have been hurt and disappointed; they have experienced setbacks and sorrow, but they do not let these difficulties determine their destiny or define their lives. Instead, they strive to rise above their challenges and keep moving forward one day at a time. In fact, it is very often the defeats, just as much as the victories, that bring out the greatness in a true champion.

One reason we love sports so much is that they provide countless inspiring examples of this very truth. Grantland Rice, a legendary sportswriter from the previous century, spent more than 50 years observing and writing eloquently about the wins and the losses, the triumphs and the failures of great athletes. He wrote these words that have been paraphrased by parents and coaches so often that they have become a familiar motto of athletic competition everywhere:

When the One Great Scorer comes to mark against your name,

He writes—not that you won or lost—but how you played the Game.3

Every two years the world gathers in celebration of sport to witness world-class athletes compete in the Olympic games. While the medal count is interesting to follow, what really grabs the heart are the personal stories of the athletes—their hard work, persistence, dedication, and teamwork. Everyone, it seems, faced challenges that could have tempted them to give up and give in, but they discovered—as we all must—that the key to a winning life is to keep going.

Every Olympic athlete is a living reminder that if we can rise when we fall, pick ourselves up when life knocks us down, and continue on when it seems easier to quit, we will see in time that winning is not as much about talent or luck as it is about grit and perseverance. Winners and champions just keep trying. This thought is expressed well in the Olympic creed: “The most important thing in life is not the triumph, but the fight; the essential thing is not to have won, but to have fought well.”4

1. Originally presented on Music and the Spoken Word broadcast by Lloyd D. Newell August 7, 2016

2. Marvin J. Ashton, “A Pattern in All Things,” Ensign, Nov. 1990, 20.

3. “Alumnus Football,” in William A. Harper, How You Played the Game: The Life of Grantland Rice (1999), 158.

4. In The Olympic Symbols, 2nd ed. (2007), 5.