November 3, 2024
Peace in a Troubled World

MACK WILBERG

Conductor

RICHARD ELLIOTT

Organist

DERRICK PORTER

The Spoken Word

ERIN MORLEY

Special Guest

LET THERE BE LIGHT!

Music: Gilbert M. Martin Text: John Marriott

THERE IS SUNSHINE IN MY SOUL TODAY

Music: John R. Sweney Text: Eliza E. Hewitt Arrangement: Mack Wilberg

PRAISE THE LORD WITH DRUMS AND CYMBALS (ORGAN SOLO)

Music: Sigfrid Karg-Elert

RISE! UP! ARISE! (EXCERPT)

from Saint Paul Music: Felix Mendelssohn Text: Based on scripture

DEAREST CHILDREN, GOD IS NEAR YOU

Music: John Menzies Macfarlane Text: Charles L. Walker Arrangement: Mack Wilberg

THE SPOKEN WORD

“Peace in a Troubled World”

YOU’LL NEVER WALK ALONE

from Carousel Music: Richard Rodgers Text: Oscar Hammerstein II Arrangement: Arthur Harris

IT IS WELL WITH MY SOUL

Music: Philip Paul Bliss Text: Horatio G. Spafford Arrangement: Mack Wilberg

The Spoken Word

Peace in a Troubled World

November 3, 2024

By: Derrick Porter

Yehudi Menuhin was one of the great violinists of the twentieth century. To him, playing the violin was a form of human healing, a way to make peace within oneself.[1] He said, “Peace may sound simple, . . . but it requires everything we have, every quality, every strength.”[2]

Wanting peace is part of our human nature, and it has been sought after since the time of Adam and Eve. But peace in the world can’t happen until we have peaceful communities. And peaceful communities can’t be formed until we find peace in ourselves. Inner peace is the foundation on which external peace is built.

True inner peace comes by turning to God. As we choose to trust Him, exercise faith in Him, and strive to do His will, we can find His peace.[3] Sometimes it’s as simple as yielding to a feeling to be still.[4] Other times it requires great resolve to act, or not act, in a certain way.[5] And yet, in other moments it requires prayerful pleading for peace to enter our heart and to stay with us.[6]
It takes great effort to develop and cultivate inner peace. Day by day, choice by choice, experience by experience, peace can grow within us. This effort requires real work, even everything we have.

But we don’t have to do it alone! The Prince of Peace Himself once declared: “My peace I give unto you: [but] not as the world giveth. . . . Let not your heart be troubled, neither let it be afraid.”[7] As we receive His peace deep into our hearts, we are changed. We are strengthened. We feel calmness and confidence, even in very challenging circumstances. This same Prince of Peace commanded: “Peace, be still. And the wind ceased, and there was a great calm.”[8]

The search for peace, whether for the world or ourselves, begins with a choice—a choice we make within. As we choose peace each day, both by extending it to and receiving it from others, we can experience this “great calm” and rejoice in the invitation to “be still,” even in a troubled world.

[1] See “The Legacy” and “The Man,” menuhin.org.
[2] Yehudi Menuhin, in 151 Cong. Rec. 7471 (2005).
[3] President Howard W. Hunter spoke often about inner peace (see Teachings of Presidents of the Church: Howard W. Hunter [2015], 49–59).
[4] See Psalm 46:10.
[5] See Doctrine and Covenants 59:23.
[6] See Alma 38:8.
[7] John 14:27.
[8] Mark 4:39.