Music
Conductor: Mack Wilberg
Organist: Andrew Unsworth
Announcer: Derrick Porter
“With Songs of Praise”
Music: Newell Kay Brown
Lyrics: Penelope Moody Allen
Arrangement: Mack Wilberg
“For the Beauty of the Earth”
Music: Conrad Kocher
Lyrics: Folliott S. Pierpoint
Arrangement: Mack Wilberg
Hallelujah Chorus, from “Christ on the Mount of Olives”
Music: Ludwig van Beethoven
Organ Interlude
“Sweet Is the Work”
Music: John J. McClellan
Arrangement: Andrew Unsworth
“I Would Be True”
Music: Traditional
Lyrics: Howard Walter
Arrangement: Mack Wilberg
“Let Us All Press On”
Music: Evan Stephens
Lyrics: Evan Stephens
Arrangment: Richard Elliott
“O Come Ye Nations of the Earth”
Music: Traditional
Lyrics: David Warner
Arrangement: Mack Wilberg
The Spoken Word
Everyday Courage
The Spoken Word, October 6, 2024
By: Derrick Porter
“Everyday courage has few witnesses. But [your courage] is no less noble [just] because no drum beats for you and no crowds shout your name.”[1] Those are the words of Robert Louis Stevenson.
It takes courage, everyday courage , to live in the world today: courage to stand up for what we know is right, even as the crowd moves in another direction; courage to stand strong when doubt and uncertainty begin to build; and courage to stand steady when the winds of tribulation blow with hurricane-like force.
A young person I know chose to courageously stand up to high school pressures, even if it sometimes meant being less popular. This person taught me, “It’s not the quantity of friends that matter; it’s the quality.”[2]
Another friend of mine is choosing to courageously stand strong even as he fights a debilitating disease. His response upon receiving the devastating diagnosis? “I’ll run through the finish line.”[3]
I am also acquainted with a family who collectively chooses to courageously stand steady. Heartbroken from the loss of their young mother, they have adopted the motto, “We are brave, and we are tough.”[4]
Standing up, standing strong, and standing steady are examples of everyday courage found in everyday people. In fact, many of the most tender examples of everyday courage can be witnessed in the seemingly small and uncelebrated moments of life. These simple moments become sacred moments that matter.
True, there will be moments when we want nothing more than to run and hide from the challenges that stand in our way. But remember, everyday courage is fueled by exercising faith—every day. It takes faith to choose courage, and sometimes it takes courage to choose faith.
No one has exercised greater courage than did Jesus Christ. He “hid not [His] face from shame and spitting.”[5] He was “in an agony [but] prayed more earnestly.”[6] He was betrayed by one friend with a kiss[7] and denied by another with the words, “I know him not.”[8] He was mocked, beaten, ridiculed, and sentenced to death. Yet, to His offenders, He responded in prayer, “Father, forgive them; for they know not what they do.”[9] And then, in a moment that mattered most, He pressed on with godly courage, completely submitting to the will of His Father.
As we remember His sacred moments, let us take everyday courage in all that we face. As we stand up , stand strong , and stand steady , Jesus Christ stands ever ready to strengthen our courage and faith.
[1] Robert Louis Stevenson, in Hal Urban, Choices That Change Lives: 15 Ways to Find More Purpose, Meaning, and Joy (2006), 122.
[2] Personal correspondence.
[3] Personal correspondence.
[4] Personal correspondence.
[5] Isaiah 50:6.
[6] Luke 22:44.
[7] Luke 22:48.
[8] Luke 22:57.
[9] Luke 23:34.