The Jordan B. Peterson Podcast - 261. The Story of Possum Trot | Joshua Weigel, Bishop and Donna Martin
Episode Date: July 4, 2024Jordan and Tammy Peterson sit down with the screenwriter and director behind “Sound of Hope: The Story of Possum Trot,” Joshua Weigel and the real life inspirations for the film, Bishop and Donna ...Martin. They discuss the presumption of understanding, parsing out falsehood from a message from God, how compassion spreads through giving, the miracle of adoption, and how the film came to be through hardship and grace. Joshua Weigel is an award-winning filmmaker with a unique ability to create deeply moving stories that transform and inspire action. Josh began working closely with his wife, Rebekah, writing and producing award winning short films which he directed, culminating with what has become one of the most beloved short films of all-time, The Butterfly Circus, a viral phenomenon receiving over 100 million views, and garnering over 35 film festival awards, including the Clint Eastwood Filmmaker Award presented to Joshua by Clint Eastwood at the Carmel Film Festival. Bishop and Donna Martin run the church of Possum Trot in East Texas, where they along with the families of the community have taken in seventy-seven children through adoption. Their story is one of struggle and triumph, compassion and resolve. It was brought to film and to the world through Angel Studios and the Daily Wire. - Links - Buy Tickets to “Sound of Hope: The Story of Possum Trot” https://www.angel.com/tickets/sound-of-hope-the-story-of-possum-trot?utm_source=google-ads&gad_source=1&gclid=CjwKCAjwkJm0BhBxEiwAwT1AXNLKBwIwZgec8P6mId1nHLkQiJLyUWRUSU6RfngcU_rdJtWuStXtgxoCTpAQAvD_BwE “Sound of Hope” website https://www.angel.com/movies/sound-of-hope-the-story-of-possum-trot Press and Cast information https://www.angel.com/press/sound-of-hope-the-story-of-possum-trot
Transcript
Discussion (0)
["The Sound of the Bells"]
Hello everybody.
I'm here today talking to Bishop Martin,
his wife, Donna Martin, my wife, Tammy Peterson,
and Joshua Weigel, who's the director, producer, and writer with his wife, Donna Martin, my wife, Tammy Peterson, and Joshua Weigel, who's the director, producer,
and writer with his wife, Rebecca, of the movie,
The Sound of Hope, the story of Possum Trot.
This is a story about a small community, Possum Trot,
that decided to take matters into their own hands
in a responsible way, and 22 families in the community
adopted 76 children,
pulling them out of the foster care system.
And they decided to take the children who no one wanted,
that's older children in the foster care system.
And the movie explores that topic, that difficult topic.
It's a hell of a thing to take it onto yourself,
to pull someone you don't know,
who's been hurt
into your life to try to intercede in a positive manner.
Joshua pointed out, for example, in the conversation
that there's about 400,000 children
in the foster care system in the US.
And if every church did what the church community
in Possumtruck did, that there'd be no children at all
in the foster care system.
And God only knows what positive results might emerge
socially in consequence of that.
And so this is an investigation into the compelling story
of the families of Possum Trot,
as well as in this discussion,
an analysis of the motives that the people
in the community had for undertaking this venture and a discussion
of the potential consequences on the psychological
and social stage of adopting responsibility
to take care of the least among these, so to speak.
So welcome to the conversation.
All right, Joshua, let's start with you.
Why don't you tell us, well, two things.
Tell us the story of writing, first writing,
and then producing and directing The Sound of Hope.
And also maybe fill us in on the details
of your association with Angel Studios.
Good, well, I'm glad to be here.
Thank you guys so much.
Yeah, thanks for coming, all of you.
Thank you.
So, well, the story just real quick is about these two.
Bishop Martin, now, as Reverend Martin at the time,
First Lady Donna Martin,
spearheaded this amazing thing
in this little corner of East Texas.
They inspired 22 families to begin to adopt kids
out of the foster system with them.
This was in the sort of late 90s.
And ended up at the end of the day,
the community adopted 77 kids between them.
And they asked for the kids that nobody wanted.
So it was a really specific goal in that.
So we, my wife, Rebecca and I wrote this and produced it and we heard about this story
and she's working in the child welfare space
in Los Angeles doing a lot of work with churches,
trying to get them more involved in caring for these kids.
And so she came across, you had a,
I think she was looking for a speaker
for Bishop Martin to join her and they connected and long story short,
we just hit it off and felt like something about this story
just gripped us.
We felt like it needed to be made.
So we sort of shifted away from some other things
that were happening and began developing that.
So what you mentioned that there was something
about the story that struck you, and it struck you hard enough to
Divert you from the path you were already on. So what do you think it was?
What did you pick up? Do you think you and your wife that had that effect on you?
I mean for me it was it was
Hearing these kids stories. I mean I started reading about the actual kids and what they had gone through and backing up just a little bit
You know, we had adopted two of our kids.
And so we had personal experience in this whole thing
and cared a lot about it.
And we also started to connect
what was happening to these kids,
the breakdown of the family, that crisis,
and how it sort of impacts our communities.
And all of these things were coming together.
But I remember reading about these kids,
Terri especially, what she lived through.
And I was like, we've got to tell people about this.
How old were your kids when you adopted them?
One was about six, almost.
Oh yeah. Six.
And then almost two.
Okay, so you had some personal experience with this
that was direct and the stories themselves touched you,
but you also felt that...
I mean, it's a difficult thing to understand how creative inspiration comes about, right?
It is something like a bunch of things coming together,
but you also said you thought that it struck to the heart in a personal way
of one of the major problems that's facing our society,
which is obviously the breakdown of the family.
And that's a catastrophe.
And it's a catastrophe that particularly affects the poor
because the rich still are married
and have intact families.
And so you could feel all of that coming together.
Sir, you started talking about this to your congregation
a long time ago.
How long ago now?
It was back in probably in the nineties, late nineties.
Started being quite some time ago.
Okay, so tell us about the town that you're working in
and so that everybody has a sense of the place,
but also maybe you could explain
why this particular issue touched you
and why you felt it was necessary to bring it to the-
That could go to Donna too.
Absolutely, absolutely.
You're both welcome to chime in.
Why you think that particular problem
became the focus of your attention
in your work in your church.
She do the first part and I do the second part.
You can tell her why and I know,
tell her why what's happening.
Okay.
Well back in 97 from the,
90s, yeah, 97, the loss of my mother.
My mother passed away in February.
And a couple of months after her death,
I began to, if you will, be depressed.
I call it a silent depression,
because when I was around other people's,
I was happy and jolly and doing the work of the Lord
and putting on the first lady face
and just meeting everybody needs, but as a pastor's wife.
And so when I would be alone by myself at the house,
my husband off to work,
he was selling insurance at that time.
And then through the service of my mother,
we were in a really old church.
And this is a church that I grew up in as a child.
And the floor, that church probably would seat
maybe 175 people, so it was probably 500 folks
packed in that church that day.
And that many cars was lining up miles down the street
that people was trying to get in.
But at the service, I heard a,
at that time I heard a pop, I didn't know what it was,
but it was the, I thought it was a pew.
And actually it was the wall came from the,
you know, the floor came from the wall.
And so he was in the process after that,
of, you know, trying to find people to help donate
and build us a church.
We only had $500 in the building fund
and he's selling insurance.
So he's busy, he's selling insurance,
he's gotta make his route,
he's gotta try to find some good heavenly peoples
who will help us restructure a building.
He was just overwhelmed.
And I was there at the house after getting my kids off to school.
Couple of months of just crying out to the Lord silently.
There was nights he would come in after work, I would share with him.
And I would get so angry when he would tell me, Donna, I understand how you feel. It would make me so angry.
It's like, how can you understand how I feel?
You know, he lost his mother when he was young, but I would get angry.
And just after telling the Lord a couple of months,
Lord, no child should lose a mother.
I am 36 years old, but I'm saying to the Lord, no child should lose a mother.
So this particular day, I got the kids off the school,
he's off to work, I'm doing my dishes.
And that pain that I've had in my heart, in my chest,
it was like a heart and the round it was just burning fire,
aching, burning fire.
And so I said, as I was beginning to do my dishes,
I said, okay, God, today is today.
Either you heal me or let me die.
Literally, I thought he was gonna come home
and find me right there at the floor.
So you were experiencing physical pain
as well associated with grief?
It was all physical, it was grief,
it was in every emotion of being of my body,
mind, spirit, soul.
Again now, when I'm with the church
and with God's peoples, I am just,
I'm on point, I'm on target.
And that's why I said it's silent,
it's a silent pain.
And so-
Why do you think, why do you think,
I'm sure this is related in some manner,
why do you think that you were angry with your husband
for his presumption that he understood?
Did, were you feeling, I mean,
it sounds like most of the time
you were feeling pain in isolation.
So it would have been perhaps hard for him even to see that.
But do you have any sense of why,
were you angry about the fact of your mother's death,
the fact that she was taken away?
Did you feel that that was not just?
I was not angry about that.
I was angry about the pain and the hurt.
It was like, no one could connect to that.
I never felt the connection from anyone.
I see, so you're feeling isolated. Yes, yes, if you will, yes. I never felt the connection from anyone.
I see, so you're feeling isolated.
Yes, yes, if you will, yes.
Right, right.
How do you think people should share their grief?
Definitely about talking about it, expressing it,
feeling the comfort, but as I look back over it,
it's just, I think that it was a preparation.
There was a preparation for me personally
to receive the assignment that God had in store.
I feel that truly it really wasn't about me,
it was about what He was preparing me, us, the world, the church to do.
And I do believe that through pain and suffering
come victory.
When you suffer through something
and you receive that godly assignment,
then you can associate that with what you went through to get to where you are.
That gives you some seriousness.
That gave the connection.
That made the dots no matter what.
So when I answered to the Lord and he said back to me,
I hurt you, you give back.
Think about those children that's out there.
And did this happen when you were doing the dishes?
You started?
This happened, this happened.
After I said to him, either heal me or let me die.
Right.
Then a calmness came over me.
I don't even remember going out, but I was just moved.
It was just the Holy Spirit just move me
from one place to the next on my back porch.
So I wonder if that was a consequence of the way you formulated that you know, it's
You're in a serious situation where your pain is serious enough so that you're willing to have death come as a relief
Maybe that's the time when people are more likely to be most serious about doing a new thing
I mean if you're willing to give up your life and die
Maybe you're at that point willing to give up your life and die,
maybe you're at that point willing to give up your life
to do something new.
No, so yeah, well, it could be that you have to be
taken down to the, so when Jonah, for example,
when Jonah is called upon to speak,
he doesn't really agree to speak until after he's
thrown off the boat, mostly drowned, and then in hell for three days, right?
That's when he decides he's gonna do
what he's supposed to do.
Right, so it gives him grim seriousness of purpose.
Okay, so you're doing the dishes,
and what do you realize?
As I was saying, I was just moved to the back porch.
When I went and stood on that back porch,
calmly, the Holy Spirit plainly spoke to me,
said, I've hurt you.
But think about those children who are out there
that do not and did not have what you haven't had
as a mother.
And grieved, right?
So you were informed then that you were fortunate enough
at least to have a mother to grieve.
Come on now, come on.
Fortunate enough to have something that's called LOVE.
Yeah, right.
With 21 children, raised with 17,
watch this woman nurture every one of us individually
and at the same time.
Never one time that Merthel Lee Grisby Cartwright
lost her coos.
Poor, we were poorer than Lazarus, if you will.
We didn't have anything but each other, love, family,
genuine love, unconditional love.
And she kept it together.
Yeah.
So by, you know, we stepping out
and the Holy Spirit says, give back, give back.
Think about those that didn't have what you had.
So my mother passed away two weeks ago, three weeks ago.
Sorry.
And it was somewhat sudden.
We were more worried about my father actually than my mother.
And you never know how you're gonna react to that,
but I was in Las Vegas when I got the news
and I spent the day with memories, you know,
and I haven't got one negative memory of my mother.
and I haven't got one negative memory of my mother.
Wow.
So, you know, and I've interviewed a lot of people who have done well in their lives
and asked them how their interests developed
and why they had the confidence in themselves
that they had, you know,
and they're almost invariably from two parent families.
And the developmental psychologists know this too,
like the love of your mother gives you,
it's like an unshakable confidence
in your own physical reality, right?
And that's sort of instantiated maybe even in infancy,
it's really embodied and really fundamental.
Your father can be a figure of
great encouragement, which is very nice alignment with that acceptance and love. And so,
so you were in, now you said that when you were on the porch that the Holy Spirit spoke to you, and
so how exactly did you experience that and why did you attribute that to the divine?
Was it an actual voice?
Was it a thought?
Was it a feeling?
Like how did that idea come to you?
It was just a calm sense of a voice.
I could not have made this up.
I would not ever had a thunket, if you will.
I know without a doubt, I would not ever had a thunket, if you will.
I know without a doubt, and every time I think on it and speak on it, I know it greater.
I know it greater.
And I know through all the disappointment,
all the pain that the children suffered from,
all the hurt, the anxiety, the abuse, the neglection.
I knew without a doubt, and sit in here even now,
right this moment, that it wasn't nobody but God
who allowed this, who gave this, commandment from heaven.
And how do you think you know that?
Because we didn't give up.
I see, okay.
Because no matter how hard it got.
You stuck with it.
We stuck with it.
Yeah.
You know, you could tell that story about you and Julian, maybe?
Yeah, sure.
Okay.
So when I was, uh, 2019, I was diagnosed with terminal cancer.
Mm-hmm.
Told I had 10 months to live, and Jordan and I were in the doctor's office, and I thought,
well, you know, my mom and her family all died fairly young, and I guess I'm one of
those.
And so I just kind of said, okay, and we went home and my son lived nearby with his wife
and they came outside and I told my son.
I said, so I told him that I was gonna die in 10 months
and he looked at me.
He looked at me and I saw a boy losing his mother
and I thought, oh my goodness.
So that love that I had for my son,
I saw that reflected back to me,
which I had never felt before.
And I felt the weight of the world lift off my shoulders,
and I felt the Holy Spirit fill my body.
And I said to my son, you know what,
those doctors, they have a medical opinion,
but only God knows when I'm gonna die.
And we're just gonna go day by day with gratitude.
And Tammy, and Tammy.
That's been the story.
Tammy's told me two things about that.
First, you know, the first,
and I've thought about it a lot,
when she was the mother of young children,
one of the things that was quite remarkable
while watching her was that she responded to the kids if they
were in distress pretty much immediately.
So when my daughter was born, Michaela, we lived in a little apartment in Montreal in
a poor neighborhood and I built a bunk bed and I built a crib to go underneath it.
So that's where Michaela slept.
And at night if Michaela, so much peeped Tammy was down the ladder and
taking care of her so she never really woke up and cried but she had that
immediate response she also told me this I thought was quite interesting we took
we took Michaela again up to this little cottage in northern Saskatchewan
that I that we go to we've gone to every year for 20 years and most of the people up there are old, you know over
70 and
We took our little kids up there and it was just Michaela. It was just Michaela at that point
She was jolly jumper age. Yeah, we'd have like 10 old people in the
Living room of this little cottage and they'd just be watching that baby like she was on fire
You know and so and I said to my husband,
oh, this is great.
I said, all the attention's on that little baby,
and it has nothing to do with me.
This is great, you know?
It's easy for people to think that their life
should be about them and their status, I mean,
them very narrowly and personally in that sort of narcissistic way.
But one of the things that you come to understand, and I suspect this is more true for mothers
than for fathers, is that your life should be centered on the, on, your life should be centered on the on
Your life should definitely not be about your narrow needs
Not least because that doesn't work. It's a very unsatisfactory solution. First of all, I don't think that can ever be exhausted You know, I watch
narcissistic celebrities
Who are constantly dissatisfied no matter what they attain it it's a void that can't be filled and I think the reason it
Can't be filled is because the way you fill that void isn't by getting what you want. It's by giving
You absolutely yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So is it and then
see the reason I wanted to tell Tammy to tell that story too because there's a bit of a parallel there because
along with that experience,
when she saw her devotion to Julian reflected,
that showed her that she was of more worth
than she thought about herself.
But it was also a time when she decided,
or very close to the time when she decided that,
well, you decided that you were going to turn your life,
at least to some degree, in a new direction as well. You said that you were going to turn your life, at least to some degree, in a new direction as well.
You said that you were going to, for example, that you'd speak publicly.
Well, I had prayed and asked if God would spare me that I promised that I would, you
know, I would speak.
I would speak.
And you've kept up that resolve.
That's right.
That's been definitely put into action.
She actually found out she was good at it, too.
Well, I liked it anyway.
When he steps in, he gives you the ability to do what you could not do without him.
So what have you found that you could do?
All things through Christ who gives me strength.
Yeah, very good. So be specific, what have you been engaged in because of the decisions
that you've made that wouldn't have come your way otherwise?
Just obedience, just sharing the message, teaching the world or even myself what high important family is. And no matter what, you do not erupt that.
You know, you keep it together to whatever degree it take.
So how did you torture your husband
into paying attention to what you had to say?
He figured out that God speaks to women, so.
Uh-huh.
I like what you did there. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. So, okay, so maybe you
can pick it up from there. What happened? What happened after? Now, you were working
as an insurance salesman and as a pastor. Right. And you were working in this little
church that needed some work to say the least. Oh, I needed a church. Yeah, okay. Okay. So
pick up the story there. Tell us a bit of background about about your work
and then your religious work. How did you come to be a pastor? Well, before all before then,
before I even met her, I used to sing with my brothers. I got nine brothers and one sister.
And we grew up, we organized a group called the Martin Brothers, and we were singing all over the country,
and one particular Saturday night,
we went to Possum Trot, where her church is at,
and we had to be there that Saturday night,
and that Sunday evening, that Sunday evening,
I saw her walk through the door,
and I said, that's gonna be in my eyes right there.
I laid claim on her.
And then the Lord brought it together.
I had no idea.
If I would have known,
the Lord would not allow me to know that
because there would have been no, no, no.
You know, so, you know, when I started in the ministry,
I wasn't looking to do anything but just,
in fact, I didn't want to preach.
I didn't want to do that at all.
That wasn't something that I made choice of. He made choice of it. Then the Lord, I didn't want to preach. I didn't want to do that at all. That wasn't something that I made choice of.
He made choice of it.
Then the Lord, I end up passing the church
that I got married in.
And when that came to me, when she came to me
about the adoption part of me, see, one of the things
that you all need to understand, that my biological son,
he was born with severe brain damage.
And that constituted, welluted teaching us about patience.
And I think that God had a program in mind,
something in mind all the time.
Because through my son, with his problem that he had,
we learned how to be patient.
Because you got to be very, very patient with him.
You can't take him fast.
You got to be real slow with him.
And you got to do things over and over and over
before he get it.
But once he get it, he got it.
So when she handed me the program,
I didn't wanna do it because I was thinking about him
and what I had to do with him
and then all the rest of the responsibility that I had.
But then again, I began to feel
that this is a movement of God.
So I joined in, I joined in, I went to some of the Pride
classes, couldn't go to all of them.
In Texas they got what they call Pride classes as well.
CPS teach you how to deal with children with multiple
problems and when we got started in it,
and brought, got the first two, we got one boy who came in
before we got our two, his name was Nino,
her sister got him and after he came in before we got our true, his name was Nino. Her sister got him, and after he came in,
then we got Tyler and Mercedes.
And when we got Tyler and Mercedes,
then some of the members started asking,
how did y'all do that?
What y'all do?
How did y'all do all of that?
So what I done, they wanted to do it,
but they didn't want to do it,
because we had to drive 120 miles round trip,
you know, from our church to go to take the classes.
And I went to the state and asked them about it.
So they told me, said, well, if you can find
eight families that was willing to adopt,
we would teach you classes at the church.
Oh, yeah.
And then she said eight families,
but I found 13 the first time, family from within your church within the church
You know that wanted to sign up and go through this the process of learning about adoption and that we did them
I began to realize that
Adoption itself was not something that man came up with it wasn't a man-made
I it was a God idea the beginning, because the only way
we was able to get back to God was through adoption. And if you read Ephesians 1, I think
around the fourth and fifth verse, it will explain it to you that it was God's good pleasure to bring
us back to Him through His Son Jesus through adoption. So that was the only way we was able
to get back to God. So adoption was something something, and then on top of that, adoption was something that started in the Bible
years ago, and Moses wasn't an adopted child
because Moses was not, he wasn't Moses' daddy,
no Lord, but he was raised in Pharaoh's home.
And a lot of people don't agree with it,
but I do, Jesus wasn't an adopted child.
Because if you look at it closely,
Joseph was not his biological father.
He was one that, he didn't plant the seed for Jesus.
When the angels spoke to Joseph, he told them,
Joseph said, he said, don't be afraid to take Mary
as your lawful red wife.
That she's carrying is holy.
So she was already pregnant when she got married.
So he was, she was not, but he told Joseph
to raise him, teach him, and learn him.
That's why they related to Jesus as the carpenter's son.
And if you read in there, in Matthew, Mark,
it'll explain all that to you.
So once I began to let the church know
the importance of adoption and why we should be doing this
and why it's God's thing that we do this,
they began to really get involved.
We was not looking for no publicity.
We was not looking for none of this.
I mean, all of this was something we just done because
I always figured that people take care of their children.
Because anything, and a lot of us can say right now,
well, something happened to my mom,
my grandmama raised me, my auntie raised me.
So I always, it was an adoption,
but it's not a formal adoption.
It was an informal thing that when something not a formula, it was an informal thing
that when something happened to mama,
adoption was gone because mama or your grandmama
or your auntie or somebody would came in.
But once we learn and once we got into existence,
now it's a more formal thing that you got to go through
all of this and go through that
and go through that to adopt a child.
But for the most part, it was not something that man,
this was God's idea to get us back to him.
And I feel like this, that we all been adopted.
Every one of us who is a child of God has been adopted.
So you said, there's a couple of things
that you said in there that really struck me
as worth delving into further.
So you said that you already had
a fairly heavy responsibility with your son.
And so you were leery about taking on
additional responsibility,
partly because you knew how difficult it would be,
partly because you were already occupied.
Okay, so why did you decide to take on
the additional responsibility, given that?
And how did you come to that decision?
It came to a point where you can't help it.
You know, I wasn't, it wasn't when I felt like
that this was something that God was doing.
Not knowing the outcome of it,
but just doing what God said do.
And when we do things like that,
we may not see what's beyond the corner,
but if we obey God and do what he says,
he will reveal to us through process of time.
Okay, so let me ask you a question about that.
I mean, people have ideas and notions all the time,
and some of them aren't very bright.
And so how do you personally, both of you for that
matter, how do you decide when you know you're supposed to discern the spirits to see if they're
of God, right? So okay, so now you've had a calling that occurred to you while you were doing the dishes
and on the back porch in the aftermath of the death of your wife and now you're contemplating
the death of your mother, sorry, and now you're contemplating this major adoption
of this major responsibility,
and you regarded that as a calling from God,
a divine calling.
How do you distinguish good ideas in that regard,
personally, from bad ideas?
Because the Spirit of the Lord would lead you
and guide you through all things.
One thing I do know by God,
he does not give vision without provision.
If God puts something before you,
he gonna give you direction.
If you look at it, even Noah himself,
when he called Noah to build that ark,
he gave Noah pacific response, how to build it, the sign,
what he was gonna do, two levels,
and what he was gonna build.
He gave him pacific instruction.
And this is what God does today.
He just don't say, look, I'm going to you to do this.
When Moses got ready to lead the children out back,
he told him what to do, how to do it, and when to do it.
So the Spirit of the Lord is so active
that it will lead you and guide you through all that.
A lot of time we make the mistake
because we try to do it our way.
This is when we get off course.
But long as you stay in that realm
with the Spirit of the Lord,
He gonna take you where He wants you to go.
How do you stay in that realm?
Obedience. Because when God speak, you obey his word.
If God said go, you go.
If God said stop, you stop.
And if you notice why Moses was even out there in the wilderness,
there was a whole lot of disobedience.
Yeah.
And because of that, God, there was some problems went on out there.
But anytime that God is working and showing you and telling you what to do
He's gonna direct your path
I think it's probably maybe that Phil chapter talking about he said trust in the Lord and do God
He said and he said direct your path
We are let the Lord direct our path. Yeah, we would do a whole lot
So I've been I've been trying to think that through psychologically, and so part of the reason
that we think, obviously, or that we can see our way forward is so that we can get to where we're
going. And so thought is an aid to movement forward. Now thoughts come to you.
And so then you might ask, well, how do you ensure that the best possible thoughts come
to you?
And it has to be, it's something like what Christ recommends to his listeners on the
Sermon on the Mount.
He basically says with regard to prayer, that you should aim at the highest good that you can conceive of, right? And then you should then attempt to treat other people
as if they have the same value as you.
So that's the frame, that's your aim.
And then what comes to you is going to have as its source,
the provision of that aim, right?
Then it'll be reliable.
Now your additional point was if you do that,
then the things that you need
will come to you along the way. of that aim, right? Then it'll be reliable. Now your additional point was if you do that,
then the things that you need will come to you along the way.
How did that, now your sister,
your sister was the first one who adopted?
Yes.
Okay, now why was, how did she come to play that role?
Because actually after the Holy Spirit spoke to me,
I'm always one to say, God, I need confirmation,
you know, in the form of man.
Because if you work through me,
then I don't have to spend a year trying to explain it
to somebody else that you said it,
because he said, we should know the,
try the Spirit by the Spirit,
and you'll know that it is of the Spirit.
So when I spoke to my husband about it
within his busy time of serving the Lord and his calling.
I didn't get that sense of peace.
Oh yeah, okay.
So I called my sister, she's at work.
She happened to be on break.
And I said, Diane, the Lord has said this to me.
And I tell her where he's at. Yeah, the Lord has said this to me.
And I tell her where he said,
think about those children that's out there that did not have what you had in a mother,
give back, foster and adopt.
I said that to her and she says,
First Lady, if God said it, we can do it.
It just warmed my heart.
She came over after work and I began to explain to her.
And at first she goes, girl, you crazy.
But she was saying like, you're crazy
to attack this like this.
You know, she's like, you sold out already.
And we just went from there.
We just went from there because-
So why do you think your sister was so responsive
to what you said?
Was it how you said or-
Because we had the same thing.
We grew up in a very same connection.
Right.
The same love, the same nerve.
Okay, now so she adopted the first child.
Did she take these courses?
Did she have to?
Right along with us, right along with us.
Because when I call for the CPS for the classes, right?
And they said to me, Mrs. Martin,
you're the last person that can get in these classes.
It's the first time we ever had a full class.
It is shut down. Then here I go again, because I'd
already talked to Diane, and I go back to the Lord. I say, okay, God, I know this is you. So what I'm
going to need you to do, because these folks are saying, I can't bring anybody else in. And if this
really you, I'm going to need you to open up this door. So the lady says, I call her back and I says,
I really need to bring my sister.
And she says to me, well, Miss Martin,
as I already stated that the classes are full
and it's shut out, but bring her on and let us see.
They may ask her to leave, but all down in my spirit,
I already knew that she would be there.
We went to the class,
nobody said nothing from that day to this one.
It's God.
Now, had you decided at that point as well to adopt
or were you and your sister just investigating it?
No, sir.
I knew.
You knew.
I knew.
I say foster because you know that you can't just go
into like the system, the foster system adopted.
You have to have that six month period of fostering
and then you're eligible for adoption.
But I knew that I was not gonna be a foster parent.
I knew that the children that were coming to our home
was there to stay. How do I know that the children that were coming to our home was there to stay.
How do I know that?
I just know it by the Spirit.
You can't explain the Spirit.
You just know.
He got, it's just something on the inside of you
that you know, that calls you to live, move and breathe.
I just knew.
And today, I know.
So when Moses encounters the burning bush, right, the voice of God speaks to him
because of his diligent investigation. Eventually, it's the voice of God that
speaks to him, and it speaks to him in a very particular way, right, because it
it demands something of him. It says that he has to stand up against tyranny
and he has to be a leader of his people away from slavery.
And he says, well, no one will listen to me
because I'm slow of tongue.
And God says, find your brother.
That's very similar to what you did
because your brother has talents you don't,
but he also said, if you tell people that I sent you,
they'll listen.
And so I've thought a lot about that,
because you know there are people who talk to you
and your attention wanders, you can barely pay attention
to them, barely listen to them.
Other things crowd your imagination and call to you.
But now and then you meet someone and you listen to them,
and you're convinced that,
at least that they are convinced of the truth
of what they say and their voice is much more compelling.
And so it seems that that's what's portrayed
in the description of Moses going to speak to the Pharaoh
and the Israelites, right?
He comes away from this encounter
and the manner in which he communicates is convincing.
And you see the same thing portrayed
in the stories of Christ, right?
Because continually when he's preaching,
the writers of the gospels note that he speaks
in a manner that's different than the scribes
and the Pharisees and the lawyers with direct authority.
And that's that sort of compelling voice
that overcomes obstacles.
And it is what unites people in their resolve,
which is what you said happened to you,
but that can be transferred to the community.
Okay, so now you're with your sister
and you're with Childhood Protection Services
and you're taking these courses.
And are you on board by this point?
Are you still wondering what's going on?
I think I got on board about middle ways, the classes.
I think there were like 16 weeks,
and I had got on board right about the middle
because I didn't have the time, no way to do that.
And when I'd taken a class, and when I take any class,
I think I still have missed a couple of them
because of pride duties, you know.
So were you going to the classes together at that time?
Or was that-
Some of them.
Some of them.
Some of them.
Right.
Okay, so-
I would teach him, I would inform him
of what I'd gone through, what we were taught
in the class once I got home.
And little did he not know he was already on board, because he knew
that when I stick my hand on something,
I'm not, I'm not giving.
And it's not that many things, you know, that I do,
but what I do, I do it.
Yeah, well, that's a good thing to point out though, too,
you know, is that you can maybe get what you need and want
if you don't ask for too much all the time, right?
Cause then people know when you're serious
and when you're not,
that's a very useful thing to know in marriage.
It's also a useful thing to know
in your relationship with your children.
It's like, you don't have to say no that often,
but when you say it, you should mean it, right?
Same with yes.
Yeah.
Okay, so what's going through your mind
while this plan is starting to take shape?
I mean-
Well, I didn't really focus on it at that point,
but then at some point in time,
I felt that this was something that God was doing,
not knowing the outcome, not knowing why.
You know, so I got on board, and when I got on board, you know, I began to just,
you know, to go with it and follow through it.
And children just continued to come, because I had to go back after they finished one class,
said I had to go back with another group
and present them to the state.
Another group of your parishioners.
That's right, another group.
And that's how they came up with the 22 families.
Okay, so why did, okay, so you and your sister adopted.
And so why did the parishioners start
to become interested in this, do you think?
Because I started telling them
what the word of God said about adoption.
That's how they got on board.
We began to preach.
Yeah, but why'd they listen?
Because I'm the preacher and I'm the pastor.
The Bible says this, faith come by hearing,
hearing by the word of God.
And how can they hear without the preacher?
So they got to understand that when God
give the message to the preacher,
it's not for him, it's for them.
Right, and they believed that.
Well, they believe it or not, it's still for them
because everybody you preach to,
because Jesus himself said that everybody that said,
Lord, Lord is not going in.
Yeah, right.
So whether they believe it or not,
his still his word, it's not gonna, not gonna change. But one thing I love about God word is that he said not, his still his word is not gonna change.
But one thing I love about God's word is that
he said he stand watch over his word
and whatever he sent his word out to do,
it will accomplish what he sent out to do.
So his word was sent out for that little church
down in those woods to start this movement.
And it was accompanied because the spirit of the Lord
was there as a pusher to make sure that we covered the ground
that the Lord laid out to them.
And to say it was a picnic, no, no, no, no, no.
It was not no picnic.
It was hard, it was tough.
You had to do a lot of things.
They changed your whole life, your whole demeanor of life.
Now you got one child already that you got a problem with,
now you're finna invite other problems in.
It's just not an ordinary thing.
That's why everybody can't adopt.
But everybody can be a part of adoption
because you just can't do it.
You got to have a mind, you got to really have a mind,
a passion, you got to understand
and try to put yourself
in a life of a child that never had anybody
that say I love you.
Nobody that ever say I hug, give me a hug.
Never had a mother and a father
because they in the system.
So what do they know?
You got babies in the system.
So what they know about a mother and father.
They don't know until somebody teach them
or show them what it's all about.
So it's a big responsibility.
That's why everybody can't do it.
And God has special peoples to carry this out.
So, you know, when I first came across the film
and the idea as a clinician
who's dealt with very difficult families, you know,
one of my concerns was fools rush in
where angels fear to tread, right?
This is a very difficult thing to ask of people
or of yourself to bring someone,
a damaged child into your household,
especially as you pointed out,
when people already have a fair number of problems
to take care of their own.
And so it's a relief, well, to know, for example,
that you had a child who required additional care
to begin with, so you already knew about this.
So you were obviously approaching this
in a manner that was very realistic.
Cause people can be very naive and foolish
about their do gooding.
And then they cause a lot more trouble than good.
So Josh, or maybe you could comment on this too.
How did you handle the problems of the difficulties
and how did you strive to make that realistic?
Well, I think one thing to keep in mind
is this was much more than a movie to us.
It was that first for me.
I feel like it has to be a movie first if you're going to make a movie.
I think a lot of mistakes are made when it's not that.
That's the mistake of the propagandist.
It's a sin, not just a mistake.
And then the person who just wants to get a message across.
So we knew that was important.
It was important to us personally, but one of the things about this community
that I think is important,
and you've been teasing this out,
is how do you arrive at this decision?
Why do you do this?
We think about that because we want people to respond
as we have, and I think on one hand,
we talk ourselves out
of what we ought to do all the time.
And it's important to look at something and assess it
and figure out, can I manage this?
But I think-
We usually talk ourselves out of things
by avoiding doing that, right?
Because part of what you discover,
if a problem's being set in front of you,
is if you actually think it through,
it's amazing, it was amazing to me as a clinician
to watch how terrified people were of thinking.
It was as if they believed that if they dared to think
the worst, the worst would happen.
But actually what happens is that if you investigate
something like Moses investigated the burning bush,
you find your way and the dragons that you imagine
to be capable of eating you are cut down to size rapidly.
And the preparation for it too.
So it's like this balance of not wanting to scare yourself
out of the situation because of all the obvious problems
that's gonna be presented to you.
But when you know what to expect,
it's a huge advantage, I think.
We didn't know a lot of what to expect
when we adopted our first two.
We responded out of the need, out of compassion,
out of being compelled, but it's that balance.
We felt like when we were telling this story,
we want people to know about what this really is.
Because it can just be compassion, and that's not enough.
You've gotta understand what you're going to show up again.
I think that's the sin of Eve.
Thoughtless compassion, right?
Because she clutches the serpent to her breast
and presumes she can do it, right?
Pridefully, there is the way to a fall.
And then her husband says, anything you want, dear,
which is his sin, right.
So now-
And many do that.
I mean, if you think about it, when you're alone,
or when there's only a few of you,
and you're trying to manage all of what this means,
it's most people fall out, most people give up.
And we knew about that and we faced our own battles.
And so we felt partly, we want people to understand
what this whole world is.
We want them to be aware of it.
It's on one hand, this is an unavoidable problem.
Like we have to deal with this.
Children are in need, we are compelled as humans
and especially as followers of Jesus
to get involved in that.
And so, but how do we make this most doable
when we tell this story?
Well, let's be honest.
This is what's going on in these kids' lives.
Let's be real about it.
Let's not go so deep and real that it's disturbing
and you scare people away because of that,
but we want people to understand what they're getting into.
We felt like we needed that when we look back. If we had known a little bit more, and you scare people away because of that, but we want people to understand what they're getting into.
We felt like we needed that when we look back,
if we had known a little bit more,
maybe we wouldn't be freaking out in those moments.
We had been prepared for it.
So it's that balance of obedience
and just responding to an emergency
and then a thoughtful approach
that gives it more security and longevity.
And I see that in that community.
So, okay, so two questions from that.
The first is when you and your wife adopted,
in the story of the unfolding of the biblical heroes,
what happens continually is that a new opportunity
and challenge is placed in front of them.
They make the appropriate sacrifice
and their character expands, right?
And if that happens enough,
they literally turn into new people.
So Abraham becomes Abraham and Jacob becomes Israel.
You change so much that you're no longer the same person.
Now you and your wife adopted
and that's an overwhelming responsibility.
So what did that change for you and for her,
and what did it change in your marriage?
You come together,
well, probably either you're pulled apart
or you come together.
We came together.
How?
We needed each other in ways that we'd never felt before.
Right, right.
You know, you're taking care of a child
you know very little about.
You don't know exactly what they experienced.
And they don't know how to articulate that.
So they're just living and acting.
And you're trying to deal with that.
So for us, it was a coming together, praying through this,
the what have we done moments,
the oh wow, this is amazing moments. So it was a coming together, praying through this, the what have we done moments, the oh wow, this is amazing moments.
So it was a coming together for us.
And it was-
Right, so that means the adopted challenge like that,
there's a peril and a promise.
And the peril is couples often divorce
if they have a child that dies, right?
It's very common cause of divorce.
And so you can see that in a moment of peril,
everything could be lost
or something great could be gained, right?
And I think that,
so that level of responsibility helps.
That you feel God is with you.
I can't speak about this in any other way.
That's how we experienced it.
We felt God is with us.
And because of that, we can do this somehow.
And there's something.
Why did you, two of you feel that, do you think?
Well, there's-
As opposed to being pulled apart.
Okay.
I think because we had that kind of relationship.
We were friends.
It's just the way we have always been.
You know, we are, we're close. We share a lot.
We're the type that communicate a lot together. Like we just, we don't sort of have our own lives.
We are together and that's why we work together so well. It's because it was just a natural thing.
Right, because you and your wife wrote this.
Yeah. So it's just kind of probably the nature of our relationship.
And what do you do right to make that relationship have that quality?
Relationship and what do you do right to make that relationship have that quality?
we Give room for the other's strength. I think in a lot of it when it comes to the creative part, especially, you know
It's oh, yeah recognizing
That's actually a void in me. She's feeling that void. I need to get right room to that
And discovering where the strengths and weaknesses are and then trusting that I'm gonna defer because I don't see it.
So I'm more trusting by nature than Tammy, right?
And so I say yes to things and people that I shouldn't
and she says no to people and things that she should.
But if we talk, then we're as wise as,
what is wise as serpents.
The consummatory.
What's the phrase?
As wise as serpent and as gentle as a dove.
Right, exactly.
And that's a consequence of communication
across those differences.
Well, that's the beautiful part of all the dynamics
that play here.
So there's never just one thing going on.
So what's happening in your life is you're changing.
When you bring kids like this into your life,
you are now seeing things in you
that you would have never seen any other way.
You know, you've got your biological children.
You grow in ways you would have never been able to grow.
And so you end up growing that.
I don't think, I mean, many challenges
will reveal things in you, but children,
they're not someone you can just ignore
and leave and walk away from and go, I'm done with you.
They're there.
And if you have any decency,
of course you're not going to do that.
So you're sort of like, okay, this is part of life now.
And you start to see the things in yourself
that needed changing,
which is another part of why this is so important.
Yeah, the kids need help,
but there's a dynamic thing going on in the world.
And when we follow Jesus, especially,
he's after a lot of things. And so as he's developing his followers and refining them,
you must be put through flames, you have to be in difficult situations and everything.
That forces maturation, fundamentally. Maturation.
Well, you see this in clinical practice, as well as in developmental psychology, as
Well, you see this in clinical practice, as well as in developmental psychology,
is kids develop on the edge of their,
on the challenging edge of life.
So if two kids are playing a game,
if they go to a playground
and they wanna find someone to play with,
they wanna find someone who's at their developmental level
or slightly higher, because that's where the challenge is.
And so, and challenge forces development maturity, right?
And then you might say, well,
what's the advantage to development maturity?
And the answer to that is that, well,
it works much better over the long run,
all things considered,
but it requires continual sacrifice
and that willingness to challenge.
Okay.
And someone who's following Jesus,
they, you know, your part of your goal is to become like him.
And you can't do that without these kinds of things happening.
So I don't wanna make it like a,
we did this for ourselves kind of thing,
but there is this layer, this reality to it
that you're being purified in a sense.
Well, you wanna point that out to some degree
because young people, for example,
they don't understand, when they think about children,
they think about the responsibility and the burden
and the interference with their hedonic self-gratification.
But what they don't understand is that the children offer
more to them than they take.
And what they offer is, well, they offered it to you.
And you said that is, well, first of it to you. And you said that is, well,
first of all, you weren't the self-centered, unnecessary center of the universe anymore.
And so not that you were particularly like that to begin with, but it's, and that's a
relief. And then to be put in a situation where you're required to mature, which is
what children do and marriage as well, that's a gift, it's an obligation obviously,
but voluntarily shouldered, it's also a great gift.
And it's part of that process of hoisting the cross.
Which I see in this community too, in some ways,
like there's just everyday challenges,
unrelated to this issue, that have developed a way
of confronting problems in them,
that just carried into the care of children.
And I see that, that in America at least,
we're so comfortable, we as a,
let's just talk about the Christian church,
it's got a really significant level of ease and comfort.
Our goals are so often not.
That's why it's failing.
Is why it's failing. It's why it's failing.
Yeah, because people aren't being, there's not enough.
We avoid the, you know, we'd rather build, you know,
stages than go where it's hard. And that's understandable.
It's not a guilt trip, but it's just like,
well, we have to understand that about ourselves.
And part of making this movie was, and what I saw in this was,
these are people who are doing the thing that they say we ought to do,
that Jesus says you ought to do,
but they're actually doing it.
And they're sacrificing, like part of what they could have
is not going to happen for them now
because they've brought in these other people.
So that's for us as creatives,
always wanting to do more than just create entertainment.
We want to do things that challenge,
that are important, that change people.
Okay, well, so let's delve into that for a minute.
I would say probably for the most part in my life,
I'm very averse to propagandistic art.
It really grates on me.
And it doesn't matter whether it's communist propaganda
or Christian propaganda. And it doesn't matter whether it's communist propaganda or Christian propaganda.
And I would define Christian propaganda
as the subversion of the art to the, what would you?
False, well, it's more than that.
Like it's worse than that.
It's that false, it's that praying in public.
Look how good we are because we've produced this message.
And then that subverts art and it makes terrible art
and it's not effective, but it's also hypocritical.
It's Pharisee-like hypocrisy.
So when you're attempting to make a movie
that is in keeping with your moral striving,
how do you protect yourself against the temptation
to subvert the art to the propaganda?
Even if it's moral propaganda. I love it.
Well, for me, I think it's starting with the,
why are you doing this?
And that's the first thing I think that we ask,
is this something we ought to be doing?
Is it bigger than us?
Is it important?
We're gonna spend a lot of our life on this.
So it's coming from him.
Does he want me to do this?
Plainly said.
And then like full commitment to that.
What this was, we didn't fully understand.
And we knew that.
This was not, I've lived in small towns,
but I've never lived in Possum Drive.
I've never lived in a predominantly black community.
And so we got to the point where we felt like we,
to get this right, we gotta go deep.
And so we decided to move as close
to this community as we can.
We left California.
We could tell the script wasn't where it needed to be.
We weren't being fair to the idea.
And so for me, it's a full commitment
to what you're doing as much as you can.
And that's how seriously we take filmmaking
because they have such impact and can have such impact.
So, go deep.
So is it fair to say,
I was just thinking, while you were saying that,
I was thinking about speaking on stage.
And when I'm speaking on stage,
I'm not trying to tell the audience what I think
or what I believe to be true. I'm trying to figure something out
Right into exploration towards the end is so that I know more than I knew to begin with
but it's an exploration and I
Know many people who write fiction
For example, I have a very good friend who writes fiction and he's trying to figure out what's going to happen when he's writing the fiction
Right. There's not a pre-ordained conclusion
There's a process of exploration now you said because i'm still trying to figure out exactly
How you stop it from being propaganda now?
You said you knew you didn't know enough and you moved to the community and you explored
So is it fair to say that the film is an exploration?
I think it's certainly that on one hand
I personally feel like art itself
should be more than just exploration.
Like I think we should have an opinion.
We're saying something.
Could be wrong, but we're gonna say it.
And so part of what we do is speak from what we know.
And I don't know how to distinguish exactly
from propaganda.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Well, it's tricky.
But Jesus says, go and share the gospel.
Go and share what's true.
Go and tell the world what you know to be true.
So there is a responsibility in us
to actually stand by what is true to us
and be okay with that.
But I think you must have a level of humility
and a posture of learning so that you're picking up
the nuance, you're picking up the things
and allowing the things to remain
that maybe aren't neat and clean and figured out.
And there can be some rough edges,
but to me art that is just left to people to interpret,
I think it's weird. Right, okay, so you're making a case that,
at least insofar as we're discussing what you did,
there was a surrounding moral framework.
Yeah.
And you think that's commensurate with making genuine art.
Well, I thought-
But it has to be submitted to the crowd.
This is where I think the mistakes are made,
is you have to respect the art form.
Yes.
You can't demand of a painting to be, you know,
a performance art piece.
It's like, it's a painting.
And a film is a film, and it has certain rules to follow.
You can't let it just be a message conduit.
Okay, so what can you specify?
So I watched the angel students chosen
and I watched Sound of Freedom
and I watched them carefully.
And I enjoyed them.
And so that was actually quite surprising to me,
especially with regards to the chosen
because that's a hard thing to pull off.
Yeah, and they pulled it off.
It was on its own terms, it succeeded.
Independent of the religious context,
it succeeded as a movie.
It was a very difficult thing to do,
especially over that protracted period of time.
And I felt the same about The Sound of Freedom.
And so, and now you just finished watching.
I watched it this morning.
This morning, yeah, and so, and we talked just finished watching. I watched it this morning. Yeah,
and so, and we talked about that a little bit on the way here, and you were engrossed in it.
Yes. And so what worked for you as a viewer? Oh well, it was very effective, the staging of
the scenes themselves, you know, with a small child who comes into a group of people, like the parishioners and the welcoming,
and to see that a child maybe who had been alone
and who hadn't had love, the community that,
I think you really showed that well,
that the community could gather around
and really lift up that child.
And you showed that in a number of different situations.
So why the community exactly,
rather than the individual families?
Because I think it, I think because you guys had that huge, when one of the children got
lost when Terry found herself alone in the forest, the father called and said, bring
the community, you know, we're going to find this child.
And it turned out that her mother found her, but then when she brought her back, the community. You know, if we're gonna find this child, and it turned out that her mother found her,
but then when she brought her back,
the community gathered around to show this,
we are here as a cohesive group,
and we're not gonna let you go.
Yeah, it was very good.
I liked it.
God tells Moses that he's not to assume
that he can do what he's being called upon to do alone.
Right, and you see that with the biblical heroes
fairly frequently, so Abraham has Lot
and his family and Sarah along with him.
He's not doing this alone.
Everybody, and there's a very interesting idea
that's embedded in that, which is that,
you know, you can take on, and this is why
it doesn't have to be about you in that
narcissistic way, let's say if you're following the appropriate straight and narrow path,
is that you'll have your role and that will be plenty for you, more than enough, more
than you can imagine even.
But that doesn't mean that there's any less for anyone else.
Absolutely.
Yeah, yeah.
So that's a cornucopia image in some ways,
that the realm of possibility is such
that it's fundamentally inexhaustible, which I believe is.
So identifies this community and really people who follow Jesus.
It isn't an isolated thing.
It is a family.
This is a globe.
It extends around the globe.
And the intention is for these to be done in community.
That's why this works so well.
We've found it in our own lives,
but this individualistic kind of approach to problems
isn't the future.
That's not the way forward.
I think it's together,
and it's why we focus on the church in this.
I wanna see hundreds of thousands of Bennett chapels
because they captured that essence
of coming together around something as a community.
Well, you see the same thing laid out.
This is vitally important, right?
There's a scene in Exodus where Moses is in the desert
with the Israelites and they ask him to be their judge.
And they're really preparing him to be a new Pharaoh.
And Jethro, his father-in-law,
shows up and says, you can't do this. It's too much for you and it will corrupt you, but worse,
you're depriving your own people of the opportunity to be responsible and to make their
own judgments. Exactly. So it's a profound revelation of proper governance, right? Because
it's a profound revelation of proper governance, right? Because Jethro sets up a subsidiary hierarchy
of responsibility as an antidote to tyranny and slavery.
And so in this community,
so you start the adoption process yourself,
but then other people are interested.
And you said it's partly because they're listening to you
and they trust you.
So what happens next? interested in and you said it's partly because they're listening to you and they trust you.
So what happens next?
What happens after you start the adoption process?
You have 22 families that get involved in.
Does that happen all of a sudden or does it happen across?
Over a period of time, over a period of time because we did two classes.
I think it's the first class with 13 families and then we came back and did another class.
We had a whole lot of people on that list,
but then the state had so much,
because if you get involved in adoption,
and the caseworker, their workload just stacks up.
They have so much, you got 13 families
at one time to work with.
That's a lot of work, I mean,
and they go to bed and wake up,
they sleep, they wake up
because there's a lot of work involved.
So it was my intention to get 100 children in the community.
But because we didn't have no resources out there whatsoever,
they cut us off.
And we had got 76 children.
And one day I came from out of state,
and a lady called me from Beaumont, Texas,
said her son, she had a grandson that,
her daughter didn't want him anymore
because she was in college and all of that,
and she couldn't raise him.
She called me and asked me,
would we take, I said, bring him on.
And this is what the last little boy that we got,
and his name was Michael, and that's what made the 77.
And I really believe to me that this whole thing
was a plan that God laid out.
And I believe that God wanted to teach this nation
what we are missing in the adoption arena.
You mentioned something a while ago
that really struck my attention.
I thought about what Jesus went through for us.
He died simply to give his life, that we can have life.
But then again, how much are we willing to go
out of our comfort zone to help some other child?
The thing of it is, and you mentioned something
about comfort, I think that what has happened,
the church has gotten too comfortable.
And they done got so comfortable until they feel like that is not their problem.
It's somebody else's problem. But they fail to realize that Jesus said, I came to seek and to
save that which was lost. We should be doing, if we're going to be Christ like, that means we're
going to walk in his shoes. The Pharisees and the Pharisees did not agree
with what he was doing, but he knew his responsibility.
When God called you to purpose, he did not say
it was going to be a level road,
it was going to be a smooth road.
It's going to be some ups and downs.
You're going to have some problems.
But ultimately, if you just stay in the process,
God is going to move in him.
He's going to teach you.
He's going to, in all of those situations that we've been in, God made us make us stronger.
He make us more aware.
He helped us to be able that we can be a blessing to somebody else.
We went through, yes, I'll tell you about, yes, we went through hell, stealing, lying,
anything you can name.
They did it.
But the thing, God never give up on us.
So why we have to give up on the children?
We did something.
We're doing this, and we believe today
that if God's telling us, wake in those woods,
churches nowadays is so flourished with so much wealth
and so much gift that they can help another child.
But are they doing it?
No.
And here God's summoning
all the way down in them bushes, in those woods, to start something. And it's got to be to
show this world what we are missing. We don't know what we got locked in that system. We
could have presidents and preachers and teachers and missionary workers all locked in that
system. But if we don't do something about this and stop this process right
now, it's sweating up every day longer, more and more and more. So I'm, I'm, I'm believing right now
that God gonna use this as a catalyst to let this whole world know, hey, look, look what you missing.
Look what we have looked over. James 1.7 said, Pure religious underfile that God accepted
we take care of widows and the orphans.
Now have we did that?
No, we have not.
And God got an indictment against these comfortable churches
with these big family life centers and doing all that.
And I'm not against that
cause I would like to have one myself.
But the fact of it is,
we got all the resources we need.
When we did what we do, we didn't have no resources.
Only thing we have with each other. You talk about the community, we came together and
realized that the church got to come together. We created our own wraparound support right
there in the church. We deputized the men and the women to help us to watch over the
children because this is a major problem that's going on. The schools got problem.
I got to go to the school.
I got to do that, I got to do that.
But I'm not one time that I back off
from the responsibility, why?
Because if God be for us, who can be against him?
We got to realize right now that God given us the ability
to do the things that we do.
Because the scripture said,
great as he does in us, he does in what?
We got this power over everything on all the money for over everything over because the Lord is with them
And that's all I know and that's what he told Moses on their money. He said look you ain't got to worry about this
He said you don't know what to say just shut your mouth open. I'll speak through you
So God's done the whole thing
Oh, we are gonna be willing to go in on and do to what the God called us to do and stop looking to the left
I stopped looking to the right or I'm looking up to the hill that come which come out here
We could get this thing done. This system is going to be empty
God is for an empty system out why because he went all out of his way and I'd like to say this to
The first law of nature is self-worth
But the first law of grace is others forworth, but the first law of grace is
others worth. Jesus went all out of his way to make sure that we can be sitting up here today.
Well, there's something to be said too for a demonstration case in a relatively isolated
and poor community, because if you can do it there, well, that's the idea, isn't it?
And I was reminded when you were talking about
part of the story of Elijah,
and when Elijah is running from Jezebel, right,
the evil queen, essentially, the nature worshiper,
he ends up in the house of a widow, right?
And the widow has not enough food for her
and her children, right?
And there's a famous episode in that story
where I think she hits the side
of the flower barrel continually
and every day there's more flower provided.
But the idea there is that it's a very fundamental idea
and it's the idea that you just expressed,
which is that there's more possibility available
even to people who think they're in poverty,
even if they are in poverty,
then they believe if their alignment is proper
and their aim is up.
Now, okay, so let's delve into that a little bit.
So this is a poor community,
doesn't have much resources,
the church isn't even architecturally
sound and yet people do this.
And so how do they manage it?
Like how did, why does it work?
Has it worked?
And why did it work?
It worked because number one, we came together.
Number two, it worked because the Lord was with us.
We had many needs and still do,
but the problem of it is, some way and somehow,
when you are doing this for the Lord
and doing it in His will and obeying His commandment,
God would drop stuff on you that you never dreamed.
God would take somebody that you never heard of,
and He said, look, don't was thinking about you
I just want to bless you with something. This is the way God this is where you able to
Accomplish thing and look it ain't nothing to be be gritting and the old man look who I am said
It ain't nothing like that. But the thing of it is staying in the process. I can't get that word out of my mind
Process a process is something that you stay with
Yeah, if you get out of the process you done messed
up already but if you stay in the process expect that when God has already opened up them channel
for you to walk through all we got to do is just stay with the process obey his will and understand
that God got your back I don't care what happened see that's the same thing with Elijah I mean he
was went to this widow house and what happened he He said look, I'll tell you what you do. He said we just go I got a little oil and a little home cake and me and my
Son we're gonna eat and we're gonna drink and we're gonna die. But look at Elijah and said look don't do that
He said give me a man first. She obeyed the command of God and the mandate that was on his life
She obeyed that what he did and her meal never ran out of here. This is what happened, she obeyed that. What he did, and her meal bag never ran out again.
This is what happened when we obeyed God.
This is the thing that happened when we stayed
in the process and do what he said to us.
It ain't gonna happen no way,
because we do have our adversary out there
that fighting us on every hand,
don't wanna see us do this.
And same thing you done about this whole movie,
he have fought us on tooth and nail.
But let me tell you something,
only thing I can say about that, but God,
when you're going through something
and you know that the Lord is with you,
you don't even have to be a,
you don't even have to be a fear that,
don't even look at their faces.
Don't be afraid of that
because God is going to work it out
some way and somehow God is gonna work out.
When Israel got out there in Bona and needed some water,
what God told them to hit the rock and moat water.
It's just the way he does that.
We don't always keep the finding,
but we know that God is with us.
So, you know, one of the things that's interesting
about that Elijah story too,
is that it's after Elijah has that encounter with the widow,
who is contrasted with Jezebel, who's powerful.
That's when his conscience awakens within him, right?
Because this is a very crucial story,
because Elijah, of course, is one of the prophets
who appears with Jesus when he's transfigured.
It's Elijah, Moses, and Jesus.
And Elijah is the first person
in the biblical sequence of stories
who formally identifies God with conscience, right?
Because it's Elijah who talks about the still small voice.
He realizes that God is not in the earthquake, not in the fire, not in the storm, these awe-inspiring elements of nature.
That's partly why he's opposed to the nature worshipers. And what he does instead is take everything
that people had misapprehended in the awesomeness of nature
as indicative of God.
And he places it in a very lowly place in a way,
which is the voice of conscience, right?
Now, and part of the theme that we've been developing
in this discussion is something like the awakening
of conscience in the church.
Okay, so now do you think there's any particular significance
in the fact that this is also something that happened
in a predominantly black community?
No, it's something that is happening.
Well, let me say it like this.
What we did was in a black community,
but what God did, what God is doing now, He exposed
it to the world.
Yeah, absolutely.
Because He wants everybody to know that we all got a part in this.
And like I said earlier, everybody can adopt, but everybody can be a part of adoption.
We can do something to help.
The sad part about it, if we don't do absolutely nothing, that's the sad part, but I do know one thing.
If God be for us, I don't care what happen,
I don't care what, they can shake the gravy
on a called dry bones to rise, it doesn't matter.
If God be for us, we gonna succeed.
This movie, if George would just give you a short history
of the hell, of the problem, of, if, if Josh would just give you a, a sharp history of the hell, of the problem,
of the situation and now the trouble and the trauma that we have to get have did just to
get this, this far and it's still devil ain't through yet. He's still raising up his ugly
head, but he's the thing over here. God knows somebody who won't say no, who won't give
up. And the lady told me the other day she said these words she said whatever God say yes
In your spirit, that's what you do. God done said yes, and that's what we're doing. We are not bagging them
We're not taking down. We're not running away because you know why we got the power over this not the enemy
But he wants to throw up this bluff and make us feel and and try to intimidate us
But look i'm i'm a cat to be fooled by a kid.
I'm not gonna let the enemy try to bring this stuff down
on me, and I know better,
because I already know what the Lord said.
No weapon, I mean absolutely no weapon,
formed against us shall prosper.
We are more than a conqueror, and I stand on that.
You're pretty good at that.
I'll say something for you.
I think there is something about your community and even the black community at large because
of what in our country they've had to overcome historically and the bond that's been created
through community and family that they've thrived because of and survived because of.
It's an example, I think, in a picture of
what Christian family is supposed to be like.
And I don't mean blood family,
I just mean spiritual family as well.
So I think there is something that we noticed
that allowed for this to work
and is an example that we wanna follow.
And I think we've lost, at least in the bigger cities,
I think there's a lot of smaller communities
that just kind of naturally have that, but it's a-
Yeah, it was just being a black woman
and proud of being, you know, black and,
but I think about my poor parents.
Well, there's a particular problem
with the breakdown of family structures
in the black community.
And so the fact that you're working within your marriage
and then you're working within this community
to rectify some of the consequences of that
seems to me to be significant
in addition to the fact that you're doing it with,
well, hypothetically with restricted resources.
It's like, it's not so obvious in a way
that your community is poor
because you actually have a community.
And if you're rich and you don't have a community,
you're poor, right?
Well, it's true.
It's true.
Well, true.
You're just rich and isolated.
And then that often just does you nothing,
but give you license to pursue your idiot habits.
And that's partly why Christ says to the rich man
who's in distress that he has to sell everything.
It's like, you think you're rich, but you're not.
You're not rich at all.
In fact, your wealth is an enemy.
That's kind of the enemy that you made allusion to
with regards to the church.
No, it's that comfort.
You can think of that comfort.
Comfort is Abraham's worst enemy
when he begins his adventure, right? It's what he has to sacrifice immediately That comfort, you can think of that comfort. Comfort is Abraham's worst enemy
when he begins his adventure, right?
It's what he has to sacrifice immediately
to go out into the world, is comfort.
You said something that you brought up Abraham.
Notice what Abraham nodded, know what he did.
Abraham, when God said,
Abraham, get up and go to a land that I show you.
Did he ask God which direction?
Did he question God why me?
Did he question what did Abraham do?
Gathered up his flock, gathered up his stuff,
and started-
And hit the road.
But hit the road.
Now, I'm sitting up here saying,
how did Abraham know whether to go north,
south, east, or west?
The Lord's with him. And God was showing him
within his own plan the way he should go. And he went that way. And you mentioned Lot a while ago.
It came a time that God had to do something because the Bible says, how can two walk together except they agree?
So, Abraham and Lot had to separate because God had a plan for Abraham. That's why they
separate. But the thing over here, God blessed Lot and he also blessed Abraham. But Abraham had
to cut. I preached the message one Sunday, to get a lot, you got to give up a lot. And that's what
we know. You got to give up your lot to get a lot. That's what give up a lot. And that's what we know, you got to give up your lot
to get a lot, that's what Abraham done.
He gave up his lot to get a lot.
And after he gave up his lot, look what God done.
He said, Abraham I'm gonna make you rich,
but he had to give up his own nephew
in order to get this rich from God.
Well, God offers Abraham four things, right?
So he comes to Abraham and he says,
leave what's comfortable.
And he says, this is what will happen.
Your life will become a blessing to you, right?
Your name will become known validly among your contemporaries.
You will establish something permanent and of lasting value. For Abraham it's a dynasty of nations and you'll do that in a way that
brings a blessing to everyone. Right and so that call of adventurous
responsibility that's what came to you on the porch. Okay so what has that done
to your community? What have you seen happen as a consequence? First of all to
the people who adopted and the children but what's been the broader impact on the community?
The enlargement of love, family, stability,
faith, sound of hope, you know,
and passing down, stopping the generational curses,
the breaker, being the bondage breaker,
and seeing that those children,
children, because they were gathered into love
and impact by change, that their children,
my grandchildren that I nurture,
you know, that comes up to our home,
would never have to experience what they've experienced.
You're talking about gratitude and gratefulness.
Right, so it's a permanent change.
It's a permanent change, it's an everlasting,
just as the promise gave unto Abraham.
Well, that's right.
So what happens to Abraham is that God says to him,
if you follow the voice of adventure and let it take you wherever
it wants to take you, then you'll become the father of nations. And so I'm thinking about that. Well,
I think what it means. See, there's a mistake that evolutionary biologists make when they think about human reproduction. They think about reproduction as sex,
but that's foolish because our children require
this kind of dedicated commitment that you mentioned, right?
Once you take on a child, it's like,
it's a 40 year commitment, right?
And so sex just gets the ball rolling, you might say.
There's an immense sacrifice that has to be made after
that, and that's the sacrifice that forces you to mature. Well, what God points out to Abraham is
that if he does that right, he'll establish a pattern of fatherhood that will then cascade
down the generations and make his descendants successful, right? Because God promises him that
his descendants will defeat the people of Cain, for example.
And those are the resentful, bitter descendants of Cain.
And so there is that,
so you see that your community has adopted
this responsibility that's multi-generational.
And you think people are aware of that?
I mean, you laid it out very quickly.
I think so.
I think so. I think that, I mean, you laid it out very quickly. I think so.
I think so.
I think that, you know, coming from the same community
and have the same values and, you know,
touched by the same love, it's passed down.
You know, you can only give out what's been given to you
and being in the same area and having the same, you know,
form of life
and expectancy before you, yeah, you gravitate
to the environment that you're in.
So yes, yeah, I think so.
Well, it seems to me too that there's people
in the modern world are searching for identity, right?
They're searching for dignity.
And maybe that's more difficult And maybe that's more difficult.
Maybe that's more difficult if you're poor.
Although there's plenty of undignified rich people.
So it's not that clear, but it is clear, I believe,
that that dignity that people are searching for
is accomplished by adopting responsibility.
Because you know then, like, even if things come your way that,
I don't know, demean you, maybe that's one socially, you, you, you, if you've taken on the
proper responsibility, you know in your heart that what you probably know in your heart that God's with you. That's a period. Sell it all. Point and case. A shadow of a doubt. What got Abraham where he was?
And this is why we call him the father of the faithful. Abraham was faithful. Although he messed
up. Yeah, yeah, lots. He messed up.. But the thing over here, God looked beyond his faults.
Yeah.
And cause he, God promised Abraham what he was gonna do.
God is not gonna go back on his promises.
Now we go back on God because we go contrary to the will,
but he didn't go back on his promise.
He told Abraham what he was gonna do and he did just that.
And in the midst of all that, Abraham messed up bad.
But God had mercy, I guess that's why we got mercy
and grace today.
Because God keep on giving us his mercy and his grace
to help us understand the beauty of who he is
and what he wanna do in our lives.
Well, it also means, it also means what you were referring to earlier
about how you struggled when you first adopted children
is that you didn't know what you were doing to begin with.
And that's certainly the case for Abraham
and for Jacob and all the biblical heroes.
They definitely figure it out along the way.
And a large part of what does constitute God's grace is the fact that you can do a good thing
badly and learn along the way.
Right?
And that's a relief, right?
Because this is one of the things I've really learned about from reading these biblical
stories is that these, the heroes in the Old Testament, they're very flawed people to
begin with.
And that's a relief because everybody's very flawed to begin with.
So if there's hope for them in their flawed circumstances,
that also indicates perhaps that there's hope
for all of us who are flawed to begin with,
and that the proper sacrificial intent
gets the ball rolling, right?
Okay, when does the movie come out?
July 4th.
You can actually go July 3rd,
but the official opening is July 4th.
So nationwide, over 2000 screens,
we'll see how it goes and it will go beyond that.
And you mentioned that you have a first grand opening.
We have a premiere.
Tomorrow?
It's premiere tomorrow.
Yeah, and that's in Utah?
In Atlanta, it's in Atlanta. Oh, it's premiere tomorrow. Yeah, and that's in New York?
In Atlanta, it's in Atlanta.
Oh, it's in Atlanta.
Yeah, we film near Atlanta,
so we're gonna gather with the crew
and everybody down there to kick this off.
Okay, and so maybe we could close this.
What is it?
There's a call to action in all of this,
so let's make that practical.
What is it that you're hoping will happen,
you guys and you, what are you hoping will happen?
And is there something concrete
other than going to see the movie that people,
because people should be interested in the movie per se,
but maybe there's also something
that it's calling them to do beyond
actually just watching the movie.
I think in a broad sense, it's really working to resolve
some of the problems around us in our communities.
You think about how this problem connects to things,
or the foster care system is like the feeder
of all kinds of terrible things in our society.
You know, the majority of kids who are trafficked in America, 70, 80, 90
percent of them have spent time in the foster system. You've got 50 percent of the homeless
population in the United States has spent time in the foster system. The prison population,
I think it's 70 percent of the prison population has spent time in the foster system.
Sure, because the children aren't being taken care of.
Yeah, so this trauma and all the disruption that happens
just leads to all of the other things.
So you really think this is a focal point.
We wanna address the roots.
Oh yeah, oh yeah.
And the things that we all get so brokenhearted about
and disturbed by, but maybe don't feel like we can change.
This is a way to change it.
We get involved in the foster crisis,
we deal with the root cause of this.
So what we want people to do, go enjoy this movie.
Go be moved by the movie.
We made it so that you would enjoy it in and of itself.
There's a bigger purpose here,
and that is that we take responsibility
for some of these things around us.
So we want to do that with the, at the end of the movie,
you'll have a way to continue spreading the news,
creating awareness, buying tickets, pay it forward is what
ancient Jesus does. And then there's a website that you will be led to if you're interested to get
involved. We're going to lead people in several ways to get involved. We want to see thousands
of churches emulate what Bennett Chapel did, so you're going to be able to get your church involved.
There's people who may feel like they want to foster and adopt. We're going to have a way for
you to learn about that and maybe even get help on the
ground where you are.
And then also prevention.
We want to see this stop.
We want to see these families that are in crisis helped.
So there's going to be ways to connect through something called Care Portal, which connects
families and needs to people who want to meet needs.
It's this amazing thing where we can cut off the flow of children into the system
by doing things as simple as providing beds for families
or refrigerators or really it's relationship.
Ultimately the relationship is what we want.
So we want people to go beyond this
and look at their communities, their neighborhoods,
focus on that.
Change that.
We can see broadly speaking in our society
a mounting fear of top-down tyranny.
Yes.
And it's fostering conspiracy theories
and terror everywhere across the West, around the world.
And at the same time, what's accompanying that
is a disintegration of community
and a fractionation of people
into atomized individual slaves.
So we have a tyranny and slavery problem that's emerging
and the historical antidote to that
is subsidiary responsibility, right?
Is you look around to see what you can do.
Because then that's what they're doing.
You take a place like California,
they're in effect allowing 13 year olds to be emancipated.
You've got little children who can be going into the car
of a child trafficker, a known trafficker,
and a caregiver cannot stop that from happening.
They have to watch it happen.
They could take a picture of this.
I mean, so the insanity that results
from people abdicating, going,
oh, let the government deal with it,
someone else, not my problem.
Every responsibility you abdicate to the government
invites tyranny, right?
Turns you into a slave and invites tyranny.
That's exactly right.
And the antidote, it's very interesting.
One of the things I've noticed in my lectures,
and so the public lectures has probably been 700 of them,
something like that.
The thing that strikes people most now
is to draw a through line from responsibility to meaning.
The conservatives always tell people,
this is what you should do, but they're missing something.
What they're missing is that if you do what you should do,
then you have the adventure of your life.
That's what happens to Abraham, right?
The greatest things that could possibly happen to him,
happen to him because he's willing
to take on responsibility, right?
That's what happens to Christ, obviously as well.
So the message there, the eternal message of the divine
is that the adventure that redeems your life
is to be found in the adoption of maximal responsibility.
I love that about you.
And that's, to me, it goes from religion
to relationship that way.
When you're only acting out of ought, very cold.
Yeah, it's cold, that's right.
But when it's, I'm going to put within that purpose
and I'm actually going to make you become more like me,
this is God speaking, or the relationship between us is there.
I'm allowing you to be a part of this.
And that's the covenant.
And the purpose is the adventure
and the beauty of that involvement.
So yes, of course, we ought to do these things with that.
Well, that's the burning bush again, you know,
because Moses, by the time the burning bush appears to Moses,
he's actually a pretty well-established adult, right?
He's a shepherd and doing a good job and he's a husband.
And so he's already grown up.
But then that extra calling emerges
and he pays attention to it
and that transforms his life and then the world.
And that's right.
That's an archetypal story.
That always happens.
And in the end, the one you're following is seen.
I mean, he wants to be known,
but he's also limited all of this to faith.
And so it's a lot of these questions like, why, you know,
and should we, and these kinds of things.
It's like, well, within all of that,
he wants to be seen and experienced and known,
and there's so much happening.
And I want people
to understand this isn't just like begrudgingly go out and do good and like help kids.
Well yeah, but there's such power in this and the experience is so deep and you're missing
so much if you just leave that to someone else.
That's the invitation to the heavenly banquet. Yeah, right. I want to I want to point this out, too
Is that?
adoption
Is the antidote to abortion?
Have the child
If you don't don't kill the baby that that's that's murder and you're taking something you can't give
And my barber told me only God give and take
away. So have the baby. Somebody will take that baby if you just going on and have the baby.
So it to me is an antidote. It's the solution. An invitational solution. And it will work.
And it shouldn't be like this. no, it shouldn't be like this.
The church is the only entity that God ordained to take care of the problems of this world.
When I was 15, 14, 15 years old, we'd say, what do you call a service station?
Some people call it a filling station.
You go to the service station or filling station.
If you need air, somebody will get a weight on you.
If you need a thick, fat towel, whatever you need right there,
you can get it all fixed right there.
So the church is a one-stop solution that will fix all problems.
Why?
Because where the Word of God is and where God is,
there is liberty and there is freedom. And that will be when the people of God is, and where God is, there is liberty and there is freedom, and that will be.
When the people of God come together on one accord, the presence of the Lord is there.
And when the presence, wherever the presence of the Lord is, I mean, you've got everything you
need right there, because it's all in his presence. So what do you say to that? Amen?
Yes, amen.
Absolutely.
All right, well that's a good, that's a good point to make.
Well, we hope people hear the, I mean, I, what,
what shakes me inside is that there's this children,
the voice of the child is in God's ears all the time.
He hears.
Yeah.
And I think right now we're at a, we're at a very unique,
this isn't just, you know, we threw a movie together,
like there's something going on in the world today
and the child is at the center of that
and it's the most innocent, helpless thing.
That's the divine child.
He's done with us just letting that happen
without us becoming involved in that and dealing with that.
So there's a lot in this for all of us,
but people need to understand these children,
right now today in America,
there's 100,000 children that need homes.
There's 400,000 kids in the system.
And just one solution is there's 400,000 churches
in America.
So this is a really-
One child per church.
Yeah, this is a really manageable problem.
Really.
And so I'm hoping people hear the cry of these kids now,
as I was drawn in because of that,
that there's suffering children all around us.
There's kids, they don't have room for these kids.
They're putting them in hotel rooms alone
in some places in America.
They're putting them in defunct hospital wards.
They're putting children back. And they don't want,
welfare doesn't want you to know about this
because it's who wants to be told,
we don't know what to do about this problem, it's so big.
And it's an emergency right now.
And so part of this is, let's look at this as people
and go, we gotta do something here.
Children are suffering, enough of this.
We can do more than just be Americans,
live with the American dream or wherever you are,
making your goal, comfort and health.
This is the proper American dream.
This is it.
Yep, definitely.
And it's also the dream that actually produces wealth,
right, in the long run.
It's not natural resources, It's not economic activity.
It's the proper covenant between the individual and God.
Yes, definitely.
Amen.
All right, good.
Well, thank you to everybody watching and listening.
I'm going to continue this conversation
for another half an hour on the Daily Wire side.
The Daily Wire, by the way,
has been moving towards a practical relationship with Angel
Studios, which I think would be good for both.
And so that's a good thing to see.
I've really liked working with The Daily Wire and I like what Angel Studios is doing.
And so the conjunction of that seems to be very good.
If you want to join us on The Daily Wire side, please feel free.
Thank you very much for coming up here
and for what you've done and best of luck with the movie
and with your continued endeavors.
God only knows what will happen as a consequence of this.
I guess we're going to find out, it's very exciting, eh,
that this is all going to launch July 4th.
That's a great time to have it happen, this renewal.
And so congratulations on your work.
And what an adventure to watch what happens, eh?
Amen.
That's for sure.
We appreciate you guys having us.
Oh, my pleasure, my pleasure.
Thank you, Tim, very much.
It was, I'm very grateful to be here and to have met you.
It's a wonderful story.
And I look forward to hearing how it goes for everyone.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Yep. ["The Star-Spangled Banner"]