This is the Truth Network. Too many teardrops for one heart to be crying. Too many teardrops for one heart to carry on. Welcome to the Christian Car Guy Radio Show.
I say this calls for action and now! Tears in his bottle today on the Christian Car Guy Show. You know, tears can be sadness, but they can also be happiness. There's a lot of things we can say about tears, and we're going to talk about them today on the Christian Car Guy Show, as I don't know if you've ever even thought about it. But, you know, your windshield washers on your car, you know, in their own way, they're kind of tears, right, to help you be able to see.
I always find things humorous. But anyway, Psalms 56.8, you know, and to set up the scene on Psalms 56.8, which is the verse that has to do with tears in the bottle, poor David had been being chased all over Israel by King Saul, and had gotten into all kinds of trouble in the temple with eating the showbread, and oh, things were getting bad, and he had to flee to Gath, which is in Philistine territory, and the Philistines actually caught him, the king of Gath, and he acted like he was insane. In fact, the famous verse about Spittle running down his beard so he would act crazy. And in the midst of that horrible situation, you know, you think about it, his family has not exactly been his buddies, and now, you know, all of Israel's chasing after him, trying to kill him, and he's in the middle of the Philistines, so at that point in time, no doubt, he was crying. And so Psalms 56.8, he says, your numbers, you number my wanderings, you put my tears into your bottle, are they not in your book?
The point being, obviously, that God keeps little things like this to let us know. He's always there, and every tossing and turning that David is talking about, he's kept that, he's kept all that in his book, but there's tears in a bottle. So this week, I had a member of our church, you know, I love it when they text you questions or call you and ask you a question, and her question was, how many bottles does God have?
You know, she's going through a difficult time, and so she asked me that question, and I said, well, you know, let me go see if it's singular or plural in the actual Hebrew. I'll study the word, I'll study the idea, and the more I've thought about it all week, the more I realize the magic of the spectacular aspects of tears. But the neatest thing that I experienced that I really would want you to call in and share is that I wonder if there is a story in your life that you cannot tell the story without getting emotional and quite often even tearing up when you tell the story.
That's how close to God you felt in that particular moment or something along those lines. The reason I say that is this week, James Banks is encouraging prayer, which I help co-host that show sometimes, but no, I always do. But anyway, it's James' show, but I just help him with it. And he tells the story of his wife when she was at a really, really, really low place in her life. And for those who don't know, his son was addicted to heroin. He's now a pastor in Wilmington, but at the time, they were really going through it. He had stole some money from his sister, and his wife was at a horrible place in her life. And what happens as a result of that, which you're going to have to listen to encouraging prayer today to hear the rest of the story.
I don't want to steal all James thunder. But anyway, as a result, every time she tells that story of what God did for her through that particular experience, she can't tell the story without getting teared up. And so there's the question for you. Is there a story like that in your life? And I would love to hear it. 866-348-7884, what makes you turn on the windshield washer in your eyes in order to tell the story?
And I have one in my life I'm going to tell in a minute, but I just wonder about you. I would love to know, how does God touch your heart in such a way that it turns on the tears? 866-348-7884 is the number to call and share.
866-348-7884. So when you look at the word tears in Hebrew, which people that know me know I definitely would, because I thought there was going to be something really amazing in it. And there is. Right? Number one, the bottle that is talked about in Psalms 56 is not a bottle like everybody's picturing a glass or a ceramic bottle. No, no, no, no. It's a wineskin.
Okay? That bottle is clearly a wineskin. There's several mentions of wineskins in the Old Testament, and that's the word that's used. It's a wineskin.
It's not a glass bottle or something. Like, this is a wineskin. And I think there's a very important reason why it's a wineskin, that God keeps these bottles, these tears in. And clearly Jesus makes mentions of wineskins, new wine being put in new wineskins. But also, the root word of the word tear in Hebrew is the same word as the juice that they make wine from. In other words, they have to squish the grapes to make the juice, and with that juice that ferments, it's going to become the wine.
And they put it into wineskins in order to happen. Well, what the root word of tears? Literally, if you look at the word tears, it's used in the 56 Psalm, and throughout the Psalms, you know, obviously, the book Lamentations is filled with it. That word, the root of it is tear—I mean, is juice, as in wine juice. So what is that telling us?
That's interesting, isn't it? And when you look at the actual whole word of wine, it's just the word juice expressed. Well, the way that that is spelled is with these letters that all have a picture of something, okay? And the first letter is the letter Mem, and the letter Mem, you've heard me talk about it before, I hope.
It is the middle of the Hebrew alphabet. It means water, literally, is the picture of water, okay? And flowing water is the open Mem, which is what this is, the beginning letter of the word tear.
It starts with that Mem and the idea of flowing water. Well, of course, juice is flowing water, as are tears. The second letter is an Ion, okay? And the letter Ion does mean eyes. What does this kind of tell you?
Interesting. Like, the juice has eyes, so to speak, but, you know, I don't know if you ever thought about this, but you can't see without tears. In other words, there's lubrication and the oil layer of tears, which are always on your eyes.
If it's not there, you can't see, right? And so in order to have vision, it requires tears to some extent, and those are tears that are there. But there's other tears that gives an idea to be able to see something deeper, right? And those are emotional tears. So there's three kinds of tears. There's tears that you get just to make your eyes be able to see. There are tears that protect your eyes, like when you cut open an onion or something, you get that, you know, all of a sudden your eyes start to tear up because they're protecting your eyes. And then there's the third kind of tears that happen with emotions, and the three emotions that tend to make tears happen are fear, you get scared enough, you can cry. Obviously sadness or loneliness, something along those lines, well, that'll make you cry.
But also, you know, if you're seeing something that makes you sentimental, you know, my family teases me that I can go to a Disney movie and ball like a baby. I mean, that is due, because there's something in it that I see, and it makes me cry. And I don't know if you ever noticed this, but I've noticed it a lot, that many, many, many Christians, they cry a great deal. And clearly David did, and clearly Jeremiah did, you know. But the question on the table for you as you're thinking about this, is there a story in your life, I would love to hear it, that you cannot tell the story without getting emotional?
866-348-7884. And the question I have about that, is it that when we get a glimpse of God, if we get a real glimpse of God, does it make us be able to see in a new way? Is that what makes the tears happen, or do the tears make it happen? I'm not sure, but I think it's a wonderful thing to think about.
And that's why I would love to hear your stories. You know, when is it that you saw him? As I think about it in my own life, you know, like when you see your daughter get married, or when you see a graduation, or things like that, that you see that, you know, God's heart is good. You see that he really is there, just as David described, his tears are in that wineskin.
And he's keeping them, I love that song that's in the beginning, his tears in a bottle, as well as 96 tears that we grew up with. 866-348-7884. 866-348-7884 is a number to call in and share your story.
And so, you know, my own particular story, I'll start out, was, you know, after I had all the situations with my lymphoma and God healed me from lymphoma and all those kind of things, a couple years after that, I started to get these headaches. And when we come back, I will finish that story, but in the meantime, it gives you time to call and give us yours. 866, I would love to hear it, really. I'm praying that you'll call.
866-348-7884. We'll be right back. Tears in his bottle today on the Christian Car Guy show. When did you have that experience where, you know, somehow or another you cannot tell the story, you had God show up in your life, you can't tell that story without becoming emotional, having tears.
What does that look like for you? We have Billie Jean is in Greenville, South Carolina. Billie Jean, you are on the Christian Car Guy show. I'm so honored you called today. Okay.
This is Billie Jean. I was in the hospital and I had some papers that they could, if something happened, they had to let me go. They couldn't, they weren't allowed to do anything. And all of us, I woke up in the hospital and my room was filled with people and my RN had my arm on a pillow. Just to get, see if she could get some pulse because they couldn't get my pulse on that machine. And she was there. My, my room was just filled.
There wasn't room for another one to be in there. I think everyone on that wing was there with me. And, and, uh, she sent to her desk to get, uh, this machine so they could, um, I had to turn my radio down. They got the machine so they could say where my heart, the little hills that come down and then the lines are coming. And, uh, they were all just looking at me. I could just see him looking, but they didn't say anything. And they showed me the machine where the lines have started coming about my heart. The surgeon had come to the door, him and another doctor, uh, the most surgeons, they, they were at the door. They are, they couldn't get into the room, but I came to, and they were all just looking at me.
They didn't say anything. I knew that the Lord had taken over. I'm a Christian and it wasn't my time to go. So when I heard all this on your radio, when I thought, well, I have to tell you this story because this happened in Prisma hospital. And, uh, you know, they, they, they were all nurses and all, and, and, and the surgeons were there too to see it. Wow. Wow.
And that is, that is absolutely beautiful. And again, when any, you see God show up like that and you, don't you think it's fascinating that you saw all of it happening, uh, even though you weren't conscious? Well, that was afterwards and I got to see it on the machine and, and I saw the head nurse and all the RNs that were in my room and, and then the surgeon at the door with the other surgeon. I think they had come to pronounce me as gone. And I think the other one that was their head was coming to see what they could use on my body because I had given them, you know, whatever they could take, they could have. Oh, wow.
Oh, wow. And I know that the Lord had his hand in it, but it wasn't my time to go. And this was God's doing, it wasn't mine.
And so you even obviously have this opportunity today to share that story, to encourage other people that he is right there with you. And so when you woke up, um, were you in a lot of pain or were you, what was going on? I wasn't in pain and I'm looking at everybody and they're all just staring at me with their mouths, something like they were, their eyes were on me and, and they were like, like they weren't believing what they were saying, you know? And I'm just looking at everybody and there's not room for another one to be standing in my room. And the only one that's in the chair is my RN that she's got my arm on a pillow trying to find the pulse. And there comes the surgeon and the other guy. I felt sure that he was coming to see what he could take on my body. But the Lord showed me that it wasn't my time to go.
I am a Christian and I love your radio show, but I knew God had his hand in that and he just wasn't ready for me to go. I know the feeling. I really, really do. And is it, is it Betty Jean or Billie Jean? Betty Jean.
I want to get it right. Yeah. Betty Jean, I am so honored that you would call in and share that story. How long ago was it?
It has been this year about, I don't know, just a few months back. Oh my goodness. It just happened. Wow. Wow. Praise God. And that was back, I know it was before November, you know, but back up in there.
Wow. Well, let's just thank God right now. Lord, thank you for Betty Jean. I thank you for giving her more time. I thank you for the witness that you provided for those surgeons and all the people that were in the room that day. And I pray that those seeds that you planted would bring them faith, bring them to faith to see that you're right with us in all these situations. I'm so grateful for Betty Jean's call today and for your work in her life and for her courage to share her testimony. In Jesus' name I pray. Amen. Thank you so much. I love the Lord. And he just let me know it wasn't my time to go. It's not. And so we're going to keep praying that you keep going on, Betty Jean.
Thank you again so much for listening and for calling in today. God bless. Yes. And there's proof there that all that happened, you know.
Oh yeah. I'm just looking around trying to see why everyone's there with their mouths open a little bit and their eyes are like on me. And, you know, and there wasn't room. I guess everyone on that wing was in my room. It was filled. And when the surgeons came, they had to stand at the door. They couldn't even get in.
There was so many people in my room. Wow. Wow. Well, God bless you. Thank you again. You have a great afternoon and we're going to pray you keep up the great work. God bless. Well, it's just I still have something else I have to do here.
Whatever, you know. But the Lord will lead me through it. He sure will.
He sure will. God bless. You have a great afternoon.
You too. Well, what's your story? 866-348-7884, 866-348-7884. Your tears are in his bottle. What does that exactly mean?
How does that work out in your life practically? 866-348-7884. We'll be right back. You're listening to the Truth Network and truthnetwork.com. Too many teardrops for one heart to be crying. Tears in a bottle today on the Christian Car Guy show. I am just touched that there are certain stories in my life that I know that I cannot tell the story because of the way I witnessed God without getting emotional, without crying. And we, you know, heard from Betty Jean here a minute ago. We would love to hear from you. 866-348-7884. How do those tears, you know, represent how God allows us to see things like Alicia showed his servant, right, that time, that they're more against us?
I bet he could never tell that story of when his eyes were opened without getting emotional because it's interesting how tears may be involved in that. So we have Ms. J is on in Greensboro, North Carolina. Ms. J, you're on the Christian Car Guy show. It's great to hear from you.
How are you guys doing? Wonderful. I wasn't going to call in, but I said, you know what, I'm going to tell this wonderful story. My tears is when God, he showed me his pure love, at least a glimpse of it, as much as I guess a human could bear it, and he showed me through his eyes how he loved his people, what he did for them and everything. And I was like, oh my God, and I couldn't stop crying. It was so profound, it was so pure, and it was so, I just, I couldn't even.
How did that happen that you started to see that? Well, it was me fully giving my whole heart to him. I gave my whole heart to him, and I was like, Lord, okay, I surrender. So were you, I hate to back you up a little bit, Ms. J, but I just have a curious mind. So were you in church? Were you at home?
Where were you? You know, you remember when I told you the little young boy that was in the third grade at the time told me that Jesus, that God had told me to tell you that no matter how far you run, that God is going to meet you there? So when he told me that I really did a deep dive in just the retaining of things that was in my spirit to stop running and really hit rock bottom with him, and it was like my fall took place, and it was like he took me. And I just could not, I could not fathom all the things that I was seeing.
But I wrote the poem about it as far as I could get it out, but it goes like this. Looking through the eyes of my father, I finally know what he sees in me. Looking through the eyes of my father, I finally see what he sees in me. Heartfelt love devotion goes streaming down my face. Heartfelt love devotion goes streaming down my face.
I do believe the word became flesh within me. So that was like, it was the communication that was going both ways. And every time I think about that, my hair is on my hair, and it's a thing to remember.
It's like a love thing for me. And I'm just grateful to be able to show me that. I'm so grateful, yeah. And it brings that, it brings back that faith, right, that I know he's right there, and he always will be. That's absolutely beautiful, Ms. J. He had a plan for me. He had a plan to show me also me reaching back down.
That's a whole other story, but I'm reaching back down for other people. So, you know, that was my call to ministry. That is so beautiful. That is awesome. Thank you, Ms. J, as always.
I have a lot of tears in my bow, but they're still dripping, because I'm still listening to people and telling people, and their stories are still streaming. You know, it's like wonderful how much God loves us. I don't think we really, really know it, you know. No, we don't. I'm happy to hear that. We don't.
We don't. Well, thank you, Ms. J. As always, you blessed us. God bless you. Have a great weekend. You too. Thank you.
How about you? What story is it that you have that you cannot relate without tearing up, right? That those tears, they're somehow or another a signature of God in your heart in some way. You know, as James Banks was telling that story, as soon as he said that his wife couldn't tell it without tearing up, I immediately remembered my story that I started out talking about that right after I had gotten cancer, or a couple years after, I started to get these horrible headaches, really, really, really horrible headaches, and they did a brain scan, and they were like, hmm, you know, there's something going on in what they call the meninges part of your brain, and it may be that your lymphomas come back in that part of your brain, and so we have to do something called a biopsy, which you never want to have that done if you can help it. I won't go into any details, but essentially, they do go into your brain, and when they did that, they put a titanium plate in there, and that titanium plate had a staph infection in it, which caused a brain abscess, and when that happened, to say I was in pain would be an understatement, and they needed to get that titanium out, and they needed to somehow relieve the pressure in my head, and for whatever reason, they had some kind of malfunction in the operating room, and they couldn't get me in there, and they tried every single thing that they could to ease the pain, but there was nothing that was easing the pain, and I've had a lot of different kinds of pain in my life, but I've never had anything like this, and I was in unbelievably horrible, horrible, horrible pain, enough that would just make you want to die, literally, and they kept on telling me, hold on, hold on, it won't be, but a little bit longer, a little bit longer, and then all of a sudden, God sent an angel.
I don't know how to put it other than that. Her name was Ramona Sechrist. She was in my Sunday school class, but you see, the second she came in, she said, Robbie, I'm not going to say a word, because I know you're in a lot of pain. I'm just going to hold your hand, and as she held my hand, right, I saw God, and I realized that he was right there in the midst of this, and I will never, ever forget it. Of all the things I've ever experienced at that particular moment, I knew that I knew that he was right there with me, and I can never think about the story.
I can never, you know, throughout my life, I'll always know, right, that God is right there, and those tears that come as a result of thinking about that are a way to see God that I think that is just uniquely yours, whatever it is, and God gave me this one. And so we have Chauncey is in Greenville, South Carolina. Chauncey, you're on the Christian Car Guy show.
I would love to hear your story. Hey, great day, great day. To God be the glory to the King Lord. I would like to say that sometimes I used to sit on my hands when I was in church, and sometimes I used to didn't sing the songs, and sometimes I didn't, you know, get from my heart. And I think when I started to actually get off my hands and clap my hands and stand up for the Lord and sing praises to the Lord, when he accepts it, it's almost like I'm just so thankful that he accepts that praise. And I don't care who's watching me.
I don't care who's looking. And all of a sudden, just tears just flow straight from me. And all I could do is say, thank you, Abba. That's all I could do is just thank the Lord for receiving those praise and that worship. And one of the scriptures that come to mind anytime I'm going into the house of the Lord is 100 Psalms.
And I try to live by that anytime I work into the house of the Lord. And he just fills me. He fills me after that. And he says, thank you. And just knowing that God doesn't need anything, but knowing that he receives my praise and my worship is just the most beautiful thing that a man could ever feel. And I'm just overwhelmed with thankfulness and gratefulness and hope. That's it.
Just being able to praise him out loud and knowing that no matter who's watching me, he's watching me and he hears it and knowing that the angels are in heaven saying, holy, holy, holy, holy, holy for infinity, for our Lord, just me being able to join in with that, it's a peace that resonates all over me after that. It gets me through the weekend like tomorrow and we'll go back and I'm going to do it again. Oh, wow.
That is so bad. I love that. I absolutely love it. And so you know when the tears start to stream that your praise has hit its mark.
Yes, yes, yes. He says I'm doing the right thing. I'm okay. I'm okay with him.
We're okay. You know what's cool about that, Chauncey, is a lot of times when I'm getting ready to do a show. And Nick will tell you that I spend a lot of time usually working on the music because the music has to be right for me or I can't do it. And the way I know it's right is if it makes me cry. Yes, yes. Hallelujah. Hallelujah. And if it makes me cry, then I know that, man, God, this is the mark.
You have to feel God in it. And I love that you're worshiping in that way. That's such a beautiful testimony.
I'm so grateful for your call, Chauncey, and for you listening today. You have a great weekend, my friend. God bless. Will do. You do the same. Thank you.
Bye-bye. His tears, I mean, excuse me, are tears in his bottle. It's a fascinating idea that he keeps all those tears in his bottle. And I love the tears that he just described about praise. And, you know, there's tears of worship, and there's all sorts of different ways that that may be happening for you. I would love, love, love to hear your story.
How does that happen for you? 866-348, the number to call, 866-348-7884. This is the last segment of Your Last Chance, so if God's put it on your heart, and you know you've got this story, you know, dial it, 866-348-7884. I want to mention that for those who love Hebrew and things like that that are in the Winston-Salem, or actually in North Carolina anywhere, because we're going to be doing a Passover Seder at my church. It's Kildee Church in Ramsboro, North Carolina. If you go to christiancarguy.com, you're going to see it Saturday, April 12th at 4 p.m. It's $20 per person.
What an amazing opportunity. We're going to spend some time, you know, going through all the different traditions. The four cups of wine, afikoman, the three pieces of matzah and how that's hidden, and all those things that go into a Seder. But this is very much a family event, too, because we have all kinds of singing, and we have prizes for kids as we hide the afikoman, and they have like an Easter egg hunt and that, and so we always have an amazing time.
We have videos, we have songs, we have a fabulous meal with, it's a lamb dinner with the fresh matzah that's homemade that my wife cooks, as well as, you know, the bitter herbs and the greens and the eggs and all those things that go into the traditional Passover. It's going to, again, happening this Saturday, excuse me, Saturday, April 12th, a couple weeks away. It is Passover, Saturday, April 12th, 4 p.m.
It's $20 per person. Go to ChristianCarGuy.com to find out about that event, and I would very much like to meet you and have a chance to share that celebration that's been going on. It's the longest holiday that has ever been, obviously, celebrated, as God instituted it, you know, clear back at the Exodus. So, interestingly, talking about Hebrew and those kind of things, I realized at the beginning of the show, I started to talk about the word tears in Hebrew, and I left out the first letter. I talked about the mammon, I talked about the iron, but I didn't talk about the first letter and the word tears, and I don't know why I did that, but I should talk about it because it's significant and huge. And so the letter is the Hebrew letter dalet, and the Hebrew letter dalet, in its own way, is a picture of a door. And you might know that they put the blood over the door, and so doors are really a significant thing, and obviously, tears are a door to something, but the word dalet also means the poor, humble person.
And you might have heard Ann Graham Lotz talking about humility. Well, humility is a door, right? It's a doorway that we can see God, but it's undoubted that when we are crying, when we have tears, it's a pretty humble situation to be in. Clearly, David had been humiliated, you know, to have to act like he was insane in front of the Philistines to preserve his life, which was so critical to what would happen in all of history.
Obviously, David needed to survive, but in order to do that, he had to really, really be humiliated and be humbled. And so what an amazing thing when you think about that the whole idea of tears starts out with that letter dalet, to be poor and humble this doorway, and then the idea, as we talked about, of the mem, which is water, which clearly, you know, tears have that involved, and the eye and the ability to have a vision. And, you know, without a vision, the people perish, and it requires, like even in a car, like we talked about, you've got windshield washers, it requires a clean eye, and the way your eyes are cleaned is constantly, believe it or not, you have 50 gallons of tears a year that keep your eyes clean, and there's an oil substance.
There's three layers. There's a layer that sticks to your eyeball, that's sort of a mucus layer that keeps it there, and then there's the one with all the good stuff, and then there's an oil layer on top of it that keeps it all in place. And so tears are critical to the idea of seeing, but from a standpoint of where there's no vision, the people perish, they're talking about the vision of a prophet or the vision of Christ, that when you, just take the letter I, and it looks like the letter Y, by the way.
And so when you take the I, the Y, if you look, there's two stems that come out of it, but in spite of the fact that you have two eyes, you only see one image. Well, if you had the eyes of Christ, right, and you had your own point of view, then you would have the vision that we're talking about, and as all our friends have talked about in this vision that they talked about in the show today, that they got to see God through his eyes to some extent, or you got to see the situation of the help that came for you in that particular situation, and that idea of being able to see through God's eyes is throughout the Scriptures, and the whole idea of I in it is a beautiful thing because, you know, when you think about it, you got two eyes that are connected by one optic nerve to create one vision in your head, and again, if we're totally living in Christ, then we can, if we turn our hearts to him through humility and through those kind of tears, interestingly, be able to see things through faith that we wouldn't otherwise see. Now, as we talked about at the very beginning of the show, the word tears, the root word is juice, the same juice that they use to make wine, and again, the bottle that David describes there is a wineskin, and so it's a fascinating thing to think about that these tears are some type of juice. It's similar, again, like wine that's been crushed, and the idea that most people, you know, obviously have been crushed at some level to understand the idea of tears, and I even think about, or I couldn't help but think about, you know, I was a little kid, and something would happen that I'd go in my bedroom and just lay on the bed and cry, and, you know, all sorts of tears happened there, but also, you know, you'll hear very few stories of people coming to Christ where there wasn't just an unbelievable amount of tears, just like Ms. Jay described, that these tears are just flowing down your cheeks, and uncontrollably, my brother, you know, related that to me not, you know, a couple, three years ago when he came to Christ, he was like, Robbie, I just can't stop crying, I just can't stop crying, and that was my own experience when I saw it in the Book of Job, that it just clearly wasn't able to stop crying, and it's fascinating, right, and his line when he accepted Christ was that it had got to him, and he'd attended a discussion that I was having on there is a God and I'm not him. Well, you know, the point of humility to realize that you can't be your own God, you can't be your own Savior, you can't do these things on your own is gigantically huge, and it requires that first letter, that humility, that dalud in order for it to happen, and it's fascinating that once you reach that point that he reached and I reached, we all reached when we realized that we desperately need Jesus as our Savior, then interestingly the tears come, and I just find that fascinating, which is the letter mem, and then you have the letter i, and that would be the sight that you're seeing, and the last letter in the word tears is the letter hey, which means like hey, it has to do with the idea of expressing, like interestingly that is the letter, that is the letter in God's name, right, it's yud hey vuv hey, there are two hey's in Yahweh, right, you hear them, and the idea, I think it's beautiful that tears end in that idea of expression, and so when people seeing you cry, right, in a way you're expressing yourself, I don't know if you ever thought about that, but you are, and it's a signal to back off in some cases, or it may be a signal that you can be compassionate with a person.
In other words, tears are in themselves a way to express ourselves, and a very unique thing. So anyway, I am so grateful for your calls today, so grateful that I know that God is out there engaging all of us, and we know that he keeps those tears in his bottle, and so wow, how fun. I hope you will join us at the Seder coming up April 12th, you go to ChristianCarGuy.com to find out about that. The Jesus labor love, car repair labor for single moms, widows and families in crisis, also at ChristianCarGuy.com. We listen to the Truth Network, TruthNetwork.com