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Faith, Healing, and the Future of America

Truth Talk / Stu Epperson
The Truth Network Radio
January 23, 2025 7:51 pm

Faith, Healing, and the Future of America

Truth Talk / Stu Epperson

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January 23, 2025 7:51 pm

In this episode, Peter Rosenberger opens up about his wife's upcoming surgeries and shares his thoughts on her journey toward recovery. He asks listeners to join him in praying for her health, strength, and healing during this challenging time. Peter also dives into the political landscape, sharing his perspective on Donald Trump's return to the presidency. Tune in for a mix of personal reflection, faith, and political insight. 

 

For more information aboout being a caregiver and Peter visit peterrosenberger.com

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Welcome to Truth Talk Live. All right, let's talk. A daily program powered by the Truth Network.

This is kind of a great thing and I'll tell you why. Where pop culture, current events, and theology all come together. Speak your mind. And now, here's today's Truth Talk Live host. My name is Truth Talk Live. I am coming to you from the mile-high city of Denver. And I've been out for a week or two and I'm grateful to be back. Thank you all for having me.

Let me explain to you what I'm doing and why I'm doing it. And if I sound a little bit different, I'm doing it in a hotel room across from the hospital where we're going to be here for the next two months. My wife is having surgery in the morning. This will be her 87th. And this is going to be her last day. And then three weeks later, she'll have her 88th operation. So we're going to be here a while and we're still working out some of the bugs on connecting up through the miracle of technology.

And it is a, so if you hear a little different sound, whatever. If you have some snafus, just, I just asked for Grace, which by the way, is my wife's name. Lord knows I needed Grace so much.

I married a woman named Grace. So we're here. 86634 Truth. If you want to be on the program.

86634 Truth. And we've got a lot to talk about today. But let me just say on the onset of why I'm here and what's going on with her. My wife had a horrific car accident back in 1983. This was before I met her. And the surgery tomorrow is part of a 14-year plan, roughly, that we've had to fix some things. The path that she's been on was set for her. A lifetime ago. She didn't have any say so in it.

And we, here we are. Had she had the same car accident today with medical technology the way it is and so forth, she would have had both of her legs amputated the day of the wreck. As it stands, they, no pun intended, but they tried to save her legs. And in the process doomed her to orthopedic trauma. Prosthetics, though, just weren't that great back then.

They are now. I mean, we have a prosthetic limb ministry that we started back after she lost her left leg back in 1995. She finally gave that one up.

She gave the right one up in 91. She was watching a documentary by about Princess Diana and the work she was doing with landmine victims, Southeast Asia. She saw all these amputees.

And I remember, I'll never forget, I walked into the room that day. And she was laying in bed. There she had her hands just raised to heaven. One leg was healed up. It was the amputated limb, but it was healed. And she'd been walking with a prosthesis for four years.

The other leg still had a fresh dressing on it, bloody and all kinds of stuff with bandages and so forth. And she had her hands raised to heaven. And she said, and she yelled at me, she said, I know what I'm going to do. And I was a bit startled.

And I said, what are you going to do? And she said, I'm going to put legs on people and tell them about Jesus. And that's what we've been doing for 20 years in the sub-Saharan West African country of Ghana. And we put legs on people from other countries, too, but mostly our work is in Ghana. And it started there with a woman who trusted God with a broken body.

And it's rather extraordinary ministry. But had she lost her legs the day of the wreck, she would have been up on quality prosthetics in today's world, probably walking well and probably able to run. But all the damage to her hips and backs over years of having to walk poorly on these broken limbs. Did its number on her.

And so here we are. And so what happened was she was bent over. They fused her back back in 2002 because her disk started to basically deteriorate. And the way they did is they kind of pitch her forward. And so she kept going more and more and more until she was over, you know, her back was there was no curvature in it.

It was all flat. They call it flat back syndrome. So we needed to get with a good neurologist and a team to be able to rebuild her back. And then we that her hip flexors had been contracted for so long because she was bent over that now that her back is fixed.

And we did that the last couple of years here in Denver. Now we have to move her hip flexors and cut them and move them down so that you can stand straight, this releasing those hip flexors. So it's a pretty big surgery, set of surgeries. She's had a very tough journey.

She's a bit tired. And tomorrow is going to be a challenging day. I'll give you a report next week on Truth Talk Live. But in the meantime, I stay across the street at a hotel for family members who, you know, when you have long medical things here and I've spent several months in this hospital before and I'm going to spend several months this year. I get a lot of mileage, you know, I mean, those frequent stay points, you know, it's upgraded me into my category. I noticed that they give me free bottled water every day because I've been such a loyal member of this program. I mean, I'm with Hyatt and they said, oh, you're an explorer. You get some free water. I thought, well, there you go.

Thousands of dollars later, I get free water. But it's the way it has to be right now. And it's where she's going to get through it. She's tough. I tell her she's tougher than a Waffle House steak. And it is it's been quite a journey for her.

But one of the things that we've learned and we're going to talk about this as the program unfolds today. When she would find herself getting anxious about it. I said to her something that I've had to learn myself, I mean, because we both have struggled with anxiety with this.

And there's a lot of things in this world that are anxiety worthy as you've been watching on the news, even, you know, with all the stuff with the new administration, everything else. And I would tell her, I said, well, we're not there yet. And I was just over the hospital just across the street just a few minutes ago before coming on the air. And she looked at me, she said, I'm getting scared. And I said, you know, about tomorrow.

She said, well, tomorrow's not here yet. And that's just something we repeat over and over and over to one another. She has to do it to me.

I do it for her. And we just repeat it over and over. We're not there yet.

But God is and he's already waiting for it. I'll never forget what she told me after her first amputation surgery. She said, I didn't know what was on the other side of that operating room door. And she had chosen to give up her leg.

It was her decision both times. She said, I can't live like this anymore. And she said, I'll never forget what was on the other side of that operating room door. And she said, but I knew who waited for me.

I knew who waited for me. So I don't know what's going on in your life today. And there may be some things coming up, maybe as soon as tomorrow. We're not there yet. But I know who is. And I think that is the great confidence we have as believers to know that, you know, our God, our hope.

You know, Isaac want to so God, our help in ages past, our hope for years to come, our shelter from the stormy blast and our eternal home. That's truth. And that is Truth Talk Live. Back to Truth Talk Live. This is Peter Rosenberger and I'm so glad to be here with you today. If you want to be on the program and love to hear from you. 866-34-TRUTH, 866-348-7884.

Here's some things I'd like to ask you about. What do you think about this episcopal bishop dressing down Trump in the National Cathedral, which I'm not sure why that is the National Cathedral, yesterday's service. And it's getting an awful lot of attention.

And she went on The View today. I think that when you see an episcopal bishop and use the word she followed after that, you're already in some weird areas. Scripture is pretty clear on this. If you've got a problem with it, take it up with scripture. I didn't write the scripture. God did. And that's something I'd like to weigh in.

I'm going to have you weigh in and see what your thoughts are on this. It was a very unfortunate set of circumstances for any clergy to do such a thing. The responsibility of the clergy, when you get behind the pulpit, is to preach the word of God, not grind your ax politically speaking. I loved if you go to Covenant Presbyterian Church in Nashville, Tennessee, this is where those terrible shootings were. And Gracie and I went there for many, many years when we lived in Nashville.

In fact, I played the piano there every Sunday morning. And when they built that sanctuary, they took that passage of scripture and made a little plaque right there on the pulpit. And it said, sir, we would see Jesus. Sir, we would see Jesus.

I always thought that was just fabulous. What a great reminder to any pastor who steps in the pulpit. What are your thoughts on that?

866-34-TRUTH, 866-348-7884. Sir, we would see Jesus. I think that one of the things that seems to be a consistent theme in our church culture today, at least in America, is that we are having a, I don't want to say crisis, I think it seems like we're struggling to come up with that central message. Sir, we would see Jesus. And I was really quite impressed with Franklin Graham's invocation at the inauguration. I don't know if you caught it or not, but it was quite strong. And then the other fellow from Detroit, what was his name, who got up and prayed. I mean, it was the most extraordinary prayer and he was just bringing it. And when you read the back story of this guy, just the passion he brought to praying. And it was really quite something.

And everybody was just lifted. And then I saw people online that were criticizing him, saying he had theatrics and it was annoying. So, not so, what was his name?

I'm so terribly sorry about that. But it was, they were criticizing him for being too annoying in his theatrics. And I thought, I remembered when King Saul's daughter, Michael, looked at David dancing before the Lord as they brought the Ark in and she criticized him for it.

And then she was struck bare. And I called that guy out on social media for saying that. And then he blocked, so I couldn't say anything back because he didn't obviously want to have that conversation.

I did not see it as annoying. I thought it was uplifting. I cheered him on, because if you have that kind of passion to worship the living God, you know, bring it and particularly what he was saved from.

If you go back and look at his story, it's an amazing story. We've got just a few minutes before the bottom of the hour and I want to catch Greg from Greensboro, North Carolina. First off, how are you feeling, Greg? I'm feeling great. How about you?

You know, for the shape I'm in, I'm in pretty good shape. What are your thoughts on these things? That Episcopal lady, I don't want to call her. I've noticed you're parsing your words.

Yeah. I just, that's shameful. I've been around Episcopalians before that really love the Lord and had good testimony. But here in the recent years, the Episcopal Church has embraced so much of the woke culture and the world that I think they've gotten away from all that, all the truth that she should have been talking about yesterday instead of coming down on President Trump. Did you see the inauguration?

Yeah, sure did. By the way, it was Reverend Lorenzo Sewell, did you hear his prayer? I didn't get to hear it, but I heard him last year at the prayer breakfast and that was incredible. Did you find anything that he did annoying or theatrical or did you find it just somebody who was just thrilled that he was saved? I think he was thrilled he was saved because, no, it wasn't at the prayer breakfast last year. He was at one of Trump's rallies or something. I can't remember what he was at, but he prayed there too and spoke and he was really something then too. But I think he just, I think he loves the Lord. You know, I love people who are passionate about what they love.

And this man, when you hear his backstory and what happened to him, it's really amazing. We had within basically 24 hours, we had a contrast of two people who are ministers and one lectured the President of the United States with this woke ideology that clearly has adverse stances towards Scripture and the other one just threw himself into uplifting the entire room. Exactly.

What a contrast, huh? Yeah, yeah. I do want to say to you before we get off the line, my wife is a cancer survivor of 35 years now and she has had a really rare form of cancer that they have, I guess, experimented, but the things that they've done for my wife have since then helped so many people survive the cancer that she has. And I'm with you on the, I guess, watching somebody struggle from past treatments that weren't as good as they should have been. And it just really, I feel what she's going through and I pray for you and I appreciate you and your wife and the stand that you have. That really means a lot. I think one of the things we've landed on, Greg, and I bet this will mean something to you and your wife both, is that if he's Lord at all, then he's Lord of all. Exactly.

And we can rely on that. Greg, it means a lot. You took the time to call and I appreciate your insights. Somebody needs to write an article this week about the tale of two pastors, huh? But it's great to hear from you and thanks for listening and we're going to go to a break. This is Peter Rosenberg and this is Truth Talk Live.

Back to Truth Talk Live, this is Peter Rosenberg and I'm so glad that you are with us today on this program, 866-34-TRUTH, 866-348-7884. We've got a lot of winter weather going on right now. Have you seen northwest Florida and Louisiana? I saw a cow doing donuts in the snow on a fan boat in Louisiana. I don't care who you are, that's funny right there. And my wife is from Fort Walton Beach.

In fact, when she had her car back in 1983, she was the reigning Miss Fort Walton Beach High School. And they get snow like this, I don't think they've ever had snow, but they get snow like every 40 years. They'll get a couple inches. Well, they really got a lot of snow down there and you got those sugar white beaches. Now they're covered with snow and it's really kind of odd and you see all these people out there. Somebody was out there ice skating, I think, or playing hockey on Canal Street in New Orleans.

And it's been quite interesting to watch, particularly since we live in Montana. One of the reasons she wanted, she used to hate Christmas in Florida because everybody's wearing shorts and t-shirts. She said, this doesn't feel like Christmas, we need to go someplace where there's really Christmas. And so she always wanted to live someplace where there was a lot of snow. And we lived in Nashville for so many years and we would get decent snow in Nashville. I mean, you know, every year we'd have a little bit and every couple of years we'd have a big snow. But when we moved to Montana, now that's a different story, we get a lot of snow in Montana.

And I wanted to share with you some thoughts that I've learned about living in the treasure state of Montana. The first winter, full winter, I spent there. We've been coming out, we left to go to Christmas every year to her family's place in Montana since the 90s. And so we did Christmas out there just about every year.

We just loved it and we loved everything about to go cut our own tree, the whole thing. But when we moved out there full time, you know, and now I'm living out there. And we have snow on the ground usually from the end of October to certainly the end of March, but well into April. And then two years ago, we had three feet of snow on the deck on the first week of May. I've seen snow in July, July 4th.

And so Montana winters could be rather lengthy. And I wrote about this in my book, A Minute for Caregivers, when every day feels like Monday. And I would really recommend if you're struggling as a caregiver right now, I wrote this for you. If you know somebody who's struggling as a caregiver and you don't really know what to say, don't worry about it.

I do. I speak fluent caregiver. And that's the good news. The great news is that that's the language of our savior. That's his native tongue, his caregiver. And that's what he does.

That's who he is. And I'm grateful for the things that I've learned through this journey. They've been hard lessons, but they're important lessons that I've learned. And I put those down in an easy to read format, just one minute chapters. I tell people it's so easy, you can read them in the bathroom. I know that's where I wrote it. My publisher is Oliver North and his publishing company Fidelis. And they told me they've never received a manuscript on a scroll before. No, I'm just kidding.

No, don't send any calls to that. I'm just kidding. But I wanted to be able to share in a way that made sense to fellow caregivers of things of principles. It's not about caregiving.

It's not the task that is what causes a lot of the stress. It's the emotional turmoil that goes on with this, the sense of obligation and duty, the sense of bitterness and resentment when you're taking care of somebody who's treating you poorly or who has treated you poorly, the stress of it all, of guilt and fear and all of those things that I kind of help walk caregivers back away from that cliff so we can calm down, calm our hearts down and then make healthier decisions for ourselves. And this is one I learned from a guy, a friend of mine named Jason told me this. And I wrote it down in this chapter, Caregiver Advice Montana Style.

But I thought it would apply since we've got all this snow going down in this heaps of snow. But during our first winter in Montana, a friend gave me some of the best advice about the snowy road conditions in the treasure state. And he said, drive at the speed you're comfortable slamming into the ditch at. I will say that again, drive at the speed you're comfortable slamming into the ditch at. And I, of course, laughed at the point of guidance, but I also consider the implications for other areas.

How many of us race around at breakneck speeds while in treacherous conditions? Relationships, money and our health can all be severe hazards. And the faster we move, the greater the risk. And slowing down is the key. We make few, if any, sound decisions when we are amped up. Just like wildlife jumping in front of our trucks, life has a way of hurling things in front of us as caregivers and just as human beings.

Slowing down allows us to protect ourselves better, our property and our loved ones and the occasional deer in the road. How many of you all have hit a deer? And that's not a pleasant experience.

It was terrible. One night we were going to Christmas Eve service, no kidding, and we hit a deer. And my wife got mad at me because I told the kids that it was Rudolph. It just jumped out in front of me. And we were we were laid to church. We were trying to get there. And it kind of staggered off and I saw it standing there and it fell over the ditch. And I was going to come back on the way back and take care of it. And when we came back, it was gone. And I think that probably I don't know what happened to it, but it's pretty common out there. And I wasn't necessarily driving all that fast, but it just it just leapt in front of me. I think it was depressed and wanted to commit suicide.

I don't know. But it was I don't know if you've had that experience or not, but hitting a deer is not fun and hitting an elk is even worse. But ditches and wrecks can't always be avoided. But we can reduce the damage.

We can reduce the damage. Besides going slower, going slower allows us to better see the beauty all around us. Just slow down. Just slow down. And Tokugawa Ieyasu said, let thy steps be slow and steady that thou stumble not.

Let thy steps be slow and steady that thou stumble not. That's a great word for any of us, but particularly as caregivers. You know, and I think back to the caller we just had in the last block.

Greg, whose wife had a lot of stuff going on with cancer. And over many decades, kind of like what Gracie and I have gone through, just this thing has gone on for decades. And you look back and you think, oh, if only they had done this, only this, whatever. But you also realize that if he is Lord at all, then he is Lord of all. And if we are so busy racing around, we're not going to really understand that principle very well.

It's when we stop and we reflect on it, we think about these things and we give ourselves a moment's pause to reflect. If you go back and look at the end of Moses's life, when he gave that long sermon at the end of Deuteronomy. And he laid it all out for all that God had done.

Look at what he has done. He gave this great history lesson for the people, for the purpose of telling the people, lean on this God. Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding. The steps of a righteous man are directed by the Lord or guided by the Lord. All of those scriptures start making sense if we're willing to stop and slow down a little bit. And just breathe. Recognize that, you know, one of the greatest phrases in all of scripture, I think to me, is at that time, at that time, at that time Jesus did such and such, at that time God did such and such.

The Greek word is kairos, which is the appointed time, appointed time. In other words, he's got this. As I told you in the first block with my wife's surgery coming up tomorrow morning, he's already there.

We don't have to fret over this. He's already there. Now, I know it's scary and I know it's fret-worthy, but he's already there. And so we can slow down and stop racing. We're going to, you know, it's like we're on a train. And inside a boxcar, we're running around, but the train's not going to get there any faster.

You follow me? All we're doing is making ourselves exhausted. The train's not going to get there any faster. God knows what he's doing. And that's a good word for us as believers to hang on to as we go through this, because the world right now is a bit frantic and frenetic. But let us not be. Why? Because, as Bill Gaither said, because I know who holds the future.

And how comforting is that? And that is Truth Talk Live. This is Peter Rosenberger, 86634 Truth.

We'll be right back. Truth Talk Live! Welcome back to Truth Talk Live.

This is Peter Rosenberger. Glad that you are with the program today. 86634 Truth.

866348 7884. And we'd love to have you be a part of it, weigh in with what your thoughts are. I've got one more thing I wanted to address.

We'll try to squeeze in some calls, too. But I want to address the winter weather that is hitting deep, deep, deep, deep south. I saw pictures of Bruton, Alabama that looked fabulous. I've been through Bruton many, many times and covered with snow. It just looked a lot different. So I saw that Governor DeSantis had sent out to Santa Rosa County where my wife grew up there and her dad's business was there.

And they had a snowplow out there. And it reminded me, on my Substack page, I have a Substack page, caregiver.substack.com or just go to PeterRosenberger.com and you can see it. Everything's at my website, PeterRosenberger.com. And I have a ton of stuff on my Substack page of video, audio and print. And you can access those things and I hope you'll take advantage of them.

I put it all out there for you. I didn't have things like this for my journey as a caregiver. And I'm still, by the way, a caregiver. And I read my own book because I didn't have anything.

Nobody would, what people say. I mean, people didn't really know what to say to me. And so I've done that for my fellow caregivers. And like I said, I hope you'll take advantage of it.

And I put another one of the excerpts from my book, A Minute for Caregivers What Every Day Feels Like Monday on there. It's called Don't Pass the Snowplow. Don't Pass the Snowplow. And that was another piece of advice I got when we first moved to Montana and had our first full winter. I was grabbing my coat to head out into the snow following a meeting and a friend called out. He said, don't pass the snowplow. Well, I had to go on a pretty treacherous hill in heavy snow because Gracie's wheelchair had the crossbar broke. There was a welder in the next little town over and was on the other side of this very, very large hill. And they usually do a pretty good job of keeping a plow. But I don't know if you've ever some of you up in Ohio area that are listening and others may not know this place, but there's a big, big they call it Mount Doom, Mount Eagle down in Tennessee between Nashville and Chattanooga. And it's it can be pretty gnarly in the wintertime.

Well, this is worse than that. It's not as long as it's more compact, but it gets a lot of snow and becomes pretty icy and a lot of wind, which makes it even worse sometimes because it drifts up. So the snowplow that is the number one priority is that artery to get that goes over this hill.

It's called North Hill. And I had to go over the other side of this thing to get this wheelchair. They had it repaired and she needed it. And so the welder had it fixed. So I took my friend's advice and I go behind this snowplow that appeared and I stayed back to avoid the rocks, salt and so forth and saying that they put on the road.

But I move. Slowly, but securely, even down the steep grade on the hill's other side. And I arrived at my destination, got the wheelchair and then I returned over the freshly plowed hill. And the whole journey kind of struck me as an excellent picture for us as caregivers. And really, again, the things I talk about for caregivers apply across the board to the human condition. We caregivers just live with it in a very intense day to day, moment to moment kind of thing. But the issues that really trouble us are common to all of us and which is fear, anxiety, depression, guilt, resentment.

You know, all those kinds of things. That's the core of the human condition. But this journey struck me as particularly applicable for caregivers that the ones who can help us often move slower than we'd like. And it feels like they're listening to elevator music while we're cranking up Led Zeppelin in our car.

But whether it's a medical provider, counselor or financial advisor, the safest place is often behind the professionals doing their job. However, slowly, we may feel that they're moving. And a wonderful quote from Barbara Johnson says, patience is the ability to idle your motor when you feel like stripping your gears. And the ultimate snowplow, if you will, the ultimate one that we would do well to be patient with and go at that speed is God. He's going to move at his speed. And he's not going to be late.

I do often tell God in my prayers that he's missing a lot of opportunities to be early, but I don't think he's all that worked up about it. And he's going to go at his speed. My father used to say he moves quickly, but he doesn't move hastily. And our job is to be ready to go where he leads and stay at his speed. You know, when that cloud moved, the Israelites needed to be ready to go. And if they weren't, they get left behind.

And there are a lot of things that we can see in this world where God's hand is moving and are we attuned to this? Are we going at his speed or are we focused on our speed? We're going to race around and that's how you get hurt. And where we live in Montana, you start passing snowplows and you're in for a world of hurt.

So I do want to encourage all those folks there in Northwest Florida, lower Alabama and New Orleans and so forth, with this white stuff they see on the ground that is snow and those machines, those big trucks that come with this big blade on the front of it, that's a snowplow and you would be well served to stay behind it and not try to pass it. I think it's when we start racing around, we run the risk of getting hurt and hurting others. And God is not interested in us acting frenetic. In fact, he would have that burned out of us. And I love that again, that phrase, at that time you go back and look at Jesus. He wasn't in a hurry to do anything.

Because he was completely in lockstep with his father's will at that time, at that time. And those are things that I think we can hang on to as we get nervous about a lot of things. And I'm saying this on the eve of this very serious surgery that my wife is having tomorrow. But there's no need for us to get frenetic about it. We've done the best we can. We've planned.

We've got it as organized as we can. We've had communication with the doctor. Now we're going to get behind that doctor and let him do his job and stay out of the way.

She's got some amazing nurses and these are top notch people, medical providers. And both of us are well served by staying out of their way and letting them plow the road. And we'll get to our destination safely. It may not be as timely as we'd like.

It may not be whatever. But here we are. We've done our due diligence and these are some of the finest medical professionals in the whole country. And that says a lot. It's a teaching hospital and they know their business.

And yeah, we're correcting a few things that medical professionals did a long time ago. But they did the best they had with the knowledge they had at the time. And we trust God's sovereignty in these things more than our understanding. God knew Gracie before the foundation of the world. He knew me before the foundation of the world. He knew you. And there's never a time when God is freaking out and smacking his forehead and saying, oh, I forgot about this.

That's not possible. And scripture affirms this over and over and over. And I think the great hymn writers say these things over and over. I reference what Isaac Watts wrote, oh, God our help in ages past. John Newton, through many dangers, toils and snares, I have already come. And then you get the great hymn that was written from Jeremiah 3. I mean Lamentations 3. The prophet Jeremiah said, morning by morning, new mercies I see. Great is thy faithfulness. All I have needed, thy hand hath provided.

I don't have the caregiver keyboard here with me, so I can't play it for you live on the air. But the question I guess I want to ask you these last just seconds that we have here, do we believe that or not? And if we do, what are the implications? How would people know?

How would that change our life? If I believe that, how am I going to stop at the hospital after I do this program and tomorrow morning for the surgery? Will I show up there wringing my hands and freaking out?

Or will I be able to speak with confidence and calmness, the very word of God, to my wife and quote her scriptures and settle her heart down? Because she is anxious. Wouldn't you be?

Eighty-seven surgeries? I would be too. But she doesn't need me freaking out. She needs me to remind her of what she reminds me of when I am distressed with certain things. And we remind each other of those things. That's how we do it.

If you want to see more, please go out to PeterRosenberger.com. I would encourage you to be a part of what we do. You can sign up for our e-letter. She's got a song out there right now. It's a song of the month. We send out a song every month.

Gracie's an insanely good singer and she's got new stuff that has been coming out. And we've got some stuff we've been doing. You can sign up for our e-letter. It comes out just once a month. We don't have all kinds of crazy stuff in it.

We don't slam you with all kinds of stuff. We let you know about the patient of the month that we've treated, what's going on with music that we've done. And Gracie has a blog she's been doing on pain, which is an excellent blog.

You can see all that at PeterRosenberger.com. Take advantage of those things. And I think you'll find that it'll lift your heart. These are things we've learned the hard way. We've learned it in the trenches and we're still there.

But you know what? He's plowing that road for us. And we're not going to pass this snowplow. We're going to stay right here and trust him with all our heart and lean not on our own understanding. And that, my friends, is Truth Talk Live. This is Peter Rosenberger, PeterRosenberger.com. We'll see you next time.
Whisper: medium.en / 2025-01-23 22:39:11 / 2025-01-23 22:53:44 / 15

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