Beyond Sunday

Game On - Know Your Mission

King of Kings Church

In this Beyond Sunday episode, Dina, Peter, and Pastor Seth kick off the Game On series by connecting the story of King David with the unlikely heroism of Super Mario. They explore how God often chooses the overlooked for extraordinary purposes, reminding us that true greatness isn’t about talent or status, but about showing up with a heart ready for God’s call.

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Thanks for listening!

Speaker 1:

Welcome to Beyond Sunday, the King of Kings podcast, where we dive a little bit deeper into our sermon series and see what we're taking Beyond Sunday. My name is Dena Newsome and I have some great fun guests today. I don't know, guys, does that put the pressure on?

Speaker 2:

Yes, yeah, here's what I've learned about Sethh, flick and montana. This is peter bay of kim king's northwest. By the way, in my short time working with seth is if, if you say like, hey, it's gonna be a good day, he freezes like. I've seen him just stand in one spot for like four or five minutes at a time not speaking at all. Yeah, he doesn't even move. It's like I don't know if he's rebooting or what's going on. Have you ever seen the scared?

Speaker 3:

goats, or like you scare the goat and they just tip over. That's me in most social circumstances.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I've noticed that He'll make the goat sound, and then just tips. Oh yeah, check it out.

Speaker 3:

So like you do this thing right here and you go eh, that's a with goat sound.

Speaker 2:

Alright and goat impersonations.

Speaker 3:

It's a lot of goat boy from Saturday Night Live from back in the day, that's good stuff.

Speaker 1:

Chris Catan right.

Speaker 3:

I think it was Jim Brewer.

Speaker 1:

Oh, yeah, yeah. Yeah, Chris Catan was the monkey boy.

Speaker 2:

I don't remember what he was called. There was a lot of animal boys at the time.

Speaker 3:

I like that this is where we're going with our podcast conversation.

Speaker 1:

All right. So getting a little bit more on track, this week we started a new sermon series called Game On, where we are looking at some biblical truths through four iconic video games. So my question to open us up today is what video game from your childhood were you just killer at which one did you love to play?

Speaker 3:

All right, so old school stuff. Super Mario Brothers 1, I knew where all the level ups were, and my other one was Contra, because there's this like famous code that almost anybody who games knows and that is for those who listen up, up down down, left right, left right, b, a, b, a, select start if you're doing two players, but that's like deep cut stuff. But anybody who knows konami games. It's the same code like unlock code for all of them. Uh, but my favorite I think that I was really proficient at, was golden eye from james bond. With the n64 I would pick odd job and he would throw his hat and like take people out.

Speaker 2:

It was like the og fortnight wow yeah, so growing up, my parents were strictly against video games. The only time we were allowed was that we would rent an entire system on our birthday. Wow, go over to debbie's so it's sinful except on, or unacceptable, at least except on, a birthday right, and then you could play video games for 48 straight hours until the basement just smelled like one sweaty Cheeto, and then it would go back to Debbie's video and we wouldn't touch another game until my brother's birthday.

Speaker 2:

So this is like the Mardi Gras of video games for you, oh for sure, and so we're terrible at every video game ever created, but the ones we enjoy the most were Tecmo, super Bowl.

Speaker 3:

Ooh, yeah, that's a good one.

Speaker 2:

Not Tecmo Bowl, tecmo Super Bowl Super.

Speaker 1:

Bowl.

Speaker 2:

Ken Griffey Jr Baseball Mm-hmm. And then, yeah, I think Goldeneye was a big part of our, because you're a little older than me, but not much. It was a big part of our childhood.

Speaker 3:

It's huge.

Speaker 2:

Yeah. So if you haven't checked out Goldeneye, you will not be impressed when you look at it now, but for us it was as good as it gets.

Speaker 3:

Oh yeah, I dusted it off for the kids and I was like this is the best game you'll ever play. This is the first four-player game outside of Nintendo track and field. It's going to blow your mind. And I turned it on and they just kind of walked away.

Speaker 2:

It was a step up from Wolfenstein, but that's about it.

Speaker 1:

What console would you rent for your birthday?

Speaker 2:

Was it an.

Speaker 1:

Atari.

Speaker 2:

No, I'm not that old, it was Super Nintendo. Thanks, I'm not that old, yeah, when I started, it was Nintendo, and then we got up to Super Nintendo, but by the time N64 was out, we were no longer renting systems. You were owning.

Speaker 1:

No.

Speaker 2:

I've never owned a system in my life.

Speaker 1:

Still not to this day.

Speaker 2:

Well, we do have this thing called a Nex, and there's no controllers, it just does a whole thing off body movement, that's actually kind of cool, it is really cool, and so you can do home run, derby and tennis and driving and whatever, no controllers whatsoever. You must save so much money on batteries, oh my goodness. Yes, yes, although all the memories money we save on batteries it goes towards like the rc cars. It burns through a battery in like 12 minutes, so yeah, so I'm a wee bit older than you, gents wait.

Speaker 3:

Um, that was, and are you saying that we?

Speaker 1:

yeah, and when I grew up, the game system that we had was the Intellivision, which was like the first competitor to the Atari, which was the original OG game console, and my dad would not buy an Atari because he got a deal on an Intellivision and he was an accountant and very cheap, frugal, yeah, frugal, very frugal. But on the Intellivision I was a master at Qbert. That was my game, qbert.

Speaker 2:

I've seen Qbert on Wreck-It Ralph Yep.

Speaker 1:

Qbert was my favorite game and half of it was I liked. It was simple you just had to hop on the cubes and turn them the right color, but there was something very appealing about the sound that Q-Bert make, the blurp that it would make when you hopped on the cubes.

Speaker 2:

And I loved it.

Speaker 1:

My older brothers did not like Q-Bert, but I enjoyed it.

Speaker 2:

Was he the hopper? Yeah, so he did the hopping. He's a good guy. Yeah, he looked like a good guy. Yeah, he was. He looked like a buddy.

Speaker 3:

He looked like someone that would blurb.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, he's a blurber, for sure, but in the best way.

Speaker 1:

Yes, but with my kids. When we got video games, when my kids got older, Super Smash Brothers was the one that I could hold my own on that.

Speaker 2:

I don't know what I'm doing.

Speaker 1:

I just randomly move things around and hit the buttons.

Speaker 2:

Button mashing is the way to do it, but I can hold my own. We're going to hear about that one. I know In a couple weeks, and that'll be the first time I've ever even seen an image of that game.

Speaker 1:

Oh yeah, we might need to bring that here and play. I think you would be fun to play Super Smash Brothers with. Yeah or I could be like the announcer. Well, yeah.

Speaker 2:

There's a pause there.

Speaker 1:

I just think I would enjoy your excitement at trying to figure out the chaos. It's a little bit chaotic and I think that's an environment you thrive in there you go the Peter Bay story.

Speaker 3:

That's a ringing endorsement, figuring out the chaos. That should be the subtitle of your movie.

Speaker 1:

There you go. Not a book, just a movie.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that's right Straight to film. You couldn't read Straight to streaming.

Speaker 1:

You couldn't read Straight to streaming.

Speaker 2:

It would be inauthentic for it to be a book.

Speaker 1:

All right. So in our message series, Pastor Zach Zender is leading this and he opened up this week with Super Mario Brothers, which is a game that I honestly like. I know Mario and the story of Mario, but I have never really intently played Super Mario, so some of the game aspect was like I know the idea of the power-ups and stuff, but it was a little bit foreign to me. But it's a very popular long-running mini offshoot games from Super Mario Brothers and, like when he opened us up, this was a really great message to start with. What are you guys taking beyond Sunday from this opening game on message?

Speaker 3:

That hours and hours of my childhood were not wasted because I got all of the references, at least.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, similar to reading. I've probably only played that game a handful of times. I did see the movie but yeah, the way that he tied in just how normal person Mario is and I've not played the game, but I totally know who Mario is and connecting it to David of the Bible, yeah, it was a brilliant tie-in and actually because when I think of David I think of the heroics and then the terrible sins and man after God's own heart. I rarely remember he was just a dude watching sheep and not even brought out when Samuel asked for all the sons to come. So it was. It's cool to think of David in that way. And then it's humbling for myself too, like as I think my tendency, and probably a tendency of a lot of people, is to think down on myself. So God's got a plan for me, whether I feel great about it or I don't know what it is.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I really liked the tie-in between Mario just being normal and David just being a boy and us feeling like we don't have anything amazing to offer. That connection was what really spoke to me about this one. So one of the phrases that Pastor Zach said at the start was kind of God selects who the world rejects. The story that he—the Bible event that he was talking about was from 1 Samuel 16, and it's the anointing of David. So I don't know if one of you want to kind of summarize kind of what happens in that little story when Samuel goes to find the next king. But then Zach talked about how God selects who the world rejects. And how did that hit you guys?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, let me describe, describe it and then Seth you correct it.

Speaker 1:

This is a fun game. You'll be great.

Speaker 2:

And so there's this prophet. His name is Sammy.

Speaker 3:

No, I'm just kidding. No, that's fine.

Speaker 1:

I like it, samuel, oh yeah.

Speaker 2:

And God's like you're going to find the dude, the next king dude, and it's going to be over at this guy's house. And who was his name? The guy.

Speaker 3:

Jesse.

Speaker 2:

There you go.

Speaker 3:

And so then he goes over to Jesse's house and he's like bring out your sons, not his daughter, cause that'd be Jesse's girl and that would be a totally different reference whatsoever.

Speaker 2:

Brilliant stuff right here. And so then all these bros come out and Samuel was like, oh, not this guy, not this guy. And and Jesse's like well, this guy looks real good. Nope, not him either. And he keeps going and going. They're all nose. And then Sam stops and he's like what's going on? I was told I'm going to anoint somebody here. Where is he? You missing one? Like what, what happened? And then Jesse's like well, you got to check by the sheet. And then he's like well, you got to check by the sheet. And then he's like no, we're staying right here, don't sit down. I don't, you're not sitting, nobody's sitting down, no, water breaks. So then David comes, like I picture David walking. He's like and then he comes up, and then Sam's like whoa, that's the guy. And then he gets anointed.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, actually, that's really on point, nice yeah.

Speaker 1:

So how do you see this idea of David being the eighth one, you know, the one that Jesse wasn't even going to bring out, and Mario being just a normal plumber? How do you see this play out in your life or in our culture, where God selects who the world rejects?

Speaker 3:

Okay. So one thing that I think goes beyond Sunday here is God had been preparing David in the field and preparing his character in the field before he was even selected. So I mean one of the stories we know about David when he was in the field, before he was even selected. So I mean one of the stories we know about David when he was in the field is that he had already protected the entire flock from the attack of a bear and he was able to, with the hand of the Lord, go against that bear, take him out, and then a lion. So it's like, in each one of these things he's been tested in his character, tested in his resolve out in the field.

Speaker 3:

So we may not have seen what was going on with David. Jesse may not have seen what was going on with David. Samuel certainly didn't see what was going on with David, but God did, and he was crafting David's story to get him to that point. So it looked like obscurity, but actually that's only from our perspective, it's not from God's perspective, and I think that's what we can take from that is that there's a lot of obscurity that we think that we enter into being just normal Mario people.

Speaker 2:

And that's not really the case.

Speaker 3:

God's preparing us for something incredible.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that's great.

Speaker 1:

I really liked just the continued idea of David was just there. Like you said, he was already being prepared. This wasn't something he was asking for, but he was the one. Samuel was not even there, for the double portion Eliab that's my favorite phrase of the day is double portion, and I just want Zach to walk around and say it with his arms like this the whole time Double portion.

Speaker 3:

Like he's beefy. Yeah, double portion.

Speaker 1:

That's going to be the phrase I now try to work into conversation. I love it, but he looked like what Samuel was imagining a king was going to look like, but that's not who God had selected. So Pastor Zach kind of moved on and talked about sometimes your mission starts well before others can see you. Can you speak to a time that maybe you've seen this? Either a—words are hard today.

Speaker 3:

Words are hard.

Speaker 1:

Another biblical reference or something in the world that you've experienced?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, being a teacher and then working in kids ministry for many years and, dina, you came from kids ministry as well. I think we got to witness it, even when we didn't know we were witnessing it with these kids who, some of them, are really attentive and they want to please you, and some of them it's like, well, what are you doing today? And, regardless of their temperament, what God does with them as they grow up, and the kid who just always looks like they're messing around, and now they're leading a church it's an incredible thing to see how God has fashioned and honoring that. We get to be a part of it to some degree, more so for their parents and grandparents, who have done that work and that reminder of, regardless of our temperament, regardless of how goofy we are, regardless of how well you think that kid is listening, god is crafting and working on that kid in that moment. So I got to see that in teaching and kids ministry.

Speaker 3:

And I would agree, having worked in a church, with a school and having had been there for a really long time. It was amazing to see young men who I knew when they started in high school and then getting a chance to do premarital counseling with them and to see them get married and have their child baptized and become like full on contributing members. Deep disciples of Jesus is great Biblically, though. I mean. We can even look at a character like Ruth, who you know a lot of bad things were happening in her life.

Speaker 3:

She lost her husband, she lost her brother-in-law, she lost her father-in-law and was basically just going to wander around with Naomi. But then, you know, as she was being prepared, she went to go glean in the fields. Happened to be Boaz's field and God was cultivating that relationship the whole time. Boaz, and then eventually, ruth, because of the Kinsman-Redeemer relationship, came together who then had Obed who then? Had Jesse who then? Had David, and so it's kind of neat to see the way that God had crafted.

Speaker 3:

Ruth and her character told that story in relative obscurity for us to know about, but now she's a part of Jesus's genealogy and David is in there and Jesus is in there.

Speaker 2:

Because of that, yeah, the Bible is riddled with people who didn't think that they were the right person. I mean all of the disciples. You have Moses, like I can't talk to him over and, over and over again. It's it's god saying no, I chose you I love that.

Speaker 3:

Do you want to know what the hebrew actually is there?

Speaker 2:

what is?

Speaker 3:

when he rejects the, when he rejects god, he's like my tongue's too fat, isn't that awesome? Like hey, I got a message for you.

Speaker 2:

I'm sorry, my tongue's too fat that is awesome, like he got stung by a bee right on the tongue the bee of the spirit that would be. That would be tough, though, if you had a real fat tongue that's how I would sound yeah, that's yeah, but over and over and over again. People who do not feel qualified, and that reminder that that god um doesn't call the qualified people. He qualifies each of us as we're called, into his mission field.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I really, like Pastor Zach said, the world may overlook you, but God sees you, no matter where you are. And I think of for years, 10 years running I went and did mission work in Hong Kong every summer and did VBS and I never knew who our team was going to be. We would take youth from our team, like high schoolers and sometimes college kids from our church and from other area churches, and I never knew who our team was going to be. But I always knew, once we came together, god had been working in them and how they were going to be the right part of our team or just what we needed when we got to Hong Kong and then how they were going to be the right part of our team, or just what we needed when we got to Hong Kong and then how they were going to influence the kids that we got to share the gospel with over there. That it was always the right person for the job, even when I would be like, oh, come on, this kid. Like, really, this kid doesn't know how to speak, he didn't have a fat tongue, but he never says more than two words at a time. And we'd get to Hong Kong and it was a totally different ballgame. He was speaking very eloquently, or people who were really shy were really outgoing, or we needed those shy people to relate to some of the kids, and it was just always how God put that all together, just what we needed, okay.

Speaker 1:

So Zach talked about four points relating to our mission. So, talking about mission, and I just want to know kind of how you relate to these four points. So, number one your mission may start in obscurity, which we kind of touched base on. Number two your mission is less about your highlights and more about your heart. Three, your mission is fueled by his spirit. And four, your mission starts where you are, not when you're ready, but when you show up. And, like I said, one of those that really spoke to you, or how do you relate to those regarding your life mission?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, interestingly, I think most times in my life I would have answers for all of these, except for point three, and right now I feel like point three is where God is impressing a lot right now, in that moving in the spirit, and part of that is because I truly believe that the fruit of the spirit is foreign to this world.

Speaker 2:

And so when people see someone who is suffering with cancer and they're joyful, they can't understand it. Or they see someone who has peace in a horrendously tough situation, how can this even be where they see kids who have joy, um, who live in a third world country, and and so I, the fruit of the spirit, living with that um, not because, like I'm trying really hard to do that, but because god gives it to his kids and then we work to grow it. I think that's been a big one for me is to know the Holy Spirit dwells in me and has given me his fruit and it matters. And for the people outside it does make an impact because they're seeing God and his love through the way I get to live.

Speaker 3:

I'd say I would put number one and number four together that there's a starting in obscurity and you're still called to show up, and I think there's way too many people that they start in obscurity and then they self-select to stay there because they're too, intimidated.

Speaker 3:

They think that there's no way that they could be used for something important or engaging or valuable. And so, rather than coming out of the pasture to the calling, they just kind of stick around and they would rather dwell in obscurity than serve the Lord, because it's scary and it takes a lot of courage. David could have just stayed out there with the sheep and nobody would have batted in an eye, because that was his job. It was comfortable for him, he knew what to expect. It might have been dirty, but he knew exactly what to expect day to day.

Speaker 3:

But instead he responded to the call to come and submit himself to Samuel, and Samuel then was able to meet that with a grander calling than what he had ever experienced before. And I just wonder how many people within our church, how many people listening to this podcast, are being called to something greater. But right now they've said no because they're afraid, and I guess I would just want to encourage that anybody that is listening to this right now. You know you're called to do something. Somebody needs to hear this. I don't know who it is. Stop saying no and start showing up. Show up first with your heart, allow that to be cleansed by the Lord, to take away all of that fear, and then show up and just wait and see what he's going to do.

Speaker 2:

It could be scary.

Speaker 3:

It will be scary, but it's going to be worth it, and it was worth it for David.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, when he talked about all you need to do is show up, that's the one that really spoke to me. There's a I'm a sports movie fanatic, like I really enjoy sports movies, and there's a really bad movie from I don't know early two thousands about um, it's called hardball and it's Keanu Reeves and he's like a gambling addict and gets roped into coaching this and it's based on a true story.

Speaker 1:

That's why it stuck out to me. But he gets roped into coaching this baseball team from the projects and one of the things that he says to them at the end of the movie is thank you for showing up. I'm blown away by your ability to show up. And that line always stuck with me because it didn't matter if they were, you know, winning the games or playing their best effort. They were facing hardships outside of the field and they were still showing up for the team. And that's what I thought of when Zach started talking about showing up. I was like God is blown away by our ability to just show up and let Him use us, but we just have to be willing to let Him direct us. From that and that really jumped out at me.

Speaker 1:

Okay, so when Pastor Zach was kind of wrapping up his message, he did a little take on some numbers in the Bible. So I wrote it down so I could make sure and get it right. So I'm going to read it. And then I just want to know, like, what do you guys have to say about this, or what extra do you know about it, or anything In the Bible. Number six is for man, for sin, and all of us have a story of six In the Bible. The number seven is for completion, or perfection, and all of us have been made complete by the perfect, complete grace of Jesus Christ In the Bible. The number eight is new beginnings. What if the phrase I am number eight is a beautiful thing Because your story is not over? If you've had six chapters of sin and then been redeemed in seven, your chapter eight is not over. Your story is not done.

Speaker 3:

How does that speak to you guys? Well, a lot of that tie into the numbers when it comes to like theology actually has to go back also to the days of creation and then fall and redemption, and so there are six literal days of creation. God rested on the seventh day and then after that rest is where we jacked it up, and it's after that that Christ brings the new day, based off of his resurrection, and so that's one of the reasons why we celebrate Sunday as you know, not only Easter, because it happened three days after there was crucifixion on a Friday, but because that would be like an eighth day recreation, but even like an old school architecture.

Speaker 3:

when you go into an older church, like a Catholic church or an older Lutheran church, you go and you look at the font and the majority of baptismal fonts are created as eight sides on the outside of it.

Speaker 1:

Have you seen that before, where it's like an octagon? Yes, but I've never thought about it that way. You should see Peter and I's face right now.

Speaker 3:

We're both like blown away by this knowledge, if you look at older baptismal fonts, they usually have eight sides, and that's because this is an old theology, a good theology about being recreated due to baptism, and I just think because he had talked about that as well and we had just had baptism. Sunday here, not too long ago so there have been many people that had their opportunity in a font of sorts or cistern, or whatever it is that we can call it, but either way it's baptism and it's connecting to the recreation that we get to experience in Jesus.

Speaker 2:

Wow, yeah, I am a new creation because of Christ. Yeah, I am a new creation because of Christ and my incredible achievements don't define me and my incredible disappointments don't disqualify me. Because of Christ I'm a new creation. So that whole explanation of the eight side, I have noticed that with baptismals I had no idea why I never knew that. With baptismals I had no idea why I never knew that connection. So that's a powerful picture. So next time I'm in an old school church and I see that baptismal that's a beautiful. I am number eight. Like here you go, here you go again.

Speaker 2:

I think an interesting thing with our walk as Christiansians is, unlike a book, we kind of cycle back at times and we live back in the earlier chapters and, um, like we've forgotten what happened in chapter seven, when christ died for us and paid for the price, and we don't live like chapter eight and onward christians. So that that's a, that's part of that picture, that that redemption, like I, I can mess up, I can blow it, but the forgiveness doesn't go away like what christ did, even if I'm living like a one through six, um, christian. Do you know what that just made me think, oh, all right, what do you got, because I'm saying like, just like mediocre stuff, and then he's making this stuff great.

Speaker 3:

No, no, you're talking about like one through six, one through seven. But what about Acts 1.8, which is what we're called now to bring the gospel to Jerusalem, judea, samaria and to the ends of the earth? And so now, not only are we the ones who are redeemed, and in our number eight kind of, you know, like identity, but in our acts one, eight, calling, we're now called out of obscurity and into service for the Lord, and we've got a very specific target, that's sweet yeah.

Speaker 1:

It's about knowing your mission. That was kind of the theme for this one this week's thing. So what are your final takeaways from this message about Super Mario in our Game On series?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I mean I'm excited for the other three games, none of which that I've played hardly at all. But I love the imagery and the fun of games and then connecting it to God's word in a powerful way.

Speaker 3:

I love looking into the breadth of David and his character, because there is so much to his experience that every regular Mario type person, mustachioed or not, uh, could connect to.

Speaker 2:

Because there is early David who is?

Speaker 3:

impetuous and just does what he's called to do. There's the David who's a musician, who sits in the court of Saul after he's anointed to be the next king. He's still called to serve the current king. There's the David who acts crazy with the Philistines and hangs out with his enemies for a really long time.

Speaker 2:

There's the.

Speaker 3:

David who actually becomes the king. There's the David who mourns the death of a child.

Speaker 2:

I mean.

Speaker 3:

The character of David is incredibly complex, and so I'll give a shout out now for those who would love to see a little bit more behind the scenes on this, If you haven't seen House of David yet it is an excellent program. It does a very good job of at least telling the biblical story of David's life.

Speaker 2:

Season one is out on Amazon Prime.

Speaker 3:

I don't work for Amazon, I don't get sponsorships or anything, but the eight episodes that they do have really help bring this story to life. And yes, they add artistic flair in this. But the whole point is not to make it the Bible. The whole point is to show you this TV show, introduce you to a character and then make you say wait.

Speaker 2:

Is that in the Bible?

Speaker 3:

And then you go back and you read the actual word of God that's living and active, and we have number eight stories because of the Jesus, of the Bible, so I would definitely suggest people go take a look at House of David too.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I'm excited just looking into more of the story of David, because I feel like most of the time when we talk about David, we talk about one window of his life and that's the story that people remember. That resonates them and they don't ever look at the whole piece together. So that's an exciting piece of this for me. What really stuck with me, the final takeaway for me, was when Zach said the world crowns talent and God crowns character, and that kind of tied it all together for me, because here's David, who has this incredible heart and becomes a hero because of it quote, unquote hero and Mario, who has an incredible heart, who chooses to do the right thing and save people and help people even when it's hard, and becomes a hero. And how we can be the hero in our own story when we discover our mission and let God work within that. But it comes with God crowning our character and having the right heart and having the right character with it, and that spoke a lot to me.

Speaker 1:

So I would be remiss if I didn't mention that we are giving away a few Nintendo Switch 2 consoles, if you're listening and you would like to invite a friend to come and join you to experience this message series. You can go to our website, kingofkingsorg, slash game on and you can invite a friend through the website and you'll be entered to win one of the consoles that we'll be giving away at the end of the month. We're going to give away one at each campus. It'll be an exciting time. So next week we'll dive into week two of this message.

Speaker 1:

So, peter, I just feel like you always close us out now, when you're here.

Speaker 2:

Okay, yeah.

Speaker 1:

So what would you like to do for this one?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, we're going to do a Barry White closeout, so if anyone wants to add to it, they can.

Speaker 3:

Anyone at all.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, if anyone in this room wants to add to that, they can. So here we go. Hey there, you heard that message on Sunday, I know you did. You heard about God's love for you. Are you a little David? Are you? Are you number 8? Well, if so, sunday's done, monday's, here, go get it baby live life like Monday after Sunday I'm done nothing better is going to come after that crushed it.

Speaker 3:

Live life like Monday After Sunday. Wait, yeah, I'm done. There's nothing better that's going to come after that Crushed it.

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