It Is Written Canada

Journeys of Hope

Three Angels Broadcasting Network

Program transcript

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Series Code: IIWC

Program Code: IIWC202112S


00:00 >> Welcome to It Is Written
00:01 Canada.
00:02 Thank you for joining us
00:03 downtown on the east side of
00:05 the city of Vancouver where
00:07 there is a lot of personal and
00:09 social need, desperation and
00:10 homelessness.
00:12 Our special guest is Anke
00:14 Jenkins who, after being
00:16 diagnosed with cancer at the
00:18 age of 40, and halfway through
00:20 her chemotherapy treatments,
00:22 decided to go on the adventure
00:24 of a lifetime.
00:26 >> And that decision changed
00:27 everything, not only for Anke
00:29 and her children, but also for
00:31 people on the other side of
00:33 the world who she hadn't
00:35 met yet.
00:36 Anke, we are looking forward
00:38 to hearing you share your
00:39 journey with us.
00:41 >> Thank you for having me and
00:42 letting me share my story.
00:44 [gentle guitar music]
01:07 [people chattering]
01:18 [music continues]
01:43 [VOICEOVER] Hi, my name is Anke
01:45 and I am a survivor and
01:47 a missionary at heart.
01:51 >> So, Anke, you were
01:52 originally from Germany
01:54 then you came to Canada.
01:56 Tell us about that and why did
01:57 you come to Canada?
01:59 >> Yes, I was about 19 years
02:02 old, after I finished school,
02:04 high school in Germany, I
02:06 always had the travel bug and
02:08 I did a South Pacific trip
02:10 which I also included a stop
02:12 over in Canada and since I
02:14 have distant relatives here in
02:16 Canada, I have second cousins
02:17 in the Okanagan, Canada, since
02:20 I was a little child was
02:21 always a big dream.
02:23 I'd never really been on an
02:24 airplane, I'd never been to
02:25 North America until I was 16
02:29 and so that was-- at 19 I got
02:32 the chance to do a big trip
02:35 and Canada was one of my stops.
02:38 >> As a little girl I would
02:39 see and hear about
02:41 missionaries going to Africa
02:43 and helping people in need.
02:45 It touched my heart deeply and
02:48 had a big impact on me.
02:50 I wanted to be part of the
02:52 solution, not just a bystander
02:55 to all the human misery.
02:58 I wanted to give others hope.
03:01 When I was about 12 years old,
03:03 I started thinking I would
03:05 love to become a medical nurse
03:07 and travel to places like
03:09 Ethiopia or Kenya to help
03:11 people in need.
03:13 At the time, the famine in
03:15 Ethiopia was raging and
03:17 consuming so many lives.
03:19 I still remember watching the
03:20 news and seeing countless
03:22 faces filled with pain,
03:24 hunger, and despair.
03:28 [RENÉ] Anke, you've always had
03:31 an interest in helping
03:33 other people.
03:35 Can you tell us about that?
03:38 [ANKE] Yeah, I believe that
03:39 sort of from very little on,
03:41 I've been a caregiver.
03:43 I love looking after, from
03:46 starting as a little child,
03:47 animals to people to, just--
03:52 A lot of people say "a heart
03:53 of gold," just because I
03:55 really loved serving other
03:56 people so when I knew my
03:58 cousin was a nurse, I was
03:59 intrigued, "Maybe I want to
04:01 become a nurse," or being in
04:02 church and having read all
04:04 those missionary stories.
04:06 I was intrigued by African
04:08 missionary stories.
04:10 I wanted to travel and, at the
04:12 same time, do something good
04:15 'cause, you know, from Sabbath
04:16 School on we were taught, you
04:18 know, you need to help other
04:20 people and, you know, at that
04:22 time, sort of around 1984, or
04:26 even earlier, you know, a lot
04:28 of famines in the world so we
04:29 saw a lot of those images and
04:30 it always really, really
04:32 touched my heart to see that
04:34 there's so many people in need
04:36 that I couldn't really relate
04:38 to because I was born in a very
04:41 privileged part of this world.
04:46 >> As the years went by, my
04:48 desire to help those around me
04:50 never left.
04:51 But I got busy with life.
04:54 I became a wife and a mother
04:56 and I put all my energy into
04:58 raising my family.
05:02 >> It just wasn't my
05:04 focus anymore.
05:06 I was always helping people
05:07 along the way, there was
05:08 people at church that needed
05:10 help, I took in a lady that I
05:13 met coming into our church
05:15 when I was a greeter at the
05:16 church, she came off
05:18 the street.
05:19 I was the one that was able to
05:22 build trust with people and
05:24 love on them and kind of met
05:27 them where they're at.
05:29 And so I think God maybe gave
05:31 me a bit of a dry run for what
05:33 was to come because I didn't
05:34 know yet.
05:36 She turned her life around.
05:37 She came from addiction, she
05:39 came from, yeah, from a
05:42 really, really hurtful past
05:44 and just to give her shelter
05:46 and let her live with us and
05:48 she then had the desire
05:50 to change.
05:52 And that is the big difference
05:54 is when people have the desire
05:55 to change 'cause I can be
05:56 there and help people, but
05:58 people do have to do the
06:00 change, we can just
06:01 assist them.
06:02 >> You love to help others.
06:05 What led you to the
06:06 next level?
06:09 >> In May of 2010, my world as
06:12 I knew it suddenly came
06:14 crashing down.
06:16 Doctors diagnosed me with
06:18 advanced uterine cancer.
06:21 I was devastated.
06:24 Was this the end of my life?
06:27 I had so many things I wanted
06:29 to do, so many places I wanted
06:31 to visit.
06:33 I asked God, "Will I be able"
06:36 "to see my children grow up?"
06:38 "Will I be able to travel to"
06:40 "Africa to do Your work?"
06:42 "God, I know You're there."
06:45 "I know You love me."
06:47 "Show me the way"
06:48 "and give me hope."
06:51 >> Here I was at 40 years old,
06:53 having two children that still
06:55 desperately needed their mom.
06:57 At this time I was a single
07:00 mom and I was always healthy.
07:05 I hardly ever got a cold, we
07:06 don't have a cancer history in
07:08 our families and I got
07:11 diagnosed with uterine cancer.
07:13 That walk into the doctors
07:15 office when they tell you,
07:16 "Yeah, I'm sorry to tell you,"
07:17 "but you have cancer."
07:19 I never thought I would ever,
07:21 ever be that one out of five
07:24 people or two out of five, I
07:26 guess it is now, that would be
07:28 told that so that obviously
07:30 shocked me and my first
07:35 thought, ironically enough was
07:37 like, "Wow, I'm going to die."
07:40 "What am I gonna do?"
07:43 "Is this the life I want"
07:45 "to lead?"
07:46 "What is my life like?"
07:48 "What is happening?"
07:50 Obviously my first concern was
07:51 for the children, they're not
07:52 gonna have a mom around to
07:54 guide them.
07:56 It wasn't so much about that
07:57 I'm going to die because
07:59 eventually we all will.
08:00 But I thought it's a little
08:01 early, there's still things
08:04 that I would like to help
08:06 with, especially raising my
08:08 children, but also I never
08:11 went to Africa.
08:13 I remember that so clearly.
08:15 It's like, I've never set out
08:17 to do what I really, really,
08:18 really had the desire to do.
08:22 So after I was diagnosed with
08:23 cancer, I obviously had to
08:26 stop life a little bit as I
08:27 knew it as I needed to go to
08:30 some treatments and-- which,
08:33 thank God to the place we live
08:35 in, medical care is readily
08:38 available, which, again, I
08:40 learned later on in life that
08:41 that is not a privilege that
08:43 many people have.
08:45 >> Throughout my surgery,
08:46 chemo, and radiation, I knew
08:50 God was right there beside me,
08:52 giving me the strength I
08:54 needed and hope of the future.
08:59 >> And about halfway through my
09:00 chemo of my only, thank God,
09:02 three chemo's, the children
09:05 brought home a notice or I got
09:07 an email at the time that they
09:10 are planning a trip to visit a
09:12 school that they had
09:14 established a relationship
09:16 with and send donations and
09:18 things to Kenya.
09:21 And when I saw that, I was
09:22 like, "I'm going."
09:26 "I'm going," like "they're"
09:28 "going to Africa."
09:29 "I have to go with these"
09:31 "children, with my kids,"
09:33 'cause they're qualified, my
09:34 son was in grade 12 and my
09:36 daughter was in grade 9 at
09:38 that time and so my kids
09:40 qualified to go and I'm like,
09:41 "Well, they're going, but"
09:42 "I'm going."
09:44 And it's not typical of
09:46 schools to allow parents to go
09:47 as chaperones, but that I knew
09:50 the person that was in charge
09:52 of the program so I approached
09:54 him and I said, "Listen,"
09:56 "I have to go on this trip,"
09:57 "I want to go with you."
09:59 And since it was their first
10:00 trip and I have some travel
10:02 experience and they knew me,
10:04 they trusted me and said,
10:06 "OK, we'll make an exception"
10:08 "and you can come with us"
10:11 "on this trip to Mombasa."
10:14 >> God's loving hand continued
10:16 to guide me.
10:18 Within a year of my diagnosis,
10:20 I found myself in Africa with
10:22 my kids helping a school
10:24 in Kenya.
10:26 God kept gently guiding me.
10:28 He led me to my dear friend,
10:30 Hemed Mukui.
10:32 Through him, God gave me the
10:34 opportunity to bring quality
10:36 education and hope to
10:38 Kaliang'ombe, a village near
10:41 Mombasa.
10:42 >> So, Anke, tell us what your
10:45 introduction to Africa
10:46 was like.
10:49 >> I had really no idea of
10:50 what to expect in the real
10:53 world, I've seen pictures, I
10:55 read about it, you cannot
10:56 prepare for such things.
10:59 You land in Mombasa and chaos
11:02 starts, but we were welcomed
11:05 by the school that hosted us.
11:09 We came with, there were eight
11:11 kids and three adults.
11:14 We were welcomed at the
11:16 airport with smiling faces,
11:18 with banners, with song, with
11:20 dance, with just a huge, huge
11:24 warm, warm welcome and it was
11:25 just overpowering after flying
11:27 for 32 hours.
11:29 You're overtired, you're just,
11:31 you're done, all you want is a
11:32 bed and you come there, it's
11:34 34 degrees and humid and you
11:35 get off the plane and there's
11:37 this-- there was, I would say,
11:39 about 500 students from that
11:41 school that welcomed us and it
11:43 was, like, the most
11:45 overwhelming-- we were all
11:47 crying, I mean we were tired,
11:48 we would have cried at
11:49 anything, but that was an
11:51 emotional breakout of like,
11:54 "Oh my goodness, these kids,"
11:56 "these people are really"
11:57 "welcoming us with open arms."
11:59 So it was a very
12:00 over-powering, overwhelming
12:02 kind of an introduction and
12:04 then, of course, we started
12:06 going to the school and it was
12:07 a school that was in the
12:09 outskirts of Mombasa in a very
12:11 poverty-stricken slum area
12:14 called Changamwe and the reason
12:16 we went is 'cause the school
12:18 had donated money to build a
12:19 parameter wall around to keep
12:23 bad people out of school.
12:25 So the school that we were
12:26 going with donated over
12:27 $100,000 to build this wall so
12:29 we were there to make sure
12:31 that these funds were going
12:33 for that purpose.
12:34 So we were introduced into the
12:36 classrooms, we went to every
12:37 classroom and that's when my
12:38 eyes were opened.
12:41 Black boards were very rare.
12:44 Materials were not there.
12:46 Kids in classes, 100 kids, one
12:48 teacher, just sitting on top
12:52 of each other in heat, but
12:54 desperate for knowledge.
12:56 I will say developing
12:57 countries are full of
12:58 high contrasts.
13:01 That's when I just fell in
13:03 love with it and it's like...
13:06 I don't know what it is and I
13:07 didn't know at that time, but
13:09 I want to come back.
13:11 And during that time the one
13:13 most important thing that I
13:15 got out of it was I met
13:17 Hemed Mukui.
13:19 He is a local Kenyan man that
13:22 is, I would say, the most
13:24 amazing human I have ever met
13:29 in this world yet.
13:32 When I met him on this first
13:33 trip, we talked a lot about
13:38 reaching out and what kind of
13:39 projects does he do and what
13:41 is his work and his selfless
13:44 work with children that are
13:47 handicapped and families that
13:49 are just struggling and how he
13:51 worked with it and within the
13:52 system and how many things
13:54 he had done.
13:55 It was like an instant--
13:57 I fell in love with this person
13:59 because he was just the most
14:00 amazing human.
14:03 So the next step was I got
14:04 back and reflected and
14:06 kept on--
14:08 it just didn't leave me alone.
14:10 And so when I talked to Hemed,
14:12 I said, "Can I come for"
14:13 "the summer?"
14:15 "Can I bring the kids?"
14:16 "Is there somewhere I can"
14:18 "be helpful in?"
14:21 And so he said, "Well, yes,"
14:23 "there is."
14:24 "I do have a place that is"
14:26 "just outside Mombasa that is"
14:29 "a small community where"
14:32 "there's very little good"
14:37 "education, children are"
14:38 "roaming on the streets."
14:40 So out of their own
14:41 initiative, not having any
14:43 funds or any means, but their
14:45 desire to help their own
14:46 community, two women put
14:48 themselves together under a
14:49 tree and said, "Invite the"
14:51 "children to come."
14:53 And even though they had no
14:54 education much themselves,
14:56 they would read to them where
14:57 they could, they would teach
14:59 them the alphabet, they would
15:00 teach them songs so that the
15:02 kids didn't have to go into
15:04 Mombasa for begging, the kids
15:05 didn't have to roam and the
15:07 kids were more prepared to
15:09 actually go into a school
15:10 system by the time they go at
15:11 the age of five.
15:14 And so he said, "They're"
15:16 "really, really eager to have"
15:17 "change, but they just don't"
15:18 "have the means to really"
15:20 "make the change that they"
15:22 "want to see."
15:25 So that conversation happened
15:26 over like six months, by the
15:28 time it was around Christmas,
15:30 I remember driving to church
15:32 with my kids, at that time
15:34 they are 18 and-- well 15 and
15:39 17 actually.
15:40 So driving to church and we
15:42 kept talking about Kenya, it
15:43 had impacted them as well, it
15:45 had changed their perspectives.
15:48 I just said, "You know, how"
15:50 "would you feel, guys, if we"
15:51 "moved to Kenya for a year?"
15:55 And they were like, "Oh, Mom,"
15:57 "you're crazy."
16:00 I'm like, "Well, it'll be an"
16:03 "experience of a lifetime."
16:06 So I went into church, walked
16:08 into church, saw a good friend
16:09 of mine and I immediately went
16:10 to her and said, "How would"
16:12 "you like to babysit my house"
16:13 "for a year?"
16:15 And she's like, "Sure..."
16:19 I'm like, "Awesome!"
16:20 "'Cause I'm going to Kenya."
16:24 >> Seeing those young children
16:25 with their beautiful faces,
16:27 those inquisitive eyes.
16:29 I knew I had found a new
16:31 purpose in my life.
16:33 God opened so many doors
16:36 and kept me going.
16:38 I realized my life was coming
16:39 full circle, back to my
16:41 childhood and back to my
16:43 dreams of helping others and
16:45 giving them hope.
16:48 >> I had no education around
16:51 any of this kind of
16:53 fund-raising or charity work,
16:54 I had no experience.
16:57 I really-- you would be--
16:59 I would be the last person
17:01 somebody'd pick from an
17:02 organization to go like, "Go"
17:03 "and do this project for us,"
17:04 'cause I had nothing to show
17:06 for, but the one thing I had
17:08 is the desire
17:10 to go and just to do it.
17:14 And that's when things were
17:18 brought to me.
17:20 God opened doors, God brought
17:22 me the right people.
17:27 [beeping]
17:33 [exchange greetings in Swahili]
17:43 [HEMED] How are you?
17:44 [ANKE] We're doing well, we're
17:45 doing well, winter is upon us
17:47 here pretty soon, but
17:48 we're managing.
17:50 So, Hemed, tell me how are the
17:51 kids doing at school?
17:54 >> Uh, they're doing-- the
17:55 kids are doing really well,
17:57 they're doing amazingly well.
17:59 We're thankful that they are
18:01 safe despite the challenges
18:04 that we've had with COVID.
18:06 The kids are safe, we're
18:08 thankful for that.
18:09 >> Um...moving forward in the
18:11 next few months we need to
18:13 just up a little bit of our
18:15 fund raising so we can keep
18:17 providing for the security at
18:18 the school as well as the
18:20 electricity issue that
18:22 has come up.
18:24 >> That is what I have for
18:25 now, yeah.
18:27 >> Hemed, yeah, it was great
18:28 to catch up, I'm glad we
18:30 covered those points...
18:33 >> I want to thank you so much
18:34 for the meeting.
18:35 It was really nice seeing you
18:37 and getting connected.
18:39 >> Thanks, Hemed.
18:40 Thanks for everything, see you
18:41 next week and we'll catch up.
18:43 Be safe until then.
18:45 [Anke speaking Swahili]
18:47 >> Thank you.
18:49 Appreciate very much.
18:52 >> You started off with one
18:53 tree and the kids were under
18:55 the tree and where is
18:57 it today?
18:58 >> So that tree was and has
19:00 become very significant.
19:01 So the tree is on the donated
19:02 land that we got donated from
19:04 the elder of the village to
19:06 build the school on, that's
19:07 where the women gathered.
19:09 And it was always very
19:10 profound because that tree, at
19:13 that time still a bit smaller,
19:15 was the root, the beginning.
19:18 And it grew, you know.
19:19 So if you water it and if you
19:21 look after it, it will develop
19:24 into a big tree and it gives
19:25 you all kinds of blessings.
19:26 It gives you shade, its
19:28 strength, it has to have
19:29 roots, it has to have all
19:31 these things and so the tree
19:32 really became this icon for us
19:35 that, you know, we're grounded
19:38 here, we will grow together
19:40 and when we put things
19:42 together and care so Jipe Moyo
19:44 became then that around the
19:49 tree and Jipe Moyo in Swahili
19:52 means "give yourself hope"
19:57 and that was then also it came
19:58 from there, that tree wasn't
20:00 looking so great when I was
20:01 there first and then, you
20:03 know, we watered it and it
20:05 became a little bit bigger and
20:07 it just developed and so did
20:08 Jipe Moyo 'cause then there was
20:11 that hope and the tree is
20:13 still there.
20:15 What I learned is what they
20:18 taught me as well is when I
20:21 got sick I was really
20:24 desperate, I was sad, I was
20:27 desperate to do something,
20:29 either get healthy or if then
20:30 if I had some time left I
20:32 wanted-- I had hope that I
20:34 could still do something that
20:36 had meaning and could
20:37 help others.
20:38 So through my devastation and
20:44 my hurt, I had hope and from
20:49 hope it came into the-- it--
20:52 the reconstruction of my life,
20:54 like, the restoration of my
20:56 health, of my mental health
21:00 and so when I got into Kenya,
21:02 I saw that desperate poverty,
21:05 I saw the longing and the hope
21:08 that their children would have
21:09 a better future and I was able
21:13 to go with the help of so many
21:16 and help in that journey of
21:19 hope and restore
21:23 faith in them.
21:25 And that continued with a very
21:28 good friend of mine whose
21:30 little boy died, Sam, he died
21:31 at two years old, very
21:33 suddenly, unexpected,
21:35 devastating as moms or anybody
21:37 could imagine.
21:39 And I had just come back from
21:40 a trip to Kenya so I stayed
21:41 for a year, went back, and
21:43 then kept going back and forth
21:44 to Kenya and they came to me.
21:48 I was on the plane to Canada
21:50 and when I arrived I heard
21:52 the news that he had
21:53 passed away.
21:54 I was heartbroken.
21:56 And so I went into the door
21:58 and knocked and of course we
22:01 cried and the first thing she
22:03 said to me is, "You just came"
22:05 "from Africa."
22:06 And I'm like, "Yeah."
22:08 "You know, we already been"
22:09 "thinking about you."
22:11 "We would like to build"
22:13 "classrooms in honour of Sam"
22:15 "because he could never go"
22:18 "and we would like to have"
22:19 "his life live on for"
22:22 "children that have not got"
22:24 "the opportunity to go to"
22:26 "school so we want Sam's"
22:28 "legacy to be in Africa."
22:32 God entrusted into their
22:34 hearts, like, Sam is not here,
22:39 but Mom and Dad wanted his
22:41 legacy to live on and do
22:43 something in that grief that
22:46 will help other children.
22:48 So again, it was out of
22:49 desperation and to this hope
22:51 to give other kids a bit of a
22:53 better life and education
22:55 which then gives you back into
22:57 the restoration.
22:59 So it's been this beautiful
23:00 wave of sadness, upset, to
23:03 hope, to restoration and it's
23:05 just a continuous flow of that
23:07 and it's like we learn in that
23:09 desperation and then in that
23:11 hope we come back to life and
23:13 then we're restored and then
23:14 we can pass that on again.
23:16 And those children that are
23:18 going through Jipe Moyo, the
23:20 school, for the last ten years
23:23 now have turned out very
23:26 different to the children
23:27 around the area.
23:29 They do better at school
23:31 because we give them love
23:33 first, we respect them, we
23:36 trust, they trust us.
23:38 So once you have their hearts,
23:41 then the rest is easy.
23:43 The rest is reading, writing.
23:46 I was able to create with
23:48 everybody involved an
23:50 environment where kids were
23:52 safe, were loved, and where
23:54 education and learning
23:57 could happen.
23:58 It was a child-centred and not
24:01 curriculum-centred education.
24:04 It was never about me.
24:06 It's never about that,
24:08 it's always about what...
24:10 what did this change,
24:12 the start of something
24:13 different, the beginning, the
24:15 do it now, the begin it now,
24:17 what was the impact to those
24:18 people, that community?
24:20 There is something I took very
24:23 serious and therefore tried to
24:28 live it out and it's in
24:31 Deuteronomy 15, verse 11.
24:35 "Since there will never cease"
24:37 "to be some in need on the"
24:39 "earth, I therefore command"
24:41 "you, open your hand to the"
24:43 "poor and needy neighbours"
24:45 "in your land."
24:47 >> And it's very fitting that
24:49 you are now working here in the
24:52 east side of Vancouver where
24:55 there's a lot of desperation,
24:57 a lot of need, a lot of
24:58 homelessness and addiction.
25:00 >> So after coming back from
25:02 Kenya, the need and the desire
25:04 to do something meaningful
25:06 even in a work situation is
25:09 still really strong and I was
25:12 able to join the First United
25:14 Church in their ministry
25:16 outreach in the downtown
25:18 east side.
25:20 ♪♪
25:21 >> It wasn't the path I
25:23 envisioned as a child, but
25:25 through my own suffering,
25:27 despair, followed by healing
25:29 and hope of a future for my
25:31 life, I learned to lean on God
25:34 and trust Him.
25:36 God give me what He had
25:38 prepared for me all along.
25:40 He sent me on my own journey
25:42 of hope.
25:44 God empowered me to help
25:45 others come out of disparity
25:47 to hope and a brighter future.
25:51 Hope for a better life.
25:53 Hope for a life filled with
25:55 purpose, a life filled with
25:57 care for others.
26:00 >> Thank you so much, Anke.
26:02 That's exactly what you did.
26:05 You began it now and God
26:08 opened up the doors for you.
26:11 So I wonder if I could ask you
26:12 to please pray for us.
26:14 [ANKE] Yes, definitely.
26:17 Dear Heavenly Father, I wanna
26:18 thank You so much for the
26:19 opportunity to share
26:21 Your story.
26:22 The story of Kaliang'ombe, the
26:24 story of the children that we
26:27 learned to love and through
26:30 Your possibilities and opening
26:33 of doors and sending people
26:37 for this cause only because of
26:40 that was it possible to help
26:42 this community to grow and
26:45 have hope again, hope and
26:47 knowing that You're alive and
26:50 that You love them and that
26:52 there is help and there are
26:53 people that You send.
26:55 So many things happened that I
26:57 could have never foreseen so I
26:59 wanna give You the glory for
27:02 all that You've done and for
27:04 continuing to bless those
27:06 children and the project.
27:08 I am forever grateful and
27:11 thank You so much.
27:12 In Jesus' name we pray, amen.
27:14 [MIKE & RENÉ] Amen.
27:15 >> Anke, your journey is more
27:16 than your journey, it was
27:18 journeys of hope and thank you
27:20 for sharing that with us today.
27:21 >> Thank you.
27:24 >> Friends, our free offer
27:25 today unveils true stories
27:28 that will change your life.
27:30 It is entitled,
27:31 The Invitation.
27:33 >> The Invitation is a very
27:35 powerful book, containing true
27:36 stories of people who were
27:38 destroyed by circumstances and
27:41 rebuilt by God's love.
27:43 This is our free offer
27:45 for you today.
27:48 >> We want you to experience
27:49 the truth that is found in the
27:51 words of Jesus when He said,
27:52 "It is written, man shall not"
27:54 "live by bread alone, but by"
27:56 "every word that proceeds out"
27:59 "of the mouth of God."
28:00 [gentle piano musi]
28:04 [children chatterin]
28:19 [ALL CHILDREN] Bye! Bye!
28:30 ♪Oh, blood of Jesus
28:36 ♪Oh, blood of Jesus
28:42 ♪Oh, blood of Jesus
28:47 ♪It washes white as snow


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Revised 2021-12-14