3ABN Today Live

Salt - Helping The Unsheltered

Three Angels Broadcasting Network

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Series Code: TDYL

Program Code: TDYL240008B


00:00 [MUSIC]
00:04 [MUSIC]
00:09 [MUSIC]
00:11 >> I'm Sheli Quinn. I'm Jay the Queen. And welcome to the
00:14 second hour of 3, A B and today LIVE
00:18 tonight. We have 2 very special guests with us to husband and
00:22 wife Jane.
00:23 They didn't start off that way. Actually, the Lord brought them
00:26 together.
00:28 They met 3 the ministry that they actually run. And I'm
00:32 speaking up, Eric Curry, who is the president and founder of
00:38 Salt, which is service and love together. I love you. And then
00:43 his beautiful wife,
00:46 though. These void
00:49 come with me. Haha.
00:52 >> The good news is we call and yeah, haha.
00:58 >> You know, I wanted to do this because heifer got to
01:01 hopefully you've seen it running across the bottom.
01:05 But if you want to get in touch with salt there from number is
01:09 4, 0, 7, 7, 1, 2,
01:14 0, 6, 8, 7, or you can go to their website which have done.
01:19 And it's just amazing. Even just to have to see all the
01:24 stories. It's salt outreach, DOT org, salt outreach dot org.
01:32 And if you want to get in touch with Eric person like you can
01:38 e-mail him and he are icy, Eric at so outreach Dot Org. You
01:45 know,
01:46 I'm going to say this. One of the stories that touched my
01:50 heart the most
01:52 it's to your character. She actually took someone into your
01:57 home convinced your roommates to bring a homeless man who had
02:02 had a stroke into your home.
02:05 >> Can you have to admit strong have wow. Yeah. That was the
02:09 first time I remember salt was just can and can't get up and
02:13 running. And you know, that's what that's what drives us.
02:16 You know, like when and people that watching, that's that 2
02:20 ministry for the unsheltered, they they feel this to where,
02:24 you know, you might be helping with food. But you know that
02:27 that's just a drop in the bucket of the need that that
02:29 person has and they have so many other needs. And and it's
02:33 sometimes can be overwhelming for people because they don't
02:36 they want to help. But, you know, we don't have they don't
02:38 have the resources to help with everything and that that
02:41 feeling of wanting to help but not having the resources is
02:44 what is part of what drove us to to take saw, keep taking
02:49 sought to the next level to keep meeting those needs.
02:52 But I remember back then we were just doing food at the
02:55 time and some clothing.
02:58 And, you know, this man, he had just gotten discharged from the
03:01 hospital, had a stroke a year. That's why he was in the
03:03 hospital and the flap that's kind of above the long that
03:07 kind of close is when you're eating and drinking the stroke
03:10 caused could like stay open.
03:12 >> Aspirated use food. Yes, so he key.
03:16 >> But they he was let out of the hospital in the middle
03:19 winter, coldest time in Florida and he could barely eat or
03:23 drink, you know, who's out there on the street. And,
03:26 yeah, I was single at the time. And, you know, I had some
03:29 roommates and I'm like
03:30 we've got to help this guy. He know he can't even eat or
03:33 drink. He's out there, you know, just got released from
03:37 the hospital. So so we took him in and for about a year,
03:40 he was with me for about a year
03:42 and eventually we were able to get them into housing after
03:47 that year period. And he had a business, actually all this
03:51 equipment was in storage.
03:53 So we didn't. And the home that was your business. Yes, that's
03:56 right. Yeah, that's right. Oh, I remember that. So so
04:00 yeah, he we brought all his T-shirt, printing equipment,
04:03 his computer, all that stuff in the special room in the House.
04:05 He was able to get as business up and going guys first check I
04:08 think is first check was like $1200 or something like that.
04:11 Pretty sure it's for a church in.
04:13 Yeah, it was. It was a it was one of the hardest times in my
04:18 life. I will say that it is very difficult to bring someone
04:22 into your home, those experiencing homelessness and
04:25 and to not be fully trained and know how to, you know, respond
04:28 to certain things. But but I'm grateful I experienced it
04:32 because I learned a lot from it to help with the organization
04:35 down the road. But yeah, that was that was a yeah. Remember
04:40 that time? Yeah, that's that's cool. He brought that up by
04:42 Tony.
04:44 >> It reminds me of first John, where he says the children
04:47 don't love just with words, but in deeds. That mean it's got to
04:52 be deeds and actions. Stats got that have got to love sets.
04:57 >> You know what I was thinking about with mentioned in the
04:59 first hour, a lot of the people are saying why why God wants
05:05 and probably what was meant to discourage
05:09 for 6 months and there really set something a fire and look
05:15 at this ministry today. So
05:19 I imagine to all of our lives,
05:22 we say quite some time and you just don't know how it's going
05:27 to work out. Yeah, but, you know, don't give up and,
05:31 you know, just be more determined.
05:32 >> Yeah, a man. Yeah. I when I was experiencing homelessness
05:36 for 6 months. You know, I was in Christian at the time.
05:39 I didn't I didn't really even know if I believed in a God at
05:42 that time, you know, but I was 20 years old. And I remember
05:45 being in my car and, you know, after showering, quote, unquote
05:49 in 7.11 bathroom and got in my car, put on a dress shirt and
05:54 tie that, Ryan, you know, find some work and make some money
05:57 somehow. And I was just there in my car on the driver's seat,
06:01 like just crying out to God. I wasn't even sure I believe
06:05 then like, why is this happening to me? Why am I going
06:08 through this? And, you know, after becoming a Christian
06:12 right has 7th avenues Christian, I I look back at
06:14 that time.
06:16 And you know, it's it's another thing that that God is using to
06:19 drive. Yeah, the passion I have for this work know. So.
06:24 >> He developed that empathy. You knew you. Could you relate,
06:28 right? Yes, you definitely. I always say that passion.
06:32 It portrays your purpose when God puts that zeal in your
06:37 heart for something that's at your purpose in me tells just a
06:41 brief like kids we we didn't. What were some of the greatest
06:44 challenges that you didn't meet its beginning of the ministry?
06:48 Yeah, yeah.
06:50 >> You know, I and this is something that I always when I
06:53 talk to different organizations and ministries and and they ask
06:57 for, like, you know, tips and what what they can learn.
07:01 You know, I think one of the biggest challenges was that was
07:03 a there was always a lack of consistency. You know, when
07:06 you're working with volunteers, you know, not all the time or
07:08 people showing up, you might be county on people for certain
07:11 things and they might not come through in our or whatever.
07:14 And and so I think one of the biggest challenge was that kind
07:17 of like,
07:18 you know, there were times where we were get ready,
07:21 a fee to 300 people. And and, you know, East side and Kathy
07:24 there on our team still intends to this day. But they were they
07:28 would be forced to to cook all of the food for 2 to 300 people
07:31 on their own in their homes and bring it to their to to feed.
07:36 Because we just we we didn't have anyone at that time to
07:40 help. And so those were some rough patches that we've gone
07:43 through. But, you know, we couldn't we didn't give up.
07:46 We continue going. You know, it was hard. It was tough. There
07:49 were many tough moments like that. But staying consistent,
07:54 you know, I think God blessed that consistency demand meant.
07:57 >> And in for those who may just be joining us the second
08:00 hour, what they did, they began feeding program and they may be
08:04 canned surveying the homeless to find out what they need
08:08 needed. So they went from the feeding program to having at
08:11 clothing truck, but heres people that maybe not have
08:15 showered for 3 months. So they got a shower track where people
08:21 can go in. It York actually happened, Barbara, that comes
08:25 making they could do shape. They can get a haircut that
08:28 made it their shower, put on their clean clothes. Then
08:32 they've got case management. So mental health services face.
08:38 I mean, they're meeting physical mental. But my
08:40 favorite part is the spiritual that that you couldn't really
08:46 be effective with the spiritual if you wore.
08:51 >> The meeting their needs years. Yeah, I imagine, you
08:54 know, I I tell people because the spicher care team, our
08:58 pastors have I believe one of the hardest jobs in the world,
09:01 you know, and I say that because like most challenging,
09:05 I guess is because imagine having a congregation,
09:09 thousands of people, they're all experiencing homelessness.
09:12 I mean,
09:14 that that for any pastor to just at I mean, sometimes,
09:18 you know, one person, expansion homeless, my aunt or a church
09:21 and the church is scrambling. I like how would we do? And we
09:24 you know what? How can we serve this person? But they have
09:26 thousands of people that that looked to them Stairmaster.
09:31 >> On the streets, you know, and so that they there full
09:34 time saw their full-time salt employees. Yeah, yeah, I could
09:38 reach you. I kind of cut that story off. How did he reach
09:42 you?
09:43 >> So man, when when I was white when I became a a well,
09:51 yeah. So I was going through a kind of like a sad time in
09:55 January of 2010. And
09:59 I remember trying to look for something like hope something
10:02 encouraging and somebody get me have gotten by with the
10:06 previous Christmas, you know, like a month prior,
10:09 I flip that Bible around and I see words and read in the
10:12 Bible.
10:14 And I see the most read off the summit on them out. And I'm
10:17 like let me read with this rain is right. Words about, you
10:20 know, as I read, I start to realize these are Jesus words,
10:23 right? And I'm reading the sermon on the Mount Matthew 5,
10:26 6, 7, start to give me a piece I had never felt before and I
10:30 started to feel a purpose. You know, I started to feel
10:33 like maybe there's more to this life and what I what I thought,
10:36 you know. And and that's when I just started just really going
10:41 down that, you know, just all I heard about this, Adam and Eve
10:44 story, let me read about I mean, I heard about David and
10:47 Goliath. Let me read Davis whole life. You know, I start
10:49 reading the stories until finally got to the point where
10:52 I needed to. There were things I was worried. I didn't
10:55 understand. I wanted to understand that by wasn't fully
10:57 understanding. So I reached out to friends when you are
11:00 Christian and they and I do Bible studies with them so they
11:03 can teach me what the Bible saying in these different
11:06 places. And,
11:07 you know, eventually I just cool the 7th avenues church.
11:10 And, you know, there's a lot that happened in between there
11:13 before and after their. But when I went to church, just I
11:17 want to be baptized and May 20rd of 20.
11:21 >> I was baptized. Some Davis, Christian. That's a 200
11:24 barrels.
11:25 >> Joke. I just hope that people were listening there
11:28 because, you know, people, some people
11:32 they make,
11:34 they make it really difficult
11:37 to be able just to be there for somebody at the right time.
11:41 Whenever she's us is the one that's doing the work. The was
11:45 the one that's put in the the warmth into your heart.
11:50 It just so happens. You know, that the right people then
11:53 showed up, as you've also mentioned, and the growth of
11:57 saw it just so happens that just when there's time to go to
12:01 the next step.
12:02 All. But yeah, it's it's presented. Yeah, God is alive.
12:07 He's good. He's willing to do something.
12:11 >> The change or lie? Yes. And you're modeling what Jesus
12:15 did you always tell people this that if you want to ministry go
12:19 out and just reflect the love that the amount what you've got
12:23 to do is relate to people don't go out preaching and put on the
12:28 Bible. You can not convince somebody have beautiful.
12:33 The music is by hitting him over the head with a title.
12:37 It's got to hear that island that's got to see that. So if
12:40 you go out and to show the love,
12:43 >> they're going to know something stinks. And the
12:45 simplicity of it, he hears he sings. He does yet.
12:48 >> Yeah, that's right. Yeah. You know, it's it kind of spark
12:52 something that
12:54 you know, when when people ask all the time and we serve
12:58 7,000 different people just in the past 3 years, it's
13:01 meaninglessness. And,
13:05 you know, they ask what's the common denominator like,
13:07 what's what's something? That's not a cop. What what is
13:10 is there something that is common to all of them and that
13:13 that,
13:14 you know, that you can identify, you know, and and
13:17 some some people might say, well, that commonality is
13:21 addiction or mental illness. And and, you know, the in the
13:25 U.S. only about a quarter of people experiencing
13:28 homelessness have a severe mental illness or something
13:32 like that, you know, and so the other 75%, there's other
13:35 reasons there, you know. And so,
13:38 you know, when you look at it, like, for example,
13:43 you know, people my experience homelessness because of an
13:45 episode of mental illness or episode of Addiction or maybe
13:49 it's an eviction or maybe it's a loss of job. All those things
13:52 play a factor, right?
13:54 But the common denominator really is not having anyone in
13:58 their life that's able or willing to support them when
14:01 they go through that mental health episode. When they go
14:04 through that addictive episode, when they go to that a victory
14:06 that lost a job, there's no one that's and I say able or
14:09 willing because sometimes no family or friends or whatever,
14:13 just not willing to help during that time. But then there's
14:15 other times that family or friends or just not able to
14:18 they don't have the resources to help, you know, someone
14:20 that's going through that. And so, you know, I wanted to
14:25 share that, too, because you know what? We try to do us and
14:29 we talk about special care team and offering hope to people in
14:31 love like
14:34 the common denominator is they don't have anyone in their
14:36 corner. That's rooting for them the same. I believe in you that
14:39 that that that's giving them. I hope that they could one day
14:42 be off the street and and live a normal life again. There's no
14:45 one there for them that's doing that. And we want we desire to
14:49 be that group to to, to be in the corner, rooting for them
14:52 and and supporting them. And and that's what drives our
14:55 growth. That's what drives everything we do. You know,
14:58 I mean and so so yeah, anyway, that so that's the fog bank
15:02 dispelled H o p e. Yes, yes, yeah. That's right. That's just
15:08 just I hope.
15:11 >> Well, God is certainly I remember and I don't know if we
15:14 I don't know kind of updated if you're just joining us a second
15:17 now. But they started with feeding program. Did they get
15:20 that clothing? Did they did the shower trailers? They they did
15:29 that to the storage trailers. Now they're doing mailed.
15:33 Have they've got your phone charged, the vote to occur.
15:37 It's just meeting all of their physical needs who may have
15:41 case managers, if they've cut the mental health element and
15:46 the spiritual. So that by the way, you need to her that we
15:50 can cut. Yeah.
15:51 >> Haha. I love it. So.
15:56 >> So you have
15:58 got its growing your ministry greatly. What's the vision for
16:02 the future?
16:04 >> Yeah, so you know, we are vision. The vision of the
16:08 organization is that every metropolitan area in the United
16:12 States has a comprehensive drop-in center for people
16:15 experiencing homelessness. And just to kind of
16:18 just a kind of dig a little deeper into that, you know,
16:22 drop-in centers are usually buildings that provide
16:24 everything we do. The brick and mortar places. Right.
16:27 One of the challenges that we see in in cities across the
16:30 U.S. is that the cities do not want the building, providing
16:34 the serve of permanent structure, providing the
16:36 surfaces because, you know, the baby out is real estate values.
16:42 Citizens don't want that around, you know, their
16:44 neighborhood or whatever. And so so when we talk about a
16:48 mobile model, something on wheels where we could bring in
16:52 the same exact services, this brick and mortar building does,
16:55 we can do it on wheels, you know, and the trailers and
16:58 vehicles, then the city is more likely to test or to to accept
17:03 that kind of model there because there's an issue,
17:05 someone come plans what they want us to move. Okay. We'll
17:08 move down the street you now. So like so when we say that our
17:13 vision is that every metropolitan area and the U.S.
17:16 has these drop-in centers for people,
17:19 it's it's we want to see every metropolitan area where people
17:23 experiencing homelessness can get their basic needs met and
17:26 to get navigated through an often fragmented homeless
17:29 services system to end their homelessness and on through all
17:33 of that, within all of that, that Christ character might be
17:36 shown to them throughout that whole process and that they
17:39 might know who got is and how much he loves them. And so
17:44 like, you know, for example, some someone made a joke about
17:47 us because they were like, you know, I look at SAWS like
17:50 church planters, you know, because in the area that we're
17:53 in right now, downtown Orlando, we've been operating there now
17:56 for about 2 to 3 years. And so
17:59 we want the city actually a purchase data reports from us.
18:04 We collect a bunch of data showing how or services
18:07 actually make a difference in helping end homelessness.
18:09 And so they paid us about $60,000 for this data report
18:13 that we were doing. We've got it to them. And and eventually
18:17 the city got a grant for 6 million dollars to build a
18:21 brick and mortar drop-in center building that they were
18:24 tracked. They've been trying to get for over 10 years in the
18:26 city. And now we're in a sense help plants that drop-in center
18:31 building now to take our equipment and go to another
18:34 area and plans another drop-in center somewhere else. And so,
18:38 you know, it's fulfilling our vision and.
18:42 >> Yeah, so let's say right now that there is somebody that
18:46 sitting in Portland Ore King, OK and there homeless problems,
18:50 whether you're in Dallas, Texas, are muskie, Oklahoma,
18:54 where ever you are
18:55 and they're watching you since who we are. Church is very
18:59 active on said thus feeding hungry.
19:02 Tell us about your so its programs could issue can
19:05 actually call Eric contacts out.
19:10 >> And you can get a team to then tell us about her. And so
19:12 its programs. Yeah. So S O S stands for season of service
19:17 and we we call Mass West weekend swear if a church or a
19:21 group of churches and we really emphasize group of churches
19:24 because this works best when there's multiple churches
19:27 involved, you know, they say they we want to duplicate salt
19:31 in our area. Then, you know, we asked for a donation of of a
19:36 $6,000 toward the ministry, but that also covers our costs for
19:41 coming out there. We'll do a series of messages will do a
19:45 seminar and will go through in detail how salt started to
19:48 where salt is today to show that road map and help inspire
19:52 the congregation and the group that if we could do it, you
19:56 know, they can do it to you now and then on that on the Sunday
20:00 we do a workshop where we we examined all of the data.
20:03 We research the data in the area on homelessness. We we
20:06 interview other organizations. We see what's around. We
20:10 connect all the dots for them and say, hey,
20:13 homelessness looks different in every area. This is how
20:15 homelessness looks here in your area. Here's a 6 month game
20:19 plan. These are the steps you need to take to duplicate what
20:22 we're doing in your area based on this data and this research,
20:26 right.
20:27 >> Let me ask you this. Can and can't Dade come in and do your
20:31 umbrella your 501, C 3. Kind of like a franchise had. What else
20:35 to call? Yeah.
20:37 >> They can. Yeah. So so if if after that they say you know
20:42 what, we want to be assault chapter, we want to be a part
20:45 of the song Brel the franchise Wonga saw franchise. Then we
20:50 ask for a monthly donation from the group to help us build
20:54 capacity to support them, which includes visiting their their
20:58 their program. You know, a couple times a year and
21:01 involves U.S. consulting them on a weekly basis and they can
21:05 use our brand, which really has a lot of value in helping to to
21:10 raise money and to get the equipment they need to
21:13 duplicate. We actually have a video from the San Diego group.
21:18 We have a chapter out there. We did that last weekend there
21:21 and they decide to be assault chapter and actually here.
21:25 And and and in March of 2024, they're going to be a launching
21:32 for the first time, the shower trailer. It's our first shower
21:35 trailer outside the state of Florida. And it's really
21:37 exciting. And, you know, we have a team going out there to
21:39 meet with them. So we can play that video to show you what
21:42 that was like.
21:43 [MUSIC]
21:48 [MUSIC]
21:53 >> So this will let John know that God is amazing.
21:57 We took on this project
21:59 a little over a year and a half ago
22:02 and God has provided abundantly above all we could think
22:08 dreamed or imagined. So hope this is encouraging somebody
22:12 that when God put something on your heart to do it, don't
22:15 hesitate move forward in faith. And look.
22:18 [MUSIC]
22:20 >> We've got to
22:23 well.
22:27 >> That was in San Diego, Dallas and San Diego. Yeah,
22:30 yeah. He that's London pastureland and he's a kind of
22:34 our director for that. That area there and he has a great
22:38 team behind them. But using the Saab brand using our data,
22:42 he was able to fund raise for that shower trailer 2 times
22:45 faster than we were when we were getting started. Now,
22:48 you know, it took us about a year and a half. He did in 6
22:52 months actually has 3 times faster. Then what we did it.
22:55 And so that's what we want to be able to bring to these
22:58 churches if they can leverage our brand, you know, using our
23:01 data are impact our proven track record. You now then
23:05 could help with grants to help them with donations because
23:09 people will now that we're backing them up. You know,
23:12 we're giving them that support and that insight to back them
23:15 up and help them to be successful if they.
23:17 >> I don't want to be a chapter of salt. They can just start
23:21 whatever they want. Yeah. If you want to thank start to
23:24 cap or Pepper Ministry wanted to Yahoo. Yeah. Haha, let me
23:33 tell you how you can contact salt if you would like them to
23:37 come do a season of service weekend it to church. You can
23:42 phone at 4, 0, 7, 7, 1, 2, 0, 6, 8, 7,
23:48 It's 407-712-0687, or go to their website. Salt out reach
23:57 dot org. Or if you want to get in touch with Eric through
24:01 e-mail, it's E R I see there's No K E R I C at soap AO pH Dot
24:09 Org. Yeah,
24:11 it is exciting. I know that we've got to have some friends
24:17 that are very much involved. You're still doing volunteer
24:21 work. Tell us a little about its a board member what you do.
24:25 >> Yes, so I am a board member and salt, which we, of course,
24:30 have to work on making all those big decisions, whether
24:32 it's purchasing a new trailer, opening a new program, you
24:36 know, different things that begin. We can work on that.
24:39 And from the volunteer perspective, I think something
24:42 so beautiful about this ministry is that not only are
24:47 we able to touch the lives of those experiencing
24:51 homelessness, but also the volunteers are touched in such
24:54 a beautiful way to you know.
24:55 >> I have volunteers from all different kinds of the
24:58 nominations are maybe not even a spiritual background. Yes,
25:01 yes.
25:03 >> And they're able to see the love of God through they
25:06 they're able to also see their lives change the ministry.
25:09 You know, there's so many people that have maybe left a
25:13 church or maybe have you known, didn't really know about
25:16 Christ. And then after that, they continue being involved
25:19 with saw, then they decide, you know, too, whether it's getting
25:23 Re-Bath ties or whether it's joining, you know, church or
25:25 whether it's in strengthening their relationship with Christ,
25:28 you know, and they're able to see their lives being
25:30 transformed as well to being a volunteer.
25:33 >> You know, I was just thinking people are always
25:35 saying how do we keep our young people in the church, put him
25:38 to work and give them a mission to have something to do.
25:41 This would be something that you get a lot of tears. We get
25:45 a lot of young volunteers. Yes, so we actually have.
25:48 >> A group of young people at a, you know, University of
25:51 Central Florida. It's a, you know, and they don't
25:55 necessarily identify with a now the Christian faith or
25:58 whatever. But they were. So I'm moved by the work that
26:02 salt was doing. They decide to start up. A chapter is called
26:06 Salt Outreach at UCF that the University of Aviation. And so
26:10 that chapter literally their whole purpose is to support the
26:13 organization. So they final volunteers from the University
26:17 of Central Florida to Salt Monday. They fund-raise they
26:21 they get donated hygiene products and clothing. They
26:24 bring them over there. They're there. I mean, we have students
26:27 from that university almost everyday at our site how and
26:31 where, where, you know, operating 5 days a week.
26:33 So it's it's pretty cool. And and even I mean, there was
26:36 a time. And the story is kind of
26:41 definitely one. You are here every day. You know, it's it's
26:45 actually with an atheist volunteer
26:47 and this volunteer with calm. And this is, you know, we're
26:51 we're serving food. You know, she kind of got involved with
26:54 the group and and, you know, create a community with the
26:56 group. They're right. And so but every time God was mention,
27:00 she did not want to hear. She was like she would walk
27:02 away or she'd say, no stop talking. I'm going somewhere
27:05 else, you know, and just kind of, you know, leave it there.
27:08 And eventually one of our other volunteers was cut was going to
27:12 get baptized, right? So we all kind of jumped in the car,
27:15 were get going and not just reaching the health issue
27:17 reaching about. Yeah, you're seeing Christ in heck yes and
27:22 then. Yeah. So so we all went to go for that baptism and they
27:26 invited her to calm. You know, she made friends with them just
27:28 like our come to, you know, so she can. And so we're at this
27:32 house, you know, again and in that one person is getting
27:34 ready to get baptized in the pull of the house, the pastor's
27:37 get ready, get his, you know, baptismal gown on and that that
27:41 it is volunteer. Was there sitting by the pool.
27:44 It's kind of looking at it, you know, not mingling with any
27:47 won, just kind of sitting at the pool
27:49 and hand. Eventually she she she got up.
27:54 She goes to the past and she's like,
27:56 Pastor, I don't know why I'm studying medicine. The why
28:00 study medicine, the more I see evidence of a God
28:03 and I thought it would show me the opposite. But it's not
28:06 showing you that there's evidence of a got out there.
28:08 So bodies or so intricately made. And, you know, I can't
28:11 keep tonight his presence, I want to be baptized a tomb.
28:15 And so should there ended up being 2 baptisms that case,
28:18 though.
28:19 >> And so you want to have to just say this.
28:22 Praise the Lord that he didn't tell her way to you. Do all of?
28:26 Yeah. 48 fundamental bully. They have both studies because
28:32 got this moving car. Why should do their best shot?
28:36 >> Yeah, yeah. So the and it's it's interesting like
28:40 the ministry has not only, you know, like like we just talked
28:43 about. It's not only about ministering to to the people we
28:46 serve.
28:47 That's I mean, that's our mission. That's where, you
28:49 know, organized to do. But we also have our volunteers,
28:52 right?
28:53 But then there's also the people we meet that are
28:57 maybe donors are maybe maybe organization, secular
29:00 organizations that want to give and support the mission,
29:04 don't necessarily identify with the face, but they'll give you
29:07 know, we have, you know, like we saw one, the ribbon
29:10 cuttings, you know, real estate company donated trailer,
29:13 an insurance company donating the youth and adult trailer
29:16 $150,000 and also a truck. And, you know, I'm a theme
29:21 parks, giving 6 figures, you know, Christ, it's it's got a
29:25 God has has really allowed us to create relationships with so
29:30 many different people. I mean, all walks of life.
29:33 >> Will people know there's no need a motion for a person to
29:36 be hungry? Yeah, right. And you know, just to sit there and say
29:42 how you doing to the you know, just to be able to communicate,
29:46 start relation.
29:47 >> Yeah, yeah. So the work you're doing is is I said I do.
29:51 I don't think I've ever heard the ministry of Mobile mixed
29:57 like this.
29:58 That is meeting its SEPTA, holistic approach. But now
30:03 it's not all anybody that's in
30:07 a nonprofit ministry knows that you were a lot of hats. There's
30:12 a lot of that work the den and usually they're selling them to
30:17 people. So, yeah, it's not all easy. Tell us what your current
30:21 challenges. So, yeah, so.
30:23 >> You know, we we have a we have a good, a good team,
30:26 have an amazing team. Each of them contribute uniquely and
30:30 just so much to the organization to its success.
30:33 And
30:34 right now, you know, our people on the ground, you know,
30:37 we're short-staffed probably and every team that's on the
30:40 ground were short-staffed our administrative team. Our
30:43 administrative team is putting in,
30:45 you know, 60 sometimes 70 hours a week because of all the hast
30:50 we have to. I think I'm still wearing like 4, 5, hats.
30:53 You know, my wife sees me now be up late. Thank for the
30:57 Sabbath and will have to decide if I may add say that on crazy.
31:01 Yeah, but but it's it's it's been it's been tough, you know.
31:05 And fortunately funding is a big driver of that. You know,
31:08 we just don't have the funding on wearing the executive
31:11 director have the public relations. Half the marketing
31:14 have social media marketing grant writing fundraising.
31:18 That's that's that's those are my hats. You know. And then we
31:21 have other people are teams with several hats and
31:24 it's a challenge. You know, it's a struggle, but God's
31:27 getting us through and through. And we're hoping that things
31:31 will continue to stabilize. But we need to continue to.
31:34 We want to meet the growing need, you know, and we don't
31:37 want to reduce services. That's not that's not an option
31:40 for us. We feel God calling us to increase right to to help
31:43 even more people. And so we're just praying that God continues
31:46 to provide the resources we need to.
31:49 >> To continue to impact the community, make to seeing the
31:52 miracles in the past. Yeah, yeah. I was just a few of those
31:56 steps, right? We have to.
31:57 >> Well, before the way said it is a holistic in that. Not only
32:02 are you
32:04 providing a service, the feeding the hungry,
32:08 wrapping your arms around loving, but you're also keeping
32:11 data from a business standpoint of, hey, we also can offer this
32:17 and this is not this is not going in your 4 one K, you
32:21 know, this is to be able to get through the next week. Yes,
32:24 it is. But he's blessed, too, with this model.
32:27 >> That you're actually putting into action a show that the
32:29 data shows that the model is is successful. I mean, over the
32:33 past from August of 2020 through today, all of our teams
32:37 combined. We've been involved in helping and homelessness for
32:40 over 1500 people. Our case management team currently is is
32:44 ending homelessness directly for 2 people a week right now.
32:48 I'm so scared. So we're hoping, you know, God is good. We're
32:52 hoping that that it continues and we can show, you know,
32:55 donors grant ERs you now, hey, this is the data. This is the
32:58 difference your dollar would make. We actually have a
33:00 dashboard on our website. Are that Alex just came up with
33:03 this? It's it's I think it's called on the website. Donor
33:07 calculator impact calculate or something like that. Someone go
33:11 on our website, assault outreach Dot org and they could
33:14 they could go to that calendar right there that that
33:17 calculator
33:18 put in the number one. Let's say they want to die $200 or
33:21 something. They put $200. It will calculate what that
33:24 translates to an impact because our data Alice took R R
33:28 financial financials and our impact and calculated that
33:32 together. So our donors can now, hey, if I give $100 miss
33:36 showers that provide over how much this provide toward
33:39 getting someone into housing, you know. So again, that is
33:42 very foggy. Now. I'm out.
33:44 >> We are one question how many people would normally show up
33:48 case Monday morning. This is our this is our program today.
33:52 We should expect this many people. How many volunteers
33:56 plus
33:57 full time to be involved?
34:00 >> Yeah. So 5 days a week at a downtown location when we get
34:04 there are 09:00AM we have lines of people for registration
34:09 window on our laundry service and their separate lines.
34:12 We have we serve over 100 people a day. So we have about
34:18 we probably have between 3 to 5 volunteers to show up every
34:21 day. And we probably have about as far as like staff, our
34:27 outreach services staff, which provides direct services by
34:30 about 6 that are operating that day. We have about 4 case
34:33 managers there that day. And then you have our mental
34:37 health counselor that comes, you know, about 2 days a week
34:41 on site. They have our administrative team just,
34:43 you know, on the computer that Alina doing the that back and
34:47 stuff. But but that's kind of what a day I guess would look
34:50 like. And what about the spiritual? Oh, yeah, the
34:53 pastors are there. 5 days a week. There's that 5 days a
34:56 week. 9 to 5. Yeah. Yeah. So they're out there doing
35:00 their thing. You know, group our studies for days. They do
35:03 that for days a week. They're busy business time. Yeah.
35:06 Yeah, it's a lot. There's 400 people that come on and off
35:09 campus every day it where we're serving right now. So it's it's
35:13 very busy. Very busy. Yeah.
35:16 >> That was about one last question show. So here we are.
35:19 We have the building. This is the drop center. Yeah, OK,
35:23 their salt here. Now, there could be another ministry over
35:26 here or another entity over here. Maybe another one over
35:29 here. So there's a lot of needs. There's a lot of moving
35:32 parts to this culture.
35:34 >> Yes, yes, exactly. There's there's so what what ends up
35:38 happening when you're experiencing homelessness on
35:40 Madgen? You're you're you're in the home one day. Write the
35:43 next day. You have no home. The first thing people do is
35:48 they they go and they and they call a shelter, right? Because
35:50 the first year thinking about getting some roof over your
35:53 head
35:54 and so they call the shelter. They could they or they go to
35:57 the shelter. And for the past over a year now, the shelters
36:00 have been capacity. There's there's no room for people even
36:03 from COVID from 2020. I mean, there there hasn't been.
36:07 So so they call, they say, hey, we're full, but here's a list
36:09 of resources to the shelters have capacity to hold
36:12 everyone's hand and walk them through. So
36:15 that's why we call ourselves the front door for people
36:18 experiencing homelessness because they can come to us
36:19 first. They get a case manager and they literally help hold
36:24 their hand on advocating them through all of the services in
36:27 the community and they tell them which ones they will
36:29 qualify for and which ones they want. And, you know, there
36:32 needs to be that in every community. That's what aligns
36:35 with our vision. That's why we want to be in every community
36:37 because
36:38 a lot of the time people don't know where to go. When you go
36:40 to a shelter, you get turned away. It's like, well, what I
36:42 did. And now, you know.
36:44 >> Well, here you had Paul. Yeah. Wandered around for a
36:48 month. Yeah.
36:49 >> Yeah. No idea if I love those. Yeah. Fancy homes.
36:52 So for 5 months, yeah, I'm months. Yeah.
36:55 >> And you know, for senior said well, for use to I mean
36:59 and in the age, I guess you would feel very vulnerable on
37:02 the streets. But I can imagine
37:05 the the very young, the very old would. I mean, I can't I
37:09 cannot imagine what it would be like to be making changes.
37:13 >> Yeah, it's it's it's just and you know, you think and
37:17 sometimes you and people that work with nonprofits are
37:20 different causes.
37:22 You know, sometimes there's that I was that call that
37:25 emotional fatigue that they get where it just kind of go
37:27 through the motions they don't have. But that doesn't God
37:30 continues to just not a new our hearts every day, because
37:34 there's always a new story. There's a new situation
37:36 happening that just kind of renews that compassion, you
37:40 know, that compassion, fatigue. That's what that's a term now
37:42 speaking out.
37:43 And so, but but there's so much need and so many every story is
37:48 so different. It's like, well, you had l that 6 months sober.
37:53 You are. You want to say what the name was? Tell us about
37:56 out. Yeah. So L L is now 6 months sober. She
38:02 she was coming to us getting services, you know, and she was
38:06 also, you know, suffering from addiction.
38:10 And, you know, are spiritual care team actually is the ones
38:13 that really create a relationship. You know, it's
38:15 interesting with our spiritual care team. When someone on the
38:18 street expensing homelessness suffering from addiction,
38:22 they don't put a case manager, mental health counselor.
38:24 First, they usually go to one of our past the first in the
38:27 share that with them. So they should be this ticket shared
38:30 with them and they kind of help support them through that.
38:32 If they really want to quit, they can help get them to detox
38:35 facilities and things like that.
38:37 But actually through the pastoral counseling they were
38:39 doing and through some of the other services were providing,
38:42 she ended up quitting her addiction and she's now 6
38:45 months sober. And in that time she decided she needed to,
38:50 you know, once you quit or addiction, she wanted to class
38:52 just are getting to a class with the partner of ours on
38:55 cooking. She got 4 certifications and cooking.
38:57 Wow. And and she called our pastors up recently. And she's
39:01 like, hey, I want you guys to come to my graduation. So they
39:04 went to the graduation and she gave her speech an and, you
39:08 know, and and now are helping her get a job and and that
39:11 cooking area. But, you know, it's
39:16 and, you know, addiction really just that takes people out
39:22 people down, you know, and when and honestly,
39:26 there's a debate right now, you know, like,
39:28 do they are they suffering addiction that end up homeless
39:31 or or are they to experience homelessness, then start their
39:35 addiction? I mean, some people when you're experiencing
39:38 homelessness, you don't want to live in that world. You know,
39:40 you get on to a substance or to something to to help. You just
39:45 kind of get through the day. You know, because you imagine
39:48 being a fight or flight mode every day and you're going to
39:50 sleep at night. You're waking up every 30 minutes, all but
39:53 cross on you all the lights from a car come pie or people
39:56 are walking past or you're afraid your stuff's getting
39:59 stolen like you can't even sleep. You know, it's it's
40:03 hard. Were you worried about being raped her? Yes, that's a
40:07 real life. Or, you know, me know that the women that are on
40:10 the street have told us they don't stick as the plane down.
40:14 They they sleep. They sleep sitting down because they're
40:18 afraid of that. You know, it's it's
40:22 it's a it's crazy, you know, even enable kids. You know,
40:26 we have kids out there. Sometimes it's like, you know,
40:29 we've had some instances where kids even sometimes get taken
40:33 advantage of like. And and, you know, when you think about even
40:36 just in time, a human trafficking,
40:39 you know, when when human traffickers are looking for
40:42 victims, right? Yes, they they look, they look for people
40:45 expand here. Was this because no one cares about, you know,
40:48 they feel like no one cares about that and a sleek and this
40:51 state, we can help them disappear or they say, hey,
40:54 they promised in this life for money and for a house in and
40:59 you know, and they I feel like that's their only option.
41:01 You know, so honorable. It's it's it's just it's a real
41:05 thing. It's a real thing that all communities are facing
41:07 right now. And and we have to we have to step back and take
41:13 that bird's eye view and really see
41:15 see all of those moving parts because it can be very easy for
41:19 people to judge, you know what, what's going on, you know,
41:24 like, but they don't know the full story. I mean, when you're
41:28 experiencing homelessness, he I mean,
41:31 you know, many people have their expensing, homelessness
41:34 of goggles and their life. They probably be using to you
41:37 now.
41:38 >> And I think that the idea that many people and we all
41:42 have to guard against this, that we don't allow ourselves
41:46 to get into that area of compassion 15, we see so much
41:51 homelessness, so much hunger so much. There's, you know,
41:55 orphan sit in and we are doing our best and in the other thing
42:00 is don't ever think, whoa, the problems to be a guy can make a
42:04 difference. It's millions of people and they're little small
42:08 donations that make the most difference actually could see
42:12 very few people that can write those big check. Yeah, you do.
42:16 So it's something that I just want to give you can because we
42:21 don't want you to this program to and with out having salts
42:26 contact information, you may say, you know what, we're
42:31 looking for a project. It may be live in Los Angeles would
42:35 like to get 3 or 4 churches together
42:39 to do something to unite. The churches were looking for
42:43 what we can to with are you. You can call salt at 4, 0,
42:47 7, 7, 1, 2, 0, 6, 8, 7, That's 407-712-0687, or you could go
43:00 on to their website. That's so outreach. Dot, Archie
43:06 or if you want to even every personally it's Eric E R I C at
43:13 soap outreach Dot Org. You can ask the team to come out to the
43:19 statistics in your area to tell you what puffy, what
43:23 homelessness looks like in your area. But they will teach you
43:28 everything that God has train them up in all these. And you
43:33 can either become a chapter of soap or you can pay and use
43:38 their brand recognition. You've just got all of this
43:42 information. You've got manual. You've got the experience to
43:45 know how
43:47 to tell you how to do it. How about Jessica's graduation?
43:52 >> Yeah, so
43:55 so we had aghast that that went through a program. And
44:03 >> you know, I love that. You call can guess?
44:05 >> Yeah, yeah, we we we we you know, there are gas, you know,
44:10 and they come into our sphere. And we, you know, even
44:13 something you only talk about the customer service. I mean,
44:16 you know, when you're in homeless services,
44:19 customer service isn't necessarily a thing that people
44:22 are are are really looking at. You know, as far as like the
44:25 front line staff, you know, you just have someone at the front
44:28 desk or whatever. But we we really emphasize customer
44:32 service with everyone because that's that's also having great
44:35 customer service showing Chris character, right? Okay. Yeah.
44:38 And so but yeah, we we had a graduation
44:45 from from another nonprofit that was doing a program with
44:49 her and it was it was really beautiful. Yeah, she shared,
44:54 you know, a little bit of of her story that graduation.
44:57 And she she mentioned, she want to open up her own business
45:00 and, you know, and she was able to dream again, you know,
45:04 and I think being able to to to help people to dream. And yes,
45:08 hope is is that hope is, you know, and I know, you know,
45:13 one thing that
45:15 when it comes like the baptisms and septicemia after I remember
45:21 when we didn't appeal for baptism last year, there was a
45:25 man that home was getting ready to be baptized him
45:29 and well action before that. Let me back up. When they did
45:33 the appeal.
45:35 He came up to one of our pastors and he's like see me.
45:38 I commute back ties like me. And they're like, yeah, you
45:43 can. You can be baptized to. Yeah, of course. You know,
45:45 and they went through the whole, you know that the bat,
45:48 what what it means to be baptized him.
45:50 And and but like that made us realize like
45:54 some of the people who are living on the stream don't even
45:56 feel worthy to even be baptized. You now to even give
46:01 their life to to cry state they do in the field. They're worth
46:04 that much, you know. So,
46:08 you know, it's it's really, you know, so it's to get people
46:11 going through like things like classes going through. You
46:14 know, I go into a Bible studies going through programs where
46:19 they get certificates are getting their education or
46:21 getting work. Experience. You know, that helps, you know,
46:25 just kind of have those little winds that show like it.
46:28 Hey, I'm worth something. I can do something with my
46:30 life. You know?
46:33 So, yeah, it's pretty.
46:34 >> That may lead to something real quick in this is a little
46:37 tiny little thing, but it's so important.
46:41 You hope somebody gave you a Bible
46:45 out of nowhere.
46:47 You open it up
46:49 and there's red riding in the room. Who would ever think that
46:52 that make a difference right for you? It did. That's what
46:56 caught your attention. Yeah. What's special about red
47:00 and you know enough
47:03 that that must be special. And that's what caught your
47:07 attention. And you read through all the red Year,
47:10 please hear that.
47:12 It may be that you're going to go and I'm not promote new
47:16 thing.
47:18 It may be that you're looking for a Bible for somebody some
47:22 by the special in your life. It might not hurt you to say,
47:26 by the way, does it have the red riding in it?
47:29 >> Huge dish and no, I don't know. Yeah. What a story.
47:34 First. Moni. And so we only have a few minutes left.
47:39 Tell us what your greatest needs for salt are now. Yeah,
47:43 so.
47:44 >> I'm and I'm
47:46 there's so much. But, you know, as we grow that the needs just
47:50 continue to
47:52 to to to multiply, unfortunately in the and not
47:55 only as we go, but as the need grows.
47:59 And so like one thing for sure, you know, like you mentioned,
48:03 we don't have many donors that are giving big amounts. You
48:07 know, most people are giving small amounts 10 dotting every
48:10 now and they got by rage. And yes, Carlton right. Why?
48:14 Yeah, I wanna Yarris Carlton has been donating towels and
48:17 and hygiene products and all kinds of stuff. That's been a
48:20 huge blessing. And and those things help support us and keep
48:23 going. But as far as like our monetary donations, yeah,
48:27 we we most people are just giving a little bit. But
48:29 there's a lot of them. You know, there's so many people
48:32 that have are just excited about the vision of salt.
48:35 Want to be a part of that. They want to see salt in their
48:37 city eventually. So they they're helping support us so
48:40 we can keep dreaming and and pursuing our vision. But but
48:45 then you get other times. I just did a tour. I think they
48:47 might be watching now that or with a couple the other day,
48:52 I want to share their names because I don't know if they
48:54 didn't ask them before him, but they came for it or they just
48:57 moved to Florida. And, you know, after that, or they were
49:02 just, you know, they they had a financial gift for us. And
49:05 and 3, they had seen us on 3ABN, right? That's how they
49:09 that's how they know last. And and so they ended up making
49:13 a donation $13,000, you know, and that and the right there is
49:17 probably one of our biggest one-time donations we've gotten
49:19 in there so far. You know, and some people are able to do
49:23 that, you know, like you said, but but a lot of people,
49:25 most people are are donating a little bit. That's adding up
49:28 and God is using that to support the Miss U. So so that
49:32 being said, one of our biggest need is financial gifts.
49:36 This year we see a 600,000 funding gap
49:40 and the reason is because COVID funding COVID it went when
49:43 COVID was around. There was funding that was going to all
49:45 these nonprofits and and it was just easy. They were just given
49:48 finding out how to help a response to the disaster.
49:51 We were getting funding specifically to help the
49:54 unsheltered during the COVID, you know, years. And so
49:59 now that COVID funding is out last year, we got about
50:03 $800,000 and COVID funding this year from the same entity is
50:07 really getting 200,000.
50:09 So now where asking God to help us figure out how to fill that
50:13 hole because
50:16 it's we don't want again, we do feel called to reduce services.
50:19 We feel God calling us to continue forward and we're
50:23 going to continue moving forward. And like we're saying,
50:25 God is live in the past, he'll deliver again. You know,
50:28 we don't know how, but we know he will. So that's definitely a
50:33 big need of ours.
50:35 Another need I think, is is definitely we need volunteers.
50:40 You know, if you're in the area, we always need people to
50:43 support. Our staff worked so hard. And when volunteers are
50:46 there, it lightens the load big time and there's things our
50:49 staff can do. They they still have the time to do so. It can
50:53 people can just go to your website. Yeah. They can go to
50:57 salt outreach Dot org and they can go. We have a they can
51:01 click volunteer. It will take until volunteer website
51:05 where they can create a user name. Then they select a shift
51:08 and they can go and sign up and be be a part of that.
51:11 And so that's that's also a big need. And then we're also,
51:15 you know,
51:17 as I talked about before, you know, as we did the ribbon
51:20 cutting for one trailer,
51:22 God had a mission for right after, hey, literally right
51:25 after the ribbon cutting cuts net and we drive it off
51:28 somewhere. And the other trailer ribbon cutting snipped,
51:32 the ribbon went right off somewhere to serve another
51:34 need. So we're realizing that as we get more trailers,
51:40 God is opening up opportunities for those trailers to make a
51:44 difference in the community. And and, you know, thinking
51:49 about if we didn't move in faith and get those 2
51:51 additional trailers,
51:53 then the women and children at one shelter would have had
51:55 showers and bathroom use for a month. You know, and I don't
51:59 know what that you know, what they are partner would have
52:01 done
52:02 and what the fire at the coalition. Ah, at the at the
52:05 shelter that was nearby. They would have had adequate
52:08 bathroom and shower use either. And they're all working.
52:10 And they're trying, you know, they need to be able to shower.
52:13 So, you know, I think I feel that
52:18 there's going to be more and more things like this that are
52:20 going to happen as time progresses. And
52:23 and God is trying to set us up to be equipped to handle all of
52:27 the need to unity. And so, you know, additional trailers,
52:31 there might be someone out there that says, you know,
52:33 I have have a business and we want to sponsor a trailer.
52:36 And and we'll Ko brand that trailer with that business so
52:39 that that people can see that their brand is attached to the
52:43 grassroots organization, making a difference, you know, and and
52:47 they might have 60,000 from their business to donate or
52:50 that are 70,000. But, you know, we definitely need more
52:54 equipment because the need is just so great. I'm so those are
52:57 kind of the 3 biggest things I can think of as far as our
53:00 biggest needs right now.
53:02 >> Yeah, you know, I just have to say and I want to tell you
53:06 at home again, please don't ever think the need is so
53:09 overwhelming. What could I do? Because I can tell you that
53:13 3ABN, it is the small donors are we call them our bread and
53:18 butter donors to the go. Evangelistic team members to
53:22 donate monthly. That's what keeps the doors open for 3 a B
53:26 in so that we can bring you cry, centered programming and
53:29 introduce these wonderful ministries.
53:32 The ministry's just like you sit
53:35 when you've got a lot of people given a little it adds up.
53:40 Yes, we want to give one more time. Your
53:44 I just there it is. Your phone number
53:49 email address phone is pour. Salt is for CBS, 7, 7, 1,
53:55 2,
53:56 0, 6, 8, 7, 4, 0, 7, 7, 1, 2, 0, 6, 8, 7, or you can go to
54:03 their website, Salt Outreach Dot Org or if you need it would
54:09 like to contact Eric directly. You can e-mail him at Eric E R
54:16 I C at soap out reach Dot O R G 8
54:21 and you can ask their team to come to your church and teach
54:26 you how you can minister to the to the homeless in your own
54:31 area. It is such a growing problem or maybe you are living
54:38 in the central Florida area and you would like to volunteer or
54:43 maybe and I just believe this that the Holy Spirit is
54:48 inspiring. Somebody. You feeling that Togo in your heart
54:52 that God is inspiring you to support this ministry
54:57 mail. We didn't talk with you, too. Might we move a little
55:00 quiet tonight, but it's such a wonderful pleasure to meet you.
55:05 We've we've interviewed Eric several times, JD and I
55:08 personally. Yeah, but it's wonderful to meet you. And and
55:13 let me just share to like
55:15 she it. I mean, you know, I'm what
55:19 >> working so much with salt. And
55:23 if it wasn't for her, support them, I I don't I don't know
55:28 where I'd be right now. I don't know or so would be right now
55:30 when she she contributes so much in the background people
55:34 don't see. And I I really I truly appreciated him out on.
55:37 >> And makes a big difference. I want to stress that you are
55:41 both precious children of God and you're both mighty warriors
55:45 have to just say,
55:47 JD, we've only got about a minute left.
55:50 >> What you're left wanting for so quick, all the Sprite.
55:54 Yes, father, we just want to thank you so much, Lord that
55:56 theirs people available that most to help make a positive
56:01 difference in people's lives. And father, you've touched very
56:04 camilles heart father. They have taken what you've given
56:07 them and put into action. So we're just asking a special
56:11 blessing, mark, whether it be just a prayer, pray for them
56:15 daily. He's been through funds, whatever it may be. Lord with
56:19 that you will handle this accordingly and they will act
56:21 on it. We love you and we thank you. We asked this in Jesus
56:26 name the man out.
56:27 >> And 2 and a man
56:29 male. Eric, thank you so much for all that you do for the
56:32 glory of God. Thank you for
56:35 coming to 3 a B in to share that with this. For those of
56:39 you. We're so glad that you joined us and I hope you can
56:42 encourage conspired. I know we have to always we always love
56:47 to hear the update from salt, but we want you to know that
56:51 you're part of our 3ABN, family. We do love you. And we
56:55 can say that honestly cause God puts that love in our hearts
56:58 for you. Our prayer is that the grace of our Lord and Savior
57:02 Jesus Christ would love that. The father and the fellowship
57:05 of the holiday spirit this week. You always got bless.
57:08 You
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