WHOA That's Good Podcast - Why I Believe There's a God | Sadie Robertson Huff & Louie Giglio
Episode Date: April 13, 2022Passion City Church pastor Louie Giglio joins Sadie to look at the awe and wonder of God's creation and why you don't ever have to choose between God and science. They also talk about their shared lov...e for the latest season of "American Idol," what it means to truly know God, why social media steers us wrong about hard work, and why science will never undermine God. Louie also marvels at the miracles it took for a striking letter to reach Sadie. “At The Table with Jesus” and “Indescribable: 100 More Devotions about God and Science” are available now. - Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
What's up with us good fam welcome back to the WoW that's good pie cast today we have
a very special guest he is not a first time guest on the WoW that's good pie cast he
is a regular face for many of y'all we have Louis Giggly on the pie cast and we're going
to be talking about two books that he has out. We have a hundred
more devotions about God and science, the wonder of creation and that's for kids but don't worry,
the adults are not left out. There is a new devotional at the table with Jesus. Anything
Louis puts out, you're definitely going to want to put your hands on and I mean,
already his children's book that he's written and described with well honey loves,
looking at all the little spacing. So we're thankful for who he is and I'm thankful to have you back on the
podcast Louis welcome back.
Thanks Sadie it's always like a really like major highlight for me to get on whoa that's
good so thanks for having me back.
Hey it's an honor and a highlight for us too because you dropped some whoa that's good
moment so super excited I was thinking I was like, hey, what am I gonna ask you
a piece of advice for?
Because we've already heard your best piece of advice.
So if you have-
Good, ask me again.
Ask me again.
Okay, so that's one or another one.
I was like, do you want that question?
Or do you need a new one?
If you want it, I'm giving it to you.
What is the most recently best piece of advice
that you've thought of that you've ever had?
Okay, don't ask me that. I want you to ask me, what's the best piece of advice that you've thought of that you've ever had? Okay, don't ask me that.
I want you to ask me, what's the best piece of advice you've ever heard someone give?
Oh, okay, okay, okay.
All right, reverse, reverse.
What is the best piece of advice that you have ever heard someone give?
And I stole this from them, and so I told you when you asked me last time that it was
something Piper said to me. Yeah.
Dr. John Piper said that wrong casually when he was telling me about, you know, anyway.
So I was thinking about another piece of advice that I heard someone else give. And I thought
that might be the best piece of advice ever. And it was Crowder. And we were on a passion tour doing a Q&A before the night.
And you've done a lot of those, you know, a few people get in with a special ticket or
something.
And there were all worship leaders there, I think, or musicians.
And Crowder sitting there and this kid raises his hand, he goes, what is the best advice
that you ever give to an aspiring young artist or an aspiring young worship leader.
And I'm like, okay, that's probably the question you've been asked a thousand times, but I can't
wait to hear what you're going to say. And Crowder's answer, Sadie, was so great. It was three words.
Tune your guitar. Yes. Love this advice. And you know, that's Crowder for you. I mean you're like what and all he was trying to say to this young guy was
Before you start out doing anything make sure your guitars into yeah
Like and so for me as a speaker or someone who's an author somebody who wants to be in tech or whatever
It's like the first thing you need to do is tune your guitar. Like make sure you've got your thing operating at the maximum level it can operate at it.
Don't skip over the detail trying to project yourself way out into the future as I'm going
to be Crowder.
It's like, well, here's what you need to know about Crowder.
Crowder's guitar is always in tune and sounds amazing.
That's great.
So tune your guitar.
I think it's great advice.
It sounds a little cheeky.
You know how to use the British phrase,
but I love it and I think about it all the time
and someone says to me,
hey, what's your advice for a young speaker communicator?
To tune your guitar?
They're like, I don't play the guitar.
It's like, I know it's a metaphor.
I love it.
That's so good.
And actually, I think he was bare from need to breathe.
Do you know him?
You know, I love him.
Okay, so he was on the podcast and he gave like two pieces of advice
and one of them was two-year guitar.
And that has stuck with me.
That's so funny.
So, well, that's good times too.
And the funny thing is, because I did rewrite the question
for you, and it was the best piece of advice
for up and coming leaders.
And that's so funny that you actually just said,
that is your advice.
And it's such a great metaphor, because so many people
want to jump the gun, they just want to get out on the stage.
And if you don't have your guitar tune,
it's not going to be good.
And it's actually funny because we were watching
American Idol this past Sunday.
And this guy started singing.
He actually had really good talent.
But as soon as he started doing it,
Katie Perry just screamed and was like,
tune your guitar, like tune it.
Like this is so, I can't even listen to it.
And so he went through his oldie, he never stopped.
He wasn't listening to her to stop and do it.
So then finally
he stopped finished a song and she said can you do that whole thing again without your guitar and he
was so confused like but I'm good at the guitar and he redid it and then he ended up going to
Hollywood because they said you're so much better but your guitar was not too we couldn't even hear it
and so what a good piece of advice that I just literally saw played out on American Idol.
That's awesome.
Shout out to American Idol too because we saw that also Sunday night.
And I think they are crushing on the storytelling.
Oh, crushing it.
The talent.
The judges are locked into their zone like never before.
They're appropriately honest, but they don't trash people.
And I don't know.
It's probably sound stupid, but I'd tear up like three or four times
in every single episode right now.
Don't we all?
And the one guy came in and I loved it
because he was singing that Tasha Cobbs song.
Yes.
And he was just going after the whole, you know,
runs that were a mile long and all that stuff. And obviously we all are like the biggest Tasha Cobbs fans of all time.
But then they were like, what else can you sing? And he said, whatever that kind of bluesy song.
Is it strawberry wine? I think it was.
Yeah, Tennessee whiskey. I wasn't going to say Tennessee whiskey because it's a Christian podcast, but that line is in its strawberry wine.
But anyway, he just sings it and it's this whole thing and they just know like they
God, they're really good at what they do. They're so good. They're so helpful and yeah, really good like judges
But more so I feel like leaders
They're actually like trying to make people better and you hear it just in an instant
That's actually funny. Yeah, I want to say to Sadie if I can because you know this whole thing, I'm on the other
end of the demographic age demographic than you.
And you're an exception to this rule.
The rule is that it takes time, you know, and that's the best advice I'd give a young
leader is to your guitar and normally tuning your guitar means,
take time, take the opportunities, build your craft,
hone your skill.
You, of course, sort of busted that mold by just skyrocketing
up into the atmosphere when you were a teenager.
But one of the things I appreciate about you
and about Katy Perry Perry who I've met
these guys and you
tune your guitars and
you you know shot into fame you became an overnight sensation
But you work harder at your craft than just about anybody I know and so anybody listening to the podcast today
I'm kind of looking at Sadie who makes all this stuff look super easy
Super effortless when you speak it just seems like it comes out and oh you wrote another book and oh you're in another movie and
Oh, you did this and that the other but you work hard and that's the non-negotiable advice that every young leader needs. It's great.
Is learn how to work hard and if you don't like working hard, might as well pick something
else to do because you're not going to end up being a leader.
Man, that's so good.
I'm actually so thankful that you said that because I've had honest conversations with
people in my circle around me about that, like needing to work hard. And I think that people have this, you know, perspective of people on Instagram because
you don't see the hard work.
You just see the successful moments.
You just see the fun moments within the work, but you don't see the like actual like studying
and the hard times and the exhausting times and the times that it didn't work out or,
you know, you work super hard for something and it doesn't go well.
Because honestly, that's just very unnatural to even think about sharing you know it's not that I
am trying not to share that because I'm embarrassed I don't even think about sharing that you know
because I'm going through it or I'm working through it or I'm thinking about it or whatever it is
and I think that young people have this perspective that it's just supposed to be easy and if it's not easy then it's not right.
But actually like most things in life that are worth it and that are good and that are successful come from a lot of hard work, a lot of long hours, tears, late nights, you know, all these different things.
And so I'm so glad that you said that because I do think that social media has shaped this
perspective that, man, if you love your job and that means that it's going to be easy,
it's going to come effortless, it's just going to be what's natural to you.
But even for me, yes, to some degree, this is a natural thing for me to do, to be a communicator
and that.
But also, man, it takes a lot of work. You're right. If I didn't prepare a message,
it just honestly wouldn't be that good, you know. And that's just, it is what it is. You know,
Holy Spirit is going to work through me, but I also got to know the word for him to work through,
you know it. And so I'm so glad you said such good advice. Well, let's dive into some of this,
this book that you wrote wrote because one thing I love
about you and the work that you do, especially in these young kids books and so many of your sermons,
it's like you can bind this, all these crazy things about science and you make it just
just shout God out even more. And I think so many times people think that like you have to choose
between like God and between
science.
It's either you believe in science or you believe in God.
But I love how you believe in God with all of your heart, but you also love to explore
science.
And so, one, where did that love for science come from?
Have you always been obsessed with science or did it come later in your life?
Yeah, and I have.
I had the vision when I was a kid that I was going to be a doctor.
I just had this kind of inclination towards science, towards medicine.
And then a little bit later in life when I was a summer college intern in Houston, the summer
that I met Shelley, I met this guy that was a drug salesman, a legitimate
drug salesman, and he called on the major hospitals in Houston and because of it he had all these
incredible relationships over time. And he got me into this program, I think I can say
this because it was a long time ago, where a few times every summer that I was in Houston
for those three summers, I would go to the main Hospital there that did heart surgery and sit in the theater above the ceiling with the medical students and
Watch heart surgeries happen. I've seen a heart trance plan
bypasses heart surgery on a little bit of kid. I mean literally sitting eight feet above the operating table looking down and
Something about all of that just inspired me
and still does inspire me,
but it was really meeting Matt Redmond
and traveling to England a lot,
because for whatever reason, Sadie,
on the front page of the paper in London,
three times a week is something about astronomy.
Some galaxy we've discovered, some new nebula,
some thing, and it just lit me up,
and I got into the Hubble Space Telescope.
I started seeing stuff that, you know, the generation before us didn't get to see. I mean,
this stuff is new. Hubble's only been in space for 20-something years, and it's 340 miles
above the earth, so there's no atmosphere, so we can see things further, better, more
clearly. And I don't know, Sadie, all of a sudden realize what David said when he wrote Psalm 19,
the heavens are telling the glory of God.
Their expanse declares the work of his hands.
Day after day, they pour forth speech.
And there's no place on earth where their language, where their voices is not heard. That this is a billboard, God put a billboard
in the cosmos to tell us how big he is.
And so science came along in the 60s particularly
and started really taking aim at faith.
And the atheist movement got strong.
There was a guy named Carl Sagan
who discovered this famous, this pale blue dot photograph.
And he was the smartest, coolest pale blue dot photograph.
And he was the smartest, coolest culture leader on earth and he was a flat out atheist.
And he would explain all these things about the universe,
blow people's minds and then tell them that it's all
meaningless.
And so that's why the divide has happened.
All of a sudden Christians were like,
oh my goodness, all the scientists are coming after us.
All the scientists are trying to undermine our faith.
And then I realize, wait a minute,
if God is who we worship and say that He is,
if He's the creator of all things,
science will never undermine Him.
So let's cheer on the scientists.
Go do your work because I believe at the end of the day,
you're gonna end up at the same place.
I'm gonna end up, which is staining at the feet of Jesus.
And so that's what I wanna do in these books,
is just help young kids realize there's not a big wall
between God and science.
Yes, there are differences of opinion.
And some of scientists maybe trying to undermine faith,
and some faith may be afraid of science, but in general,
I wanna teach kids that God's bigger than all that, and that he created all the scientists, trying to undermine faith and some faith may be afraid of science, but in general, I want
to teach kids that God's bigger than all that and that he created all the scientists.
And so they don't have to worry about science.
They can love God because he's the ultimate scientist.
That's great.
That's so great.
I love in the book how you talked about, man, I wrote it down here about how a male rhino
actually eas drops on other rhinos to protect their territory,
which is like so cool.
Like what?
Like that?
I can't see.
You love this because I'm like that is such a message in that.
You talk about first, that's the Lodian's 4-11 and making it a goal to live a quiet life
and to lead a quiet life, which is just so cool.
Like I said, man, whenever you have the eyes to
see that and you're searching for science to find out more about God instead of running
from it because you're scared it's going to disprove God. You get to see these amazing
things. And that's just an example in your new book. But you also have these huge examples
that you've preached that have been heard all over the world. Like, Laminin, I know, was
one of your, one of the most known messages you've had several,
but Laminin was one of them.
I remember watching that in my science class,
in my freshman year of high school,
and just being blown away by that.
And then now I get to know you and I've heard
a little bit about the prep behind that.
And so tell us a little bit about that prep
for the message Lamin, and what you discovered
on the process that just blew your mind.
Yeah, you know, it's such a crazy story.
I have to shorten it down a lot, but I was on tour with Chris Tomlin, and we were doing
about 60 City tour, and it was two nights before it ended.
We're in Tyler, Texas, and there's no green room at this venue we're at.
And so, as things are getting torn down, and we're waiting for him to say goodbye to his
family because he lives near there, there's nowhere to be.
So I'm just hanging around.
The guy walks up to me, we end up having a conversation.
He asks me what I'm doing after the tour is over and I tell him I'm going home to preach
at our church, which at the time was North Point, before we play in a passion city.
And I'm preaching my, for my pastry.
So what are you preaching on?
I said, the glory of God in the human body.
We did the glory of God out of space. We're going to do the glory of God in the human body. We did the glory of God out of space.
We're gonna do the glory of God in the human body.
He goes, okay, what do you got?
And I said, well, I have this about the blood vessels
and this about the eyelid and this about this
and this about this.
And he was like, he's nodding along.
He goes, well, what's your big left hook?
Like, how are you ending this thing?
And he goes, your talks always have a left hook at the end.
And I was like, I don't have my left hook yet.
And then he says, oh, well, I'm a molecular biologist
at the university down the road.
Wow.
I've got your left hook.
And I said, hey, you should have told me
you were a molecular biologist when we started this conversation.
And I've been telling you all my stuff about the human body.
And B, what is the left hook?
He said, it's a, you know anything about protein molecules?
And I said, no.
And he said, you know what I think about base molecules?
No.
He says, well, there's one called Laminin.
L-A-M-I-N-I-N.
He writes it down on the back of his card, hands it to me,
say, Dean, he says, just go look it up.
And that's your left hook.
And I was like, OK, whatever.
So we leave. And we get back on the bus later,
we get a Wi-Fi, I get on my computer.
I wish I could have bring the whole world into this moment.
I type in LEMIN, and I hit search,
and two things come up, just two.
And one of them is two photographs of Laminin, real photographs, and one of them is the
diagram of Lamanin.
And most people have seen this by now, but it's the perfect shape of a cross, and it's
this selahesian molecule that holds our skin together, our organs together, our bodies
together.
It holds us together.
And I was like, I'm not kidding you.
I fell off the seat in the bus onto one knee
on the floor, staring at the thing going, you've got to be kidding me. The thing that holds
us together is the shape of a cross. It doesn't prove anything. That doesn't prove there's
a God. That's just proves that God has a sense of humor.
Right.
And that God has been waiting all this time for us to build a powerful enough microscope to discover
Lamanan and then to see it.
And that message, man, it, you know, it has circled around the world.
And I'm not sure, but somebody will do this right now. If you go search Laminin on Google,
it, you know how it tells you at the top,
how many millions of returns there were in like two seconds,
there will be lots of returns,
because now there are pages and pages and pages of pages
and pages of Laminin earrings and Laminin t-shirts
and Laminin bracelets and Laminin,
this and that and the other.
I'm not selling any of those by the way, but there's a ton of stuff there and that's kind of
the beauty that all in you know what I would say, say to you just to wrap up real fast the thing
on science because I know we don't have a ton of time. These books are for like seven to eleven
year olds and there's three of them indescribable how great is our God and now the wonder of creation, and they're not apologetic. They don't explain all the tricky questions.
Laminin is a way of kind of bridging the gap, but what I would encourage every parent to do is that
when your kids get to be like 16, 17, 18, start showing them some videos on YouTube about the big questions of life evolution
Because they're they're gonna be told in the first hour that they arrive at university if they go to college
That the Bible isn't reliable and there is no God and we all got here by accident
And if that's the first time they're faced with that they're face gonna get
Shaken but if as a parent you can say,
hey, these were great for when you were a kid. Laminen was awesome for when you
were in ninth grade. But now that you're a high school senior, we want you to
watch these five videos of the biggest arguments against faith. And now we're
gonna show you these five answers to faith. Because there's so many smart people
out there that can help answer these big questions
and then when a kid's sitting in a classroom at some university and the professor goes
da da da da da da the student goes oh I've already heard all that yeah I already watched all that
in fact I actually watched your talk on that but then I also watched these other three talks that
helped me see that from a biblical point of view. And now I'm prepared to go forward.
We don't need to get into a big war, but we don't need to be afraid either.
That's great advice.
I feel like a lot of people listening to this podcast are probably in that age range to
be the one to watch those things.
Like 18 to man 25 is probably our biggest age range who's listening.
And so not to put you on the spot
If you don't know anything, uh, no anyone on top of your head
But do you know of any videos or anyone that they could look up off the top of your head to discover some of that?
I mean, I'm sure they could type in some of the you know, like you said the big bang
I think time is some of these theories
But who from the faith-based world could they look up to also get that perspective as well?
Yeah, I wish I I before I said soon as that sentence came out of my mouth, I went,
oh man, I want to say who that is and I can't think of the name right now, but if you just Google
Creation Science and answers to the faith, you're going to get a good start on the right people.
That's great.
And the Creation Science Institute, I mean, look around for these kinds of people and you'll
easily find good resources.
That's great.
I was actually going to ask you that anyways, it's like, where do you find so many things
that you know?
And one way I know that you find them is through books that you read.
So I remember the first time, Christian and I came to Y'all's house to stay with y'all and this is kind of a funny story. I think I told
this before publicly. Maybe not. Y'all are gonna hear the here for the first time.
But I was upstairs in the room and they sleep not on that level that we were at
and there was all these books up there and I was like okay I'm gonna tip to
out here. Maybe they won't hear me. I'm gonna look through all these books
because I'm like, I wanna learn what he's learning.
I wanna read what he's reading.
I wanna tune my guitar, right?
And there's just so many things in that library
that you have up there that I'm like, man,
there's so much that I wanna know.
So I see this book and it was a book
that you had mentioned earlier that day about,
it was something scientific. And I was like, I can't wait to, I'm just going to pull.
I'm going to try to read some of this and so I'm reading some of it and I'm
understanding very little of it, but you know, I always think about, you know, sometimes
I listen to people who go way over my head.
I listen to Jordan Peterson a lot.
Now he goes way over my head, but in light for the 10% I get, I feel a lot smarter when I leave,
right? So sometimes it's good to push yourself in what you read.
So I'm reading this.
And then I get to think, man, I wonder if there's been something for Louis that like, he
heard this and then he was like, there's a God.
And it might have been like the laminated moment or I don't know, the indescribable moment
which I want to talk about in a minute, but what was that?
And so I remember the next day, I can't away to come ask you this question and I come downstairs
and I say, so Louie, like what is the thing that made you believe like there is a God?
And with the smallest pause you said the Bible and I was like wait oh yeah I was I was almost like stumped because
I thought it was gonna be some crazy revelation that you had some scientific
thing that you saw like the stars that said heaven I don't know you know just
you think of these crazy things and gosh I had this girl write me this letter
and I've waited for the right moment
to pull this letter out.
And I felt like today was the day
because I have people write me letters a lot
and I don't always respond,
but what I try to do is if there's one
that I really feel the need to respond to,
I'll wait until there's a moment like this in the podcast
or I'll wait until there's a moment in my message
and really nail that question.
And it's the most simple letter,
this is all it says,
dear Sadie Roberts and Huff,
how do you know God is real?
Practical answers only please.
And it reminds me so much of the question that I asked you.
And so I wanted to ask you that question again,
because I know your answer is the Bible but just kind of speak
to for a second that the Bible really is enough because I think so many times like the Bible for her
might not have been a practical answer but this is the most practical answer. This is the most
evidence. This is all we need but so many times like we want more and it's almost like we're so
familiar with the fact that we have this that that it's become not crazy, it's become
not this all-and-wonder that it should be, because it actually is wild that we
have that. So, why don't you just speak to that for a minute, because that's a
question I had, that's the question I got asked, and I think you really nailed the
answer. I love that you were sneaking around in my library. I was trying to be very subtle, and then I told on myself the next day.
I love that.
That's what I would have been doing at anybody's house.
I'm curious like that, and I don't want to be nosy, and I don't know what the proper line
was.
I wouldn't have gone in their desk drawers or something, but I definitely...
I didn't go that far.
If I was at a hero's house or somebody I looked up to
or somebody I respect, or if I was even a, you know, crowders house for the night, I mean,
I'd look around and I'm like, what books is he reading? You know, what's going on? But I want
to speak to that real real fast and I'll come back to answer the question because, you know, what a
great letter, by the way, that's just getting right to the point. But I try to read something every year that
is not a Christian book and not just like some novel or whatever, some leadership, not
even leadership. And so I read a book two years ago on the building of the shard. It's a
very iconic building in London. And I love London and I love this building and I went to
the top of it. You can go to the observation deck. And I heard a and I love this building and I went to the top of it.
You can go to the observation deck and I heard a tiny bit of the story of the guy who envisioned it.
And I'm like, I'm going to the books where you know how they make you walk through the gift shop
when you go to the top of these big buildings.
And I always don't like that, but I thought I am stopping in the gift shop and buying this book.
And the guy who built this building,
stories, phenomenal, changed my life, the shard.
I did a whole message on it.
Last year, I read The Agony and the X-Tacy,
which is a biography, autobiography of Michelangelo,
maybe the greatest artist of the Renaissance era,
from my stomping grounds in Florence, Italy and
Absolutely blew my world up
Because this guy painted the cysteine chapel. He sculpted the David. He sculpted the Pieta
He was one of the most brilliant human beings who's ever lived on planet earth
So try to read something that is inspiring
about somebody who did something great every year. That's what I would encourage people to do.
But the moment for me, there's two moments, Sadie, and to answer the question coming back to the
Bible. I hiked down on the Grand Canyon in the middle of the night when I was in college
because we couldn't get a permit to spend the night.
So we had to hike down at midnight
and hike back out before dawn, practically.
And I don't necessarily recommend that.
It's a pretty scary thing to do at night.
But we ended up laying down on the sandy beach
of the Colorado River for about an hour
before we had to start our hike back up.
We were a mile
down in the earth. So when you're down in a mile crack there is zero natural
natural light. There's not a light bulb period. So you can't see stars good in
Atlanta because there's a lot of light. You can see better maybe out at your
house because it's a little darker out there. But when you're a mile down on the earth,
you feel like, and I'm not exaggerating,
that you can reach up and grab the stars.
Wow.
And I had a sense of awe come over me that night
as a college student that I'd never felt before.
And I've only felt it a few times in nature sense,
seeing the Northern lights the first time
and I just was I literally was having like a moment.
That's how you know there's a God.
Wow.
Because there's awe and wonder and science can explain things but science can never speak to meaning
plain things, but science can never speak to meaning and people want meaning and people feel things.
And science can't speak to what is or why you feel it at certain times.
And I would answer this young lady, I'm assuming this a young lady, maybe it's a young man
that wrote the note, I would answer her and say, the fact that you wrote me this letter
is proof to me that there is a God.
Because probably a hundred miracles happened for her to write you that letter.
The fact that she knows you means she has a brain.
The fact that she could see that paper she wrote on and blind people can write letters
to. that paper she wrote on and blind people can write letters to, but what the human eye can do?
The human eye is the most complex instrument on earth. The human brain is the most by a
factor of a Julian complex organism on earth. The fact that she could put lines on a page that when you got them, you knew what she was asking you.
All of it is a miracle. And design is the only argument I need. And if I looked at that girl,
look back at her and looked at her, I would go, there's no way that you just appeared. So there must be a designer. The designer is a creator.
And what you call him or her or it, okay, you might want to argue with me about that. But you have
to acknowledge that there is a creator of it all. And someone who's powerful enough to set it in motion. And the scripture tells us who that is. And it in,
of itself, is a miracle. The fact that it's 66 books, but one story. The fact that it's written
over thousands of years, but it has one thread, that it has multiple authors who are all kinds of
different people, a doctor, a fisherman, a farmer, and they're all writing from different
cultures, different points of views, but it's all one story with one thread and that one
thread is revealing to us the question that we're all asking, is there a God?
Yes.
And this book is breathing.
It's not just ink on a page, it's God's breath on a page.
And I just got chapter one of John Back
from the International Space Station,
it stayed up here for a couple of months
and circled the earth a lot and traveled millions of miles
with an astronaut friend of mine.
And he came back from the International Space Station,
brought the page out of my Bible,
and it's back in my Bible.
And when I tell people that page in my Bible went to space, they freak out. And I said, yeah, it's back in my Bible, and when I tell people that page in my Bible went to space,
they freak out.
And I said, yeah, it's not, it's not, it's not every day that a page of your Bible goes
to space.
But the bigger miracle is that, it's not that this page in my Bible went to space is that
this whole Bible came down from heaven.
And so, yeah, it's a miracle.
It's all a miracle. And if this precious girl
take one step back, she'll realize someone made all this. And that's how she'll know. And
maybe she won't know exactly what that God's like. That's what the Bible is going to tell her.
Yeah. What was his purpose? That's what the Bible is going to tell her. How does she fit into that purpose?
That's what the scripture is going to tell her.
Yeah, wow, that's so good.
Louis, I feel like that answer that you just gave is going to expand way more to just
that one girl.
I can see this being sent to many friends, parents, sisters, brothers, because that is the
question that we're all searching for.
And I love how she said, only practical answers only, but in reality, you don't actually
want the God that you serve to be so practical that you can understand everything about him,
or else you would be enough to be your own God. But it's actually amazing that he's it's
so almost unpractical, but it's believable and it's so tangible and it's so real. And
even though he's God, he also became man. And even though he was man, he was fully God
and all of that, even trying to be practical is so unbelievable, and that's what makes him so amazing,
and you able to just wanna drop to your knees
and worship him.
And so I actually love that,
and some degree that's a practical answer,
but in a million others,
it's the most miraculous, all-in-wonder answer
that you could have given.
And so, that's incredible, I love it.
I love that you talk about space a lot too, and I love that you literally have given. And so that's incredible. I love it. I love that you talk about space a lot
to and I love that you literally have moons behind you. I'm actually interviewing Levi later today,
so I'm pretty much going to school. I'm having my science lesson, I'm having my history lesson,
all of my things pointing to Jesus. But yeah, you preached an incredible message indescribable
and I was talking to Demi Tibo about this and she said the only
Really American she really knew of was you because when she was in South Africa she watched that message
One of her classes and how cool that her and I both watched a message that you preached in our school
Days and now we get to do life with y'all in a sense, but it's just amazing that the things that you preached in our school days and now we get to do life with y'all in a sense but
it's just amazing that the things that you're preaching are into schools even though they're so
about God but they're also about these incredible things and so when you were writing that message
how does you even get on the trail to discover all of the things that you were discovering about space?
Yeah well it's the same way Stady you know, that whole thing about South Africa,
I wish we could do a podcast on it with me and you and Demi some point because we were working in a little tiny house
north of Atlanta before Passion City Church.
So we were just doing Passion Conference and I was speaking places and we actually, you know,
like ordered the DVDs.
This is back in the day. And they came from a little place nearby,
and then if someone wanted one, we mailed it to them.
So that's how you got the DVD.
We mailed it from this little passion house,
and it went out on an envelope, and one day, a guy that worked
in our resource came up to my office, and he said,
hey, this is kind of weird, but we just got an order
from South Africa.
You know anybody in South Africa? I'm like, no, never been there.
Don't know anything about South Africa.
I mean, I know where it is on a map,
but he said, well, we just got an order
for 10,000 copies of the indescribable DVD.
Well, we wouldn't send out 10,000 copies of this DVD
in a year.
Wow.
And he said, so obviously we don't have that many.
We're going to go have to make them.
That means we're going to put a lot of money out.
And we don't even know if these people are real.
And then we have to get them put on a pallet.
And we're going to get them shipped to South Africa
to this guy, who's a distributor in South Africa.
And eventually, we did a little homework.
We made the investment. we shipped the DVDs.
Sadie, I'm not kidding you.
Over the next year or two years,
we would have shipped hundreds of thousands
of copies of this one message to this one country.
A country that I had never been to.
Actually, I had been there one time.
And somehow the South African people in the indescribable
message just, it was an explosion.
And I remember getting a letter like the one you just
held up, and it had a real photograph in it, like in the old
days.
And the photo was of some people that lived in Bloomfantane.
If you're in South Africa, you'll know what I'm talking about.
I want to say it's North at Joburg a little bit.
A small town, and these people, Sadie,
had put a sheet on the side of their house, a bed sheet,
and a projector.
Wow.
And the photo looked like there were 200 people in lawn chairs
sitting in their lawn, watching the indescribable message on the side of somebody's house in bloomfantane
In South Africa and I'm telling you this is where you know people say, you know
What do you do with all that? Hey, you don't take any credit for stuff like that
You just step back mouth open going. I don't know what you're doing God
But it's pretty crazy watching it.
Yup. And that message just went all over and for me it was a combination of loving these things,
learning about these images, seeing a bunch of Hubble stuff. But then it was the thread, Sadie,
because that's what you need. And that's when you're doing one of your talks or you're
working on a book or even in this podcast today, you're always looking for how does this thread
to a significant, memorable, transformational point.
And so one day at dawned on me
is I was looking at stuff farther and farther away.
Like this is 20 light years away
and this is 100 light years away
and this is 500 light years away.
Or this star is this big, but the this star is this big but the next one
is this big and the next one is this big and it just clicked for me. I'm going to take
people out through the galaxy but the farthest thing out is going to be a picture of the
cross and I'm just going to set it up and that's going to be my left hook because I do like
to have a left hook and it's going to be can I take you a little further and they's going to be my left hook because I do like to have a left hook. Yep. And it's going to be, can I take you a little further and they're going to go, oh my goodness,
we're going past this sombrero galaxy.
What in the world?
We're going past the whirlpool galaxy.
What?
And I'm sitting at this camp.
I'm going to tell you real fast.
And Durango Colorado student life camp.
And in the morning session, Sadie, the kids were sleepy and they weren't into it.
So every morning, I would show two galaxies
or a nebula or a quasar or a comet or something
and then I would make a spiritual application
and kids were getting their phones out.
They're little side kicks or whatever they had back then
and they're like taking pictures of the galaxies on the screen.
And I'm like, you're kidding me.
These kids are like really into this.
And so I'm back at the Hampton Inn
and Durango, Colorado, just searching NASA.
Like, just looking for stuff.
What can I show tomorrow that will be interesting?
And I click on this thing.
It says the X structure in the black hole
of the whirlpool galaxy.
And I'm like, okay, I click on it.
And boom, it's a cross.
Wow.
In the middle of the extra of the black hole
in the whirlpool galaxy is a cross.
Oh my gosh.
And the only way we can see it is because of Hubble.
And again, I'm sitting on my double bed at the Hampton Inn
and I almost fall off the bed.
And I'm like, this is too crazy.
I take it the next morning, Sadie,
and I show it to these kids.
And I mean, they are falling out of their chair.
Again, it doesn't prove that there's a God.
It just proves that God has a sense of humor.
And then I thought, oh my goodness,
if I go from that extra to the cross, this is going
to be powerful.
And I tried it at church, a same deal, speaking for Andy.
And I mean it, not people for a loop.
And so we put it into a message.
When again, on tour around the country, shared it with people, and night after
night after night, people just were speechless. And it's not because I came up with a good talk,
I can't take credit for any of that. It's because God designed the world in such a way to posture us in a
way to be an awe of Him. And the main reason we have spent a million dollars
looking for other people in the universe.
Huge money we've spent looking for extra terrestrial life
is because sciences convince that the universe is way too big
just to have us live in it. Huge waste of space.
If it's the whole purpose was just for me
and you to have a place to live on this little planet
called Earth.
And I love telling people, I would agree.
If the reason for the universe, the cosmos,
was to create a place for us to live, it's way too big.
But if the reason for the cosmos was different and it was to
be a billboard for the greatness of God is just about the right size.
Wow. Wow. That is really, really, really good. I have to say, I think this is probably
my favorite podcast ever. I've found myself a lot of times when you're talking thinking I'm lost
in this conversation. I have nothing to ask because I'm just taking it all in and just
man, so thankful that we serve a God who is a God of such intention and such detail and
has a thread throughout the whole story of life and that cross. It seems to be the common
thread of everything and it's just incredible
to reflect on and to hear you talk about the things you're excited about and the things
that you've learned that make you excited that led you to this led you to that and I can't
help but think of the first piece of Icy Gave, the tune your guitar and I don't know anyone
who tunes your guitar better than you and I don't even know if you play guitar but you just
genuinely, man, just the research you've done and the things that you've studied
but more importantly than all of that, just your love for God and your desire to
know him more and make him known is an honor to be a part of the same generation
as you and Shelley, truly. We learn so much from y'all, I know so many people
learn so much from y'all and I know so many people learn so much
from y'all. And so thank you for tuning your guitar. And thank you for everything you've
shared on this podcast. And so I just want to say truly thank you. And if you're listening
to this podcast, man, you've just got started on all the things from Louis that you need
to go read, that you need to go listen to, that you need to go watch. But right now, if
you are a parent, go get the wonder of creation
because it's a great way to get your kids started
and then this search for science and God.
There's so many more like he said,
this is the third one that he's written for children.
Also, I know you have a new devotional
at the table with Jesus,
which has been an incredible message as well.
And it's just so cool to see the years
and years you've done this
and just more and more wisdom continues to pour out of you. So I know that's a continuation
of tuning that guitar and keep going out there. So thank you for that and just the best
example for us to live and learn from and we appreciate every piece of ice that you've
given.
Thank you. Love you in Christian and man we were pumped to get to meet honey. Yes. A few
weeks ago. So now like life is good and we love you guys get to meet honey. Yes. A few weeks ago, so now life is good.
And we love you guys.
I've said this privately.
I've said it in small group, setting the saty.
I've said it to you in front of people.
But you are a shining light.
And I was thinking about you in Christians
wedding the other day.
And talking about how bright stars come along every night,
but comments only come along every so often.
And you're a force.
And thank you for using your platform and leveraging your life
in such a great way.
You're a real URA hero to so many people.
And when I meet people and you go,
oh, I love City Rob Huff, I look up to her so much and I'm like, you keep looking up to her because
she's looking up to Jesus and that's the way this whole thing works and you
and Christian are making such a big impact on this generation. Shelly and I
could not love you more and I'm thrilled to be on with you again today. I
loved this conversation and hopefully we'll get to do it again. You're gonna
get a lot more information from Levi, guarantee you that.
So, buckle up.
I'm so excited.
I'm so excited.
It's a day of learning.
Well, thank you, Louie again.
Thanks for making me cry at the end of the pie, guys, too.
We love you so much and I appreciate you.
Love you. you