00:00:00
(dramatic music)
00:00:23
(light music)
00:00:28
- I'm standing at the starting
line of the Boston Marathon.
00:00:32
Each year, over 30,000
people set off from here
00:00:36
on a gruelling, 42 kilometre run.
00:00:42
Marathons, along with Ironmans,
00:00:44
are two of the toughest athletic
endeavours on the planet.
00:00:48
The ultimate test of
strength and endurance.
00:00:52
They're considered by
most as barely possible,
00:00:56
but not for the Team Hoyt, father-son duo.
00:00:59
What makes this duo so special
00:01:02
is that Rick, the son, was
born with cerebral palsy,
00:01:06
and is quadriplegic.
00:01:07
And so, his father, Dick,
pushes and pulls him
00:01:11
in specialised wheel
chairs, bikes, and boats.
00:01:15
They've completed over 1,000 races
00:01:18
and are as devoted to each other as ever,
00:01:21
continuing to inspire millions
of people around the world
00:01:25
with their trademark
motto, "Yes, you can."
00:01:30
This is one of the greatest
love stories of all time.
00:01:35
A father who climbs
mountains, runs marathons,
00:01:39
travels to the ends of the earth
00:01:41
to give his son a better life.
00:01:43
A life that transcends the
limitations of his body.
00:01:48
This story shows that through perseverance
00:01:51
and determination, love conquers all.
00:01:56
(inspirational music)
00:02:12
A 3.8 kilometre swim, a
180 kilometre bike ride,
00:02:17
42.2 kilometre run.
00:02:19
The Ironman is arguably
one of the world's most
00:02:23
challenging one-day sporting events.
00:02:26
Initially begun as a contest in 1978
00:02:29
to see which athletes between
runners, swimmers, or cyclists
00:02:33
were the most fit.
00:02:34
The Ironman Triathlon has developed
00:02:37
into a worldwide
competition of determination
00:02:40
and awe-inspiring human feats.
00:02:43
To say an Ironman takes a lot of energy
00:02:46
is an understatement.
00:02:48
The average Ironman athlete burns around
00:02:51
7,000 to 10,000 calories
00:02:54
during those gruelling 226 kilometres,
00:02:57
four to five times the
average daily intake.
00:03:01
To most, it would seem barely possible
00:03:04
to do one by ourselves.
00:03:07
But imagine how difficult it would be
00:03:09
to push and carry someone else.
00:03:13
Well, that is exactly what Dick Hoyt does.
00:03:16
For 226 kilometres, he pulls, pushes,
00:03:20
and carries his son Rick, who
was born with cerebral palsy,
00:03:24
unable to walk or talk.
00:03:28
(gentle music)
00:03:30
Richard Rick Eugene Hoyt,
Jr., was born January 10, 1962
00:03:36
in Holland, Massachusetts,
00:03:37
the first son of Dick and Judy Hoyt.
00:03:41
Due to an umbilical cord
being wrapped around his neck,
00:03:44
Rick was oxygen deprived at birth
00:03:46
and was consequentially
born with cerebral palsy.
00:03:50
- The first time that I saw
Rick, he was in an incubator.
00:03:54
And he was doing push ups.
00:03:56
And I said, wow, my son,
he's gonna be an athlete.
00:04:00
He's doing push ups already
and he's only two days old,
00:04:03
come to find out he was having a spasm.
00:04:05
And he ended up having
severe brain damage.
00:04:10
- [Gary] Doctors told
the devastated parents
00:04:13
that their son would have
minimal quality of life
00:04:16
and recommended that he
should be institutionalised.
00:04:19
His parents were told to forget him.
00:04:22
He's gonna be nothing but a vegetable.
00:04:25
- My wife and I, we cried
and we talked about it
00:04:28
and we said, no, we're
not gonna put Rick away
00:04:31
like the doctor suggested,
put him in an institution,
00:04:33
he's gonna be nothing but a vegetable
00:04:34
for the rest of his life.
00:04:35
We said, we're gonna bring him up
00:04:36
just like any other child and
this is what we have done.
00:04:41
- Determined to give him
the best life possible,
00:04:43
regardless of his medical diagnosis,
00:04:46
Judy and Dick Hoyt took Rick home.
00:04:49
- Family life, at first,
when we brought Rick home
00:04:52
from the hospital, was very tough,
00:04:55
because we had all these problems
00:04:57
and we didn't know exactly
what was gonna happen
00:04:59
to do with Rick and actually, my wife,
00:05:01
she didn't want to go outside
00:05:03
when she first came home with Rick
00:05:04
because she thought what was gonna happen.
00:05:08
- [Gary] Rick's mother
Judy spent hours each day
00:05:11
teaching Rick the alphabet with letters
00:05:13
and posting signs on different
objects around the house.
00:05:17
And, soon, Rick had learned the alphabet.
00:05:20
- We could tell by looking in Rick's eyes
00:05:22
that he's paying attention
and he understood everything
00:05:26
that we were talking about.
00:05:27
So we tried teaching him the alphabet.
00:05:30
And we tried to teach him the numbers
00:05:33
and then we did a lot of reading with Rick
00:05:35
and we could tell that he understood
00:05:37
everything we were saying
'cause the look in his eyes
00:05:40
and what we used to do is have
him shake his head yes or no
00:05:44
to all the questions
that we were asking him
00:05:47
and he was able to do that and
we were able to communicate,
00:05:51
but we have such a bond with Rick now
00:05:53
that we know what each other is thinking.
00:05:55
It's unbelievable.
00:05:58
- Growing up with two brothers,
00:06:01
Rick wasn't offered any special treatment.
00:06:03
He was included with his brothers
00:06:05
and did everything they did,
from building treehouses
00:06:09
to sledding in the winter
and swimming in the summer.
00:06:12
When playing baseball,
Rick was the umpire.
00:06:15
During hockey, Rick was a goalie.
00:06:18
To his brothers, he was just one of them.
00:06:22
- Rick's two brothers
are just unbelievable,
00:06:25
the way they treat Rick and handle Rick.
00:06:28
They all love Rick and
they did things for him.
00:06:30
They built tree huts, outside,
00:06:33
and they'd carry him up there.
00:06:34
They'd bury him in sand
when we went to the beaches.
00:06:37
We used to go do a lot of camping
00:06:40
and we'd go to campgrounds and have these
00:06:42
big swimming pools there and
they'd take Rick in there
00:06:44
and throw him in the pool.
00:06:45
And everybody else that's
looking and they're freaking out
00:06:48
and Rick's sinking down
and he's looking up at us
00:06:51
and he's laughing and then
they'd jump in and get him,
00:06:54
I would jump in and get him.
00:06:55
I mean, we did everything as a family
00:06:58
and everything that we could do,
00:07:00
we found a way to do it with Rick.
00:07:02
The boys were just unbelievable.
00:07:05
- However, life wasn't easy
for Rick or his family.
00:07:08
They faced constant
challenges at every turn.
00:07:12
With one constant battle
being the fact that
00:07:14
Rick was unable to communicate verbally.
00:07:18
- He'd wave his arms
and try to do anything
00:07:20
just to get our attention so
he could communicate with us.
00:07:25
- Although his family did their best
00:07:27
to interpret what Rick was communicating,
00:07:30
they could never be 100% sure.
00:07:34
However, all this changed in 1974,
00:07:37
when engineering students
at Tufts University
00:07:39
in Medford, Massachusetts,
00:07:41
developed a communication device for Rick
00:07:44
that the family would
eventually dub the hope machine.
00:07:49
- The hope machine's
probably one of the most
00:07:50
important devices that Rick ever had
00:07:53
'cause we wanted to get
him into public school
00:07:55
and Rick couldn't talk, so we
went and met some engineers
00:07:58
from Tufts University in Boston
00:08:00
and we talked to them and
they built what was called
00:08:03
the TIC, the Tufts
Interactive Communicator.
00:08:06
And Rick's mother named
it the hope machine.
00:08:09
And so, the engineers
were coming to our house
00:08:11
and everybody's betting
what are the first words
00:08:13
Rick is ever gonna say.
00:08:15
Well, his mom's saying
it's gonna be, "Hi, Mom,
00:08:17
and me, the dad, no,
it's gonna be, "Hi, Dad."
00:08:19
Well, the Boston Bruins were
going for the Stanley Cup
00:08:21
and the very first words he
ever said was, "Go Bruins."
00:08:25
So we knew right then and there
00:08:27
that he understood
everything that was going on
00:08:29
and he loved sports.
00:08:30
- [Rick] For 12 very long
years, all that I could do
00:08:34
was cry, laugh, and move
my head to answer questions
00:08:39
that people asked.
00:08:41
When I got my first communication device,
00:08:45
the feeling was joyous.
00:08:47
For the first time, I could tell Dad, Mom,
00:08:51
and the rest of the
world exactly how I felt.
00:08:56
- Unable to talk and
classified as disabled
00:09:00
meant that up until now, Rick had not been
00:09:02
entitled to the same
schooling as other students.
00:09:06
However, Rick's parents,
mostly his mother, Judy,
00:09:09
fought tirelessly for the
passage of a Massachusetts
00:09:13
education reform law that
forced public school districts
00:09:18
to accommodate individuals
with disabilities
00:09:21
and educate them as they
would any other student.
00:09:24
- [Rick] Mom fought for the rights of me
00:09:26
and thousands of others
to enter public school.
00:09:31
She pushed ahead even if
it meant calling senators
00:09:34
from different states to make
sure her point was heard.
00:09:39
It was important to Mom
that I be fully included.
00:09:45
- The addition of his communication device
00:09:47
proved that Rick was capable of learning
00:09:50
and with this, Rick was able to attend
00:09:52
public schools for the first time.
00:09:55
- [Rick] I wanted to be
treated like any other student
00:09:58
as far as school work
and responsibilities.
00:10:02
I also wanted to be treated
like any other student
00:10:06
outside the classroom.
00:10:09
You might be wondering whether or not
00:10:11
people stared at me or made fun of me.
00:10:15
The answer to that question is yes.
00:10:19
But I'm hoping they were staring at me
00:10:22
because of my stunning good looks.
00:10:25
- Rick not only attended middle school,
00:10:28
but went on to graduate from
Westfield High School in 1984.
00:10:33
- It was just unbelievable
'cause that was our main goal,
00:10:36
was for Rick to be able to
live a life like anybody else
00:10:40
and one of the most important things
00:10:41
was for Rick to be able to go to school.
00:10:44
And we were able to get Rick into school
00:10:46
and then see him to go to
high school was unbelievable.
00:10:50
- However, as someone who
always pushed the limits,
00:10:53
Rick didn't stop there, but
applied and was accepted
00:10:56
to Boston University where
he studied special education.
00:11:01
In 1993, at the age of
31, Rick became the first
00:11:05
non-speaking quadriplegic to ever graduate
00:11:09
from the School of Education
at Boston University.
00:11:12
Rick later worked at Boston
College in a computer lab,
00:11:16
helping to develop systems
to aid in communication
00:11:19
and other tasks for
people with disabilities.
00:11:23
Yet, Rick not only broke
down academic barriers,
00:11:26
but smashed athletic barriers as well.
00:11:30
In 1977, at age 15, Rick
used his hope machine
00:11:34
to ask his father if
they could run together
00:11:37
in a five mile road race to
support a lacrosse player
00:11:40
from his school who had
recently been paralysed.
00:11:43
- [Rick] I wanted to show
this person that life goes on
00:11:47
and he could still live a productive life.
00:11:51
That is why I turned to my dad and said
00:11:55
that we have to run in this race.
00:11:58
- Well, at the time, I was 40 years old.
00:12:00
I was not a runner.
00:12:02
I used to run maybe three times a week,
00:12:04
a mile each time to keep my weight down.
00:12:06
And all we had was a
Mulholland wheelchair,
00:12:08
which was form fitted,
prescription made for Rick's body.
00:12:12
And we had a hard time pushing him in it,
00:12:14
never mind running in it.
00:12:16
But we went down to the race.
00:12:17
It was a five mile race.
00:12:19
They gave Rick and I
the number double zero
00:12:21
and the gun went off
and Rick and I took off
00:12:23
with all the other runners.
00:12:24
Well, everybody thought that
we would go to the corner
00:12:26
and turn around and come back.
00:12:28
Well, we didn't.
00:12:29
We finished the whole five miles,
00:12:31
coming in next to last, but not last.
00:12:34
And we have a picture of Rick
coming across the finish line
00:12:37
and he's got the biggest
smile you saw in your life.
00:12:40
When we got home that night,
00:12:41
Rick wrote on his computer,
"Dad, when I'm running,
00:12:44
"feels like my disability disappears,"
00:12:47
which was a very powerful message to me.
00:12:50
You think about it, somebody
that's in a wheelchair,
00:12:52
can't talk, use their arms and their legs,
00:12:54
and now they're out there running,
00:12:56
their disability disappears.
00:12:58
He called himself Free Bird, 'cause now he
00:13:00
was free and able to
be out there competing
00:13:02
and running with everybody else.
00:13:05
- Team Hoyt knew they
just had to keep running.
00:13:09
So, they had a special racing
wheelchair made for Rick,
00:13:12
a streamlined, freewheeler,
00:13:14
that wouldn't keep veering off course.
00:13:17
Team Hoyt steadily began
doing longer and bigger races
00:13:22
and, eventually, set their
sights on the Boston Marathon.
00:13:26
Race organisers turned them down at first,
00:13:29
but finally relented, although the Hoyts
00:13:31
got no special treatment.
00:13:36
They would only be allowed to compete
00:13:38
if they qualified in Rick's age group.
00:13:40
This was quite a challenge,
as Rick was in his 20s,
00:13:44
while Dick, the one who
was doing the running,
00:13:46
was in his 40s.
00:13:48
Yet, with determination and
perseverance, they qualified.
00:13:53
And so began a father-son legacy.
00:13:57
The Boston Marathon became
an annual event for them.
00:14:00
Their personal record
for the Boston Marathon
00:14:03
is 30 minutes shy of the world record,
00:14:06
a record set by a person running alone.
00:14:11
- [Rick] The message I am
trying to tell everyone
00:14:13
is that disabled people are people too
00:14:17
and just love the opportunity
00:14:20
to be included in everyday life.
00:14:23
- [Dick] We've had more
people that come up to us
00:14:25
and they say, "We want
to thank you because
00:14:28
"we saw you out there competing
00:14:30
"and we were on the sidelines,"
00:14:32
and they said, "If you
can do it, we can do it."
00:14:35
This is all people,
people with disabilities
00:14:37
and people that don't
have any disabilities.
00:14:41
- [Gary] A few years after
their first Boston Marathon,
00:14:44
someone suggested why not compete
00:14:47
in triathlons and Ironmans?
00:14:50
Now, a triathlon contains three elements:
00:14:53
swim, ride, and run.
00:14:56
For Dick, who hadn't ridden
a bike since he was six
00:14:58
and who couldn't swim, one would think
00:15:01
that he was up against an
insurmountable challenge.
00:15:05
But Dick attacked the idea with a fury
00:15:08
that could only be fueled by love.
00:15:11
Love for his son, who
couldn't be happier competing.
00:15:15
- [Rick] Let me put it
into perspective for you.
00:15:19
The average triathlete probably
weighs about 150 pounds
00:15:24
and their bike weighs about 17 pounds.
00:15:28
This is a total of 167 pounds.
00:15:33
Dad weighs about 180
pounds and our bike weighs
00:15:38
about 70 pounds because it
needs to be heavier and stronger
00:15:43
to hold both me and my seat.
00:15:45
Dad isn't very pleased about this,
00:15:48
but I now weigh about 100 pounds,
00:15:51
thanks in part to a regular diet
00:15:53
of ice cream and chocolate cake.
00:15:57
This totals 350 pounds,
or almost 200 pounds more
00:16:02
than the average triathlete with his bike.
00:16:06
The same math could be used to figure out
00:16:09
how heavy a load dad has to pull
00:16:11
in the swim portion as well.
00:16:14
- From there, it was on
to the most challenging
00:16:17
of all sporting events:
The Ironman Triathlon
00:16:21
in Kona, Hawaii.
00:16:24
(light music)
00:16:26
This gruelling event is comprised
of a 3.8 kilometre swim,
00:16:31
a 180 kilometre ride, and a
42.2 kilometre marathon run.
00:16:38
In January 1988, after a year of racing
00:16:42
that included one Ironman, a half Ironman,
00:16:45
three Olympic distance triathlons,
00:16:48
five marathons, three half marathons,
00:16:51
and 15 short road races,
00:16:53
Dick wrote to the Hawaii Ironman officials
00:16:56
to ask permission to
compete in the 1988 event.
00:17:00
However, concerned that the swim portion
00:17:02
would be too dangerous to compete in,
00:17:05
their application was rejected.
00:17:07
However, Dick was undeterred.
00:17:09
They'd been rejected before.
00:17:11
Dick took it in his
stride to make it happen.
00:17:15
He immediately replied,
detailing exactly how
00:17:18
they would be able to complete the swim
00:17:21
and emphasising that they
had swum triathlon distances
00:17:24
before, in all kinds of waters.
00:17:27
But the answer was the same.
00:17:30
The Hawaiian Ironman officials regretted
00:17:32
that they couldn't allow
Team Hoyt to compete
00:17:35
for safety reasons.
00:17:38
However, through incredible perseverance,
00:17:41
Team Hoyt was officially
invited to participate
00:17:44
in the Ironman World Championship,
00:17:47
an event which is really the ultimate test
00:17:50
of strength and endurance.
00:17:53
In 1989, Rick became the first
disabled person in the world
00:17:59
to ever compete in and
complete the Ironman in Hawaii.
00:18:04
Due in part to Team Hoyt's
dedication and efforts,
00:18:08
Ironman now has a physically
challenged division.
00:18:11
Nearly 24 years later, Rick became
00:18:15
the first disabled person to be inducted
00:18:18
into the Ironman Hall of Fame.
00:18:21
- [Rick] I was inducted as the 26th member
00:18:24
and Dad, just behind me as
the 27th because, as you know,
00:18:31
I always finish just ahead of Dad first.
00:18:35
This made me feel very happy,
00:18:38
being a part of such an
iconic accomplishment
00:18:42
with my father.
00:18:44
I was able to show the world
00:18:46
that my body does not define my spirit.
00:18:50
Through this experience of
this athletic achievement,
00:18:54
my father and I have a
greater love for one another
00:18:58
because we shared the same
dedication at this event.
00:19:03
- [Gary] Team Hoyt have competed
00:19:05
in more than 1,100 athletic
events in the last 35 years.
00:19:11
They've run the Boston Marathon 32 times,
00:19:14
plus 39 other marathons
and 252 triathlons,
00:19:18
including six Ironman distance events.
00:19:22
They've run across the
United States of America,
00:19:24
through 18 states, from Santa
Monica Pier in Los Angeles,
00:19:28
to Marriott Long Wharf in
Boston Harbour, Massachusetts,
00:19:32
the whole thing distancing
6,011 kilometres
00:19:37
and lasting 47 consecutive days,
00:19:41
averaging 127 kilometres a day.
00:19:46
In 2005, the Hoyts used
their popularity and fame
00:19:50
to create a foundation:
The Hoyt Foundation,
00:19:54
to help others with a disability
00:19:55
take part in athletic pursuits,
00:19:58
promote and foster
inclusion in every day life
00:20:00
and raise disability awareness.
00:20:03
Their motto is, "Yes, you can,"
00:20:06
to promote the message
that you can do anything
00:20:09
you set your mind to,
00:20:11
for individuals with
or without disability.
00:20:14
For the Hoyts, after decades
of being told, "No, you can't,"
00:20:19
they proclaim a different
message for others to hear.
00:20:23
- [Rick] To me, finishing is so important.
00:20:26
It is a representation of my life.
00:20:30
Mom and Dad could have
quit when I was born,
00:20:33
but they didn't.
00:20:35
They could have given up trying to help me
00:20:38
learn to communicate or trying
to get me into public school.
00:20:43
They chose to continue
and because of that,
00:20:47
I have had one heck of a ride.
00:20:49
So many people race now
because of me and my dad.
00:20:54
I love to inspire
everyone to be able to run
00:20:59
or have someone push them
00:21:01
if they are unable to run themselves.
00:21:05
- Today, Rick is 53 years old.
00:21:08
They said he's gonna be
nothing but a vegetable
00:21:10
and we still can't figure
what kind of vegetable he is,
00:21:12
but he's graduated from high school,
00:21:14
graduated from Boston University.
00:21:16
He lives all by himself
in his own apartment
00:21:18
and Rick and I have
competed around the world,
00:21:21
over 1100 athletic events.
00:21:24
And he's making himself well
known throughout the world
00:21:28
and now we get a Team Hoyt Virginia Beach,
00:21:30
we've got a Team Hoyt New England,
00:21:32
we've got a Team Hoyt San Diego,
00:21:34
we've got a Team Hoyt Arizona,
00:21:35
we've got a Team Hoyt Canada,
00:21:37
and they actually want us
to start one over in Japan.
00:21:39
So you can see that this
person they wanted to put away
00:21:43
and see what he's doing to
everybody all over the world.
00:21:48
- [Gary] This father-son
team have proved to everyone
00:21:50
that anything can be achieved
00:21:53
with enough persistence, dedication,
00:21:56
and, ultimately, the
bottomless depths of love
00:22:00
that can only be found in the unique bond
00:22:02
between a father and his son.
00:22:04
- [Rick] I have said this so many times.
00:22:07
Dad is my hands and my feet.
00:22:10
He is the wind beneath my wings.
00:22:13
There is many things I'd
like to do for my dad.
00:22:18
I wish I could sit him
down in the wheelchair
00:22:21
and I would push him, but, obviously,
00:22:24
because of my ability, I cannot.
00:22:28
I have quite a list of
things I would do with Dad.
00:22:32
Pull, pedal, and push him in a triathlon.
00:22:37
I would carry him on my
shoulders up a mountain.
00:22:42
I would do anything for my dad.
00:22:48
- [Gary] Dick, at age 75,
00:22:50
still pushes his son in a wheelchair
00:22:52
in races across the country.
00:22:55
Why?
00:22:56
Because his son, who was diagnosed
00:22:59
with cerebral palsy at
birth, forgets his disability
00:23:03
and never feels better than
he does during those races.
00:23:08
And so Dick keeps going, despite
warnings from his doctors,
00:23:12
despite stents in his arteries,
00:23:14
despite surviving a heart attack.
00:23:17
This is what unconditional
love looks like.
00:23:23
♪ How deep the Father's love for us ♪
00:23:28
♪ How vast beyond all measure ♪
00:23:34
♪ That He should give His only son ♪
00:23:39
♪ To make a wretch His treasure ♪
00:23:45
♪ How great the pain of searing loss ♪
00:23:50
♪ The Father turns his face away ♪
00:23:56
♪ As wounds which mar the chosen one ♪
00:24:02
♪ Bring many sons to glory ♪
00:24:07
- Fully devoted, 100%
committed, unconditional love.
00:24:14
Wouldn't you like that
kind of love and devotion
00:24:17
to help you through life's tough times?
00:24:20
Well, you can.
00:24:22
Just ask for it and begin
to experience it right now
00:24:27
as we pray.
00:24:28
Dear Heavenly Father, thank
you for Your unconditional love
00:24:33
and commitment to us.
00:24:34
Thank you for being there
in our time of need.
00:24:37
Thank you for Your willingness
to help us and carry us
00:24:40
when we feel unable to continue alone.
00:24:44
We thank You that You are a God of love,
00:24:46
who is completely devoted
to us, in Jesus' name, Amen.
00:25:09
Stories don't come much more
inspirational than this one,
00:25:12
about Dick and Rick Hoyt.
00:25:15
It's the story of a father, Dick Hoyt,
00:25:18
who pushes his son, Rick, in a wheelchair,
00:25:20
in marathons and triathlons
across the country.
00:25:24
In fact, in over 1,100 gruelling events.
00:25:29
Why?
00:25:30
Because his son, born with cerebral palsy
00:25:33
and unable to walk or talk,
00:25:36
forgets his disability
and never feels better
00:25:39
than he does during those races.
00:25:42
In fact, I've been so
inspired by Team Hoyt
00:25:47
that I want to share their
story and inspiration
00:25:49
wherever I can.
00:25:52
So, we have a special gift
for all our viewers today.
00:25:56
It's the booklet The One and Only.
00:25:59
This book is our gift to
you and is absolutely free.
00:26:03
There are no costs or
obligations whatsoever.
00:26:07
This book has inspired
people around the world
00:26:11
and here's your opportunity
to receive it free of charge.
00:26:15
Here's the information you need.
00:26:19
Phone or text us at 0436 333 555,
00:26:25
or visit our website www.tij.tv
00:26:30
to request today's free offer
00:26:33
and we'll send it to you
totally free of charge
00:26:36
and with no obligation.
00:26:38
So don't delay.
00:26:40
Call or text 0436 333 555 in Australia
00:26:46
or 020 422 2042 in New Zealand.
00:26:52
Or visit our website www.tij.tv
00:26:58
to request today's offer.
00:27:00
Write to us at PO Box 5101,
00:27:05
Dora Creek, New South
Wales 2264, Australia.
00:27:10
Or PO Box 76673, Manukau,
Auckland 2241, New Zealand.
00:27:19
Don't delay.
00:27:21
Call or text us now.
00:27:25
If you've enjoyed today's journey,
00:27:27
be sure to join us again next week,
00:27:30
when we will share another
of life's journeys together
00:27:33
and experience another new and
thought-provoking perspective
00:27:37
on the peace, insight,
understanding, and hope
00:27:41
that only the Bible can give us.
00:27:44
The Incredible Journey truly is television
00:27:47
that changes lives.
00:27:49
Until next week, remember
the ultimate destination
00:27:53
of life's journey.
00:27:55
Now, I saw a new heaven and a new earth
00:27:57
and God will wipe away
every tear from their eyes.
00:28:01
There shall be no more death,
nor sorrow, nor crying.
00:28:04
There shall be no more pain,
00:28:06
for the former things have passed away.
00:28:09
(gentle music)