Clean Water Changes Everything | Pastor Levi Lusko and Scott Harrison | Fresh Life Church I guarantee no one watching this woke up this morning and said, "Wow, I'm so grateful for the clean water that came out of my refrigerator. For the long shower that I took, for the the water that allowed me to brush my teeth, >> the cold plunge, you know, the cold plunge, the pool, the golf course that I might play, you know, Sunday afternoon after church, right? >> Let me go help the 700 million people who don't have that." >> So, it's it's no one comes looking for us. No one comes looking to solve the problem. So we really have to share this need uh share it in the most compelling uh visceral way that we can and then show people they actually can be a part of the solution. >> Hey Fresh Life, we want to welcome you at every location and church online, however you're listening to this for a very special edition of This is the Kingdom. Uh we're here in Franklin, Tennessee at the Experience Lab, which is what you guys are calling it, uh for Charity Water, which is the first of its kind experience to take people on an immersive tour to help them understand both the need and the solution for bringing what we're taking for granted oftent times in our lives, and that's clean water to people. >> And I'm here with Scott Harrison, who is the founder and CEO of Charity Water, currently on paternity leave because of his brand new baby boy. but we dragged him into this moment because it's just so important for us to get to have this conversation. And uh you'll know why in just a moment when we read our text that's going to be our scripture uh this weekend. But we do want to say how glad we are especially if you're with us for the first time at church uh brought brought by a friend. It just means the world you'd come. And we are talking about something that should move every person on earth's heart uh but especially followers of Jesus. And in this series, we're talking about what the kingdom of God is like. And we don't have to wonder. We don't we're not left trying to figure it out. I mean, in the Red Letters, Jesus tells us so often what the kingdom of God is like. He tells us what the kingdom of heaven is like. And when we scripted the series and were coming up with what the weeks were that we were going to focus on, we included Matthew 10 verse 42. And here's what Jesus says, telling us what life in his kingdom is like, what lights his heart up, what pleases God. And he says that whoever gives one of these little ones a cup of cold water in the name of a disciple, assuredly I say to you, he shall by no means lose his reward. And Scott, I I texted you immediately when we kind of planned the series out because I was like, I don't know anybody on earth who has given their life over to this verse than you. I mean, you have literally spent your life bringing cups of cold water to people around the world. >> I love the specificity of the the temperature. >> Yeah. That he said cold. That he said it needs to be cold like and and and how audacious when there wasn't even ice cubes then, you know? But but really, I mean, you're no stranger to Fresh Life and Fresh Life's no stranger to you. We've been partying together for years. Um, but just kind of for those maybe who are new, uh, just kind of give us the 30,000 kind of overview of of what God has done through Charity Water. >> Yeah. Well, maybe we start with a problem. So, you know, as we record this, uh, today 700 million people around the world are drinking dirty water. Uh so it's about one in 10 people alive on the planet, you know, will not enjoy this thing that, you know, you and I and and probably most people watching have taken for granted, you know, their whole life. And uh >> and behind you is literally shades of water that you guys have sampled around the world, right? >> Yeah, exactly. I mean, this is a little tongue and cheek kind of the dirty water bar here at this experience lab. Uh we're in Tennessee. People like to show off their fancy alcohol, their wine, their bourbon, their spirits, and these beautiful lit bars. So, we're showing off dirty water. >> Hey, here's life for one out of 10 humans on this planet. >> Yeah. And I think, you know, if you don't have clean water, it's hard to uh overstate the dramatic impact that has on your life. uh and and you know if you talk about women and girls you know just today uh women and girls will waste more than 200 million hours walking for dirty water >> you know so imagine you know you're a a teenage girl and 6 hours a day 7 days a week are spent walking for something that's not even helpful it's not like oh I'm going to something that's going to make me healthy I'm actually going >> they walk all these hours but they don't come back with clean water they come back with >> they're going to a river they're going to an open source pond >> uh and this This is why uh so many of the teenage girls will drop out of school. They don't get a chance to fidget their education because they've got to go walk for the water of the family. Uh it it dramatically impacts health in in many of these countries. 50% of the disease you can track right back to dirty water. So you know I remember somebody said to me in the early days just give everybody water and you can empty half the hospital beds. >> Wow. >> In the entire country. you would just send half the people home >> if they had the most basic need for for health. >> Um it impacts education, it impacts women and girls. It impacts the local economy. You know, you're these people are spending so much money often on medicine for the waterbornne diseases. Uh I remember being in a village once and and they said, "Well, it's actually not even the medicine that's the most expensive. Sometimes it's the taxi ride to the clinic which could be one month's wages. >> So you've got families often that'll have a sick child and they can't afford to get their child to the clinic to get the medicine. So uh it's a huge problem and the great thing is it's completely solvable down to the last person. And uh that's what's really energized me for you know almost two decades now >> cuz 2006 is when this all began. >> Yeah. So next year is our 20th anniversary and there can be zero people drinking dirty water on the planet. Uh and there are >> the technology exists. >> The technology exists and you know there's actually a lot of problems that we're working on that we haven't solved. There's no cure for Parkinson's disease. There's no cure for ALS. Uh my mom eventually died of pancreatic cancer at the end of her life. It was a couple months from diagnosis to death and the doctors had no idea. Yeah. >> Pancreatic cancer as well. >> It was unsolvable and today is, you know, it's almost a death sentence if somebody has, you know, stage four pancreatic. So unlike all those problems where we're spending billions of dollars in research labs looking for a cure, we actually have the cure for water. We've had the cure for hundreds of years. We haven't implemented the cure. >> We haven't gotten enough people to care. we haven't mobilized the the resources and we haven't kind of aimed those resources at the problem. So I think that's what's most exciting is knowing that we are working on a problem where 700 million people could actually be zero people where we could see a day where every human being on earth has clean water to drink. And in the last almost 20 years, you you and your team have been used by God and an army of people who believe in the mission around the world >> and communities like Fresh Life stepped up. >> But the number that you guys have brought clean water to is astounding. It's now 21 million people. >> Almost 21. Yeah. >> Almost 21 million people. I mean that's I mean I know you keep >> I mean that sounds small to >> because you're looking at the 700 million. >> You're thinking what what do we still what do we still What do we still Right. we've talked about before, but but I mean that is a massive swing that's been taken. I mean to see that >> it's about 190,000 communities around the world have have clean water. But again, that's 135th of the current problem. >> So 2.8% of the way there. So when the water project opens up in a city, it's not just like it just solves the problem of ecoli and jardia and you know all those diseases and mosquito worms and and all that stuff, but it's also all the time coming back, right? I mean, it's it's the little girls who can now go to school, right? >> Yeah. I think that's that probably has been the most exciting uh anecdotal evidence for me. And I've been to Africa 55 times now and I've gotten to travel to 72 countries and just been exposed to so much both need and then the problem being solved. [clears throat] It's the story of what people do with the reclaimed time that is they're the best stories. you know, women that uh will start businesses and they will bake donuts and then they'll start with one stall and then the next thing you know they're selling them in eight markets and they're using the money to repair their home and to put a tin roof on and then put all their kids through school. You know, time equals money. Uh you know, we hear stories of uh girls when they don't have to walk for water, they go immediately to school. Uh, here in the lab, we actually have a virtual reality film that shows this little girl and she's like, "It's it's attention because I want to be on time for school, but that means I have to wake up at 4 in the morning." Yeah. >> And start walking and I'm exhausted. And these kids get to school and they're often so tired >> when they're there cuz they are walking in the morning, they're walking at night. >> When we went through the lab, there's the part where you get on the treadmill in a 90°ree heated room, which is probably actually being pretty conservative for >> I think so. Couldn't get it hotter with fire code, but I think I wanted 110. >> It was like I was sweltering. And then I put my daughter Clover's 13 up there and to see her and really she's watching Esther walk >> who's 12. >> Who's 12? And to see my daughter and think of five hours a day of her life, five trips to this well to bring back diseased water and then to think about her life being given back cuz a lack of clean water really is a sexist problem. The problem does disproportionately discriminate and it's it's oppressing women around the world. >> It does. And as you have a daughter, I have daughters. You know, it's [clears throat] hard to to think about that. But >> and I think, look, that's just the the biggest challenge for an organization like ours is, and that's why we built this experience here. It's just trying to bring people into the problem. You know, I I guarantee no one watching this woke up this morning and said, "Wow, I'm so grateful for the clean water that came out of my refrigerator." Yeah. For the long shower that I took, for the the water that allowed me to brush my teeth, >> the cold plunge, you know, the cold plunge, the pool, the golf course that I might play, you know, Sunday afternoon after church, right? >> Let me go help the 700 million people who don't have that. >> So, it's it's no one comes looking for us. No one comes looking to solve the problem. So we really have to share this need uh share it in the most compelling uh visceral way that we can and then show people they actually can be a part of the solution. When we met many years ago, you did one well one water project. You said I think our church can come together and and fix this for one community. Now you're at 17 communities. >> So >> and by God's grace we're doing more. This is the can we're going to attach some cuz cups of water in Jesus name. I mean, that's powerful. That's powerful to think about that. >> And and what we love about this space is so many children get this intuitively. I mean, we've had kids donate their birthdays to Charity Water who are, you know, eight or nine years old. We've we've had six-year-olds go out and sell lemonade, you know, 12 weeks in a row and and give a little bit of money because kids understand other kids should be drinking clean water. >> And, you know, that that's sometimes it's the adults that get a little more jaded and apathetic. you know, oh, how could we play any part in some paralyzing global issue? >> And you know, it's it's communities like yours. It's it's children who've just said, we can do something. >> Yeah. >> We can actually do something for one person, for one family, for one community. And that's really the approach Charity Water's taken. And you look back and you say, oh, >> the first community has now turned into 186,000 across 29 countries just using that. Just do the next one. Is is that the exact number? $186,000. Cuz that's crazy. That's the exact amount of dollars we've been able to partner with you. >> Okay. >> $186,000 fresh. Come on, guys. I mean, that's crazy that that lines up like that right there. >> And when you when you see that water turn on and now everyone has access to it, like what what are you seeing of like the impact it has on a town or on a place? I mean, >> so we have about 14 technologies that we will use to to bring clean water to people. Drilling is the most dramatic. And in a way, you know, if you think about the irony, right, you've got hundreds of people living in a village and they are living on top of the resource. >> Yeah. >> But the resource is 15 stories underground. >> Oh, that I thought of that when the VR was on cuz I was like, "Oh my gosh, it hit me. It was there the whole time." >> It was there the whole time. And it almost feels so easy. You bring in these big trucks. >> They come in like a dinosaur, you know? >> Yeah. guys jump out and they're all covered in, you know, kind of [clears throat] muddy overalls and they stick pipes into the ground and they go down one story and two stories and three stories and then in about 2 days of drilling they tap into a lake and then there's this moment. So you're in these communities and everybody is crowded around for days. So it never gets old, Levi. You know, hundreds of people waiting. Are they going to find water? >> You cuz some holes are dry about 10% of the time, you know, there's nothing there and you got to move to a different location. ever strike out completely. >> You just try again. Okay. You keep trying. >> Yeah. >> But there is this moment where they strike water and they start flushing the well and they push compressed air down and this plume of clean water shoots out of the ground, 100 ft high, and everybody's getting wet and the kids all crash the drilling rig and they're trying they they've got their hands out. They're trying to touch the water. They're tasting the water >> that's been there their whole lives. They just and [clears throat] you know and you're standing there saying like that was $10,000. >> Wow. >> Like all that was needed. That was the equipment that was needed, >> but it actually cost $10,000 to help $250 people >> in this community. Yeah. >> Yeah. >> I mean, it's kind of crazy. It's $40 >> and they're they're waving. They're waving. >> It's amazing. There's Sometimes these celebrations will last for days. It's like a party that lasts for days. >> Watching I mean I've seen with knowing being your friend watching these videos being it's addicting. It's like there's not much that can compare to that that joy of that moment like as far as like a high or an addiction like to see that joy break out and it's just such a tangible symbol of the kingdom cuz as I was praying for this week I I was reading this text and I just kept thinking to myself like why did he pick that? Why is that a symbol? Why is this the kingdom? This this I mean >> but obviously beside the fact that it's such a building block of life so many of the miracles in scripture from beginning to end tap into water. Yeah. So, I was thinking about Moses throwing the the the branch and turn the salt water fresh. He's the original Scott Harrison, right? I know that's you're like, that's the worst thing someone's ever [laughter] said, but we're going to allow it, right? Uh but but then you have uh Elijah pouring water out on the sacrifice on Mount Carmel. You have the the the river to blood in Moses's day. You have the Red Sea parting. You have the rock being struck. I think you have Jacob digging the wells that are contested and then just continuing to kind of move on like I'll give you those >> and I'll keep looking for fresh water. >> Isaac redigging out Abraham's wells because those wells had gotten stuffed up, right? I mean I mean you have Jesus's first miracle happening with water turning into wine. I mean the spirit comes at the baptism of Jesus in water. You have Ezekiel the river from the throne. Jesus said when the spirit comes we get to have rivers of living water. I mean really there is something so symbolic, significant and really spiritual. I mean we all feel at peace by the sea. We feel at peace by a lake or a stream. I mean I think there's something deep inside of us that is is touched on by this this theme. >> You know >> that's that's totally true. Yeah. >> And I think that the cold, you know, if you think about it, most of the bad water is on the surface. So the problem we're trying to solve as we go into Ethiopia, right, which is a also talked about in the Bible a lot. uh it's it's a open source that is shared with cattle. Well, that water is out in the sun and it's hot. The minute you go deep, the water becomes cold and clean. >> So, the water that we're bringing out of the ground is actually cold >> because it comes from the depths of the earth naturally. It's cold naturally. It's coming out kind of like out of your refrigerator temperature and it's clean >> because it's been warm water, the dirty water. So Jesus when he says cold water, he's talking about springfed deep out of the ground. >> Wow. That'll preach. Yeah. And it does. Wow. So the water that is is on the surface, I mean, we're looking at some photos here on the wall. I mean, it's got >> it's getting beaten down by the sun. It's Exactly. It's contaminated. And >> you know, [snorts] it it it breaks my heart often to see children next to the cows, next to the donkeys and the livestock, and they are sharing the same kind of open source. It might be a swamp. It might be a giant puddle and you realize like this is fecally contaminated. I mean this is you know the place where animals are going to the bathroom >> is the same water that is that is being drunk. It's not protected. It's not safe. It's not clean. So >> I was thinking about as you were sharing that like how um for all these people living on top of water they can't tap into. It's much like us living on the solution to the problem just many of us not being mobilized, not being activated to realize like you said for $40 to take part in water for 12 people a year, right? >> Uh it's $40 a person to >> $4 a month in a year. >> 12 people a year. Yeah. as people come on that membership or $10,000 for a project like you said and now a well's there and that well's there forever, right? I mean >> for 10 plus years. >> Okay. 10 years on a well. >> But we have wells now that are 19 years old that are just as long as and and that's one of the things that the organization at Charity Water has invested um really tens of millions of dollars in the ongoing sustainability. So we train mechanics uh and we send them out on motorcycles to go and maintain and fix wells. It's almost like the Geek Squad or Apple Care for wells. >> Oh gosh. Yeah. You're so funny. >> And if and if something breaks, uh, >> you have software on every well that can monitor. >> Yeah. Not on every well, but we've been working on sensor technology, kind of smart wells. Uh, so we've had a project in R&D for for eight years now where we can create a water project, throw a sensor on it, and then when it breaks, it alerts a team of mechanics and they say something's wrong. they go out and then the community pays for that repair. So, we've we've kind of helped set the whole thing up, but when that $65 repair bill comes, the community values the water and they actually pay the mechanics. >> You've empowered them, first of all, given them so much of their time back, but then also now you've you've also given the wind to local outfitters, too, right? Cuz even locals, you don't send in the outsiders, hey, get out of the way. Dad's here. Like, you empower them. >> That's right. Right? >> Nobody that looks like me is working at a charity water project around the world. It's we employ over 7,000 locals now. >> It's incarnational ministry, right? >> You want to create local jobs. You want to help people empower and lead their communities and their countries forward into the future. You know, I remember uh we told the story of this kid John Bosow from Rwanda. He was 13 years old and he was drinking the most brown, viscous, toxic, poisonous water you have ever seen. We we have one of his photos actually there that photo in the lab. And you know, one day uh a family decides to help and these drilling rigs uh leave the capital city Kaggali and they start heading towards his rural village and they they pull down the dirt road and he watches eight Rwan hydrogeeologists jump out and they've got their, you know, blue work coats on and they look for water over the next couple days and they find it and they build the well and a week later John Bosow is drinking clean water for the very first time in his life. And you know, you just think like what what that must have felt like for a 13-year-old Rwanda boy to see his people come and solve the problem. And what they didn't have was the capital. They didn't have that $10,000 for the village. And um I love his story. We went back and visited him eight years later and we had this picture of this kind of shy teenage boy. Uh his face had changed. He was a 21-year-old man and he had just gotten married and had his first daughter. And she was this this beautiful girl. Her name was Jean Marie. And you know, we just realized like how profound that change was. She was born into a world of clean water. She would never know the poisonous swamp that, you know, threatened her father and mother's lives when they were children. And you know this kind of generational change, you know, every child born into that village knows something better, knows the pure water, knows something new. And that's why we're so passionate about, you know, making that possible for every community on the planet. >> Hey, we're going to get back to this interview, this compelling. It's so good >> in just a moment. But I mean, just we we cannot help but to know that the the cup of water being given out in Jesus's name, guys, this is the kingdom. And that's how we've been able to partner with Charity Water all these years, opening up these different wells. But that's just one of many outreach partners as the first 10% of everything coming in through this year-end offering. This is the kingdom goes out to outreach partners around the world doing good work just like this. This is what lights up heaven. It should light up our hearts as well. So, as you partner with us, you're not just helping us to fulfill these outreach grants that's going to make a difference in these different ways, but also sending out this message from God's word each week through this ministry where people can come to life in Christ. >> That's right. I love when we get to run into you around the world when we've met you in an airport or in a city and you've said, "Fresh Life has changed my life." And I just I'm I'm so grateful that we get to do this together and give together and um have and grow in faith together. >> Yeah. It means the world when you receive, but I'm telling you, things always take on a different level of meaning and significance when you get into the arena. And by you stepping into partnership with us as we send out messages and do this work around the world, uh I just believe it will be exponentially more significant in your own life. So between now and the year end go to freshlife.urch/give and make a mark be a part of what God's doing like you've told us each week we can select uh from the dropdown that this is the kingdom offering but you also can begin the journey of generosity giving with us each week setting up recur recurring giving like we do where everything God gives to us we can bless his kingdom all around the world and thank you for praying about it. >> Enjoy the rest of this interview. >> Good. You were saying 7,000 different people are on the construction teams. Is that And then the mechanics are separate from that. Is that >> No, that's including mechanics. So we we work with 59 local organizations in uh we're active in 21 countries. So there's 300 people in Ethiopia, there's 180, let's say, in Rwanda. And they're taking the the funding and they are turning into clean water. They're building solar powered pipe systems. They're building bioand filters. There's a lot of different technologies. It's actually not a one-sizefits-all solution. The well is fun because it's it's very visual, but sometimes they're more boring. You're laying pipe. Yeah. >> And you're, you know, running clean water up to a reservoir and then you're letting gravity take it down to these different villages and they turn on a a tap at a kiosk and the water comes out. >> It's just right there. It's not as Instagrammable, but just not quite as Instagrammable. >> Just as life changing. >> It's just as life changing. And then and that's the end result. So you and what I love about just working on this for so long is it might be one of the few things that everybody can agree is good. >> I mean Republicans and Democrats can come together and say, "Yeah, people should probably have clean water to do. >> Yeah, we should probably do something about that." >> Faith communities and even your atheists agnostic friend, >> you know, hey, what do what what's what are we doing together as a community? Yeah, we're helping people get water. >> Yeah, that seems like a pretty good thing to do. >> Yeah. Yeah, I mean you've seen like Will Smith and just all kinds of corporations and just it's pretty universally agreed upon. This is something we should >> we have taken uh people now I think I've taken 400 people to Africa and they would have the most diverse set of >> views on religious uh issues or social issues or politics but again they can all agree hey clean water is an inarguable good. It's a common good. Uh it's it's an indisputable uh transformation of life when you can take someone from drinking dirty water and providing them with clean water. >> Now to circle back cuz I mean obviously we've said that everyone's like yeah that's amazing. Um for those maybe who weren't in the church or with us back in the day when you came and shared right after your first book Thirst came out which is still a great read if you haven't read it. Um you shared a little bit about kind of the origins and how it's kind of personally so beautiful and full circle and redemptive that you're getting to be a part of all this. Um we talked earlier in the series about a carbon monoxide scare we had in our family where we woke up and it was you know they were going they were going off the the and I I was scared cuz we were in a dead sleep and there had been a leak in our home and it was just one of those brushes with death for my whole family that was terrifying. But this the origin stories of you realizing something could be fatal going on in the home took place when you were at a young age with your mom and not everybody would have heard that story. >> Yeah. So, New Year's Day 1980, uh my mom walked across her bedroom and she collapsed unconscious. Uh there was a slow carbon monoxide leak in the house that we had just purchased. It was winter. All the windows were closed. The house was advertised as an energy efficient house, which is great. Uh [laughter] keeping everything in. It's great >> gas chamber. It's a gas chamber. Yeah, >> it's a gas chamber. And you know, my dad and I, I was an only child. We were starting to get these strange >> symptoms, migraines, you know, heart racing, but mom was really the canary in the coal mine, uh, unpacking boxes 24/7 and specifically spending time in the basement. So, this led to the discovery of the leak and she was never the same again. She became an invalid for the rest of her life, unfortunately. And you know that really uh kind of set me on a on a course when I grew up. I was taking care of my mom. I was doing the cooking. I was doing the cleaning. She wore masks her whole life. She was allergic to the world as her immune system had just irreparably shut down. And I wanted to be a doctor. You know, I was going to uh become a doctor. I was going to cure my mom and all the sick people. And then my life sort of took a turn at 18 where I decided instead of becoming a doctor, I was going to become a nightclub promoter. >> Yeah. It's a similar trajectory >> to the horror of my parents when I announced that. >> And I spent 10 years uh running 40 clubs in Manhattan in New York City chasing all the stuff. >> You were focused on getting a clear liquid out. It was just a diff. It was vodka, not water. >> It was a very different one. And you know, I listen, I I'd grown up in the church and you weren't allowed to sleep around and you weren't allowed to use bad language. You weren't allowed to drink. You weren't allowed to dance. You weren't weren't allowed to have fun, I thought. So, this was kind of that, you know, sad cliche prodal son rebellion that lasted for 10 years. And I woke up one day, uh, I had the Rolex watch, my girlfriend was on the cover of fashion magazines, I drove a BMW, I had a grand piano in my New York City apartment, you know, all these things that I thought would make me uh, happy >> and maybe no surprise. >> Now, just to pause right there, there might be some, you know, young people in our church or older people in our church who are like, "Wait, those things won't make me happy. like if I could just get my hand on that, you know, but you were miserable. >> I was miserable and I and and >> you know, I believe that's so much more now having been exposed to the lives of, you know, 20 billionaires or so. Like it does there's always more, >> you know, somebody always has more. Someone always has better. >> And it was this insatiable desire and and all of these things were my identity, right? >> The hangover the next day, just waking up just empty, looking for it again, right? Right. I mean, that's >> I mean, I would go to dinner at 10:00, the club at 12:00, after hours at 3:00, and it was noon. You know, I'm popping ambient to try to come down knowing that I would have to wake up at 7:00 p.m. and do it all over again. >> So, it was uh it was a really dark uh selfish hedonistic uh existence. And you know thankfully uh by the grace of God 10 years into it I came to my senses and started reading some deep theology and just said man I I want to make my life look exactly the opposite. Uh and I got this idea of uh tithing time. You know there was this idea I'd grown up with you tithe money. I'm like well I I spent 10 years chasing all the wrong things. What if I gave one year to service uh to others? And that led me uh on an extraordinary uh hospital ship, >> the YWAM Mercy ship. >> Yeah. The Mercy Ship in in Liberia, West Africa. So I go, Levi from these clubs where we're spraying thousand bottles of champagne. from the DJ booth and like Jay-Z's at table one and Denzel's at table three and Jim Carrey just came in the club and the Rolling Stones are coming in later and you know you you think you're so fabulous. >> That's as high as the world gets. >> It's as good as you get. >> That's literally like if you not a better table. >> A couple weeks later I'm in the poorest country in the world uh after a 14-year civil war had just ended. There's no electricity in the country. There's no running water. There's no sewage. And I'm with a group of doctors who are trying to pick up the pieces. And I I fell so in love with that mission that when the year ended, I just signed up for another year. And of all the things that I saw when I was volunteering, I saw people drinking dirty water. And I think it was just, you know, not on my watch. You there's something so personal because I used to sell bottled water in my clubs for $10 a pop and people wouldn't even open them. I mean, I remember they would come in, they'd buy 20 bottles of Voss water, it would sit there and then they'd drink champagne and vodka and I remember just when I saw people drink dirty water for the first time was like, I I I got to do something about this >> cuz you connected the dots. >> Connected the health. >> There's a couple things. First, >> I did connect the dots and and there was this powerful moment for me the third day I was in Africa where we had done a casting call for sick patients. We're like, "The doctors are coming. It's a huge ship. Yeah. Yeah. >> If you have a tumor or a cleft lip or a cleft pal or you're blind with cataracts or you have flesh eating disease, you know, turn up on this day at 7 in the morning or so and we had 1,500 available surgery slots. And I remember when we turned up uh at 5:30 in the morning, there was there were 5,000 people standing in the parking lot. M >> so it was it was this realization, wow, we're going to send 3,500 sick people home >> who walked for maybe days. >> Some of them walked for a month. >> Oh my gosh. >> We later learned some of them walked from neighboring countries as the word haded spread. >> There's a ship coming with doctors on it. >> And then I learned half the countries drinking bad water and half the disease is waterborne. >> So what you're saying, a lot of those people wouldn't even be patients had they had water. You're cleaning. You're going two steps back. >> Exactly. >> Yeah. Okay. So there's a lot I want to say, but first just your testimony and just connecting to, you know, my heart's always for these these these in the church, maybe hearing this who are kind of on the fence about Jesus or whatever. Just but just to think I mean how your story portrays what Jesus said, if you drink of the water of this world, you'll thirst again, but if you drink the water I have, it will well up in him as a fountain of boiling water. Right? So under under springing up into everlasting life. So to think about like you knowing the truth but but looking to the world for happiness versus now like as you think back to what God's doing in your life now and you compare it to that. I mean that that must probably just blow your mind thinking about it. >> It's interesting you use that reference. the probably the the most um and it's such a almost an overplayed verse if it was but the the important verse for me was James 1:27 when I'd come to the end of the clubs and it was hey true religion is to look after widows and orphans and to keep yourself from being polluted which is the word that you use and I was not only personally polluted using drugs using cigarettes you know uh having meaningless relationships I was actually polluting others >> so I was like a a a severe here O for two. I'm not giving. I'm not contributing to anything. And you know, I wanted to go two for two, right? I wanted to live a life of service where I could um use what I was blessed with, my my time and my talent uh in the service of others. And then I wanted to like live pure, you know, I didn't I didn't want to smoke anymore and drink and I didn't want to be >> defile your body. Yeah. >> Yeah. >> So, I had this kind of cold turkey moment. I'm like, I'm never going to look at a pornographic image as long as I live. Never going to smoke again. I'm never going to touch drugs again. You know, I wanted uh a new, you know, chapter of my life to unfold at 28 years old. Um, and it's been pretty easy, you know, honestly, because I know how that felt and I don't want that again. >> The other text I was thinking about was Jeremiah when he says, "You you you forsook me. I'm a fountain of living water, but you've built for yourselves broken sistns that can't hold water." Right? So, but but your story, it illustrates the the the the way your soul can be quenched when you when you find what you're looking for, right? >> But what I love is that the seeds and the reason I wanted to start by talking about your mom, the way you were formed by taking care of someone with what now we realize is a preventable issue. The CO2 detector hadn't been invented yet, right? >> Yeah. >> At that point, because it was like late summer detector, >> what year would that have been? Uh, it was 80. >> Okay. Yeah. Sorry, I didn't mean to see what >> they were not. And now they're in blister packs, right? You go to Home Depot and you buy like Exactly. That was for 30, right? >> Scary for me was like when I realized my life, my family's life was saved by a $15 Walmart purchase, you know, but that was something that didn't exist then. And so your mom's chronic illness and all of that difficulty and but you were formed and forged in the fire of taking care of her. And when you when God called you back to himself, those things came out. Those instincts came out. I mean, you you literally all all of our shadows conformed in different ways, but the pain you had to face, that's honoring your mom as you do what you do every day. Have you thought about that? >> Yeah. I mean, it it it was lost on me for a while. Um, but somebody said years ago, well, you're just trying to bring clean water to your mom. I mean, you're trying to cure your mom. And, you know, she she was sick and this she was she would be poisoned by almost anything. and they're like, "You just found something poisoning the world and you're trying to make everybody healthy." So, I had never really connected that to my childhood before, but I think in some way I wanted to be a doctor and now in some way we've been able to bring health to 20 million people. So, it's a different uh a different way maybe to, you know, to think about medicine or to think about healing people. >> And during your prodal season, she never lost the >> No, they prayed for 10 years. I mean, >> she prayed for you, right? I mean, >> they they they they tried to pray the prodal home >> and this is churches and prayer changed the moms and the dads who are praying for that lost son and daughter who are gone. >> It would have look looked uh it would have looked like a 0% possibility for a full 10 years until it became 100% possibility almost >> and on a dime. And you said it was reading theology. >> Yeah, I was reading Toer's Pursuit of God in Punta, Uruguay on a New Year's Eve vacation. Everybody was on drugs. Where did you pick it up? Well, my dad would just keep sending me books and I would just throw them in the trash and I would I for some reason he sent me a book for this New Year's Eve and it just found its way in my bag. >> So, here's encouragement to the parents. Keep sending the book. Keep buying the book. You think, "Oh, they're never going to come to I've invited them to church 100 times. I keep mailing it to him." It's like, but to but not one day until you didn't you did. >> And it's funny cuz I read that book now. It's not an easy book. It's really a dense book. But I think what I got out of that book was I was just reading the opposite of my life. It's a book where he's trying to uh he he's chasing after virtue and knowing God and like living a you know a a pure life of integrity. I'm like man I am I couldn't be more opposite than what I'm reading than the you know my the intention of my life is exactly that. I'm like this feels better like that feels noble >> in a way. >> Yeah. Yeah, I remember he talks about the nations are a drop in a bucket and a soap bubble and >> there's actually a bunch of water references in that which when I went back and read it, you know, I I was lost on them at the time >> everywhere. I mean, and that's prophetic. But I just love that like your your mom's prayers for you, your mom's, you know, unnecessary uh suffering, all of that kind of being played out in in a redemptive way. I think that's hopeful and encouraging for all of us to believe that every suffering, every every tragedy there there is redemption and there's beauty that can come out of that. >> Well, the first Charity Water Well was actually built in a nightclub. So, day one of the organization, uh it was my 31st birthday party and I didn't know where else to start. So, I called up some friends who were opening up a new club. It was fashion week in New York. The club hasn't wasn't open. And so I said, "Could I just have it for free? And would you give us open bar for an hour?" And then I just emailed everybody that I had known for my former life and said, "I'm turning 31. I'd like to turn my birthday into clean water. Come to my birthday party, but bring $20 as a donation." And we put out this big plexi box. And as people came into the nightclub that night, they dropped $20 in the box. And at the end of the night, there was $15,000 that was enough for one well. M >> and that's really where it started. Uh you know, some of the most unlikely people, you know, I'll never forget there was one guy that night who was a weed dealer and he gave $500 because he had known me from before and he said, "Scott, this is the first charitable donation I have made in my entire life, but I believe this money is actually going to help people." So, not that that would be our market, but it was it was so cool kind of seeing >> more dealers. There's more weed dealers than >> being the most jaded person I know. Like Louie would never give to a charity and like Louis threw down 500 bucks, you know, enough to give. >> I didn't know Lou Gigglia was a weed dealer. No, I'm jug. [laughter] >> My god. I love that. And I what I love about you, Scott, too, is like you're you're the most big thinking, you know, creative storytelling. The execution of things is always so excellent. like walking around here being being in this like it's it's it's excellent. It's I think the creativity honors God. I think the way that you approach things I know you you were reticent to start a charity because you knew you you knew none of your friends trusted charities, >> right? I mean I think the number is 42% of Americans say they don't trust charities and so you've always sought to like with with transparenc one of the reasons we love giving grants to you because you can track the wells like we know exactly where every project we've given to. You you you raise your overhead separately. I mean, it's just there's so much you do that's just different. It's really incredible. >> Yeah. I mean, I think when I started, uh, I remember just thinking like, where's the Apple of charities? You where's the Nike of charities? Where's, you know, where's the imagination and the design thinking and and the inspiration, you know, so many charities back then were using shame and guilt. They would try to make people feel awful about what they had and almost, you know, coers them into giving. And I remember thinking, let's just take a very different approach. Let's create a new kind of charity where 100% of all the donations that we would ever receive anywhere in the world >> could go directly to these water projects uh in a separately audited bank account, which is true today. You know, almost 20 years later, we would go find a small group of people to pay the overhead, >> the nasty staff salaries and the god forbid toilet paper and airplane tickets, >> the Epson toner for the copy machine, right? >> The unsexy. We said, "Hey, we know that business leaders and entrepreneurs would actually love to pay the salaries, you know, the the unsexy costs so that millions of people could give in the purest way possible. So that was kind of the first big idea, >> which is shockingly different, you know, business. >> I mean, it's incredibly difficult, too, right? You have to kind of run these two things in perfect balance. >> It's like running two organizations really >> under the same under the same umbrella. Um but that's you know that's now over two million people have given over a billion dollars and and that has been one of the the the main reasons why people have chosen us like if I give a dollar I know the whole dollar is going if I give a million dollars through my business you know I know all million dollars is going to go and then the second big idea was kind of just a follow on well if we know where all the money is going we just track it >> I mean you could track your package with FedEx you could track your you know, your delivery meal with Uber Eats or, you know, or one of these uh these services, why can't we build technology that would track donations? So, we we became the first charity in the world just to put every water project on Google Earth and Google Maps. >> So, we would send donors the satellite images of the well they built or the pipe system that that they built. And that seemed so intuitive to us, but again, nobody else was doing that. Nobody was closing that loop. Uh so proof became this um real kind of tenant of the organization. Today we call it waterproof. So yeah if somebody gives 62 cents they will see that 62 cents tracked to a village in Malawi or a village in India. >> Um so it's I think it's been this uh this desire to reinvent or reimagine charity. You know charity means love and it's it's keratas in the Latin. It's a really beautiful word that means to help your neighbor in need and not get anything in return. And I just wanted more people moving towards the idea of charity, towards the idea of love, not coming up with excuses of why they weren't giving >> and really depriving themselves of the blessing that comes with sharing your resources and giving. So, you know, I wanted it to be fun. I mean, think about fundraising. The first three letters are fun. >> I mean, it should be there. Yeah. It's not guilt raising or shame raising like it should be a joy to come together as a community and use our resources to >> transform human life in a positive way. >> Well, I love what you've done. I love what your God's doing through your team. Uh the way that you've given a whole new creative imagination to a world of of those who have a heart to do good and to see because now this exists because before you were like this didn't exist. You've blazed this trail and now it exists and I'm sure is inspiring others around the world. I know it's inspiring me. So on behalf of all those of us at Fresh Life, thank you. Thank you for what you're doing. Um it's such an honor for us to be a small part of it of what's happening. >> Significant part. I mean 18 communities with clean water is a >> 17 we're going to get to huge difference. >> Well um we're going to continue. I I want everyone if you're not the spring you have this like spring which is a monthly subscription thing like we talked about $40 a month can >> touch a person with water. >> We have kids giving $10. We have college students are like every four months they get one person clean water. Uh I think what's made you know a lot of charities have monthly giving programs that 100% promise and the ability to track every month's donation um has really helped community grow. So that's called the spring and yeah everybody's more than welcome >> we love being a part of it. We want everyone to it's of course holidays a time of all this thing but which is why we always try and focus our our attention on how can we give and of course we're so excited that that Charity Water gets to be part of this is the kingdom and >> how many emails do we all just get for Black Friday and then then it was Cyber Monday right >> you mean how many emails per hour like yeah I always tell my team I'm like they're not afraid by send email don't be afraid to email yeah well could I pray for you I would just be someone I know you guys had this new baby and just God's growing your family number four I mean hello Um, Father, we thank you so much for Scott. We thank you for this man, the the redemption story he's living, your work in his life. Um, we thank you for the the the way that he proves what I know is one of his favorite verses that you can take the years that the locusts have eaten and and you can bring redemption out of it. God, you can restore what's what's what what was eaten by the cankerworm and and and not only it's like it didn't happen, it's like even more powerful because it did. And so God, those uh those those years of partying that he's now swn his life to your kingdom and Vic and and the family. I pray your blessing on him, on the whole team. Thank you for every single one of the 186,000 projects that are sending even at this moment clean water into communities and the way that women's lives have been empowered and changed around this world. I'm so touched as a as a as a father of to girls and um I just thank you for what you're going to continue to do, God, for these 700 million people that still don't have water. And we thank you that your kingdom, what's it like? It's like cold, clean water pulled from the depths of this earth you gave to us going out to people in your name. And so we thank you that this problem will be solved. That you'll continue to bring the right people. That churches like ours will continue to to come on board and that God, you're already going to use God for the next problem. His mind, which is just brilliant, his team, God, they're so excellent at what they do. We know that you'll use them for the next thing, God. And and so we pray protection upon the whole team and staff and this space. And may more people keep coming through here in Franklin and being told the story in a creative way and coming along and just all the efforts around the world. will bless the the new baby and we just love you God and thank you so much for what you're doing in our lives and we pray this in Jesus name. >> Amen. >> Thank you, brother. Appreciate it. Love you. You guys have been >> so fun.