TESTIMONY
		
		Tennessee's Wild Ride
		
		By Sheryl Fountain
                	The 700 Club
                	
		
		
		 
		CBN.com 
		 “We went bar-hopping, and I started doing two shots of Beam  and a shot of Budweiser. I started to get ripped, and we went to the go go bar  down the street and smoked a couple of joints. I left the go go bar and was  doing 85 miles an hour down the road. I went to take a turn, and I don’t know  if I yelled Jesus or God. I yelled something out, and the bike turned and  catapulted. I almost went over a power line and landed on my feet. I fell back  and had no feeling from my waist down.” 
		Tennessee William Morse had survived several accidents in  his lifetime, but this one would end a long road of rebellion. As a child, Tennessee  never felt accepted or wanted.  He says, “I  was picked on a lot, constantly called names. I wanted to be cool and accepted.  Everyone wants to be accepted. Everyone wants to be loved.” 
		By the time he was 12, he was not only doing drugs but  selling them. He recalls, “I was caught up in some pretty heavy stuff at that  age. It wasn’t about the money it was just about being cool.”
		In high school, Tennessee was introduced to a local biker  club, The Renegades. “They’d ride up on their bikes, man, and I was attracted  to that,” he says. “Nobody messed with you. Know what I mean? I was messed with  all my life. They took me under their wing, and I got my first tattoo.”
		Tennessee never became an official member of the club, but  he embraced the lifestyle. 
		“There’s more drinking than anything. A lot of one night  stands with different people. A lot of riding. There’s a lot of intimidation  going on. You weren’t going to mess them with. I’ve seen people get beat half  to death. I’ve seen people beat unrecognizable.  It was good to be accepted and not messed with  no more. Yes, it was nice.” 
		When he wasn’t riding with The Renegades, Tennessee was  traveling with rock bands. That’s where he was introduced to crystal meth. 
		“Everything that you would want in any kind of drug form was  there for free. I didn’t really like it, to be honest with you. It was just to  be cool.”
		This need to feel accepted came with near fatal results. He  recalls, “My body wasn’t functioning right. I was just totally flipping out. I  ended up staying up for eight days. I flat lined at Lee Memorial. I died.”
		The doctor’s were able to revive him, but despite his near-death  experience, Tennessee went back to his regular routine.
		“I started drinking more and smoking more pot, because I  didn’t like staying straight. Thought about killing myself a few times. It’s  like I really wasn’t happy, but I thought I was. As long as I was around  everybody and I was around the lights, the excitement, the clubs, the  motorcycles and the bands, I was good but seems a lot of times when I got home  I was depressed.”
		In the early morning hours on New Year’s Day, Tennessee’s  wild ride finally came to an end.
		“I went to take a turn and the bike turned. I almost went  over the power lines. I was paralyzed. I could not move my lower end, and I was  laying there, just thinking. I’m not walking anymore, and I still had a little  bit of a buzz but it was pretty much gone. I just said, ‘Jesus, if You just let  me walk, I’ll walk with You. I’m done.’ I knew I was done.”
		Immediately after he prayed this, feeling started to come  back to into his legs. The next day, still sore from the accident, he went to  the doctor. 
		“I went to the emergency room, and the doctor said the  impact of the bruise that I had on my heel could have shattered everything. I  shouldn’t be walking. I said, ‘I know.’” 
		Aware that he was miraculously spared, Tennessee committed  his life to the Lord. “I’ve been in 11 motorcycle and car wrecks. My 11th brought  me to Christ. No sex, drugs, rock’n’roll, no high could ever touch the peace I  had. It was like I was healed.”
		Since the accident, Tennessee says that God has completely  changed him. 
		“My life is totally restored. I got a four-year-old boy now,  and I’ve been married for 11 years. I don’t want anything to do with drugs or  alcohol or my old lifestyle. God put it on my heart to start this Christian  Soldiers group I’m in. You can still be a biker and hang out with bikers but do  the right thing. Now I’m national president. 
		"I look back at all the times that  I have been spared of death and getting beat half to death ‘cause I know God  was there. He blesses my in spite of myself. I still look around and have to  smile the way He takes care of me. He was patient and put up with me for so  long waiting for me to come to Him. The only reason why I am sitting here  talking to you and not in dead or in prison is because of Jesus Christ.”
        
		
CBN IS HERE FOR YOU!
	Are you seeking answers in life? Are you hurting? 
	Are you facing a difficult situation? 
 A caring friend will be there to pray with you in your time of need.