COUNTRY
		
		Randy Travis: Road to Redemption
		
		By Sandy Engel and Lisa Ryan 
  The 700 Club 
        
		
		 
		 
  CBN.com   
    Randy Travis was the first Country artist to break the multi-platinum sales 
    barrier. Now he s setting records with his gospel recordings. Randys Rise and Shine album just hit gold status, and his single, "Three Wooden 
    Crosses," has been nominated for Single of the Year and Song of the Year by 
    the Country Music Association. But no award compares to the value of his newfound 
    music ministry. Thats what he talked with Lisa Ryan about from his home 
    in Santa Fe. 
   LISA 
    RYAN (reporting): In Randys amazing Santa Fe home, crosses abound. 
    But Randy gives the credit for these crossesand a whole lot more 
    to the woman who began as his manager and became his wife, Liv. 
  RANDY TRAVIS: After youve been married quite a few years, you 
    learn to take orders; it just comes easy. 
  LISA RYAN (reporting): That may be all thats come easy to Randy. 
    For over a decade, he was turned down by every record label in town. 
    
  RANDY TRAVIS: When Storms of Life, that first album, was released, 
    to have a platinum album that was a million selling album in less than a yearthe 
    first time it had ever happened on a debut Country albumthat was a surprise! 
  LISA RYAN (reporting): But in the small town where he and his brother 
    Ricky grew up, Randy was no stranger to fame. 
    
  RANDY TRAVIS: We were well known in that area, not in a good way, 
    for sure. I got into the drug thing, I totaled two motorcycles, and I got 
    in at least 30 fights. The verse in the Bible that says, 'Hell give 
    His angels charge over you to protect you'that in itself tells me that 
    verse is very true because I should have been killed a long time ago. 
  LISA RYAN (reporting): Things went from bad to worse when Randy was 
    arrested for stealing cars and breaking and entering. He also started singing 
    in the club Liv managed.  
  RANDY TRAVIS: Having her in court the last time, saying that I was 
    not drinking, not using drugs, not running with the same people anymorethat 
    kept me from going to prison. 
  LISA RYAN: Did you have any kind of religious upbringing when you 
    were a kid? 
  RANDY TRAVIS: No. I was in church a little bit as a very young kid, 
    but, as they say in the South, 'it didnt take.' None of it took with 
    me. My Mom and Dad had six kids, and four of the six were going down 
    the same road I was. 
  LISA RYAN: When did your personal spiritual journey and search for 
    peace of mind start? 
   RANDY 
    TRAVIS: Again, I have to look to my wife. When I got into my early 20s, 
    I was going to bed one nightI was still drinking, still using drugs, 
    and probably was drunk or high or bothwhen I just picked up the Bible 
    and started reading to go to sleep. I was amazed at how well I slept, but 
    even beyond that, the next day, there was this peace of mind that was still 
    there that I wasnt used to. I never had peace of mind. I never felt 
    at peace with anything or anybody. 
  LISA RYAN (reporting): Randy continued to read his Bible, but it was 
    10 years before he surrendered his life to the Lord and was baptized along 
    with Liv. 
    
  RANDY TRAVIS: I know Im forgiven for those things, as bad as 
    they were, in the past. Theres forgiveness if you ask forgiveness, you 
    truly repent, and you do make an honest effort not to do that anymore. 
  LISA RYAN: The last time I interviewed you, your first gospel album, 
    Inspirational Journey, had just come out. You were just beginning to 
    play churches and Christian venues and giving your testimony. How is that 
    different from the concert halls and the Country shows? 
  RANDY TRAVIS: I didnt know what I was getting into. I never 
    even heard the term 'music ministry.' I didnt even know I had one, you 
    know?  
  LISA RYAN: Whats a testimony? 
  RANDY TRAVIS: Yeah. What is a testimony? Im singing. 
    Im a singer! It has turned into literally a music ministry because people 
    coming in who didnt normally go to church, some cases never went to 
    church, some of them had drifted away from the Lord, coming to hear us because 
    of Country hits, and then coming and getting saved, altar calls. Youll 
    see 100 people, 125, and one night 150 people coming to accept Christ. Its 
    just unbelievable. 
  LISA RYAN (reporting): Randy has just released his third gospel album, 
    Worship & Faith, which includes
 
  RANDY TRAVIS: Some pretty unusual versions of songs like "Just a Closer 
    Walk with Thee;" "Turn Your Radio On," and "Peace in the Valley." 
  LISA RYAN: Is there a greater satisfaction in that than even on all 
    the record sales youve had, all the people that have come to your concerts, 
    when you see people come up and receive the Lord as Savior? 
   RANDY 
    TRAVIS: Oh yeah, it's a totally different thing. We hear about people 
    changing their lives, getting baptized, stopping the drugs, the alcohol. I 
    mean its all kinds of thing. I never thought Id 
    be a good influence on anybody with anything I did or said or sang. 
  LISA RYAN (reporting): Today Randy Travis continues to make a positive 
    impact. Like the music he loves most, Randys life has become his personal 
    story song with a powerful gospel message. 
    
      RANDY TRAVIS: Its not what you take when you leave this world 
        behind you. Its what you leave behind you when you go. 
  
  
  
		  
				 
				 
 
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