(Disclaimer: This transcript is auto-generated and may contain mistakes.) The bread and butter of our church or the, you know, rice and saba of our church or whatever is always going to be the preaching. But at the same time, though the preaching is the main part of the service, the song service is a beautiful thing. And it's not about having the most talented people in the world. I'm sure that if you were to look at churches like that one right over there, or you look at the Mormon Tabernacle Choir, whatever, I mean, they have beautiful music. They have people that are extremely good at what they do. And they spend a lot of time preparing for music. We don't let our church spend, you know, like eight hours of, you know, song practice every single week. You say, why? I'd rather you go out and preach the gospel and get Catholic saved. But at the same time, when we're singing praise to God, it's a beautiful thing. It's not necessarily about, you know, having the most talented people in the world. It's like the words we're singing, singing with passion, singing among God's people. I would rather sing these praises amongst God's people than I would sing the same songs with the Mormon Tabernacle Choir.