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The God-Story Behind Why This Famous NASCAR Driver's Wife Encourages Racers With Bible VersesStevie Waltrip is probably most well known for her pre-race Bible verse. She pores over her Bible and waits each week for the Lord to direct her to just the right Scripture. Never, did she imagine, this would become a topic of conversation outside of the garage. And never did she dream she would be writing verses weekly for a man known as the Intimidator.
For decades, the wife of FOX analyst and NASCAR Hall of Famer Darrell Waltrip has equipped drivers with Bible verses prior to Cup events. She started doing that in the 1980s for her husband and then in the 1990s for Dale Earnhardt Sr. at his request. She has continued the tradition with Earnhardt's son. Dale Earnhardt Jr.'s fiancée Amy Reimann tweets the Scripture—#SteviesVerse—every week during NASCAR's 10-month season. Some fans consider it more than a way of connecting with the driver who has been chosen the fan favorite for the past 13 seasons. "They are good motivational verses to study," one fan tweeted in appreciation. And that's what moved Stevie to tears on an otherwise quiet February Monday in her Franklin, Tennessee, home.
Growing Up Fast "I had just gone in a completely different direction from the way I was brought up," Stevie said. "Darrell was a wild and crazy guy, and my family was ultra conservative." Much to her parents' initial horror, the lovebirds were wed once she graduated high school. They immediately moved to Tennessee so he could focus on his dream of racing. Stevie, a self-described "race fan by marriage," started learning the sport. That helped in two major ways. First, it saved money for the cash-strapped Waltrips. Second, it gave her something to do other than pray and fret while the love of her life raced in close quarters around fast tracks in underwhelming safety equipment. So she stayed busy. Stevie prayed while she tracked laps, calculated fuel mileage, recorded pit stop performance and so on. For perspective, today one engineer on the Cup level might focus on fuel mileage during the race, while a pit crew coach would track pit stop activity. And never mind the fact she's a female doing all this—a rarity even in today's racing world. "But then I said, 'Truly Darrell, I want to love the Lord more than you, and I don't believe I do,'" Stevie said she penned in August 1979. Stevie knew Jesus thanks to her church upbringing, but she had some gaps to fill. Why was the crucifixion necessary? She prayed about it and struggled to find a satisfactory answer until she crossed paths with Ann Isaacs. Now Ann knew the Waltrips because her husband Leonard asked Darrell to serve on his bank's board in the 1980s. But Ann had no idea that Stevie was at a loss on this particular topic. So Stevie's mind was blown when Ann presented her with a tape discussing the substitutionary death of Jesus Christ. "She had no idea where I was spiritually," Stevie said. "She had no idea I had asked the Lord to explain this." Fast forward a few days later. Stevie played the message on her cassette tape player while tending her flower garden outside their Franklin, Tennessee, home. She learned that the penalty for sin is death, which is why before Jesus, people would sacrifice a lamb's life to pay for their sins. In the Old Testament, the lamb's innocent blood covered the sins of the people. When Jesus arrived on the scene, He became the once-and-for-all sacrificial lamb. His blood needed to be shed to cover our sins. "I had never heard that before in my life, and that was the picture I needed," Stevie said. "That moved me from wherever I was spiritually to a whole other plane. I was on my knees, and I had my hands raised in the air. I'm crying. It was awesome." Stevie's spiritual thirst was insatiable. She was ordering tapes and attending Bible study with Ann. She was turning up the volume on Christian radio broadcasts at home and relaying her notes to Darrell during car rides. He didn't object, and he wasn't just tolerating it. He wanted to hear what she was learning. He even started to attend Wednesday Bible study with his wife and the Isaacs. Stevie was also putting Scripture in her husband's car even though his lifestyle didn't match up. You see, Darrell wasn't exactly a fan favorite early in his career, although he was successful on-track. He earned the nickname Jaws from the legendary Cale Yarborough for his mouthiness, and then there was the time he was inviting Yarborough's fans to fight in the K-Mart parking lot. No matter, Stevie still kept putting God's Word right in his office—the racecar—right where he could see it. "I believe God's Word is living and powerful and life changing so I put Scriptures on the dash of his car not for any other reason than to just help him focus on what truly was most important to give him encouragement," Stevie said. God's presence took on a whole new meaning for Darrell after a serious accident in 1983 at Daytona. "He spent a night in intensive care," Stevie recalled. "I think the Lord used that to knock him conscious." From that point forward, subtle changes took effect. He prayed with his wife, and his faith—supplanted by hers—was getting stronger. Neither of them knew how important that would be for the upcoming season in their lives. A Change, A Champion & A Cause They sat side by side in their room and poured out their hearts to God. "We're sitting on this blanket chest, and we both opened our hands and gave the whole situation to the Lord," Stevie said. "We said if you want us to have a child, we would love for You to give us a child but only if it's Your will." They began the adoption process but by late 1986, Stevie was pregnant. Darrell was a wreck. This man with three NASCAR Winston... Click here to continue reading.
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