Ironically, the power ran out a minute before the sermon ended. Here is the conclusion:
"It turns out I'm an electrician too, generating warmth and energy and a safe home for billions of germs and bacteria and parasites. But I don't use this power to make them feel like prisoners in my intestines, and I certainly don't use this power to make them pay exorbitant fees for the right to absorb my precious electricity and half-digested hamburgers.
Many of us here are not blockbuster superstars or billionaires, and I can tell we're not electricians because nobody's charging to attack me or attacking to charge me. But that doesn't mean we don't have power. We do have power.
We are the power."
"It turns out I'm an electrician too, generating warmth and energy and a safe home for billions of germs and bacteria and parasites. But I don't use this power to make them feel like prisoners in my intestines, and I certainly don't use this power to make them pay exorbitant fees for the right to absorb my precious electricity and half-digested hamburgers.
Many of us here are not blockbuster superstars or billionaires, and I can tell we're not electricians because nobody's charging to attack me or attacking to charge me. But that doesn't mean we don't have power. We do have power.
We are the power."