:25:01
- Uh... Father?
I just wanted to ask you a question,
:25:03
since you're the closest one to God
I know around here.
:25:08
- You have my undivided
attention.
:25:10
- Father Hibbert told us that
it would take a miracle
:25:12
for anyone from the cross-country team
to win the Boston Marathon.
:25:15
- Well, Father Hibbert
would probably know.
:25:18
- Well, my mom needs a miracle
:25:20
to get out of her coma.
- And?
:25:23
- Me winning the Boston Marathon
could be that miracle.
:25:26
God told me.
:25:29
- God told you?
:25:31
- Today at gym,
when I fell off the ropes.
:25:34
- Did he tell you how to do it?
:25:36
- No, that's why I need your help,
:25:38
especially with the purity part...
:25:40
and prayer, probably.
:25:42
- I believe that what you're talking
about could be bordering on blasphemy,
:25:47
even if it is unintentional,
so let's be careful.
:25:50
God did not ask you to win Boston
:25:52
to get your mother out of her coma...
it doesn't work like that.
:25:55
- How does it work?
:25:57
- Why would he ask you?
:25:59
- Well, I don't know.
He just did.
:26:03
- Precisely. You don't know.
:26:05
It wasn't God.
:26:06
It was the bump on your head.
A hallucination at best.
:26:10
- Father, I don't mean
to be disrespectful, but...
:26:13
- Mr. Walker, trust me.
:26:14
You are not going to perform
any miracles.
:26:17
You're not running Boston.
:26:20
Is that clear?
:26:22
- Yes, Father.
:26:27
Father, forgive me,
for I have lied...
:26:30
to a priest.
:26:45
How far have we run, Father?
- One mile.
:26:47
- That's it?
:26:49
- Turn back, if you want to.
- I can't.
:26:52
- All right, stop.
:26:57
I heard you talked
to Father Fitzpatrick.