HE SPENT FORTY YEARS RUNNING FROM GOD. THEN HE WROTE ONE QUIET SONG — AND STOPPED RUNNING. Waylon Jennings buried Nashville’s rhinestone suit and built something rougher in its place. Outlaw wasn’t a label. It was the way he lived — loud, restless, accountable to nobody. Churches were for other people. He had songs to write and roads to burn. But roads end. And by 1998, Waylon was sixty years old, burying friends more often than he was making records. The drugs were behind him. The leather was just a jacket now. And somewhere in a writing room, alone, he did something he had never done on any record in his entire career. He prayed. Not on a stage. Not for an audience. He wrote a song called “I Do Believe” and tucked it quietly onto an album most fans never bought. No promotion. No television. No announcement. Just a man, a guitar, and a truth he had carried privately for longer than anyone knew. He didn’t believe in religion. He never would. But he had made his peace with God — on his own terms, in his own room, with nobody watching. When Waylon died in February 2002, his wife Jessi Colter played that song at his funeral. Most people in the room had never heard it. By the second verse, no one could hold it together. The toughest man in country music had left behind a confession — and only the people who truly listened ever found it.
He Spent Forty Years Running From God. Then He Wrote One Quiet Song — and Stopped Running. Waylon Jennings spent…