Published November 05, 2009 10:57 pm -
Car gets man’s message across
By Angie Thompson, Senior Reporter
TIFTON — A local man is using his restored “Batmobile” to spread the word of salvation to people young and old.
Ray Metzger, 72, drag races motorcycles and owns Cycles Unlimited in Decatur, Ala. He decided recently to move to Tifton to be near his children.
Metzger was in Huntsville, Ala., in 2005 when he had a winning weekend. At 68, he won the street bike class race and a raffle that he said started his journey to find a way to catch the attention of people so he could tell them how they could be saved according to the Christian faith.
Metzger said former professional football players Pat Sullivan and Terry Hendley had bought the then-worn and rusted 1960 Dodge Matador and donated it to the Mountain Brook High School in Birmingham 16 years before.
“They used it in parades for a while, but it got to where it wouldn’t run,” Metzger said.
At the Huntsville race track, raffle tickets were sold for the car and the proceeds went to the American Cancer Society. Metzger said he bought a $5 ticket and won the car.
“The brakes were bad and the steering was terrible,” Metzger said. “After two months, I got it running enough that I could drive it to my store.
“I just kept saying ‘Lord, why did you give me this car?’”
The attention the car received once parked at Cycles Unlimited began almost immediately.
“The car was there an hour and an employee said ‘Ray, come here and look at this,’” Metzger said. “Parents were taking pictures of their kids with the car.
“I said OK, Lord, you want me to use this for people to know about Jesus.”
Metzger began restoring the car, putting in Batman yellow and black leather seats and special gadgets in the dashboard to intrigue young people. The driver’s sun visor is personalized “Batman” and the passenger’s is personalized “Robin.”
The refurbished car now gains more attention than before and Metzger, a Gideon, decided he needed brochures that would tell people the message of salvation. He called a friend of his from Promise Keepers and asked the man for ideas. Two months later, the friend, his wife and two daughters sat around their kitchen table and designed the brochures, which are filled with colored pictures and tell the tale of a man led to Jesus.
Once the brochures were printed, Metzger either handed them out to people personally or put a few of them under the windshield wipers of the car.
“It is a blessing,” Metzger said. “I’ve handed out over 3,000 brochures myself. I’ve had some real pleasures in my life and seen some wonderful things happen.”