4-Year-Old Boy Recites New Testament Books Then Belts Out ‘All My Ex’s Live in Texas’
4 mins read

4-Year-Old Boy Recites New Testament Books Then Belts Out ‘All My Ex’s Live in Texas’

If there’s ever been a preschool graduation that screams “God bless the South,” this is it.

Somewhere in Mississippi, a four-year-old kid just made the entire congregation beam with pride when he stood up at his preschool ceremony and rattled off every single book of the New Testament like it was nothing. Matthew, Mark, Luke, John… he fired ’em off with the confidence of a Sunday preacher who knows the potluck is waiting. The church folks were probably ready to pass the offering plate again just to keep this little fella talking.

But just when you think you’ve got this kid pegged as your next Sunday School MVP, he drops a twist nobody saw coming. With that tiny microphone still in his hand and the choir still catching their breath, he leans in and belts out, in the sweetest baby twang you’ve ever heard, “All my ex’s live in Texas…”

It’s the kind of moment that makes you wish you’d kept rolling on your phone because you know the family will be replaying that clip until he’s forty. And let’s be honest, somewhere in the back pew, Grandma nearly fell out laughing. The teacher’s face probably went pale for half a second before she cut him off, but come on, how do you top that?

If you’re wondering where a four-year-old even learns a George Strait song, you must not have spent much time below the Mason-Dixon line. “All My Ex’s Live in Texas” is basically required listening in every truck, honky-tonk, and VFW hall with a jukebox. That song came out back in ’87 and climbed straight to No. 1, turning George Strait from rising ranch kid to the King of Country in one swoop of that Stetson.

Written by the late Whitey Shafer and his wife Lyndia, the tune was a tongue-in-cheek wink at heartbreak, turning a laundry list of old flames into a boot-scootin’ singalong for the ages. It’s part neon-lit jukebox jam, part Texas tourism ad, and it’s impossible not to grin when you hear that first line. It’s funny, too, because Strait himself has never been the ramblin’ heartbreaker the song makes him out to be. The man’s been married to his high school sweetheart, Norma, since the early ’70s, living proof that sometimes country lyrics are just good stories told by the world’s greatest liar in a cowboy hat.

Now, there’s something perfect about this little Mississippi boy pairing his gospel knowledge with a nod to King George. Down here, it all goes hand in hand. It’s not weird to teach your kids the books of the Bible and George Strait’s greatest hits in the same breath. Sunday morning hymns and Saturday night dance halls both shape a kid who’ll grow up knowing how to pray for rain and how to slow dance when it comes.

The best part? You just know this kid’s gonna hold that moment forever. Someday he’ll be twenty-one, playing “All My Ex’s Live in Texas” on the bar jukebox while his buddies howl about the time he stole the show at preschool graduation. He’ll swear he’s still got that church video somewhere on an old phone or tucked in a dusty photo album next to his Bible school certificate.

There’s a reason Strait’s still packing stadiums decades later. His songs are the soundtrack to backroads, heartbreaks, beer runs, and yes, even tiny church graduations. And this little dude just proved that the King’s crown isn’t going anywhere anytime soon, not when a four-year-old can blend the New Testament with a George Strait hook and make a whole room howl.

If that ain’t country, nothing is.