Life as a 21st-Century Trucker
Technology, corporate greed, and supply-chain chaos are transforming life behind the wheel of a big rig. I went on the road to find exactly how….


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When Jay LeRette preaches the Word, he transforms from a mild Midwesternerâone who loves country gospel, rides a horse he has trained to roll over and grin, and has, himself, a whinnying laughâinto a human incandescence. Sixty-four, 5′ 5″, and dressed like a cowboy, he increases in stature; his voice crescendos to cracking. âThe devilâs learned to use us and abuse us, to beat the snot out of us,â he says, then uppercuts the air. âAmen, Chuck?â A man in the second row with a great, ZZ Topâlike beard croaks amen. âThe devil mopped the floor with me,â LeRette continues, and mimes a janitorial sweep. âBut Godâbut God!ââ he shrieks, pounding the lectern and leaping, ââhad compassion on you and I.â
Itâs a weeknight in December 2021, getting toward Christmas, and Iâm sitting in the trailer of an 18-wheeler thatâs been repurposed into LeRetteâs chapel. Itâs parked, permanently, at the Petro Travel Center, a truck stop off Interstate 39 in northern Illinois. All around it are acres of commercial trucks, stopped for the night and carrying every kind of cargo: cows, weed, pro-wrestling rings, grain, petroleum. One side of LeRetteâs trailer reads âTransport for Christ”; beside it, a neon cross gleams in the dark. John 3:16 adorns the back end: âFor God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.â Next to the scripture are two godly hands cradling a truck.
All across Illinois there are tornado warnings. Menacing gales rip through the parking lot, making the trailer shift and groan; we are beyond the reach of any siren. Yet every minute, the door opens and a new trucker walks in. Each takes his place in one of about 20 chairs arranged in rows toward the middle of the chapel, which is pretty minimalist: framed Bible verses along wood-paneled walls, a lectern at the front, an office and bed in back.
The driversâall men tonightâhave come straight from the road, and their bodies suggest the slow entropy wrought by bad food and decades of sitting. All but one appear over 50. Some know each other: When LeRette kicked off the service by belting out hymns and strumming his guitar, a straggler entered, and several men called out, âRip!â Rip hustled in and high-fived or hugged them.
LeRette hands out copies of the King James Bible and asks us to open to Luke 10:25. Chuck seems to be back in Exodus, and when LeRette repeats âthe Gospel of Luke,â Chuck responds, âOh, I thought you said Mötley CrĂŒe.â They are irrepressibly funny like this, suddenly schoolboys.
LeRette asks John, a small, older man in a hoodie, to read the verse. âA certain lawyer stood up and tempted him, saying, âMaster, what shall I do to inherit eternal life?ââ He struggles to sound out âeternal,â but the men nod along, supportive, patient.
Then LeRette interprets: A skeptic is trying to trick Jesus into contradicting Judaic law, into uttering a heresy. âNow how many know he ainât gonna do that? Jesus is the living word of God, amen? There ainât no trapping our savior.â Chuck calls out, âThey tried to trap him for three years,â and LeRette answers, âCâmon, thatâs right!â The quickness with which he beckons these road-weary men into call-and-response is extraordinary. He stamps and claps, sidesteps and kicks till his lungs falter. âJesus carries our load, amen?â