CHRIST on the PGA TOUR (1965-1982) is the only book ever written about the Christian movement in American pro golf. It began sixty years ago, in 1965, when this author and other pros founded the PGA Tour Bible Study. Now, this fellowship flourishes with the world’s #1 pro golfer Scottie Scheffler, beloved by peers and fans alike, as its most prominent member. Kermit Zarley , now retired from his 30-year full time career on the PGA Tour and its Senior/Champions Tour, tells many interesting and humorous stories about his fellow pros. But the main thrust of this book is how their faith in the risen Jesus positively impacted their lives as they met weekly for prayer, Bible study, and sharing of their faith together. The group’s influence has been so pervasive that it caused an anonymous pro to admit while having a drink at a bar, “Sometimes it feels like the darn Bible-study tour out here.” I wrote most of this book in the late 1970s and early 1980s, when these memories were still fresh on my mind. Back then, writing was just a hobby for me since I was playing the PGA Tour full tiime. Later, it got more serious. Yet it has taken me ten books to finally publish one about golf. Christ on the PGA Tour (1965-1982) is the only book ever published about the Christian movement in American professional golf. It began when the author and other pros founded the PGA Tour Bible Study in 1965. This fellowship flourishes today with the world's #1 pro golfer Scottie Scheffler—beloved by peers and fans alike—as its most prominent member. From inside the ropes, Zarley tells many interesting and humorous stories about his fellow pros. So many of them have been influenced by these weekly meetings that consist of prayer, Bible study, and the sharing of their faith in the crucified and risen Jesus of Nazareth. This group has always been open to all pros and their wives, irrespective of religious affiliation. This fellowship started small and grew remarkably through the decades. Its members have won hundreds of PGA Tour tournaments and dozens of golf's four majors. Zarley compares this spiritual growth to a parable that Jesus taught in which he said, "The kingdom of heaven is like a mustard seed that someone sowed in his field; it is the smallest of all the seeds, but when it has grown it is the greatest of shrubs and becomes a tree" (Matthew 13:31-32). Finally, the author explains that the book's title means what the risen Jesus Christ had said to his disciples before sending them out into the world, "Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, ... And remember, I am with you always, to the end of the age" (Matthew 20:19-20). Kermit Zarley competed thirty years full time on the PGA Tour and its Senior/Champions Tour. He won five of its tournaments, including the Canadian Open, and was runner-up seventeen times. Nowadays—as a lay member of the Society of Biblical Literature since 1999—Zarley writes books mostly about biblical studies. This is his eleventh book and his first one about golf.