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PASSOVER PREPARATION # 4
Fred Coulter – March 15, 2003
This is Passover Preparation # 4 and we finished last time through
John 14. We’re going through John 14, 15, 16, and 17. In chapters 14 and
15 we’ll go in much more detail than we will the others and in
particularly John 17 because John 17 is Christ’s prayer and there’s not
too much in the way of comment that you want to add to that, after all
that is His prayer.
So let’s begin in John 15 (FV) and what we need to understand
is this: that God wants us to have a direct living relationship with Him
through the power of the Spirit. That’s what God wants, based upon
faith, based upon hope, based upon love. That’s what God desires. He
doesn’t want religion because religion then puts you into a corporate
relationship with a church entity and puts you into a laity
ecclesiastical hierarchical relationship with the church leaders. God
doesn’t want that. He wants a direct, living relationship with Him by
the power of the Holy Spirit through the Word of God, through prayer,
through study, through how you live, how you think, how you conduct your
life, in all of that. And within all of that you see, we are going to
see as the Days of Unleavened Bread teach us that it is all a part of
being perfected, and that’s the important thing we need to understand.
Now let’s begin in verse 1: “ ‘I am the true vine, and My Father is
the husbandman.’ ” So it is a collective work that they do together, as
we showed last time, through the power of the Holy Spirit. “ ‘He takes
away every branch in Me that
does not bear fruit…’ ” Because you see, with a living dynamic direct
relationship with God the Father and Jesus Christ you are going to be
continually growing, continually overcoming. He does not want you to
stagnate. God is the one Who handles all of these things and these
problems, you see. God is the one Who makes the decision ultimately.
That’s why, as we’ll see a little bit later on when we come to chapter
16, that if someone is excommunicated out of a synagogue or out of a
church that doesn’t mean they’re cut off from God. In some cases it may
mean the opposite. So God is the one Who does the final work. No man is
going to do this work of God because Christ is the vine, the Father is
the husbandman, and: “…every branch in Me that does not bear
fruit…” He takes away. “ ‘…But He cleanses each one that bears fruit, in
order that it may bear more fruit’ ” (John 15:1-2, FV). And you
might put there that is the whole purpose and object of trials.
Now around here, living in the wine country, you’re very familiar
with the vines. And every year they trim back the vines. And you can
tell how old the vineyard is by the size of the trunk of the grape
plant. The bigger the trunk the older the vineyard and probably greater
the quality of the grapes and hence the quality of the wine. But if you
take a grapevine, of which we have one that we have for kind of an arbor
over a little garden area that we have in our back yard. We just let it
grow so we have shade and it covers so we have these 20 foot long vine
branches going out. Well, every year bingo – here come all these
new green grapes. But they never produce anything because the vine has
not been pruned. So the pruning that God does is to get rid of human
nature so that you can produce more spiritual fruit. And it’s so simple
that He puts it in the terms of the vineyard.
Now let’s look at our part on cleansing. Let’s come to I John 1. We
have our part. He stirs us up with the Holy Spirit. He takes away our
sins when we repent. And here’s how we are cleansed. And the cleansing
is not a haphazard thing. It is not a partial thing. If your attitude is
right and you’re wholehearted toward God and you love God, it’s going to
be a complete work. As we all need to realize we are all a work in
progress. And every year, just like the husbandman goes out to the
vineyard and he trims off all the old dead branches so that it can have
new branches in the spring and hence new fruit, so likewise every year
we go through the same process with the Passover, don’t we, so that we
renew the covenant and we have that standing before God.
Now let’s pick it up here in I John 1:6 (KJV). And this
becomes a very important thing in relationship to whether you have a
personal one-to-one direct living relationship with God, or whether you
play church, or attend church, or have religion, or whatever it may be,
you see. “If we say that we have fellowship with Him, and walk in
darkness, we lie, and do not the truth…” Why? Because if you walk in the
light you’re going to be doing something very profound.
Hold your place here and come to John 3, because there is something
that you will always be doing regardless of your sin, regardless of your
fault, regardless of your trial and difficulty that you are going
through. Here is what you are always going to be doing: you’re not going
to be walking in darkness. Now let’s pick it up here in verse 17: “For
God sent not His Son into the world to condemn the world; but that the
world through Him might be saved.” That’s the whole goal of what God
wants. Ultimately the unrepentant sinners will have condemned
themselves. “He that believeth on Him is not condemned: but he that
believeth not is condemned already, because he hath not believed in the
name of the only begotten Son of God. And this is the condemnation, that
light is come into the world, and men loved darkness rather than light,
because their deeds were evil.” So you can’t be walking in darkness and
saying that you have fellowship with God (you cannot be a Buddhist and
have fellowship with God; you cannot be a Moslem and have fellowship
with God; you cannot be a Catholic and have fellowship with God; and the
Protestants probably have a half-hearted beginning fellowship with God,
etc), because Christ is the
way, the truth, and the life and there is no other way.
And He also says what? “I am the light of the world.”
Now notice: “For every one that doeth evil hateth the light…” Now
we’ll talk about hatred a little bit later on here. “…Neither cometh to
the light, lest his deeds should be reproved.” Because he doesn’t want
to change. Or as it could be: discovered. He does not want to discover
that his human nature is inherently evil and poisonous by nature and
that it needs to be changed. Now notice verse 21: “But he that doeth
truth [that means practices the truth or does the truth] cometh [is
coming] to the light…” Now this shows it’s a continuous ongoing thing
that you do. You are doing the truth, you are practicing the truth, you
are coming to the light, and Christ is the light, you are continually
coming to Him. And this is what it’s all about. And this is what the New
Covenant is all about and this is what our relationship with God is all
about, you see. He’s coming to the light: “… that his deeds may be made
manifest, that they are wrought in God” (John 3:17-21, KJV). In
other words the fruits of the Spirit of God (Galatians 5:22); love, and
hope, and joy, and peace, and longsuffering, and temperance, and
goodness, and meekness and so forth, against such there is no law.
Now let’s come back to I John 1 and finish this section here
concerning cleansing and so forth and how God does this. It’s really a
wonderful and marvelous thing. And this is all a part of our
relationship and standing with God. Now verse 7: “…but if we walk in the
light, as He is in the light [and we might put in brackets John 3,
because we are coming to the light], we have fellowship one with
another, and the blood of Jesus Christ His Son cleanseth us from all sin
[or every sin].” And that’s the whole purpose of the Passover, that’s
the whole purpose of the words that Jesus is talking about – to cleanse
you, but more important to keep you in a covenant relationship with God
so that you have opportunity to have your sins continually cleansed
through Christ Who is our propitiation. And that is the act of grace
under which we live, you see.
“If we say that we have no sin [that is, we don’t have a sinful
nature], we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us.” And isn’t it
interesting that those people who believe that men are inherently good
rather than inherently evil, they have no room for the truth of God.
These are living things. The Word of God is living. It applies
everywhere, at all times, in all circumstances. “If we confess our sins
[and this does not mean to the priest, but to God], He is faithful and
just to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from all
unrighteousness” (I John 1:7-9, KJV). That’s how the relationship
with God works. That’s why Jesus said, as we’ll read in just a minute,
“Now you are clean through the words which I have spoken.” because you
believe them, because you act upon them, because you live with them and
it’s part of your being. So that puts us in the standing with God that
there is no condemnation of the fact that we have human nature.
Now that’s the individual work, you see. Now there’s the also the
collective work. Jesus said, “Go into all the world and make disciples
of all nations, teaching them whatsoever I have commanded you, and lo I
am with you till the end of the age” (Matt. 28:19-20, paraphrased).
And it’s still being done through the Word of God. If we are preaching
what God has spoken, then we are giving you what God would give you if
He were to talk in your ear, you see, and likewise with the words of
Christ and the writings of the apostles, because He said that, “You
would be witnesses for Me to the ends of the earth.” And that could only
be accomplished through having the New Testament written, because they
didn’t get to the ends of the earth. They covered a gigantic area, but
even they didn’t know until a few years before they died, with the
exception of the apostle John, that time was going to go on way beyond
their lifetimes. They didn’t know that until the last few years.
Now let’s come back to John 15 (FV). So this is why God does
it. So when you have a trial or you are overcoming human nature and you
have this spiritual battle within, know that God is doing this to
cleanse you. That’s why there is repentance, that’s why there is prayer,
that’s why we ask every day, “Forgive us our sins and our debts.” Now
verse 3: “ ‘You are already clean through the word that I have spoken to
you.’ ” Now how does that work? How do the words cleanse you? It’s
accomplished through the power of the Holy Spirit.
Now let’s look at two things in how that’s done. Let’s come to John 7
because the Holy Spirit is likened unto water. Let’s pick it up here in
verse 37: “In the last day, that great day of the feast, Jesus
stood and cried, saying, If any man thirst, let him come unto Me, and
drink. He that believeth on Me, as the scripture hath said, out of his
belly shall flow rivers of living water. (But this spake He of the
Spirit, which they that believe on Him should receive: for the Holy
Ghost was not yet given; because that Jesus was not yet
glorified.)” (John 7:37-39, KJV).
Now let’s come to Ephesians 5 and see what the Holy Spirit and the
words do together and how it’s phrased here in Ephesians 5. Very
interesting expression. And he’s talking concerning Christ and the
church. Let’s pick it up here in verse 25: “Husbands, love your wives,
even as Christ also loved the church, and gave Himself for it; that He
might sanctify [it]…” So here’s what Christ is doing to the church:
sanctifying her, or that is making it holy, “…and cleanse it [He said,
“Now you’re clean through the words which I have spoken] with the
washing of water by the word…” (Eph. 5:25-26, KJV). Very
interesting process that takes place, isn’t it. Why? When you confess
your sins and repent to God, you study the Word of God, you feel
relieved. Have you ever felt greatly relieved when you really know that
you have repented? What is that relief? That is a cleansing. That’s what
that is.
So when Jesus said, “You are clean through the words which I have
spoken to you,” now because of that then here is a direct living
relationship. And from verse 4 down through verse 11, all of this is
building to what we find in John 17. Now let’s begin here, John 15:4. I
don’t mean to throw around so many scriptures that you get lost as to
where we are. I don’t want to do that.
“ ‘Dwell in Me…’ ” So it’s a living and dwelling relationship. It’s
direct because He is the vine and we are the branches and we are
dwelling in Him. I mean you can’t get any more direct than that, can
you? No. “ ‘Dwell in Me, and I in you.’ ” And as we’ve seen that’s by
the power of the Holy Spirit. “ ‘As a branch cannot bear fruit of
itself…’ ” And that’s interesting because it means the impossibility of
having the power to produce any spiritual fruit on your own. It can’t do
it of itself. “ ‘…But only if it remains in the vine [and He’s the
vine], neither can you bear fruit unless you are dwelling
in Me.’ ” So I want you, as we go down, circle the word “dwell,”
“remain,” “dwelling,” because all of those are reflective of the same
Greek verbs.
Verse 5: “ ‘I am the vine,
and you are the branches.’ ” And many people never
understand that and come up and proclaim that they are God. You know
like Yahweh ben Yahweh, remember that down in Florida, what 15 years
ago? He ended up that he really thought he was God, and he authorized
other people to kill people that he didn’t like. No, “I am the vine,
and you are the branches.” You know, the Pope ought to learn
that. He’s not in place of Christ. As a matter of fact he’s another
plant. You might say the wild vine, not connected to Christ at all.
“ ‘The one who is dwelling [there it is again] in Me, and I in him,
bears much fruit [all the fruits of the Spirit, all the things we need
to do]; because apart [or that is, severed] from Me you can do nothing.’
” (John 15:4-5, FV). That’s why no one can do the work of God
without Christ in him. Now many have tried to do the work of God. Let
God do the work in you, and then let Him do His work through you if
that’s what God wants.
Now let’s look again at this situation concerning “dwelling in
Christ.” Now sometimes dwelling in Christ we find ourselves in a
nonproductive way, don’t we? And that also fits into the parable that
the ten virgins, they all slumbered and slept. And this shows that there
is sometimes need for a revival. Luke 13:6: “He spake also this parable;
A certain man had a fig tree planted in his vineyard; and he came
and sought fruit thereon, and found none. Then said he unto the dresser
of his vineyard, Behold [Look] these three years I come seeking fruit on
this fig tree, and find none: cut it down; why cumbereth it [why does it
take up the space in] the ground? And he answering said unto him, Lord,
let it alone this year also, till I shall dig about it, and dung
it…” So sometimes we need some digging and dunging. And God will
inspire us to do that if we go astray from God for an extended period of
time. Now notice here it’s three years he’s been coming. But the digging
and dunging also shows the mercy of God, that He doesn’t want to give up
on us. And you might say that the man who owned the fig tree in the
vineyard was God the Father, and the man who was tending the garden was
Christ. See, so Christ says, “No, don’t cut this one off yet, don’t dig
it up yet. Let’s dig and dung.” So if you need a little “d-n-d” in your
life, dig out the sin and dung in the Word of God, as it were, for a
spiritual fertilizer to get you to produce some good things. “…And if it
bear fruit, well: and if not, then after that thou shalt
cut it down” (Luke13:6-9, KJV). So this ties right in with the
parable concerning God the Father, because when we started out here it
says, “Every branch in Me that does not bear fruit He takes away.” So
this is of God the Father.
Let’s come here to John 15 (FV) again and let’s continue on in
verse 6. Now here again we are going to see some more “if’s.” And as I
have been mentioning, as we go through circle the little “if’s.” Verse
6: “ ‘If [there’s one of them] anyone does not dwell in Me, he is cast
out as a branch, and is dried up…’ ” And we’ve seen this operation take
place within the church of God, haven’t we? Yes, indeed. See, the
scattering can be likened unto the hoeing and dunging. And how are the
fruits going to be produced then? What is going to happen, and if you
are not in Christ, see: “ ‘If anyone does not dwell in Me, he is cast
out as a branch, and is dried up…’ ” And we’ve seen that happen to
people too, haven’t we? Because in the history of the church that I read
in a book by Gipp (and he is a staunch Baptist that believes that there
is absolutely nothing wrong whatsoever with the translation of the King
James Version), but he has a good insight in the churches, which is
this: Churches start out evangelical, that is, like going and preaching
the gospel to the world and so forth. And then they grow. They reach a
certain stage of growth. And then they begin developing into
institutions. That is, they begin building buildings and schools, and
people are attracted to these things because it’s an institution. Well
that happened to us, for those of you who were in Worldwide Church of
God, correct? Yes. And it became an institution and people were
attracted to the institution rather than being called of God. So you had
a lot of branches hanging in there that weren’t rooted in Christ, but
they were rooted in the institution and in the corporation. And they
were not only members but also ministers, because then the ministry
became a job rather than a service to the people, you see. And it was
for the value of a living and paycheck rather than for the value of
teaching people the way of God. So there has to be these pruning and
trimmings. There has to be these hoeing and dungings because that’s the
way we are going to be tested and tried and proved, or disproved.
And sometimes when you meet people who have been cast off as a branch
and have withered up, and you meet them and talk to them (maybe you meet
them in the mall, you’re shopping, or in the grocery store) and it is
just like talking to a dead branch, isn’t it? And sometimes – even the
comment has been made by some who have known severe cases of this – that
you look into their eyes and their eyes are virtually dead. So these are
living things that we are going through.
So if you are not dwelling in Christ… There’s that word again. We can
circle that. We are going to have a lot of circles, aren’t we? Well,
make some squares, some circles, you know what ever you need, some
underlines. “ ‘…Cast out as a branch, and is dried up; and men gather
them and cast them into a fire, and they are burned.’ ” Now verse
7: “ ‘If you dwell in Me (the branch and the vine), and My words dwell
in you…’ ” So that’s where it has to be because that’s the whole purpose
of the covenant, isn’t it? Isn’t that the whole purpose as to why God
has called us? That’s the reason we renew the covenant so that the words
of Christ can dwell in us, because humanly speaking without the Spirit
of God there is no place in our minds for the Word of God, because our
carnal nature is made of such a way that unless we are converted there
is no room for God.
Now let’s go to Hebrews 10. “My words dwell in you.” Now there’s a
way that they get there. And I’ll tell you one thing, you never have the
Word of God dwelling in you unless you study it, can you? How do you get
what is in your mind unless you put it in there. I have not baptized
anyone yet and attached a funnel hole so that after they are baptized we
can stick a funnel there and just run it in. It doesn’t happen. It’s a
process. It is a perfecting. That’s why it is a living relationship. But
here in Hebrews 10:16 it says: “…This is the covenant that I will
make with them after those days, saith the Lord, I will put My laws into
their hearts, and in their minds will I write them…” And you might put –
if you desire them. God isn’t going to force it upon anyone. He’s given
that choice to us. If we choose to do so He will write them in our
hearts and our minds. Now notice in verse 17: “…and their sins and
iniquities will I remember no more. Now where remission of these is,
there is no more [animal] offering for sin.” That’s the meaning of
it because you have the sacrifice of Christ. “Having therefore,
brethren, boldness to enter into the holiest by the blood of Jesus, by a
new and living way, which He hath consecrated for us, through the veil,
that is to say, His flesh…” (Heb. 10:16-20, KJV).
See, so this again shows a living relationship. And if the words of
Christ are dwelling in us, or living in us, and they are written in our
hearts and our minds by the washing of the water of the word through the
power of the Holy Spirit by prayer, by study, by faith, and by living
God’s way, that’s the whole process of what you call conversion. Now
that’s different than belonging to a church where you zoom in and in 45
minutes all is said and done and you are out the door and that’s it
until next week. That is distinctly playing church. It’s not what you do
when you come into the assembly of the building called a church, because
you as part of the vine are the church. It’s what you do constantly with
your life every day. So this is quite profound. Quite profound.
Back to John 15:7 (FV) now: “ ‘If you dwell in Me and My words
dwell in you, you shall ask whatever you desire…’ ” And of course that
has to be according to the will of God. You don’t ask God to sin for
you, if I could put it that way. You don’t ask God to do something that,
if you did, would be sin. You don’t say, “God, kill my enemy.” You say,
“God, I commit to you the judgment of my enemy.” It’s a different thing,
isn’t it? God will take care of the enemies. I’ve had enemies come after
me. God has taken care of them in His own way. So this “whatever you
desire” has to be according to God’s will. But the greatest desire that
we need to have is what? What is the greatest desire? To be in the
kingdom of God, right? That’s the greatest desire above everything else.
“ ‘…And it shall come to pass for you.’ ”
Now verse 8: “In this [or herein, or by this means] is My Father
glorified, that you bear much fruit; so shall you be My disciples.’ ”
And of course we’ve already covered that. There’s the individual fruit
of personal growth and overcoming. There’s the individual fruit of doing
the work that God wants done by those who are teachers and leaders and
so forth.
Now, once the fruit has been produced let’s not make a mistake.
Here’s the Laodicean mistake and it has disastrous results. Luke 12:15:
“And He said unto them, Take heed, and beware of covetousness…” And boy,
that’s something we need to be aware of today more than anything else,
because there’s more things out there you desire that can be had that
you can get. So if you have them don’t set your heart on them. Be
thankful, appreciate them, take care of them, thank God for them, but
don’t set your hearts on them because they’re all temporary. “…For a
man’s life consisteth not in the abundance of the things which he
possesseth.” Boy, is that talking about our age or not? Yes, it is. “And
He spake a parable unto them, saying, The ground of a certain rich man
brought forth plentifully…” See, so when we have an increase in fruits
or growth or whatever, let’s not do as the rich man did. Instead of
giving credit to God and maybe perhaps giving it to those who had need,
he became very selfish. It’s like the one man that I related to you that
I was riding in his car, which was a Rolls Royce, the big expensive
model, and he looked at me and said, “I don’t believe in tithing.” I
about fell on the floor. Very similar attitude here, isn’t it?
“And he thought within himself…” He didn’t pray to God and ask for
guidance, did he? Now we’ve all done it, haven’t we? We’ve all thought
within ourselves and made our own decisions without praying about it and
what happens? It doesn’t come out right, does it? “…Saying, What shall I
do, because I have no room where to bestow my fruits? And he said, This
will I do: I will pull down my barns, and build greater; and there will
I bestow [store] all my fruits and my goods. And I will say to my soul
[You’ve got it made buddy.], Soul, thou hast much goods laid up for many
years; take thine ease, eat, drink, and
be merry.” Now we’ve seen that on the stock market recently, haven’t we?
Everybody poured their money into all of these things and it was all a
lie, and all ballooned up, and many people said, “Hurray, I’ve got it
made, I’m going to retire.” And bam, it’s gone. See, a very
similar thing. “But God said unto him, Thou fool, this night thy
soul shall be required of thee: then whose shall those things be, which
thou hast provided?” Who are they going to go to? And a rich man never
wants to leave it but he can never take it. And even the Pharaoh’s who
figured, “Well, I’ll take it with me in my pyramid.” The thief figured
out how to get in and take it anyway. At the funeral of a rich man
someone said, “Well how much did he leave?” And someone looked at him
and said, “All of it.” See, so then here’s the lesson: “So is he
that layeth up treasure for himself [that’s how he is], and is not rich
toward God” (Luke 12:15-21, KJV). So you have to be rich in
faith. It doesn’t matter what your personal wealth is. See, personal
wealth is not going to get anybody into the kingdom of God. Spiritual
riches will.
Now let’s come back to John 15 (FV). So if you bear much fruit
give God all the credit because you couldn’t do it without Him anyway.
And besides, you know, if we understand that we’re just sojourners here
in the earth, and that is we just have custodianship over what has been
given. In other words we’re just stewards. God owns it anyway. You can
hold and possess gold and silver but God says, “All the gold and all the
silver is Mine.” You can own lands and properties and houses but God
says, “The earth and the fullness thereof is Mine.” So if we produce
fruit spiritually then that is a great and marvelous thing and so shall
you be the disciples of Christ.
Now let’s come to verse 9. Notice then how He gives us hope through
His love: “ ‘As the Father has loved Me [now you can’t have any greater
love than that], I also have loved you; live in My love.’ ” Now that has
the same meaning as “dwells.” We have dwell, remain, dwelling, dwelling,
dwell, dwell, dwell, now we have live. Live in My love. That’s the
ultimate of what we are to do, you see. That’s what the perfection of
things that we go through are to do. When you go through sorrow and
difficulty and problems and traumas and desperations, that is all to
teach you the value of the love of God, because then you realize that
the love of God is the only great and remaining and lasting thing that
there is. Isn’t that true? Yes, indeed.
Ok, verse 10: “ ‘If you keep My commandments…’ ” Now that goes right
back to chapter 14 and verse 13, “If you love Me, keep My commandments.”
“ ‘If you keep My commandments, you shall live in My love…’ ” Because
it’s an ongoing thing. You know, I John 5 says, “Herein is the love of
God, that we love the children of God and keep His commandments, and His
commandments are not grievous” (I John 5:2-3, paraphrased). This
is the love of God, that we keep His commandments. “ ‘…And [you] live in
His love.’ ” And that’s the hardest thing because we as human beings
have a nature that is bent on carnality and hatred and sin, and so this
is a complete opposite thing that God is expecting us to do, which He
knows that we can’t do without His Spirit, and that we can’t accomplish
without living within Him and always remaining in the vine, you see. “ ‘
…Just as I have kept My Father’s commandments and live in His love.’ ”
So that’s the relationship.
“ ‘These things I have spoken to you, in order that My joy may dwell
in you…’ ” So we’re going to be dwelling in Him, His Spirit in us, His
words in us, and now His joy in us. “ ‘…And that your joy may be
full. This is My commandment: that you love one another, as I have loved
you.’ ” And He said that back in John 13:34. So the commandments fall in
this order: love God with all your heart, and mind, and soul, and being;
love the brethren as Christ has loved them; love your neighbor as
yourself; and love your enemy. Now there are the four descending orders
of love from God. And all of those require keeping the commandments of
God, you see. And that’s to bring us the joy, that’s to bring us the
love.
Now here then becomes the epitome and the ultimate of it, verse 13: “
‘No one has greater love than this: that one lay down his life for his
friends.’ ” He’s talking about Himself and what He is going to do. How
He is going to do it. Proverbs says a friend loves at all times.
Proverbs also says the wounds of a friend are to be desired rather than
the kiss of the enemy because it’s to help you.
Now verse 14: “ ‘You are My friends, if …’ ” There’s that word again.
We’ve got actually four of them. Verse 6, verse 7, verse 10, and now
verse 14. “ ‘…If you do whatever I command you.’ ” I mean this is a
great and tremendous thing. We are the friend of Jesus Christ. Abraham
was called the friend of God. We are the friends of God. You know, why
should you ever be discouraged and down to the point that you are ready
to throw in the towel and give up when you realize that Christ is your
friend. No, never. And that’s all a part of the New Covenant and the
relationship that we have with God.
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