Living as Slaves of Christ: The Values of Flipside Church (20th anniversary)

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It's good to see you this morning.

I'm glad you're here.

I want to just add a footnote
to the announcements

regarding the seven Primal Questions
resource.

That is a phenomenal resource.

If any of you have a relationship
in your life

you care about.

The truth is that

every one of us has a primal question.

A core question
that we need to get answered

with a yes from those
that are supposed to love us the most.

And when we don't get a yes from them,

it sends us into a tailspin,

and we try to get a yes from somebody.

If we know what our primal question is
and the ones that love us best

know what it is, then we can answer each
other's question with a yes.

And it's really, really good and healthy.

If we don't know what that is

and they don't know what ours is,

and they never answer it with a yes,

it gets very destructive.

And so if you have a relationship

with someone you care about,
which I hope is all of us,

that resource will be very beneficial,

especially for married couples, especially

so that you can start answering each
other's question with a resounding yes!

So I invite you to please
take advantage of that.

I can't say enough good things about it.

Today we just,

in the conclusion of our Ruth series,

I want to dive in today

with,

what our values are

the values of our church

as we look forward to next Sunday

celebrating 20 years of what God has done.

I want to make sure
that you come back next

Sunday for that celebration together.

But in setting that up,

I want us to look together at our values.

Before I get to that message,

I want to share with you
something that will set up this message

from my journal that I just wrote.

It came to me last night,

and I want to share with you

my journal.

The focus of this is on the word do loss.

It's a Greek word d o u
l s is how we would spell it in English.

Do loss.

And that word literally means slave.

I am the do loss of Jesus.

That's how the Bible talks about
Jesus followers as they do loss.

Literally, I am the slave of Christ.

I am not my own.

I am not allowed my own agenda.

I serve a master who owns my life

with unquestioned
obedience and allegiance.

He is the master.

I am his slave

everywhere in

the New Testament
where it translates do loss.

It uses the word servant,
but the word is literally slave.

In the 1500s, translators
chained slave to servant

because they thought slave sounded too
harsh.

A servant implies serves a boss,

but that implies one can be lazy
or neglectful without great consequence.

To serve implies it is optional.

Slaves, on the other hand,
have no recourse

but to only obey.

If I understand slave master relationship,

everything in the Bible makes sense.

Slaves are used
at the discretion of their master.

Slaves rely upon the grace of their master
for anything good in their life.

Slaves are disciplined by their master
for disobedience.

Slaves aren't allowed to live
by their own agendas or rules.

Slaves are protected by their master.

Slaves
can only be the slave of one master.

Every provision and the life of a slave
comes from their master.

But also

my master no longer

calls me only his slave,
but also his friend.

To be the friend of my master

means my master is not abusive towards me.

And though a slave, I'm adopted

and a co-chair with my master.

So all the rights
of the Kingdom of my master are mine.

What a blessing to be the slave of Jesus.

My life
is the life of a slave to my master,

on whom I rely on his grace, provision,

goodness, kindness, mercy, and to whom

I owe my full, unquestioned allegiance
without debate.

This slave's agenda

and dreams are not fulfilled by my master.

This this slave fulfills
the master's commands.

It is his kingdom.

This slave serves.

He does not serve this slave's kingdom

as the slave of Jesus.

My values must only be what he values.

My prayer was this Jesus, I am your slave,

father.

I am your slave.

I trust you as my master.

Everywhere in the Bible,

the New Testament,
when Scripture talks about the servant

or the bond servant, which is a made
up word in English, it's not in a Greek.

The literal word is slave.

And what we are commanded into

is a master slave relationship,

where Jesus is the master.

We are his slave.

Translators have done a disservice

to the kingdom of God and to our churches.

When they made that translation.

Because when we talk about serving Jesus,

it's almost as
if we do him a service by our service,

and we may serve sometimes
and not other times,

and we may serve well or not well,
and we may choose to do this or that

as a servant.

But as a slave.

We have no option.

There's no debate here.

The commands of the master
must be followed.

And that's biblical.

So here's my fear this morning.

I'm going to teach and preach

a very deep
and theological biblical message

that will feel like
it will fly in the face

of Christianity, of the Bible
and of the church.

And it will feel very harsh,

and it will feel like it's
leaving a lot of things out.

And the danger that I face
in preaching this message today

is that I will preach some of you
out of this church.

I hope I don't.

But I want us to understand

what it is to be called Christian,

and what God's
expectation of his church is

of us,

not as servant, not as follower,

but biblically as slave.

To understand, understand.

As a slave to

I am not allowed my own values

as a slave.

I must adhere to and accept

and perpetuate the values of my master.

Every one of us lives by a set of values.

Most of us have not given much thought
to what

those values are, and most of us

have never given much attention
nor stated them clearly for our lives.

And most of us don't evaluate our life

currently by our values.

More of us go through life
simply responding to

stimuli upon our life.

Values are very easy to identify,

even if you've never stated them,
and if you have stated them is.

They're very easy to identify.

If we live by them, all one must do is

look at where we spend our time
and how we spend our money,

where we spend our time
and how we spend our money will

clearly expose what we value.

We can say what we value,

but unless we evaluate our time,
our energy,

and our finances based on what we say
we value,

we will never really know if what we say
we value are really values.

Perhaps many of us have goals in life,

but unless those goals are based

on very specific chosen values,

at best those goals are selfish

or haphazard.

And so I want to be very clear.

The values of this church are,
and by extension,

with the values of the slaves of

Jesus are to be.

Our church flipside

comes from a passage in acts

chapter 17, verse six, which says this.

Go to their.

When they could not,

the Jewish leaders
could not find the disciples.

They dragged Jason
and some of the brothers before the city

authority, shouting,
these men who have turned

the world upside down have come here also.

They have lived.

The flip side,

our goal as a church, as slaves of Jesus,

is to live the flip side

and turn the world upside down.

Values are important

because values set agendas, values drive

goals, values
determined strategy and values.

Direct spending.

This is as true for the church
as it is for the individual.

It's as true for the individual
as it is the church.

And so today
I want to be very clear with the values.

The flip side

and the values of slaves of Christ.

This will be challenging.

I pray it's convicting.

And I pray that the Holy Spirit

does in his slaves

what the master desires of his slaves.

Are you ready?

These values are on these shirts.

I want us to understand them
and live them.

That's why we made of available
and a welcome center for you to pick up.

You can buy your own shirt.

This is important.

The first value.

Irrefutable love.

Love that cannot be refuted.

It is so clear
and so apparent it cannot be refuted.

Romans five eight For God

shows his love for us in this,

that while we were still sinners,

Christ died for us.

When we had nothing to offer God,

we could add no value to God,
nor God's existence.

There is nothing in us

that makes God's world better.

Jesus died for us

while still in rebellion to him,

in disobedience to him.

He died for us.

The Bible says,
rarely will one man die for a good man,

but never will one die for a bad man.

Jesus died for us.

Irrefutable love asks

nothing of us on the front end.

Just simply said,
I'm willing to die for you.

As an

expression of the father's love,

it is irrefutable.

And therefore Jesus then says, by this

all people will know
that you are my disciples.

If you want to

have love for one another.

The first value is irrefutable love.

Love is not optional.

Love is evidence.

Love is not a theory.

Love is a testimony.

See, the world can argue with theology.

The world cannot argue with Jesus.

Is love.

It's the story of the Good Samaritan.

In Luke chapter ten.

When a man was left

beaten for dead on the side of the road.

And it's the story
of how love crossed the road

when religion walked past

irrefutable love.

See, we have to understand something.

That love is
the proof. Love is not the perk.

That we choose to love.

Those who have wronged us.

We choose to love. Those who may hate us.

We choose to show love to those who have
done us wrong, who have done us dirty,

who have abandoned us, who have left
us, who have talked ill about us.

We choose to show love.

Because by that

all men will know

that we are the slaves of Christ.

It is how we've been loved.

It is how we love.

And so, as the slave of Jesus,

that person, those people in your life

that are hard to love.

Who have done you wrong?

Who've left you and abandoned you.

Who should have loved you and denied you.

Those who hurt your family.

The slave of Christ has no option.

But to love irrefutably.

See, the follower

of Jesus, the servant of Jesus can say,
you know I'm I.

I follow him as well.

Like, not very well with that regard.

The slave has no excuse and no option.

Do you understand? Yes.

You okay?

Yes. Okay. Good.

Because we got six more.

Irrefutable love

and the irresistible grace.

Irresistible grace.

Ephesians two eight says, for by what

grace you've been saved
through faith in this not of your own

doing, is the gift of God.

Irresistible grace.

Grace is so beautiful that when you see it

and experience it, it is irresistible.

See, one of the things we have to realize
that Christians, in other words,

slaves, are most attractive
when grace is most apparent.

The slave lives
with irrefutable love to those

who don't seem as though they deserve it.

And the slave of Jesus gives grace
that becomes irresistible

to those who don't deserve our grace.

Grace

is not just for the grace
doesn't just forgive.

Grace attracts.

And in Romans two, for

we read.

Or do you presume on the riches of his
kindness and forbearance and patience,

not knowing that God's kindness
is meant to lead you to repentance?

God's grace,
his kindness is intended to draw us to him

because it is so irresistible.

See, grace is the magnet

that pulls hearts to Jesus.

This slave

was drawn to my master
because of his grace.

And others are to be drawn to my master

because of the grace
they see in this slave.

I will not ask

for a show of hands,
but do you have someone in your life

that doesn't deserve your favor?

That doesn't deserve your blessing?

That doesn't deserve your graciousness?

The slave

gives grace to them that is irresistible

to draw them to their master.

It's not optional.

It's not a suggestion.

It's not an invitation.

It's the command of the master

to the master's slave.

To give irresistible grace

to those in our lives

that don't deserve it. Why?

Because that's what we've been given.

By the master.

To follow for.

See, people who were nothing

like Jesus liked Jesus
because he radiated grace.

And he preached truth.

Both things together.

It's reflected in the woman
caught in adultery.

In John chapter eight,

when the religious leaders were brought,
this woman caught in

the act of adultery was stones
in their hands,

ready to stone her to death,
as the law prescribed.

And those stones in the hand
had dropped to the ground

at the feet of Jesus,
because Grace stepped in.

Did she deserve grace? No.

Did she receive grace? Yes.

And so, for that person in your world

that doesn't deserve grace.

The slave responds to the master

and says, yes, master.

I will give grace

because you first gave it to me.

You okay?

Yes. Yeah. Good.

Because we have five more.

And as slaves

these are not negotiable.

Strict and unquestioned obedience.

We value irrefutable love.

Irresistible grace and illogical faith.

Faith.

That doesn't make sense.

Because that's what faith is.

Hebrews 11 six.

And without what?

Faith?

It's impossible to make God smile.

It's impossible to please him.

For whoever would draw near to God
must believe that he exists,

and that he rewards those who seek him.

Faith doesn't always make sense,

but it does always make history.

Noah by faith

built a boat in the desert.

By faith built a boat
that took him 120 years to build by faith.

Built a boat

in an area that had no large body of water

for 210 miles.

Faith, illogical faith

made Abraham leave his land,
his family, his possessions,

and go to a place he knew not where

illogical faith made Abraham walk

by faith, not by sight.

It was the illogical faith of Peter

who was safe in a boat in a storm.

Get out of a boat onto the water.

It's illogical.

Faith.

That is the faith of the slave.

It's the illogical faith of David

that ran towards the giant.

A child unarmed, with no battle armor

on the front lines of a warzone
running towards the army.

The army? The enemy.

It was the illogical faith

that made the giant fall.

See, faith oftentimes looks crazy

until the master comes through.

And slaves

don't get to know the map ahead of time.

Slaves aren't allowed to know
the direction ahead of time.

Slaves are not given
the guarantee of success ahead of time.

A slave simply says, master,
where would you have me?

What would you have me do?

And then the slave obeys.

Right, right, right.

And what?

We've been sold in the church

is. Father, tell me where to go.

And as your servant, I will serve you.

That's not the life of a slave.

The slave says you don't have to tell me
where to end up.

At your command.

I will move.

No direction,

no guarantee. Why?

Because the slave is used
at the discretion of his master.

Of her master.

And so the slave walks

by illogical faith.

Understanding
that the master doesn't owe the slave

any explanation, nor guarantee.

And so,

dear slaves of Christ.

Take a bold step

that scares you, but honors your master.

For you have no other responsibility

as a slave than that.

Irrefutable love.

Irresistible grace.

Illogical faith.

Oh, dear.

Slave! Are you okay?

Yes. Good.

Because we have four more.

We value the invisible kingdom.

We don't just believe
in an invisible kingdom.

We value the invisible kingdom.

And I want to spend some time here
because we have to understand

that we don't wrestle
against flesh and blood,

but against the rulers,
against the authorities,

against the cosmic powers
over this present darkness,

against the spiritual forces of evil
in the heavenly places.

There is an invisible kingdom that is more
real than this world, in which we see.

And it is more active

and more powerful than anything

you and I see with our natural eyes.

Jesus said, I will build my church,

and the gates of hell
shall not prevail against it.

There is an invisible kingdom.

And we are a part of it.

And right now

there is kingdom or heavenly

beings at play.

When you look not to

the things that are seen,
but to the things that are unseen.

For the things that are seen are
transient, but the things that are unseen.

The kingdom,

its eternal.

It's this kingdom

that is ruled by the master of whom we are

his slaves.

And we value his kingdom over ours.

For Jesus said, seek first that kingdom,

the kingdom of God and his righteousness,
and all these other things

take care of themselves

as slaves of Jesus,

not as servants, not as followers.

The biblical word is slave
as slaves of Jesus.

The kingdom of God is not a flag we wave.

It is the reality we live.

This kingdom, the kingdom of my master.

Though you can't always see his kingdom,

you cannot deny its power.

In Mark chapter four,

when Jesus was in a boat
with his disciples

sleeping,

the storm raged.

The disciples were afraid.

They woke
Jesus and Jesus commanded the storm.

The waves and the wind be quiet
and be still.

And nature obeyed
the command of its creator.

And the response of the disciples
was that they were afraid.

And they asked,
who is this, that even the wind

and the waves obey him,
because they realized that this master

was the master of the invisible kingdom.

And they were faced with the reality
of the invisible

kingdom
breaking through into their reality.

And they realized

that the unseen world,

the invisible kingdom,

is more real than the seen one.

And you and I,
as slaves of the master, serve as slaves.

The master who rules over the invisible

kingdom.

As I was driving

to our football game
in Dos Palos on Friday afternoon,

I was going through
some of this in my mind,

and God spoke to me this,
and I spoke it into my phone.

And I want to read to you

what God downloaded to me

about this life and the invisible kingdom.

Life right now

was never intended to be my best life.

Now the older I get, the more I realize,

the greater accumulation
of disappointments that I've experienced.

My best life is not this life.

My best life is the life to come.

My best life is in the Turtle Kingdom,
not this temporal kingdom.

It's okay when things don't go
well in this life.

I don't expect them to.

Because I don't expect this life
to be my best life.

I have hope for eternity
and that eternity will be my best life

because of what Jesus did on the cross.

I understand that I am totally depraved,

sinful, even in my best religious work.

I am utterly sinful and unable
to affect my own salvation.

It is only by the atoning work
of Jesus on the cross

that my best life is to come.

It has nothing to do with my work here.

It has everything
to do with the work of Jesus.

And so I can go

through my worst life here,
because I know that

my best life is secured and coming

as good as things might be here.

This is my worst life.

As bad as things might be here.

This is my worst life.

My best life is to come.

And that is the hope of salvation.

That is the joy of salvation.

That is the eternal kingdom
that I already belong to.

Paul's prayer
is that the eyes of our heart

would be enlightened,

that we know the hope to which we have
been called, the glorious inheritance

that is ours, and the power that raised
Jesus from the dead.

In other words, my hope is that my best
life is yet to come.

My hope is not in a better life now.

My hope is in the Kingdom.

Amen.

That is what

a slave values.

Okay.

Yes. Good.

Because we have three more.

We value the infallible scriptures.

The word of God.

Isaiah 40, verse eight.

The grass withers, the flower fades.

But the word of our God

stands forever.

It is true.

It's infallible.

And it remains.

Proverbs 30, verse five and six.

Every word of God proves true.

He's a shield to those
who take refuge in him.

Do not add to his words, lest
he rebuke you,

and you be found a liar.

His word is infallible and true.

We value his words over our words.

We value his words over our opinion.

Second Timothy 316.

All Scripture is breathed out
by God and profitable

for teaching, for reproof, for correction,
and for training in righteousness,

that the man, that the woman of God may
be completely quit for every good work.

The Word of God is the breath
of God breathes it into us

through His Word.

Opinions shift, culture drifts.

The God's Word remains forever.

It doesn't change.

It never has, and it never will.

And those who change it

stand condemned.

It's Jesus in the wilderness.

And Matthew chapter four.

When the devil came and tempted him,
and by the way,

tempting him with every desire
that a human would want.

And Jesus, the book of Philippians

says that he came as a slave.

Same word.

And as a slave

tempted with his own, a human's agenda

responded not with his feelings,
but responded with Scripture.

Because it is the truth.

It's unchanging.

It is infallible.

God's word never expires.

It empowers.

And we have to understand what Romans

1017 says that faith comes by what?

Hearing and hearing what?

The Word of Christ.

Our faith grows

by hearing the commands of the master

and by obeying as a slave those commands.

How can a slave
do what the master commands?

If the slave doesn't know
what the master has commanded?

That's a derelict slave.

That's a disobedient slave.

How does a slave know
what the master has commanded?

By knowing the master's words.

Do you understand

this, dear slave?

It's the slaves job

and responsibilities
to listen to and obey and learn

what the master's words are.

So that the slave can obey.

That's how faith is grown.

That enables the slave

to live with irrational faith.

That's why we tell you all the time.

Read your Bible and journal.

Oh, slave.

Read the words of your master

and journal what the master commands you.

Are you okay?

Good.

Because we have two more.

We value irrational generosity.

How does the slave value
irrational generosity?

Because the slave knows the slave owns
nothing.

Whatever the slave has
is given them by the master.

So the master has discretion over
what the slave possesses.

Because what the slave possesses
is not the slaves possession.

And so when the master says,
oh, dear slave,

this is what I want you to do
with my possessions.

The only response of the slave is to obey,

because the possessions of the slave
are not the slaves.

The possessions of the slave that
the slave is enjoying are the masters.

See, this is different than the servant

or the follower,
because one can say, as a servant,

well, I serve the master
this way, but not that way.

And I'm doing well following in this area.

Not as well of that area.

But that's okay, because of these things
called mercy and grace.

But once you put it in the context
that the Bible talks about it

as slave and master.

Now I understand

that these things I enjoy
are not my possession.

They're not the possession of the slave.

They're the possession of the master.

And the master has complete authority
and discretion over the master's

possessions, and complete authority
and discretion over the slave.

And how the slave manages
the master's possessions.

And my only response to my master
is to be either,

irrationally generous with the master's

possessions or.

Do you understand?

If all I see myself is as a servant

or a follower, that means I can serve
God with my possessions

and I can follow God with my possessions.

That's erroneous.

If I understand
biblically that I am a slave now,

I no longer have discretion over
what I would have otherwise

called my possessions
because as a slave, they're not mine.

And that's why this makes sense.

Give.

Because it's not yours anyway.

And when you give,
it will be given to you.

Because I know I can trust you.

Good measure.

Pressed down, shaken together. Running
over.

Will be put into your lap by your master.

So I can direct. Why?

Where my stuff goes.

For with the measure you use,
it will be measured back to you,

says the master.

So generosity doesn't add up.

It multiplies the kingdom.

This little boy.

I don't know if you heard the story.

He had five loaves and two fish.

And he gave it.

And it didn't make sense,

but it fed thousands

because it was the masters.

See, here's what the truth is.

Generosity breaks
calculators and multiplies the kingdom.

And slaves live with open hands

because it's not their own.

And so the slave learns to give

until it feels sacrificial, not safe.

Because though the master is a good
master.

It's not always

feels like safe.

You're okay.

Is good

because we have one more.

Incessant reproduction.

The slave incessantly reproduces

the master's kingdom.

The slave incessantly reproduces.

Matthew 2819.

Go. Therefore,

all you slaves,

and make disciples of all nations,

baptizing them,

teaching them.

To be my slaves.

I've commanded you.

Do this
because I, your master, am with you

to the very end of the age.

A healthy tree reproduces

healthy fruit, and again,
healthy disciples reproduce.

Healthy disciples.

Healthy churches reproduce

healthy churches.

We are committed to incessant
reproduction.

Of slaves of Christ

and God's Church.

Expanding his kingdom, not our own.

Because reproduction isn't a strategy,

it's God's purpose for his kingdom

and for his slaves.

See, the truth is that disciples
don't just grow,

they go.

And so we will
and have always been, and will continue

to be incessantly focused
on reproducing the kingdom of God.

Because after all, all we are,
all I am is a slave of Christ, to be used

at his discretion,
to use his resources to build his Kingdom,

not our own.

That is why,

dear friends,
we invest so heavily in church planting.

Just since 2016,

we have been the major contributor,
worker,

funder or trainer of over 500 churches

around the world.

Even more since we started in 2005.

That's just the number since 2016.

In the last ten years.

Why? Because
we value the invisible kingdom.

We live with irrational generosity.

We live by illogical faith,

and we are incessantly obsessed
with reproducing the kingdom of God.

Because after all, we are his slaves.

Let me just tell you this.

As his slave, we have the opportunity

to go to Ukraine

and start 200 churches.

Right now.

And so on September 24th
through October 7th,

I will fly into Poland

and take a train into Ukraine.

And we will do what we do in doing
church planting

training for multiple, multiple pastors

so we can start another 200 churches
within a year in Ukraine.

What it is exploding in Ukraine.

And the reason exploding in Ukraine

is because when people draw near
to their own mortality,

they start to ask
spiritual, eternal questions.

And in Ukraine,

people are very near their own mortality.

We have the opportunity

to start in Ukraine, a church
planting movement.

And so as I go to Ukraine,

I'll be all around
that country, and I will go to the border

of Ukraine and Russia on the front lines
and preach in churches

there and lead church planting work there.

And we will start planting Kingdom

churches
for the expansion of the Kingdom of God,

the invisible kingdom,
because we live with irrational faith.

And the master has told this slave

that he wants this slave to go to Ukraine,

to the front line, to do kingdom work.

And so this slave will obey him.

And you, as the slaves of Christ,

will join me in that in prayer
that the kingdom advances

by any means the
master chooses to advance it

at the complete discretion of the master.

And we together, as the slaves of Christ,
will pay for it all.

We will pay for the opportunity

to go to the frontlines.

Do you understand?

Understand?

Because we are no more

than slaves of Christ.

We don't get to have an opinion

about what the master's desire is.

We don't get to have an opinion

about how the master chooses

to use his slaves for his purposes.

We simply have the responsibility to obey.

And so,

living a value driven life.

We will love people

in ways that love can't be denied.

And we will extend grace
that people can't resist.

And we will walk in faith in a way
that doesn't make sense.

And we will live for the kingdom

that we cannot see, but cannot ignore.

And we

will stand on the word that does not fail.

And we will give in ways
that make calculators cry.

And we will reproduce disciples
in churches

until the world is reached
and flipped upside down.

Because we are the slaves of Christ.

Your values determine your destiny.

Change your values.

You change your future.

And so, dear friends,

don't don't just admire these values.

Adopt them.

And don't just agree with them.

Apply them.

This is what slaves of Christ do.

Do you understand?

Yeah.

You okay?

Yeah.

That's.

What?

Make sure you come back next week.

Because we're going to.

We're going to celebrate

what God has done through his slaves

over the last 20 years.

Together.

He's a good master.

Yeah.

Yeah.

And we will say yes.

Father.

Thank you.

Thank you.

You are a good master.

And we are your slaves.

Friends,

I want to invite you in this moment.

To adhere to the command of the master.

That says you are my slave.

And I want to encourage you

in a simple act of faith

that will cost you your life

and cost you your goals,

and cost you your hopes
and cost you your agendas.

And it will all be worth it

to in this moment.

Say, Jesus, I am your slave.

Father, I am your slave.

You are my Lord,

and I am your slave.

You are my Lord.

And I am your slave.

Do with me here

what you will here.

My life.

And all that you've given me.

Is at your discretion.

For your kingdom sake. Your

direct.

This slave.

Father, I thank you that you love us.

I thank you for your mercy.

Your Grace.
I think if that we can trust you

as our master. You.

May your kingdom come.

May your will be done on earth

as it is in heaven.

This battle that we're in
is not against flesh and blood,

but against rulers and authorities
of powers in the unseen world

over which you've already gained
the victory.

It's your battle.

Yes. We're your slaves.

Have your way.

Amen.

Living as Slaves of Christ: The Values of Flipside Church (20th anniversary)
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