Dear
Present Truth Magazine Subscriber:
We
are glad to have you as a subscriber to our Present Truth Magazine. Below
you will find articles from individual authors who have written for our
magazine. Our prayer for all who
receive read these articles is that the Lord "...may give to you the
Spirit of wisdom and revelation in the
knowledge of Him, the eyes of your understanding being enlightened; that you may
know what is the hope of His calling, and what are the riches of the glory of
His inheritance in the saints” (Ephesians 1:17-18).

My
Father’s Business
By A. Wilson Phillips
In the natural world that we
live in, if I said that I was involved in my father’s business, one would
immediately think of my occupation or profession pertaining to buying and
selling of commodities or services. Furthermore, one would think that my
father was currently involved in the business. The question I want to
address in this article is, “What did Jesus of Nazareth mean when He said
to His mother, ‘Why did you seek Me? Did you not know that I must be
about My Father’s business?’” (Luke 2:49).
Jesus knew at twelve years of
age that His life was set apart for His Father’s special purpose. Mary had
to learn that purpose throughout her lifetime, as the Spirit of God would
unveil it to her as well as to Jesus. That mystery (hidden truth) was
known before time began. God’s prophet Moses wrote,
The secret things belong to the Lord
our God, but those things which are revealed belong to us and to our
children forever (Deut. 29:29).
Father God reveals Himself to
those who fear Him (Ps. 25:14).
As an adult, Jesus would
declare, “I do not seek My own will but the will of the
Father who sent Me” (John 5:30). Throughout Jesus’ growing up
years, Jesus had to remain yielded to His Father’s will in doing His
business on earth.
After Jesus was anointed by the
Father with His Holy Spirit, Jesus began to do the miraculous works of His
Father (Acts 10:38).
When Jesus healed a man who had
been blind from birth, His disciples asked Him:
“Rabbi, who sinned, this man or his parents, that
he was born blind?” Jesus answered, “Neither this man nor his parents
sinned, but that the works of God should be revealed in him.
I must work the works of Him who sent Me while it is day;
the night is coming when no one can work” (John 9:2-4).
The miraculous accomplishments
and deeds of Jesus were works related to His Father’s business.
The Father’s business that
Jesus was involved in culminated through His obedience in the cross event.
When He felt the intense pressure of that event He asked, “O My
Father, if it is possible, let this cup pass from Me” (Matt.
26:39). Jesus had seen the horrible deaths that men died when they were
crucified because of crimes they had done. Both He and the Father knew
that Jesus lived a perfect sinless life as He was involved in His Father’s
business. Yet He would die as a guilty criminal being crucified. Why?
The mystery (hidden truth) of
God’s plan of creation and redemption had reached its
climax. The sin problem that had plagued Adam’s race had to be dealt with.
God’s holiness demanded it. God was offended with Adam’s sin that affected
his whole race—the race that was created in the image and likeness of the
Creator.
…God was in Christ reconciling the world to
Himself, not imputing (reckoning) their trespasses to them…
(2 Cor. 5:19).
The innocent—Christ—would
suffer for the guilty.
Jesus’ mind, will, and emotions
were pressed to their limits. He had learned obedience throughout His
earthly life through the things that He suffered in His Father’s business
(Heb. 5:7-8).
It pleased the Father to bruise
Jesus by placing the penalty of fallen humanity’s sin upon Jesus as the
sacrificial lamb of God (Is. 53:10-12). Jesus’ perfect obedience was
tested again in the garden scene in His second conversation with the
Father. “O My Father, if this cup cannot pass away from Me
unless I drink it, Your will be done” (Matt. 26:42).
Today, Father God is still
working on planet earth through His sons and daughters who come into His
kingdom. They will learn some valuable lessons in doing Father God’s will
by following the life and ministry of Jesus, the pattern
Son.
There
are great dividends paid by Father God to those who enter into His
business as partners today. It is a walk by faith and not by sight.
Faith is simply hearing our Father’s voice and doing His will in His
divine enterprise. Those who are involved as His business partners
co-reign over the affairs of this life. Our Father’s business should be
the highest priority for all who are called into fellowship with Him
through Jesus Christ.
A. Wilson Phillips is the co-founding and senior
pastor of Abundant Life Covenant
Church.

WHEN
THE WEAK ARE STRONG
By Richard K. Clark
The apostle Paul had a problem.
He knew too much! By God’s marvelous and infinite mercy and grace, He had
saved Paul out of his vicious self-righteousness and forged him into the
image of Christ. The two primary ingredients to Paul’s maturity were the
visions/revelations given him from God and the sufferings that he
experienced in walking them out. In describing some of the spiritual,
out-of-body experiences that he had, Paul said he had been caught up into
“the third heaven,” into “Paradise,” to hear “inexpressible words, which
it is not lawful for a man to utter” (2 Cor. 12).
And lest I should be exalted above measure by the
abundance of the revelations, a thorn in the flesh was given to me,
a messenger of Satan to buffet me, lest I be exalted above measure (2
Cor. 12:7).
God had deemed it necessary
that Paul have a balancing agent to keep him from soaring back into his
own pride and self-sufficiency. He pleaded three times that the Lord
remove his thorn in the flesh and God spoke these words:
My grace is sufficient for you, for My strength
is made perfect in weakness.
This man that God used to heal
the sick, raise the dead, and demonstrate the power of the gospel of
Christ’s kingdom was seeing things from God’s perspective. Paul determined
that the only time he was strong was when he was weak.
Not that we are sufficient of ourselves to think
of anything as being from ourselves, but our sufficiency is from God…But
we have this treasure in earthen vessels, that the excellence of the power
may be of God and not of us (2 Cor. 3:5, 4:7).
One of the most prevalent
problems in Christ’s church today is self-righteousness. Everyone comes
from the womb with it, and only through the revelation that “I
died with Christ, and it is no longer I that live, but
Christ lives in me” will I be free. Even so, we must daily appropriate our
co-crucifixion with Christ, or we will unknowingly slide back where we
came from.
The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit,
A broken and a contrite heart—
These, O God, You will not despise (Ps.
51:17).
The
brokenness (humility) that ensures our daily victories in the kingdom of
God is not merely a product of our failures. It is the product of reality.
We know by spiritual revelation that we will never be capable in ourselves
to please our God and do mighty faith exploits. We are the saved, He is
the Savior. We are the branches, He is the Vine. We are the children, He
is the Father. We are the body, He is the Head. We are kings, He is the
King!
Richard K. Clark is an associate pastor of Abundant Life Covenant Church.

The
Will to Do His Will
By Benjamin Davis
In Scripture, we read story
after story of men and women who had encounters with the living God. From
Abraham’s call to leave his country to Paul’s Damascus road experience,
their encounters became foundational experiences that transformed their
lives.
God still grants His people
foundational experiences with His Holy Spirit today. One such experience
that I had in my latter college days was when He revealed to me that I had
“selfish ambition” in my life. As He spoke this to me through His Spirit,
I remember looking up the following Scripture from James:
Who is wise and understanding among you? Let him
show it by his good life, by deeds done in the humility that comes from
wisdom. But if you harbor bitter envy and selfish ambition in your
hearts, do not boast about it or deny the truth. Such “wisdom” does not
come down from heaven but is earthly, unspiritual, of the devil. For where
you have envy and selfish ambition, there you find disorder and every evil
practice (James 3:13-16, NIV).
At the time I had some
difficulty with what the Lord was showing me because I was in college,
following His leading for my life to train in the ministry. However, as I
yielded to His voice and truth in this area, I began to see how I had
developed selfish ambition with regard to my calling and future career in
that ministry.
After God revealed this area of
darkness in my life, He began a series of events to take it out of me. The
first came when He spoke to me about leaving my current denominational
church (where I had my future hopes and plans for calling and career
planned) to attend and join a nondenominational church (Abundant Life
Covenant Church). For me, this was much more than a simple change of
churches. It meant I was giving up my future career and security within my
denomination. I made the switch believing I was also leaving my calling to
ever be a full-time pastor.
As I fully plugged in and began
to serve in the church, the Lord began to challenge some of my thinking.
Could I be content to serve and make another successful, or do I have the
need to get out and make my own mark? The cross began to touch the selfish
ambition I had developed about the ministry, and I experienced freedom
from the bondage of it.
Over the years, God, through
His Holy Spirit and His Word, has had our church in continual reform
doctrinally, especially in the area of eschatology (study of end time
events). Some of these reforms were not easy to swallow at first. However,
we had the promise of Jesus to guide us:
If anyone wills to do His will, he
shall know concerning the doctrine, whether it is from God or whether
I speak on My own authority (John 7:17).
God never does reform in a
hidden corner. He is speaking to His church today to open up to a better
understanding of Scripture about this area of eschatology, to see the past
fulfillment of prophesied events. However, where selfish ambition remains,
there is not the “will to do His will” that opens one up to “know
concerning the doctrine.”
Many leaders today, both
spiritual and political, are bound with selfish ambition that drives their
lives. It is God’s deep desire to free them so that they can “know
concerning the doctrine” and experience God’s revelation.
James goes on to say, “But
the wisdom that is from above is first pure…” (James 3:17) Jesus
demonstrated this wisdom in His total abandonment to do His
heavenly
Father’s will. He paid the price necessary to do that will, and suffered
the rejection of peers and established leaders of the day. Wisdom from
above is first pure because it is not mixed with selfish ambition or
self-advancement. As the cross continues to touch the hearts and souls of
God’s people to deliver them from selfish ambition, His reform will
continue to be advanced within His church, and our culture will be
transformed to reflect His image.
Benjamin Davis is an associate pastor of Abundant Life Covenant Church.

GRAVITY AND GLORY
By Jonathan Clark
The heavens declare the glory of God;
And the firmament shows His handiwork.
Day unto day utters speech,
And night unto night reveals knowledge (Ps.
19:1-2).
Nature reveals God. His
patterns are seen throughout the universe:
For since the creation of the world His invisible
attributes are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made…
(Rom. 1:20).
Of late, I have been thinking
about the force of gravity. Scientists teach that the earth’s gravity,
which holds all things down on the earth and holds the moon in its orbit
around the earth, is due to the earth’s mass. Scientists believe that all
objects of mass possess a gravitational pull on objects around them. The
denser and heavier the mass of an object, the stronger its gravitational
pull. Therefore, the moon orbits around the earth (not vice versa), and
the earth orbits around the sun (not vice versa), etc. Scientists also
teach that mass and energy are somewhat interchangeable—essentially two
sides of the same coin.
Arise, shine;
For your light has come
And the glory of the Lord is risen upon you
(Is. 60:1).
Natural truths reflect
spiritual truths. Just as natural substances have weight, spiritual
individuals have spiritual weight, and spiritual weight is often described
in Scripture as “glory.” According to Strong’s Concordance, glory can be
defined as “weightiness; that which is substantial or heavy…substance…”
God has glory (Ps. 63:2; Luke
2:14). Jesus has glory (John 2:11). Many Scriptures declare that new
creation people in Christ have glory:
For our light affliction, which is but for a
moment, is working for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory
(2 Cor. 4:17).
This eternal weight of glory
increases as we yield to the Lord and obey Him in our circumstances.
As an individual’s spiritual
substance increases, energy increases. Others are often “drawn” to that
person. This was the experience of Jesus—His followers found their lives
orbiting around Him. He was able to give to them of His substance and
energy. His words were a sort of “power plant” to them.
New creation people in Christ
are called to continually increase in glory so that they can be a source
of substance and energy to those who are drawn to them: 
For I consider that the sufferings of the present
time are not worthy to be compared with the glory which shall be revealed
in us. For the earnest expectation of the creation eagerly waits for the
revealing of the sons of God… the creation itself also will be delivered
from the bondage of corruption into the glorious liberty of the children
of God (Rom. 8:18-21).
Jonathan Clark is an elder of Abundant Life Covenant Church and a physician in
Springfield, Missouri.

A HARVEST PRAYER
By Paul Gabbert
Back to the cross, Lord, take me in my mind
And as I die to self, let me always find
My true identity You have given me
In Christ, my hope of glory
Forever in remembrance of the crimson flow
As Christ’s blood continually cleanses me and makes me whole
I praise you, Lord, that I can now walk free
From my selfishness and pride that once entangled me
Let me be a worthy laborer and not lose sight
Of Your fields of grain already white
And from Your wisdom, please let me find
Your lost seed I may have left behind
May I always love Your harvest as You have loved
me
And through this unconditional love please let them know and see
Your Perfect Seed, the Christ in me
In Your law of agreement, let me practice each
day
As I obey Your will and learn Your ways
For in Your strength and Your power, I will overcome
And complete the harvest we have begun.
Paul Gabbert owns and operates R & P
Cleaning Service.

REACHING OUT
By Patricia Frater
When I was in fifth grade, I went to
parties and fun things with my friends. At that age, I didn’t have anyone
really pushing me to start evangelizing my friends, and I wasn’t thinking
of doing that either. When I was in sixth and seventh grades, my mom and
dad started a Bible study in our home when my brother and I went to youth
group. My mom and dad were evangelizing/discipling other people—teaching
them how to know Christ in a deeper way. I thought “evangelizing” was only
a thing that adults did and not kids, so I didn’t worry about it.
In eighth grade, I planned this
mall trip for some of my friends and me. I invited all my church friends
(thinking it wasn’t to evangelize). Well, my mom heard about it and said
to use it as an opportunity to evangelize and tell everyone to bring a
friend. That wasn’t my intention at all. My intention was for it to be a
fun “click” thing just for my friends at church.
What I didn’t realize is that
“clicking” with my friends is selfish. I’m only doing it for my benefit
and not others’. My mom and I talked, and I invited one friend of mine.
She couldn’t go, but that was alright. Some of my other friends were
bringing some of their friends.
While we were at the mall, my friend
showed her friend the power of prayer, and I got to know some other people
better. I now know it is better to evangelize and be selfless than to
“click” with a few and only benefit myself. It’s better to include people
than exclude them.
…do the work of an evangelist, fulfill
your ministry (2 Tim. 4:5).
Patricia Frater is a sophomore at Glendale
High School in Springfield, Missouri.

GOD’S LABORATORY
By Angie Gibson
Our senior pastor told us in
premarital counseling, “Marriage is God’s laboratory for our development.”
No truer words have ever been spoken. If we had only known…
But love is so warm and fuzzy
in the beginning. It is the most exhilarating feeling. If we had only
known…
It wasn’t long after we got
married that we started having problems. We were sure God put us together.
We were committed to Him and each other, so what was wrong with our
marriage that this was happening to us? The Lord soon showed me that
having problems in a marriage doesn’t determine whether it is good or bad;
it is if and how we work through the problems that
determines this.
A good marriage operates
according to God’s principles of trust, agreement, forgiveness, etc.,
which are outlined in Scripture, but there are no pat answers that can
help us through difficult circumstances. We must work them out together.
The dark places. Every couple
has those areas that are difficult to talk about. Our main one was
physical intimacy. I had good thoughts and feelings in this area and bad
ones. The bad ones had been there longer and therefore influenced me more
of the time. I wanted to desire my husband and enjoy this God-given gift,
but most of the time I just didn’t. I felt like everything was my fault
but also knew that if I felt guilty all of the time, I’d never get
anywhere. It was much easier to ignore the problem and try to make the
best of what we had, which really was a lot. It was so perplexing. The
subject was much too painful to bring up every day or every week…or ever.
Thankfully, my husband was courageous enough to continue to press me along
the way. It was hurtful and painful for both of us, and we’d both end up
in tears. However, we needed the communication so we knew where the other
one’s heart was. We would always come right back to the same place—we love
each other, we want this to work, and we trust the Lord to bring us the
answers and fulfillment.
We met with our pastors over
the years, and they always encouraged us, showed us God’s thinking, and
gave us practical advice. We were making progress, but it seemed so slow.
God not only was changing me
through all of this, but He brought some correction to my husband in this
area that produced some noticeable difference in the spiritual atmosphere.
After ten years of marriage, we finally experienced some major
breakthroughs, and change began to come much more quickly. Our life
together was more whole. We began to see so much more fruit in every area
of our lives.
This year we celebrated fifteen
years of good marriage. We are not the same people we were when we
married. God used this area of our lives to mature us, and we are so much
better for it. We have found that love gets sweeter as we face and
overcome our challenges—no matter how long it takes, no matter how painful
it is. This time of growth brought us a true appreciation and trust in
each other and the Lord. My husband said it best in a poem he wrote me
three years ago:
What better life could we have so far?
To have trials and triumphs together.
To now possess the confidence
That tomorrow will be even better!
If life had been easy so far,
We would not hold it so dear,
But standing on this side and looking back
Shows we have nothing to fear.
Angie Gibson and her husband Ed are
leaders in the Heirborn children’s ministry of Abundant Life Covenant
Church.

THE NEW COVENANT
By Michael Lawrence
The secret of the Lord
is with those who fear Him,
And He will show them His covenant
(Ps. 25:14).
I remember sitting in my office
one day in the spring of 1998 talking to God about some matters. I asked
Him with all the sincerity that I could muster to please show me His
covenant. I told Him I was willing to do whatever it took to know the
truth. I said that even if I didn’t really mean it, please do it anyway. I
believe that God both initiates and honors such prayers.
…count it all joy when you fall into
various trials (James 1:2).
Eight months later a malignant
tumor was discovered in the duodenal loop below my stomach. In eight days
I would undergo major cancer surgery. Things changed so suddenly for my
wife and me. It was as if this was happening to some other couple. A
ten-day stay in the hospital following the operation and I was home. I was
forty-five pounds underweight—minus a gall bladder, a third of my stomach,
more than half my pancreas, and any discernible appetite. I was on
intravenous feeding for four months just to gain a minimum appetite and a
mere fifteen pounds. During the two months following the removal of my
feeding tube, though my appetite increased, tests showed a steady decline
in my protein level and weight. Chronic fatigue set in, making life a
great struggle.
The third week of September,
1999, my protein level bottomed out. I was in the throes of
mal-absorption—a diarrhea of unbelievable severity. I developed a painful
blood clot in my left leg and could no longer work. I recall being on the
sofa, my leg elevated, knowing that I was starving, wondering what the
next stage would be.
The Lord
is my shepherd,
I shall not lack
(Ps. 23:1).
I weighed in at the hospital at
just under 107 pounds. I was there nearly three nightmarish weeks
undergoing tests—each one more debilitating than the last—until the
catalyst to all my suffering was discovered. My entire life I have had
a celiac sprue—a pseudo-allergy to gluten. Gluten is a substance found
in wheat, rye, barley, and oats. To one with the disease, gluten disables
the part of the digestive tract that absorbs and disperses nutrients into
the body. Throughout my life, my immune system mostly kept the malady in
check—although now I know the cause of numerous misdiagnosed illnesses
that I have experienced. The stress of major surgery triggered the
culprit, almost doing me in.
To reveal the depth of His
covenant with me, God used a life-threatening tumor to uncover my real
problem so that I could deal with it and experience profound healing. I
have never been so alive.
“Why me?” I asked God—both when
potential disaster struck and when deliverance came. In my spirit I still
hear: “It was never about you. It was about Me and My covenant with My
people.”
Michael Lawrence
owns and operates Lawrence Electric Company and is a freelance writer.

SECURITY IN CHRIST
By Sarah Clark
I grew up the youngest of four
in a Christian family. Growing up, I watched my brothers and sisters go
through negative circumstances and thought that if I acted just the
opposite of them that my parents would give me the affirmation that I
needed. I wanted to be the good little girl. I was extremely insecure and
always wanted to fade into the background. I did not understand who God
was or who I was in Christ.
Shortly after I was married, my insecurities, as well as my husband’s,
began to really manifest themselves. We did not know how to humble
ourselves and come into unity, so we separated. During this time, God
brought us to the end of ourselves. By His mercy and grace and through our
anointed pastors, He ultimately healed our relationship.
Insecurities breed where there
is a lack of trust in God. As a parent, I wanted to shield my children
from all hurts, mistakes, and disappointments. Not only is this not
humanly possible, it is destructive to my children and to me and reveals
my lack of trust in the Lord. If I allow my insecurities to remain and
grow, they will reproduce themselves in my children.
God is faithful to finish what
He started in me. He continues to make me more secure in Christ by placing
circumstances in my life that require me to surrender my will and trust
Him.
Not that I have already attained, or am already perfected: but I press
on, that I may lay hold of that for which
Christ Jesus has also
laid hold of me
(Phil.
3:12).
Sarah Clark is the
Degree Audit Coordinator at the Assemblies of God Theological Seminary in
Springfield, Missouri.

Blessings
By Donna
Bieber
Recently, I was brought once
again face-to-face with many of the blessings of my life. The fact that I
have life and that it is abundant in so many areas—friends, family,
church body, fun, financial provision, growing relationships, faith,
health, deliverance—reflects how very “wealthy” I am. As I thought about
these things, Holy Spirit asked me some deeper questions: “If these
blessings come from Me, aren’t the hard things blessings too?” “If I
brought you from death, then isn’t the fact that you know you were walking
in death a blessing too?”
I began to think about all those
things from which the Lord has delivered me. The poverty I experienced—to
have known it, tasted it, and realized I do not want to return to it—was a
blessing. Rejection is a blessing that has taught me to love without end,
to not reject, and to have mercy beyond my desire. The self righteousness
I’ve experienced has taught me to be humble and teachable. Humiliation has
taught me to not have ungodly pride and arrogance. “Unloveableness” was a
blessing that saved my life in a dramatic way, as I learned I am not above
anyone, and that God had a plan for my marriage that was dependent on me
becoming open and giving regardless of my fleshly plan for my life.
My four kids were a blessing that
gave me a true understanding of what godly love is like and that my life
has meaning beyond myself.
The true blessings of my life are
the concepts, the people, the ups, and the downs that have brought me to
this place. I can see each part of my life—the ugly, the nice, the mean,
the loving, the sin, the life—as blessings that have made me who I
am supposed to be right now and in the future.
I always tell my kids when they
leave me for a time to go to school, church, or a friend’s house to “Be a
blessing,” and I am awed to realize that God tells me that each day;
regardless of how the day turns out, He designed me to be a blessing
not just to be blessed. Thank you, Lord, for making me a blessing.
Lord, make me an instrument of Thy peace; where
there is hatred, let me sow love; where there is injury, pardon; where
there is doubt, faith; where there is despair, hope; where there is
darkness, light; and where there is sadness, joy.
O Divine Master, grant that I may not so much seek to be consoled as
to console; to be understood, as to understand; to be loved, as to love;
for it is in giving that we receive, it is in pardoning that we are
pardoned, and it is in dying that we are born to eternal life.
Amen.
St. Francis of Assisi
Donna Bieber is a homemaker in
Springfield, Missouri.

America’s Political
Religion
By A. Wilson Phillips
Cal Thomas, a syndicated
columnist, recently wrote that religion could be a key issue in the 2008
political race in America.
Thomas believes that
…the people in this country subscribe to the
Lincoln view that when people take the oath of office they abide by
America’s political religion and that they place the Constitution and rule
of law first.
Uncle Sam becomes our moral
compass if Thomas’ statement is correct.
The moral compass of Uncle Sam
or the state will often come into conflict with the true disciple of Jesus
Christ. For example, the way the state handles certain sinners that commit
sins goes against certain biblical principles.
Paul, a true disciple and
apostle of Jesus Christ, wrote:
Do you not know that the unrighteous will not
inherit the kingdom of God? Do not be deceived. Neither fornicators, nor
idolaters, nor adulterers, nor homosexuals, nor sodomites, nor thieves,
nor covetous, nor drunkards, nor revilers, nor extortioners will inherit
the kingdom of God. And such were some of you. But you were washed,
but you were sanctified, but you were justified in the name of the Lord
Jesus and by the Spirit of our God (1 Cor. 6:9-11).
Evildoers, such as those
mentioned by Paul, can be fully cleansed from sin (washed), set apart for
God (sanctified), and totally accepted in His holy sight (justified).
They are also presented as a chaste virgin as the spiritual bride of
Christ (2 Cor. 11:2).
In America’s political
religious system, we use our technology, the Internet, and websites to
post sex offenders’ pictures and past charges. The state believes this
will be a deterrent to repeat offenders. Our history tells us this will
not be the deterrent. The washing of regeneration of the Holy
Spirit with the blood of Jesus Christ will solve these
evildoers’ problems. As the washed take on the mind of Christ,
their conduct and behavior will change. They will live in covenantal,
accountable relationships both with God and men.
True disciples of Jesus Christ
make model citizens in America. They live under the lordship of the
king—Jesus Christ—and Father God. They pray for all who are governing
authorities in order to live a peaceable life in all godliness and
reverence.
The lawmakers in America’s
political religion should ask the Spirit of our God to give them some
wisdom to set their moral compass right. They in turn could let those who
know and understand the spiritual kingdom of God deal successfully with
the evildoers that Uncle Sam or the state has not been able to
rehabilitate.

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