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I am grateful to be here among God's people. There is no life that can be
lived that is any more rewarding than a life that is mixed and
mingled among the people of God. Behold how good and pleasant it is for brethren
to dwell together in unity. Now, unless I'm badly mistaken,
that's what I feel tonight—unity. Pray for us. I approach this
week with fear and trembling, and I need your prayers. I want to read the same account
from two Gospels. If you'll turn with me tonight
to Mark 9. First of all, Matthew 17, then
Mark 9. Matthew 17. Beginning at verse 14. And when they were come to the
multitude, there came to him a certain man. Not just any man,
a certain man. Always a certain man. Not everybody
feels the way this man does. Not every parent feels the way
this man does. Not everybody that's having cases to deal with
feels like this man does. But this certain man came to him. kneeling down to
him and saying, Lord have mercy on my son for he is lunatic.
He ain't got his right mind. He's crazy. And that's in many
ways descriptive of all who are dead in trespasses and sins.
They are lunatic. They are crazy. Without understanding. A man doesn't have his right
mind, doesn't have good sense until he comes to the Lord. Then
he starts thinking a little bit better. Start thinking right.
Well, he's lunatic and sore vexed. He's not only in his, he's in
a bad frame of mind, he's in a bad frame of soul. He's sore
vexed in his spirit and his soul. He's in pitiful condition. Not
only that, he's suicidal. Notice in the next stanza, for
oftentimes, oft times, he falleth into the fire and oft into the
water. He's trying to hurt himself, trying to kill himself. And I
brought him to thy disciples, and they could not cure him."
Now this is an interesting statement. It's not recorded just to take
up space in the Bible. And Jesus answered and said,
O faithless and perverse generation. Some people say there's not any
rebukes to Christians in the Bible. Look at this. Jesus has
to be addressing his faithless disciples. as well as the faithless
man, the faithless generation. As the Lord looked out upon the
whole span of the world and found no faith, certainly no faith
among the non-believing. We're going to find at the close
of this story, there was no faith in the believing. So this is
a broad sweeping analyzation. of the human family saved and
lost at this particular time, and the disciples are caught
as well as the others. He's grieved and he looks and
he says, O faithless and perverse generation, how long shall I
suffer you? Bring him hither to me. And Jesus rebuked the devil and
he departed out of him. And the child was cured from
that very hour. Then came the disciples to Jesus
apart and said, Why could not we cast him out? Notice the very particular response
of the Lord. And Jesus said unto them, Because
of the sovereign decrees of God. Because of your unbelief, For verily I say unto you, if
you have faith as a grain of mustard seed." My grandmother
used to wear a little necklace with a little grain of mustard
seed on it. A little bitty thing. You ever seen one? Not very big
at all, is it? A mustard seed? Jesus says it doesn't have to
be big, but it does have to be real. And it does have to be
there. It does have to be there. If you have faith as a grain
of mustard seed, you shall say unto this mountain, Remove hence
to yonder place, and it shall remove, and nothing shall be
impossible unto you." That's broad. That's big. That's deep. That's full. That's rich. There ain't no limit on it. It's as big as God. Wonderful! Nothing shall be impossible unto
you, how be it this kind." Now, this kind, obviously, I believe,
is referring... Now, there are two views to what
Jesus means, and some think that He's referring to the faith that
He's just mentioned. This kind of faith that would
remove mountains doesn't come except by prayer and fasting. Some interpret Jesus to be speaking
about faith. And if you want faith that accomplishes
the impossible, then you must pray and fast. And then there are others, and
I take this position particularly, that this kind is speaking of
a particular kind of demon. This kind, this particular kind,
goes not out, because this is what happened in the previous
case. He had to go out, he had to be cast out, and he didn't
go out easy. He went out as it were kicking,
fussing, fighting to the very end. This kind goes not out but
by prayer and fasting. Now, we're going to enhance this
story. Keep your place there. We're
going to read it from the Gospel of Mark chapter 9. Let's read
it and we get some details that we do not get in Matthew. Mark
9. And when he came to his disciples,
He saw a great multitude about them, and the scribes questioning
with them, and strike way all the people when they beheld him,
were greatly amazed, and running to him saluted him. And he asked
the scribes, Why or what question ye with them? And we know that
their questionings could not have been for receiving information
leading to conversion, that they were questioning the validity
and the authenticity of his ministry. They were critical, doubting,
unbelieving questions designed to to question the ministry itself. Why? Because there's just been
impotence manifested in this movement. This movement didn't
seem to be getting anything done. This movement was floundering
at this time. Here was a real grave case of bad need, and there
was no power manifested. There was no deliverances wrought.
There was no salvation given, and it didn't seem like this
movement was accomplishing anything. Therefore, the impotency of the
moment and the seemingly ineffectiveness of the Christians at that time
brought all of these critical comments from these scribes. One multitude answered and said,
Master, I have brought unto thee my son, which hath a dumb spirit,
and whithersoever he taketh him, he teareth him, and he foameth,
and gnashes away with his teeth, and pineth away. And I spake
to thy disciples that they should cast him out, and they could
not. And he answered him and said,
O faithless generation, how long shall I be with you? How long
shall I suffer you? Bring him unto me. And they brought
him unto him. And when he saw him, straightway
the Spirit poor him, and he fell on the ground and wallowed foaming.
And he asked his father how long
ago since this came unto him. And he said, And oft times it hath cast him
into the fire and into the water to destroy him. But if thou canst
do anything, have compassion on us and help us." It's interesting in the next
stanza, verse 23, in Jesus' end of hymn. It's interesting how
it's really worded. I understand in the original language it's
worded like, the immediate response, it's like the Lord says, if you
can. He just asks, the question, Lord,
if you can do anything. And the Lord turns the tables
and says, if you can. If you can. If you can believe. All things are possible to him
that believe it. And straightway the father of
the child cried out and said with tears, Lord, I believe.
Help thou my unbelief. When Jesus saw that the people
came running together, he rebuked the foul spirit, saying unto
him, Thou dumb and deaf spirit, I charge thee, come out of him,
and enter no more into him. And the spirit cried, and wren
him sore, and came out of him. And he was as one dead, insomuch
that many said, He is dead. But Jesus took him by the hand,
and lifted him up, and he arose. And when he was come into the
house, his disciples asked him privately, Why could not we cast
him out? Verse 29, again, we don't have
the response in its fullness, because Jesus said, because of
your unbelief. Matthew, he said that. But he said unto them,
This kind can come forth by nothing but by prayer and fasting. Now, I want to speak to you tonight
on hard cases. Do you believe, and I believe
everyone does here, that sinful man is impotent in himself to
come to Christ? Do you believe that is a biblical
doctrine? That man in his sinfulness and
in his deadness and in his depravity will not move to God? The work of Jesus in salvation
is viewed from two perspectives in the Gospels. You'll find at
times Jesus coming to the impotent sinner first. the impotent person
first who needs his help. And then there are other passages
where there are concerned men bringing impotent men first to
Jesus. Now, there's no denying that some cases with men are
more pitiful, more wretched. more miserable than others. Among
the children of men, we know that there are these two great
classifications of the saved and the lost, but we as Calvinists
tend to put all of the lost into the same category. All lost men, indeed, are in
a bad state. But we find in Scripture a very
clear enunciation of different degrees of sin and unbelief,
even in the wicked. We find that in the Gospels there
are insensible, abandoned sinners, like the demonically possessed
and oppressed, where the demons are in absolute possession of
the mind and the faculties of an individual. Pitiful, insensible
state. We find also in the Gospels there
are those that are absolutely reprobate, irrecoverable, sinners
who have committed the unpardonable sin and are on the fast track
to hell. beyond hope, beyond redemption. Then we find in the Gospels there
are sensible thinking sinners who are hearing and thinking
and asking questions like Nicodemus. We find in the Word of God that
there are sinners who, after hearing the Word, have the Word
wrought out of their heart quickly and are growing harder and harder
and harder, day by day, like Pharaoh and like the seed on
the soil. robbed by the founds. We find
that there are sinners like certain lawyers. There's a certain lawyer
who, after asking a good question, getting a biblical answer from
the Lord, seemed to manifest understanding of what that text
was saying. Jesus told him, he said, you are not far from the
kingdom of God. So what I'm telling you folks,
even in among men, There are different degrees of sin and
wretchedness found in even the lost. Now, I want to address
tonight and point out some encouraging truths that are drawn from this
passage, this account. For those tonight whose lot it
is to be dealing with a particularly hard case, and I mean by a particular
hard case. Now let me make clear again,
I'm not saying that any case with lost men, sinful men, depraved
men is easy. But I'm telling you folks, there
are some cases that are particularly hard, desperate to the extreme. When I'm talking about this case
tonight, now I don't know where the Holy Spirit will make application
in your case. I don't know what you're dealing
with or what case it might be. But primarily I am speaking to
those who are dealing with a case where there needs to be spiritual
deliverance. People set free. And by the way,
that is the most epic, monumental, wonderful, permanent healing
there is. This thing of physical healing
is a drop in the bucket compared to the healing of the soul. The
valuable healing, the true healing, the healing that all physical
healings were pointing to and seeking to bring men to was the
healing of the soul, the healing of the relationship with God.
Now, there's no denying as we read this passage that this was
an unusually hard case. Wouldn't you say it was? The
disciples found it so. They were very perplexed. And they asked the Lord why could
not we cast him out. The Lord Jesus puts this particular
demonic case in a separate category by saying, You'll notice, and I'm not going
to have you read that, but back in Matthew 10-1 and Matthew 10-8,
the disciples on their Palestinian ministry had already been endued
with power over unclean spirits to cast them out. And these people
that were dealing with this young lad, they were not novices. They
were already experienced veterans in spiritual warfare. But this particular case, was
challenging beyond anything they had experienced previously. They
were stumped in this case. Mark 9, 28, their question again. Why, in verse 9, 28, why could
not we cast him out? Their question alone reveals
their perplexity over their pitiful, repeated, unsuccessful attempts
at effecting deliverance. What had worked before? had not
worked in this case. And Jesus himself identifies
this demon as a particularly hard one to evict. And he said,
only with the strictest devotion to God and sacrifice and dependence
upon God can this kind be evicted from its human habitation. It
is clear from the Word of God that some devilish cases, some
cases among children, some cases among family members, some cases
among friends, are more wicked, more malicious, more determined
than others. There is a hierarchy of strength
in the underworld. Not all demons have the same
strength or the same determination. We find a commentary by the Lord
Jesus explaining the phenomena of apostate when He said in Luke
11, 26 about this man who becomes repossessed with demons, with
a demon that had left its home. Then goeth he and bringeth, notice
this, seven other spirits more wicked than himself. Degrees
of wickedness. And they enter in and dwell there.
We find that that's so in the Gospels. Some demons, upon seeing
Jesus Christ, immediately cowed down and started, as it were,
plea bargaining. And this kind, upon seeing Jesus,
only manifest the gravest contempt and insubordination by Christ
by demonstrating His malicious powers and blowing the child
down and saying, look what I can do. And it doesn't start plea
bargaining at all. Now, indeed, this is a deeply
mysterious subject, but we can learn from the Scriptures as
well as from experience. Some of the cases that you're
dealing with with your children are particularly hard. Some of the cases that you're
dealing with your loved ones or your friends are particularly
difficult, unusually grievous, horribly hard, terribly destructive,
incredibly perplexing. not quickly solved. Do you believe
that? That's my point. All cases with
lost men are hard, but some cases are harder than others. Cases where nothing you do or
say seems to change it for the better, and the situation is
utterly desperate. I speak this again to you, either
have ears to hear or let them hear. The second point from the text
is, if you have been given by God a desperate case, how are
you dealing with it? There are plenty of cases that
are desperate and wretched in this world, myriads of cases
that are desperate and wretched where no one cares, no one's
burdened, no one prays. and they're running their natural
course and they're going to end tragedy. We have actually in the gospel
account that I've read to you two cases that's focused upon. We have the tired, bewildered
father is just as much in view as the
beleaguered son. in this case, is being dealt
with and taught as much as with a son. If you've been given a hard case,
how are you dealing with it? Whatever your case is, it
may be with a hard son, a hard daughter, a hard loved one, a
friend that you've taken a particular interest in. What kind of impact? I'm asking you, what kind of
impact is it having on you? How is the sinful, insubordinate,
rebellious, wicked, miserable state of your loved one affecting
you? Is it just irritating you? Is
it just making you mad? Is it getting in your way? Is
it inconveniencing your life? Is it just embarrassing you among
friends? Or is it really driving you to
desperate straits to where you must have a solution? I have run across people that
I know that are determined not to let themselves be bothered
too much with their lost children. I've had actually people say,
well, my children are lost, but I'm not going to be bothered
about it too much. If they're elect, they'll be saved. But if there's
Esau's, there's nothing I can do about it anyway. Have you
seen that attitude? My point is, how is your hard
case affecting you? Yes, there are plenty of cases
where people stand aloof from those cases and say, well, whatever
will be, will be. But then there are those rare
and good occasions in which those who
have a suffering loved one who, suffering the wretchedness and
the works of the devil to the extreme, are vicariously suffering
in the place of their sinful, lost, evil loved one. And how a blessed situation this
is when there is someone on hand
with a relative or a friend who suffers in his heart deeply because
of his loved one's troubles. The most godly and spiritual
thing you can do in this world, the most Christlike thing that
you can do in this world is to vicariously suffer. What do I mean by that? I mean,
in the Scriptures, vicarious. That is when you find a case
where there's chronic need, a case where there's foul works of the
enemy, a case where there's demonic oppression, a case where there's
a need of deliverance and salvation. There is someone on hand who
takes that case to heart and is burdened and bewildered and
suffers. Do you not hear in Mark 9, verse
22, the pitiful distress in a man's voice when he says, if thou can
do anything, have compassion on us and help us? Now folks, I'm going to tell
you this. When individuals start vicariously suffering in the
place of their loved one, That begins to move and catch the
ear of the Almighty. The degree of your grief in a
bad situation may very well be an indication of the nature of
the outcome in that particular situation. There seems to be
in Scripture a very close connection to the burden carried by a parent
or a friend or a concerned individual, and the healing or the deliverance
of that son or daughter or friend or individual. You find it all
through the Gospels. In Matthew 8, 5 and 6, the Roman
centurion, who was empathetically and vicariously suffering in
the place of his own servant, who came and besought the Lord
for a miracle. You find it in Mark 9, the Gospels. Chapter 5, 22 and 23, with Jairus,
the ruler of the synagogue, who had a daughter that was at the
point of death, who came pleading for the help of Christ. You find
it in Matthew 15, verse 22, with a Grecian-Syro-Phoenician mother
who came and sought Christ out, and she said, Lord, have mercy
on my daughter, for she is grievously vexed with a demon. You find in Mark chapter 2, verse
3 through 5, with the four friends of the paralyzed man who broke
up the roof to get their paralyzed friend that they loved down in
the presence of the Savior. And the Scripture says, when
Jesus saw their fate. My point is, what kind of problem
is it to you to have a problem child? What kind of burden is
it to you to have a lost friend, a loved one? Is it just a little
irritation? Or is it a consuming motivation
to find a real, authentic, divine solution? The sincere, empathetic, vicarious
sufferings of this Father were not in vain. It led to Christ. Eventually
Christ did call, bringing to me good news. And it turned out good. But I
want you to notice something. Notice how this father was questioned
by the Lord, as though the Lord was bringing out an honest confession.
This is your child? You mean you've got a child that
this is your child? This child that falls down foaming?
This child that is bad? This child that is lunatic? This
child that is sorbic? This child that is embarrassing
you? You mean that's your child? How
long has he been this way? Notice how open and honest the
father is about his son's condition. There wasn't anything to be proud
about about the condition of this child, but the father was
willing to expose this hard case to the Lord, to the disciples,
and to everybody else in order to get help. I found out something,
folks. As long as we're secretive, as
long as we're too embarrassed and got too much pride, to really
admit how painful and deep and serious the problem is, it's
doubtful that there's going to be any change for the better.
For you see, in our cases, often God is getting at our pride and
vanity through our problem and through our troubled loved one
that we are forced to deal with. Is our grief, our love, our burden,
our compassion outweighing our pride in these manners? Or are
we tempted to varnish over, well, Lord, he's not that bad? A fault not confessed, a need
never exposed, a state not honestly faced rarely finds correction. Thirdly, in hard cases there's
usually a prolonged disappointment, letdowns, heartbreaks when doing
good things. Now get this, in hard cases there's
usually prolonged disappointments, letdowns. Verse 18, Mark 9, And whithersoever he
taketh him, he tareth him, and he foameth and gnasheth with
his teeth, and pineth away. And I spoke to thy disciples,
that they should cast him out. And they could not. This man,
how did he come to know that he should bring his son to the
Lord and to these disciples? Well, they see they had a Palestinian
ministry in which already multitudes were delivered of the demonic
spirits. And so he comes. And what does
he come? He comes to find more disappointment. He was doing all the spiritual
good and godly things he knew to do, but he was meeting with
disappointment. This is not rare in hard cases. Remember the Syrophoenician woman
whose daughter was grievously vexed and she knew the Lord could
heal her daughter. Would you remember what the Lord said to
her? Called her a dog. Then she cried out to the disciples
and the disciples said, send her away, she's bothering us.
Disappointment. And that's what's so hard and
bewildering about these cases. You try praying, you pray, but
there's no change. You've tried talking to the person,
it doesn't seem to work. You've preached to them, it doesn't
seem to work. You've threatened, it doesn't seem to work. You've
tried psychology, and it only gets worse. You've tried the
experts trained to deal with hard cases, and there's no improvement. You've tried the spiritual principles
from the Scripture that you know. I'm asking this in your particular
hard case. Have you exhausted the gamut
of conventional and spiritual good solutions, all to no avail? He said, well, I've been praying
for years and nothing's happened. What are you going to do? Have
you exhausted the arm of the flesh? Have you exhausted everybody
else's arm? Have you used up all of your
strength and wisdom in trying to find an answer? You're exhausted.
You're frustrated. Your faith is shaken to the roots.
You're doing everything right and good. What else can you do?
What else can you do? You've been doing good things.
No change. Nothing happening. You'll have
to wait on God to show up. You see, in this day when we
are accustomed to quick things and quick fixes, it's hard to
have to wait on God. But this is often exactly the
case. God makes us wait. And sometimes he has us to wait
a long time. My point also is in waiting, in exhausting the
gamut of good resources, have you learned in your particular
hard case, have you experienced the impotency of Christ's disciples? Verse 18, I spoke to thy disciples
that they should cast him out and they could not. Have you
experienced that in your hard case? that you've had the evangelists
or you've had the preachers preach and you've had your children
listen to them and no change? You've looked to the church or
fellow Christians to pull you through and pull this situation
through? You've looked to good men, favorite preachers to say
the right things? You've even sought out men of
reputation, men whom you know who have been instrumental in
other cases and situations? And you're learning the impotency
of Christ's disciples? Beloved, it's so easy to think
of ministers and men of God and other Christians. It's easy for
us to think that there's other Christians and that there's other
preachers and that there's other servants of the Lord that have
more influence with God than I do. That is a lie. Men can and are used of God,
but human instrumentality is very delicate, very volatile,
and very conditional. Men that may be used in this
case are not used in this case. Have you learned the impotency
of the church to help you? Have you learned the impotency
of the preacher to help you? When we trust flesh and blood
in any degree, we're going to be disappointed. Jeremiah 75,
Thus saith the Lord, Cursed be the man that trusteth in man,
and maketh flesh his arm, whose heart departeth from the Lord.
This brings me to my next point. Have you run the gamut of solutions
with no change? It is common in hard cases to
suffer many disappointments, many letdowns, many heartbreaks
with absolutely no change. My next one is this, be there
nothing good or encouraging in your hard case at the present.
Don't give up hope. Now let me tell you something
God loves. I know He does. I read it in the Word. He loves,
loves, loves to look down into your heart and see this energy,
this intrinsic thing called trust and faith. and reaching out for
Him and holding on to Him. He loves that. God loves to see
hope alive in our hearts. Things looked the worse. Things
looked the worse when this child was close to being delivered.
Know this verse 20? Mark 9. And they brought him unto him,
and when he saw him, straightway the spirit tear him, and fell
on the ground, and wallowed. And he fell. Pretty bad state. Things looked very bad. But Jesus
was at hand. The darkest hour, in most hard
cases, is just before daybreak. Now what are you going to do?
Now what I'm saying is this. What are you going to do when you've got a hard
case and you're going through some prolonged disappointment?
Are you going to give up your hope in God? Are you going to
quit trusting God to save and deliver? Are you going to concede
this bad situation to the devil? That's what you're doing when
you're giving up hope in God. When you give up hope, you're ready
to say that the powers of darkness are too strong in this particular
case. that they're going to win. Is that the way you want it?
I'm saying, he that hath ears to hear, let him hear. Is sin,
hell, confusion, rebellion, death, the will of the wicked one going
to be bowed to? Giving up hope is like saying,
God can't. Devil, you can. Or are you beginning to console
yourself in your hopeless, prolonged disappointment by thinking a
bad ending is the will of God. It's easy to reconcile yourself
when you've got a hard case to deal with, but there's never
going to be any change. So therefore, this must be the sovereign will
of God. We don't like to carry any responsibility
here, do we? We like everything to fall on
the sovereign will of God. They're never going to be saved.
They're not among the left. Well, my question tonight, if you've
got a hard situation, are you content? Are you ready for that
situation to have a bad ending? Are you ready to accept the darkness,
the evil, confusion, the disappointment, the disobedience, the devilishness,
the death, the hell, the destruction of your loved one as the sovereign
will of God? Don't let the doctrine of God's
sovereignty make you indifferent as how this matter ends up. When
you give up hope, you're saying, Well, all of my previous hope
in God, all my previous prayers, all my previous expectations
was a lie, was a delusion, was a waste of time. Are you ready
to conceive that all of your prayers, hopes, concerns, burdens
and worries were all for nothing? See, I'm putting you in a box.
If you've got a hard case, you've got to continue to hope. Or you
ain't got any hope. And if you ain't got hope, what
have you got? Are you ready to be of the opinion?
My dear fellow saints, are you ready in your hard case to be
of the opinion and of the persuasion that the heathen parent who knows
nothing, believes nothing, cares nothing for the outcome of his
family or loved ones is on the same ground as you? Just as well
off as you? Seeing that when you give up
hope, You're conceding that the outcome is going to be bad. It brings me to my final point.
In hard cases, friends, the issue is not sovereignty, not depravity,
not the devil's power. Are you ready for a little dose
of responsibility? The issue in hard cases is your
faith, your continued prayers, and your fasting. Mark 9, 22
through 24, Matthew 17, 20 and 21. For the Lord said here in this
text, if I did not read him wrong, Lord Jesus, I hope I'm not misrepresenting
what you said. If I heard my Lord in this passage,
he says, nothing is impossible. Nothing is too hard. Nothing
is hopeless. Christ can change things within
an hour. Do you believe He can? Do you
believe He will? Is your case more extraordinary?
Is your problem more complex? Is your case too far gone? Folks,
I'm telling you here, I'm here appointed by God to tell you
that yes, even in your case, it is possible for a good outcome. Brother Don, I just can't believe
it. That's your problem. He that hath ears to hear. The difficulty doesn't matter.
The probability doesn't matter. The depth of sin doesn't matter.
the years gone by without change doesn't matter, he can do the
impossible. He can save for the uttermost.
He is a sovereign Lord of all spirits and all men and all flesh
and everything is under his authority and he specializes in impossibilities. Don't even think, my dear friends,
about giving up hope. Whatever your case, Because you're
locked to deal with it, if you're dealing with it, and you're suffering,
and you want an authentic divine solution in it, don't even think. Don't even think about giving
up hope. I ask you tonight, does the healing
and health recorded in this passage, is it simply cold theological
history? Or is it given in the Word of
God to be a living word to encourage modern Christian parents, modern
Christian servants? So, which is the real culprit
when situations are unsolved in man? Is it depravity, sin,
the devil, sovereignty? Our Lord identified the real
culprit when the disciples Why could not we cast him out? The
real culprit was identified as rank unbelief, neglect of prayer,
and neglect of fasting. Now, right now you're preaching legalistic
things. I don't know if they're legalistic
or not. But I know this, this kind goes not out. with my prayer and fasting. What
is fasting? Not hypocritical, just religious
show, but when you're so burdened about a matter and so concerned
about it that you're leaving off eating, it's consumed you,
and you're pouring everything you've got into prayer. There's
a mysterious connection existing in the Bible between our faith
and our health. There's a relationship between
our dedication and discipline, our fasting, our determination,
and the outcome. Victorious endings in the scripture
are not emotionless, effortless, prayerless affairs.
Hard Cases
| Sermon ID | 120203283835 |
| Duration | 44:02 |
| Date | |
| Category | Conference |
| Bible Text | Matthew 17:14-21 |
| Language | English |
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