We continue our series through the fruit of the Spirit that are listed in Galatians chapter 5 verses 22 through 23 and we are still focusing upon the fruit of faithfulness in Galatians 5.22 or they're called faith, the fruit of faith. Galatians 5.22 reads, but the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace. long-suffering, gentleness, goodness, faith. We've considered the previous fruit of the Spirit and now we continue with the fruit of faith or faithfulness. And our text in addition to that from Ecclesiastes chapter 12 verse 1 which reads, remember now Thy Creator, in the days of Thy youth, while the evil days come not, nor the years draw nigh, when Thou shalt say, I have no pleasure in them." The wisdom of many in this world, and sadly of many professing Christians, lays out the course of your life in this way. While you are young, sow your wild oats. Have fun. Pursue your heart's dreams. During your middle years, settle down and get serious about marriage, family, work, and preparing for retirement. And during your elderly years, make your faith a priority because death is coming quickly. However, God says, in so many words, don't wait until you are old to take God seriously and to live your life for Him. Remember now thy Creator in the days of thy youth. The Lord says. You see, dear ones, this is not a matter to be put off until it is convenient. This is, dear ones, important. There's nothing, in fact, more important in life than remembering your Creator, trusting Him, loving Him, and in faithfulness, obeying Him. The Lord Jesus says in Matthew chapter 8, verses 36-37 emphasizing the importance of our soul. For what shall it profit a man if he shall gain the whole world and lose his own soul? Or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? As we continue our study of the fruit of the Spirit, which God produces in the life of every Christian, We continue to apply the fruit of faith or faithfulness to our calling and to our duties within our homes, within our families. Having applied the fruit of faithfulness to husbands, to wives, having applied the fruit of faithfulness to mothers, to fathers, now we're going to, this Lord's Day and the next Lord's Day, apply the fruit of faithfulness to children and young people. Dear children and young people, does God care whether you are faithful in your family or not? Does God give you a free pass because of your youth, because you're young? Does God give you a free pass to act and behave as you want to behave? Dear children and young people, you are addressed. You are addressed as members of Christ's Church along with your parents. And in the next couple sermons, I pray, with all my heart, you will listen closely and apply what God says to you from His Word. First, being faithful to the Lord in this sermon, and then in the next sermon, being faithful to your parents when God has set over you. And the main points from our text here in Ecclesiastes chapter 12, verse 1 are these. Just two main points. First of all, remember your Creator while you are young. In Ecclesiastes 12, the first part of verse 1. And the second main point, remember your Creator before old age and death hinder you. Ecclesiastes chapter 12, verse 1, the latter part. of that verse. And so our first main point, remember your creator while you are young. We read in Ecclesiastes 12.1, the first part of that verse, remember now thy creator in the days of thy youth. The Holy Spirit speaks through King Solomon who is the human author of the book of Ecclesiastes. He speaks through him in the text that is before us with an admonition to those of you who are young not to waste your life. in your younger years upon yourself, doing whatever it is that you simply want to do. For all of this is going to vanish soon. This is all going to fade away. But rather invest your younger years in remembering and serving God, for that alone will endure for all eternity. King Solomon can speak to us this Lord's Day and to those who have ever read the book of Ecclesiastes. He can speak to us from a wealth of experience about wasting valuable years on himself. King Solomon was the wisest mere man that ever lived. According to 1 Kings 3.12, we read, Behold, I have done according to thy words. This is God speaking to King Solomon. Lo, I have given thee a wise and an understanding heart, so that there was none like thee before thee, neither after thee shall any arise like unto thee. The wisest mere man that ever lived. And yet, King Solomon departed from the Lord and wanted to do what he wanted to do because he wanted to do it. He experienced all that the world has to offer, untold riches, worldwide fame, the greatest political leader at that time with the power that goes with it. the most beautiful women at his grasp, massive building projects to the memory of his name, the writer of hundreds of proverbs and songs, and the most learned teacher in natural science. He set his heart to enjoy life to the fullest. But in his pride, he thought he could enjoy life to the fullest apart from God, apart from remembering God, apart from God being his first love. What is it, dear ones, what is it, dear children and young people, what is it in your life that leads you away from Christ being your first love? Is it your work? Is it your financial status? Is it your education? Is it your family? Is it the pleasures of this world? Is it the cares of this life? Is it the fear of death itself? What is it that leads you away from Christ being the first love of your life? King Solomon tells us from his own personal experience, so that especially you children and you young people will learn not to waste at all your younger years, but rather that you will invest the time that God gives to you at this point in your life, that you'll invest it in serving Him, in making your life count for the Lord. remembering Him with all that you are, not forgetting the Lord your God. Not putting the Lord on the shelf of your life like you do a photo, to whom you can give a glancing look and a nod as you pass by that photo. Not treating God that way, but rather making Him the most important one in your life. Solomon says in the book of Ecclesiastes, it is vanity. It's like a mist. We've seen mist over a lake, a mist that is here and then vanishes, like fog that's low and then vanishes. Life without God Solomon says, the wisest mere man who ever lived is vanity. It's like a vanishing mist to place your hope in this world because it's passing away. It's not going to be here forever. You, myself, we are passing away. And that becomes even more clear the older and older that we become. the more gray hair that begins to show up in our head, we become, I think, even increasingly more aware of the shortness of life and how it's passing away. Though Solomon is specifically addressing those who are young when he says, Remember now thy Creator in the days of thy youth, Let us not think that any of us are thereby exempt from these words of wisdom that Solomon gives to us. The biblical terms for youth and for the young actually stretch all the way from childhood to early adulthood. Even Timothy, who was an adult in his twenties or thirties and was a minister of the gospel who served and labored with the Apostle Paul, even he is called a youth in 1st Timothy 4.12. Let no man despise thy youth, but be thou an example of the believers in word, in conversation, in charity, in spirit, in faith, in purity. And for those of us who have moved far beyond our twenties or our thirties, and maybe so far beyond that we can't even remember what our twenties and thirties were like. Nevertheless, we should not, we should not ignore the words of Solomon simply because we don't put ourselves any longer in the category of the young. For as Solomon's words of wisdom are true for those who are young, how much more true for those of us who are even closer to poor health in aging years and closer to death itself. Solomon, by inspiration of the Holy Spirit, does not give us a suggestion here when he says, remember now, my creator. He's not giving us a suggestion. This isn't one option out of many options. This is a command from the Lord, an imperative. Remember, don't forget because you become too busy. Don't neglect this duty because you are having too much fun doing whatever it is that you enjoy doing or pursuing your own dreams. Here, dear ones, is a command to remember. Remember, dear children and young people, how easy it is for you and really for us all to forget. You don't have to intentionally go out and forget something. You don't have to hate and despise what you are called to remember in order to forget it. All you have to do is to allow yourself to become so preoccupied with the concerns, with the business, with the pleasures of this life, and soon you will. You will forget what you were commanded to remember. Just as you do not have to go out and sow seeds in your garden in order for your garden to be infested and overcome with weeds. All you have to do is to forget that the garden needs to be weeded. You need to remember that. You need to go out and do something about it. Not simply, again, a mental recollection, oh, there are weeds growing. No, remembering that your garden is going to be overtaken by weeds if you don't do something about it. So likewise, you do not have to set out to forget your Creator. You simply need to become, or you simply become preoccupied, neglectful, forgetful, and you will not remember your Creator. The chief reason why the older generation of Israel were destroyed by God in the wilderness, after having been so miraculously delivered and rescued from Egyptian bondage by those 10 plagues that God brought upon Egypt, and then protected by God crossing the Red Sea, they forgot God. They ignored God. They neglected God instead of remembering Him in faith and love and in thankful obedience. This is what we read in Deuteronomy 32 verse 18. Here Moses speaking to the people of Israel. Of the rock that begat thee Thou art unmindful, and hast forgotten God that formed thee. They forgot. They disbelieved in the promises of God. They forgot God. And dear children, and young people, and adults alike, how shall we escape if we neglect, ignore, and forget our Creator. What Solomon commands to be remembered is so important here, dear ones, that no excuses we make will be judged acceptable if we forget. This is a matter of life and death, not to forget our Creator. To remember God, our Creator, does not speak of, as I said, a mere mental recollection that God exists and that God made all things. The command to remember, in Ecclesiastes chapter 12, verse 1, is not like remembering a mere historical fact, like George Washington was the first president of the United States. This cannot be how you remember God. God is the creator. I'm done. That's all I need to know. God is the creator. No, that's not all that is being emphasized here by Solomon. You see, there is no relationship in such a remembering when it's simply remembering a historical fact. Treating God as simply a historical fact or a historical figure. Rather than command to remember in Ecclesiastes 12.1, this command rather is like the remembering you have of someone very, very close to you, that kind of remembering. For example, when I see a photo of my wedding and there is my bride, It's not just a remembering a historical fact that I was married on such and such a date as I look at that photo. No, not at all. That kind of remembering is a personal remembering. That's a remembering that stirs up joy and love and thankfulness. That's the kind of remembering that the Lord calls us to have and remember now thy Creator in the days of thy youth." It's a remembering, dear ones, that affects one's whole life. That kind of remembering of your Creator affects what you say with your tongue. That kind of remembering our Creator Also affects what you listen to with your ears, what you watch with your eyes, where you run to with your feet, what sites you visit with your hands, and what you think with your minds. This is a remembering that affects every area, ought to affect every area of our life. When you truly obey this command to remember, it will affect the doctrine that you profess and it will affect the practice of that doctrine in your life. that there is one commandment. One of the Ten Commandments begins with that word. In Exodus 20 verse 8, remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy. What kind of remembering is that? Well, it's a remembering that has such effect that you keep God's day holy. You set that part, that day apart from the other six days of the week. This is a holy day. This belongs to God. It's that kind of remembering. God isn't simply saying to the people of Israel, well, just remember that every seventh day is the Sabbath day. Do whatever you want, just remember that it is. No, He's saying set it apart, sanctify it. Let it change your heart, your mind, that God is worthy of our worship. Dear children and young people, When there is fear in your lives, is it not because you have forgotten the power and the might of your Creator? You see, fears. God deals with fears when we remember Him. That He's in control. He's our God. When you exhibit the lusts of the flesh, Is it not because you have forgotten that your Creator sees all? That sin is committed, as it were, in His very presence? Because He's everywhere. And that you are united to Christ by faith in His death and in His resurrection? Have you forgotten that? You see, when we indulge the lust of the flesh, we forget these things. In other words, we might mentally remember certain things, but we forget them by way of practicing them, implementing them, loving them, cherishing them, the truth of God in our lives. And therefore we fall into these various kinds of sins. When you simply speak against God because of His providence, what is brought into your life that you don't particularly care for, that you don't particularly like right now. When you speak against your neighbor, when you are overly critical of your neighbor, is it not because you have forgotten that God is the one who governs and controls everything? And He does so for His own glory, and He also does so for your own good, taking you through what you have experienced. to train you, as any good parent teaches and trains his children by the experiences that the child goes through, so our Heavenly Father trains and teaches us through everything that we experience. To children and young people, to forget God is to think and act as if He does not exist, or does not care what we do in our lives. To forget God is to become a practical atheist. Now, not a true atheist who, by way of his testimony, by way of his speech, denies that God exists, but simply acts as if God does not exist. As if God has no control over our lives. As if he doesn't see. As if he is not our father. As if we do not have salvation. through Jesus Christ. The second thing about this first part of the verse here, dear children and young people, what is commanded be remembered is thy Creator. Remember now thy Creator. Quite literally, the Hebrew text states, interestingly, It's in the plural. Remember now thy creators. In the plural. Which is an intimation of the three divine persons of the Holy Trinity. Just as we also see in Job 35.10 where we read, But none saith, Where is God my maker? Maker is in the plural. Where is God my makers? Who giveth songs in the night? You see, back in Genesis chapter 1, we see these plural pronouns used with regard to the one true living God. We see in Genesis 1 verse 26, and God said, let us, God said, let us, in the plural, make man in our image after our likeness. One God eternally existing in three persons. This is what is alluded to in this particular part of Ecclesiastes, chapter 12. Well, how are you to remember the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit as your Creator? How are you to remember God, your Creator? Let me just give to you three or four ways you are to remember God. Remember that He made you, your children and young people. Remember that God made you and you did not make yourself. Psalm 100 verse 3, Know ye that the Lord he is God, it is he that hath made us, and not we ourselves, for we are his people and the sheep of his pasture. Therefore, We are to offer to Him our whole lives because He created us, He made us, He's sovereign, He's in control. What is our response? Our response is to offer to Him our lives and to give our lives to Him. In Romans 12, verse 1, the Apostle Paul says, I beseech you, therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, that ye present your bodies a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable unto God, which is your reasonable service. In thinking about the fact that God has made us, I'd like for you to just consider one aspect of God's creation. of us. Consider for a moment your brain, an absolutely astounding wonder of God's creation. Three weeks after conception, brain cells begin to form. They grow in spurts at times up to 250,000 cells a minute. After birth, the brain continues growing and forming its network of connections. In time, about 100 billion nerve cells, called neurons, as well as other types of cells, are packed into the human brain. It is estimated by researchers that 100 million bits of information pour into the brain, this is unbelievable, every second. Every second. From the various senses that we have. In the brainstem, all this information is sorted out by a traffic controller, if you will. called the reticular formation. Noted astronomer and astrobiologist Carl Sagan wrote that the brain could hold information that, quote, would fill some 20 million volumes, as many as in the world's largest libraries, end of quote. The human brain is truly a miraculous creation of God. The chances that the human brain just happened by pure chance, without the design and plan of the triune creator is akin to saying that the computer on your desk or your iPhone came into being by mere chance. or that 20 million volumes in a library just evolved over a period of time. Stanford News, an online periodical for Stanford University, states in its issue of April 28, 2014, the following. Stanford bioengineers have developed a new circuit board modeled on the human brain. Now notice, the brain is not modeled on a computer, the computer is modeled on the human brain by these bioengineers. Continuing on, possibly opening up new frontiers in robotics and computing. For all their sophistication, computers pale in comparison to the brain. These are scientists that are making this statement. For all their sophistication, computers pale in comparison to the brain. The modest cortex of the mouse, for instance, operates 9,000 times faster than a personal computer simulation of its, that is, the mouse's, functions. Just a little mouse and its cortex operates 9,000 times faster than a personal computer simulation of those functions of the mouse. Man, dear ones, is wonderfully, fearfully made, David says in Psalm 139, Verse 14, I will praise thee, for I am fearfully and wonderfully made. Marvelous are thy works, and that my soul knoweth right well. You see, the more investigation into the intricacies, how complicated this body is, the more we have evidence how wonderfully and fearfully we are made by God. Secondly, remember that your Creator is also man's preserver. Not only is your Creator the one who made you, but also your Creator is man's preserver. Therefore nothing happens by accident in this universe or in the life of any of us. You are sustained every moment. Dear children, dear young people, you are sustained every moment of the day because your Creator provides for your needs. Thus you are to joyfully You are to joyfully express to Him continually your thanksgiving for all that you have, and to be content with what God has given unto you, or even to be content with what He has not given unto you. The Apostle Paul says in 1 Thessalonians 5.18, In everything, in everything give thanks, for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus concerning you. Thirdly, remember that your Creator is also man's Savior through faith alone in Christ and in His perfect righteousness alone. We are all sinners in Adam who have transgressed God's law in thought and in word and deed. None of us is righteous. We all fall short. We deserve, therefore, according to the Lord being a righteous and holy judge. We deserve God's everlasting wrath and condemnation for having sinned and transgressed His holy commandments and His laws. That's what we actually deserve. However, out of His mere, out of His undeserved kindness and mercy, God redeemed sinners chosen in Christ Jesus before the world began. He redeemed them through the perfect obedience, the death and the resurrection of the Lord Jesus Christ. And now He freely applies that redemption to us as sinners. He even applies that redemption to the chief of sinners, so that none are excluded from coming to Jesus Christ. None of us are excluded. Even to the chief of sinners, and that's why the Apostle Paul I could say in 1 Timothy 1.15, this is a faithful saying and worthy of all acceptation, that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners, of whom I am chief. You see, this is in no way boasting in ourselves, boasting in what we can accomplish, boasting in how we can save ourselves. This is simply falling upon the mercy of God. and receiving from Him the salvation which is offered unto us in Christ Jesus. Therefore, as you pass through the many afflictions, through the many trials, through the many tribulations of this life, you are to cling to Christ, not only for your justification, having been saved and rescued, but also for your sanctification, your growth and holiness. God uses even the trials, God uses even the heartaches, God even uses the afflictions, the diseases, the illnesses, the temptations in this life to make you yearn for Him, to make you yearn for your heavenly home, wherein you shall be perfectly perfectly conformed to the holy image of our dear Savior. Dear children and young people, love and desire not only the mercy and grace of God, but also love and desire the holiness of God, to be like Him, to be like Him. And lastly, the last remembering, remember that your Creator is also man's judge, before whom we will all appear on that last day. None will be able to escape his all-seeing eye. All of us will give an account before the Lord as to what we have done in these bodies, whether good or bad, according to 2 Corinthians 5.10. On that day, dear children, young people, and even adults, on that day, you will either stand before this just judge pleading your own righteousness, pleading your own goodness, which the Bible says is completely unacceptable because we all fall short of the glory of God. You'll either be pleading your own goodness and righteousness, or you will be pleading the righteousness of another. leading the righteousness of Jesus Christ, who is perfect, who kept the law of God without any sin, and then who credits his righteousness to us when we trust and believe in him, who forgives us all our sins. There is no other way. Jesus said, I am the way, the truth, and the life. No man cometh to the Father but through me. Do you seek to live, whether in secret or in public, in the presence of God, before whom you will stand on that last day? To truly remember, as God commands, here through Solomon, is, dear ones, an act of God's free grace. For none of us would want to remember, if God did not work within us, both the will and to do, His good pleasure. He receives all the glory, even when we remember. We're to remember, but God receives the glory because He works within us. He stirs up our hearts to want to remember. And the third thing, and the last thing about this first part of verse one. Note when it is commanded that we are to remember. When is it? In the days of thy youth. The Creator is to be remembered while you are young, rather than to be remembered whenever you just simply feel like remembering. No. Remember now, my Creator, in the days of thy youth. Don't treat this as if it's no big deal, as if it doesn't really matter, or as if you can wait until you get older. There is nothing, nothing more important than remembering your Creator. Second main point, this will go very quickly in comparison to the first main point. Second main point, remember your Creator before old age and death hinder you. In Ecclesiastes chapter one, we read once again, remember now thy Creator in the days of thy youth, notice, while the evil days come not, nor the years draw nigh, when thou shalt say, I have no pleasure in them. There is, dear children and young people, and adults as well, there is an urgency to this command that is like the siren that sounds a warning to everyone that there's an emergency going on. Now is the time to be watchful and vigilant. Not later, when you think that might be a much more convenient time and much more comfortable for you. No. For if you want to remember this command, you may never have an opportunity again. If you do not remember now, you may not have an opportunity to remember tomorrow. Who of us is guaranteed that we'll see tomorrow? Who among us is guaranteed that we'll see tonight? We have no guarantees. Many people have thought they would live much longer and have died in their youth, have died the next day if they were elderly. We have no guarantees. That's why the urgency, remember now, now, thy Creator in the days of thy youth, before all of these other types of days that will be trying, difficult, come your way. The longer you wait to remember your Creator, the more you are likely to forget Him and become mired in your busy self seeking, pleasure-oriented world that preoccupies you. Dear children and young people, when you seek your own ways and turn from seeking the ways of the Lord, God gives you and gives me and gives people over to the desires of their own heart just as he did with Israel of old in the wilderness. They wanted having been delivered by the ten plagues, God delivered them out of Egyptian bondage, brought them across the Red Sea on dry ground, swallowed up the Egyptians, delivered them, they immediately sang praise to God, but when they got into the wilderness, they began complaining. They began to bellyache about what they did not have. that they wanted. What did they want? Well, they wanted things like cucumbers and melons and leeks and onions and garlic? Yeah, garlic. I say that for those of you who know, I don't care for garlic, but garlic as well is what they wanted. They wanted to go back to Egypt. Been delivered, they wanted to go back to Egypt. God had so mightily delivered them. wondrously delivered them, but they wanted to go back. And you see, dear ones, if we forget God, if we forget God, we will want to go back to Egypt. We'll want to go back to what we enjoyed in those days of bondage, to sin, if we forget our God. Remember now, thy Creator, in the days of thy youth, Therein, dear ones, we learn the hard way that our sinful desires, which we thought would make us so happy, only end up leading us into greater misery. And if God grants us repentance, we will learn through our own foolishness and misery the vanity of a life that is lived apart from the Lord Jesus Christ. Solomon knew this from his own experience, and he seeks to spare us from having to learn the same lesson in our experience. Solomon gives us the reason why you are not to delay remembering every day your Creator, because there will come trials there will come busyness, there will come burdens, there will come afflictions, cares of this life, the goals and dreams that you set before you, a broken heart over something, there will come eventually death itself and will tend to occupy your thoughts more than your Creator occupies your thoughts. The heartaches of life The pains of this world, the sorrows and tears of broken relationships will come in like a mighty tidal wave and sweep away your remembrance of God from your mind. That is what is meant by evil days here. That is days of trial and heartache and affliction in which you will find no comfort or hope in the world that is fading away. and circumstances, find no comfort in circumstances that seem to have no meaning or purpose in life apart from God. That is what, as you continue reading, and you might want to do that, the remainder verses 2-7, Ecclesiastes chapter 2 or 11 verses 2-7, it depicts in figurative language this aging process. that we are all going to go through if we lived to that period of time in our life. This aging process. And compared to youth, it's no fun. As far as the type of problems health-wise, as far as the weakness, the frailties, we begin to have many times no control over those things. We're simply getting older, and it gets harder, and we become more preoccupied with our health. And rather than very often becoming more preoccupied with God, as we begin to face that time where we will stand before Him, You see, we cannot ignore it. We cannot make death go away. The grave awaits us all. And in light of that certain truth, how then should we live in this present life? Since none of us knows when we shall breathe our last breath, we must live our lives as if today, as if today was our last day upon the earth. We must live for the Lord. not knowing what tomorrow will hold. Only those who carefully prepare for death and the judgment to come, by remembering their Creator, embracing Christ by faith alone, and making Christ their life and their reason for living, will know the joy of the Lord and a peace that passes all understanding. in this life and even at death. Paul said, for to me to live is Christ and to die is gain. You see, when Christ is our life, we don't leave really our life behind because Christ is in heaven. We go to be with him who is our life. You children and young people, are here addressed by Solomon not to think that you can please yourself with all of the pleasures of life now and then sometime, sometime just before you die you can make everything right with God your creator. It doesn't work that way. Many have had the same idea. but never were granted repentance by God before they died and passed into eternity without Jesus Christ. Dear ones, that is a lie of the devil. Cunningly crafted and suggested to you that you can delay trusting Christ, delay repenting of sin, delay making Christ your life, your reason for living. Commit yourself to the Lord, your young person, your child. Commit yourself to the Lord. Take up your cross. Deny yourself and follow the Lord Jesus Christ in your life. You know, it's not comfortable taking up our cross. It's not comfortable to nail ourselves, as it were, to that cross in order to see those sins in our lives put to death through the death of Jesus Christ. It's uncomfortable. It's unpleasant because it's a part of our nature. We want those things. We want those sins. We want those pleasures. And so it's not easy, but nevertheless, We are promised that if we remember our Creator in the days of our youth, God does grant grace. God does give His abundant mercy to help us through those times. Regardless of what sins, dear child, dear young person you are wrestling with, regardless of what it is, your thoughts, your words, your deeds, it doesn't matter. God can help you. God can put to death those things in your life so that you are remembering Him throughout the day, throughout your life, beginning now in the days of your youth. Give your life to the Lord. Don't delay. Don't wait. Give your life to the Lord, even now. Let us stand in prayer. Our Heavenly Father, We thank Thee that Thy word is so relevant unto us, it speaks to our very innermost being. From our heart of hearts we cry out, it is true, it is faithful, we know that God has spoken in His word. We are challenged, we are convicted of our sins, we are shown our need of Jesus Christ, our need to remember our Creator. We pray, our Lord, that Thou would Grant to our children and our young people, by grace, to turn to Thee. Grant to us as those who are older, likewise, our God, not to forget Thee, but, O God, to live for Thee, even into the time that Thou wouldst call us home at our death. We pray, our Father, that Thou wouldst hear our prayers. Thou art faithful, Lord, Thou art Our God, call and help our children and our young people and us as adults as well to be faithful first and foremost to Thee. Be faithful to Thee by remembering our Creator in the days of our youth and every day of our life. In Jesus' name, Amen. 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