Authentic

Three Angels Broadcasting Network

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Series Code: AU

Program Code: AU000015S


00:00 - If you've ever been tempted
00:02 to feel like life might be a little bit futile,
00:04 that maybe you're wasting your time
00:06 by investing in your future
00:08 because, well, you're just going to die anyway.
00:12 I think you're gonna wanna see
00:13 what we've got going on on today's episode of "Authentic".
00:18 [upbeat music]
00:39 From what I understand, the world's population
00:41 is rapidly approaching the 8 billion mark.
00:43 And when you subtract daily deaths from daily births,
00:48 you realize there's about 100,000 new people
00:51 coming into this world every single day.
00:54 Now that's a number that I can't wrap my head around.
00:56 I mean, what are the odds
00:58 that you're actually going to meet 100,000 people
01:00 in your lifetime, let alone all 8 billion.
01:04 It's just an awful lot of people.
01:07 And to think that we're only a little more
01:09 than three and a half billion, the day I was born.
01:12 It means that more people
01:14 have been born since my first appearance
01:16 than actually existed
01:17 at the moment the doctor cut my umbilical cord.
01:21 Now, the very best estimates that I can find
01:23 according to an article published by the BBC,
01:26 well, they suggest something like 107 billion people
01:31 have now lived on planet earth.
01:33 Which means that all the people alive right now,
01:36 only represent about seven and a half percent
01:39 of all the people who have ever lived.
01:42 So here's what bothers me about this.
01:45 I know a lot of people worry about the limited resources
01:48 we have on this planet,
01:50 and there are people who fear that eventually
01:52 we're not going to be able to feed everybody.
01:54 Some of you might remember a popular book
01:57 that came out in 1968, the year before I was born,
02:00 it was called "The Population Bomb".
02:03 It kind of suggested more than 50 years ago
02:06 that we were on the verge of a global apocalypse
02:09 because well, the population was growing way too fast.
02:13 It was written by Paul Ehrlich, a biologist at Stanford,
02:16 and his first line
02:18 kind of scared the stuffing out of millions of people.
02:20 He said, "The battle to feed all of humanity is over."
02:26 In other words,
02:27 millions of people were about to starve to death.
02:30 And a couple of years after this book was published
02:32 Dr. Ehrlich predicted
02:33 that we had something like 15 years left
02:37 before mass starvation basically wiped all of us out.
02:42 Of course, none of that came true.
02:45 In fact, there are now people arguing
02:47 that our global population is about to decrease
02:49 from any number of reasons.
02:51 So that's not really what gets my attention
02:54 when somebody mentions 8 billion people
02:56 or 107 billion people.
02:59 I think what bothers me most is the sheer potential
03:02 that 8 billion human brains represents.
03:05 I mean, think about the number of thoughts
03:07 that roll around in your own brain every single day.
03:09 I know they're not all brilliant,
03:10 I know that mine aren't.
03:12 But think about how active your mind is on a daily basis.
03:17 Now multiply that by 8 billion
03:19 and think about how much mental information
03:21 is being processed minute by minute, all over the world.
03:27 Then go back in history
03:28 and think about the way that a tiny handful of people
03:31 have actually changed the world
03:33 with just a few powerful thoughts.
03:36 I mean, a lot of you are watching this
03:38 or listening to this on the internet
03:40 and that was somebody's brain brainchild
03:42 just a few decades ago.
03:44 Now, maybe you're not old enough
03:46 to remember life without the internet
03:48 but let me tell you if that's the case,
03:50 you have no idea how much this has changed
03:52 the world forever.
03:53 One thought changed the world.
03:54 How would anybody live without the internet?
03:58 The more I think about a guy like Wilhem Rontgen
04:00 back in 1895,
04:01 who was fooling around in his lab one day
04:03 when he suddenly noticed a fluorescent screen
04:05 would mysteriously glow
04:07 every time he turned on an electron beam.
04:10 Even if there was something sitting between the beam
04:13 and the screen.
04:15 And I don't know if this was smart or not,
04:17 but eventually he stuck his hand in between,
04:20 and he saw his bones on the screen.
04:22 That gave us the x-ray,
04:24 an invention that I've well,
04:26 unfortunately had to use a lot over the years.
04:30 Think about something as simple as Teflon,
04:32 which not only gave us nonstick cooking,
04:35 a delightful invention to be sure
04:37 but we also discovered that the body doesn't reject Teflon.
04:42 And so now we use it in all kinds of replacement body parts.
04:46 And then think about all the poetry,
04:49 and the music, and the art,
04:51 that has come from a handful of people over the centuries.
04:55 These kinds of people only represent a tiny sliver
05:00 of the human population.
05:02 And because they bothered to write things down,
05:05 or because they were in the right place at the right time
05:08 and had all the right opportunities,
05:10 all of us benefit from their thoughts.
05:14 So now I've got to wonder, how many important thoughts
05:18 never make it to the rest of the world?
05:21 You've got to think
05:22 if we've already had 107 billion people on this planet,
05:26 there's just a lot of great thinking
05:27 that never goes anywhere.
05:29 We never learn about it.
05:31 We lose something like 150,000 people every single day.
05:35 And the moment they die,
05:37 a lifetime of thinking just evaporates.
05:41 It reminds me of something you read
05:43 in the ancient book of Psalms,
05:45 where it says, "His spirit departs, he returns to his earth;
05:50 in that very day his plans perish."
05:54 In some English translations of the Bible,
05:56 it says, in that very day his thoughts perish.
06:00 Your thoughts are gone.
06:01 And so you've got to wonder what all of us lose
06:04 when a single human being goes to the grave
06:07 never having shared some of the most important thoughts
06:10 that crossed his or her mind
06:12 while he or she was still alive.
06:15 Now multiply that by 150,000 people a day
06:19 or multiply it by the 99 billion who have already died
06:23 and ask yourself this,
06:25 "How many opportunities have we lost?"
06:28 How many brilliant ideas never made it out into the open
06:32 because somebody never had an opportunity
06:35 or maybe even the desire to share them?
06:39 But then think about the people who do manage
06:42 to write this stuff down.
06:44 Back in the day before the internet,
06:46 I used to go to the library every single week
06:49 I would ride there on my bike.
06:51 And I used to think about the fact that there was no way
06:54 I would ever be able to read all those books on the shelf.
06:58 And this was a small town with a really tiny library.
07:02 Thousands and thousands of books,
07:05 and there was no way in a single lifetime
07:07 I was ever going to be able to read all of them.
07:11 It's not possible.
07:13 Then, when you consider the information explosion
07:16 taking place on the internet,
07:18 every single day, the problem gets even worse.
07:23 According to one source I looked at a few months ago
07:26 more than 2.5 quintillion bytes of data
07:30 is generated every single day.
07:33 That's quintillion.
07:35 That's a one with 30 zeros.
07:39 Even if all 8 billion of us, all around the world
07:42 were working on this day and night,
07:44 there's absolutely no way
07:46 we could ever consume that much information.
07:51 So I guess that's the thing that bothers me most.
07:54 Just the sheer opportunity cost,
07:57 the daily loss of unique people with great ideas
08:00 and dreams and valuable insights.
08:04 I mean realistically, I know there's no way we could listen
08:06 to everybody all the time,
08:09 but it still bothers me that most people's lives
08:11 just end unacknowledged.
08:14 Maybe their families and close friends remember them,
08:17 but let a couple of generations pass by
08:20 and at best, most of us are nothing but names on tombstones.
08:26 All of your experiences now just gone.
08:30 So I'm sure you're wondering
08:32 where in the world I'm gonna go with all of this.
08:35 And now you're gonna have to endure a really quick break
08:37 if you wanna find out.
08:40 - [Narrator] Here at the Voice of Prophecy,
08:41 we're committed to creating top quality programming
08:44 for the whole family,
08:45 like our audio adventure series "Discovery Mountain".
08:48 "Discovery Mountain" is a Bible-based program
08:51 for kids of all ages and backgrounds.
08:53 Your family will enjoy the faith building stories
08:56 from this small mountain summer camp, Penn town.
08:59 With 24 seasonal episodes every year,
09:01 and fresh content every week,
09:04 there's always a new adventure just on the horizon.
09:10 - The Library of Alexandria
09:12 was one of the most important contributions
09:14 ever made to human civilization.
09:16 It was the brain child
09:17 of a guy by the name of Demetrius Of Phalerum,
09:20 a guy, most of you have never heard of
09:22 who lived about 300 years before Christ.
09:26 He was a tyrant who ruled the city of Athens
09:29 because Alexander the Great put him in charge.
09:32 But of course is predicted in the Bible's book of Daniel,
09:36 Alexander died and his empire was divided
09:38 among four of his generals,
09:40 Cassander, Seleucus, Lysimachus and Ptolemy.
09:44 Ptolemy took over the north of Africa
09:47 which put the city of Alexandria under his control,
09:50 and he invited Demetrius to move across the sea
09:53 and join him as a court philosopher.
09:56 It was a pretty big promotion.
09:58 So of course, Demetrius jumped at the chance
10:00 and while he was there,
10:02 he supervised the construction
10:04 of the world's most famous library.
10:07 What Ptolemy wanted to do,
10:09 is collect all the world's knowledge in one single place.
10:14 Thanks to the gift of writing,
10:15 they were able to gather information
10:17 from every culture around them
10:19 and preserve it all in one location.
10:22 This was kind of like an ancient internet
10:25 where you could find just about anything you wanted
10:26 on just about any topic.
10:29 Some people think there may have been
10:31 as many as 400,000 scrolls in this library,
10:35 which might not sound like much
10:36 after we talk about quintillion.
10:39 But when you consider that all these scrolls
10:42 were actually written by hand
10:43 and had to basically travel on horseback,
10:47 this represented a lot of information.
10:52 Now, today, the whole Alexandrian library is gone,
10:55 because in 48 BC, Julius Caesar accidentally burned it down.
11:02 Not all of it, but a big chunk of it
11:03 because his soldiers were busy burning the docks
11:06 in the harbor and that fire got out of control
11:09 and got to the library.
11:10 And that was the beginning of the end.
11:12 Because even if some of the library managed to survive
11:15 what was left would have been finished off
11:18 when the emperor Aurelian burned down the city again
11:22 about 300 years later.
11:26 So think about this, try to imagine what we lost.
11:29 We had this comprehensive collection of ancient knowledge
11:32 gathered from all over the world, and now it's just gone.
11:38 We really have no idea what was in there.
11:41 I mean, today, we can't really explain
11:42 how the pyramids were so masterfully constructed.
11:45 So you've got to wonder,
11:47 what if there was a book in that library that explained it?
11:51 But for centuries people have wondered
11:53 what in the world Plato was talking about
11:55 when he mentioned a place called Atlantis.
11:57 And now the internet is full of conspiracy theories
12:00 because we don't really know.
12:02 What if there was a book in that library
12:04 that just told us where Atlantis was,
12:07 who lived there and what happened to them.
12:10 Can you imagine what we lost
12:12 when 400,000 scrolls just disappeared in smoke?
12:18 Today archeologists are forced to piece together the past
12:19 by digging through broken pottery
12:22 and reading these bits and pieces of shattered tablets.
12:29 These things are missing information.
12:30 And there's a really good likelihood
12:32 that once upon a time, the Alexandrian library
12:36 had scrolls that told all these stories
12:39 in remarkable detail.
12:41 It makes me think, that one of the reasons we're so blind
12:45 when it comes to ancient history
12:46 is because somebody destroyed our record of the past.
12:52 It really is an absolute tragedy.
12:55 And this is something I think about all the time
12:57 because as far as I'm concerned, there are no little people,
13:01 there are no inconsequential minds.
13:05 What we have living all around us are people
13:08 who are experiencing the world
13:09 from their own unique perspective.
13:11 And they're experiencing God
13:13 from their own unique perspective.
13:16 And you've got to wonder
13:18 how much richer our own experience would be,
13:21 if we had access to all that information,
13:25 but we don't.
13:27 And you never will.
13:29 Because even if it was possible to preserve all that data,
13:32 the thoughts of a 107 billion people
13:36 you and I have a hard deadline in this life.
13:39 Most of us only get 70, 80, maybe 90 years
13:44 and then it's over.
13:45 This is easily one of the biggest frustrations
13:47 about being mortal,
13:49 there isn't time to learn
13:51 and explore everything that interests you.
13:55 It reminds me of another ancient passage,
13:57 this one from the book of Ecclesiastes
13:59 which is a book of ancient wisdom.
14:01 Here's what it says,
14:04 "All things are full of labor; man cannot express it.
14:08 "The eye is not satisfied with seeing,
14:10 "nor the ear filled with hearing."
14:14 Now, man, isn't that the truth?
14:16 I'm kind of ripping this verse out of its context
14:19 but one lifetime isn't nearly long enough
14:23 to satisfy the curiosity of your eyes and ears.
14:26 You can study and learn and explore decade after decade
14:32 and it will never be enough.
14:34 Now, that's not really what the author was saying
14:37 and I'm ripping it out of context a little bit,
14:40 but ask yourself,
14:42 are you ever really going to be finished learning?
14:45 Will you ever come to the point
14:46 where you don't want to see something new
14:48 or hear something new?
14:51 Unless you're the victim of depression, I really doubt it.
14:57 You know Albert Einstein once said,
14:58 "I have no special talents.
15:01 "I am only passionately curious."
15:03 And from what I know about his story
15:05 that was absolutely true.
15:07 His elementary school teachers
15:08 actually thought he was a dummy.
15:10 This wasn't some kind of child prodigy like Mozart,
15:13 this was a kid who actually struggled with math.
15:17 And yet the product of his curious mind
15:20 completely revolutionized the world of science forever.
15:24 It was his passionate curiosity
15:26 that disrupted the work of Isaac Newton
15:29 and opened up the human race
15:30 to a whole new universe of possibilities.
15:35 So what about all the other curious minds,
15:39 given the right opportunities what would they discover?
15:43 And why do I even have a passionately curious mind
15:46 if I'm just going to die?
15:49 What's the sense of packing my brain full of information
15:52 for 70 or 80 years and then all that data just disappears
15:58 the day that I do?
16:00 Why would I be wired like this?
16:02 How does this make sense?
16:04 Let me take you back to that same passage again.
16:07 Now in the book of Ecclesiastes
16:08 and this time we'll read it in its original context.
16:12 Here's what it says,
16:14 "What prophet has a man
16:15 "from all his labor in which he toils under the sun?"
16:19 In other words,
16:20 what's the point of putting in a lifetime of effort?
16:24 "One generation passes away
16:26 "and another generation comes
16:27 "but the earth abides forever."
16:30 In other words, one day we're all going to die
16:33 and the world's just gonna go on without us.
16:36 "The sun also rises, and the sun goes down,
16:39 "and hastens to the place where it arose.
16:41 "The wind goes toward the south
16:43 "and turns around to the north;
16:45 "the wind whirls about continually
16:47 "and comes again on its circuit.
16:49 "All the rivers run into the sea yet the sea is not full;
16:52 "to the place from which the rivers come
16:54 "there they return again."
16:56 So what he's describing is the endless cycle of the world
17:00 and he's wondering why do you and I exist
17:02 in a place like this?
17:04 We have cognitive abilities,
17:06 we have curious minds,
17:08 and yet somehow we get turned off after a few short decades
17:12 and the world keeps on going without us.
17:14 Verse 8 again,
17:16 "All things are full of labor; man cannot express it.
17:20 "The eye is not satisfied with seeing
17:22 "nor the ear filled with hearing."
17:26 So here's what he's really saying,
17:29 and I think I should explain this a little bit
17:31 because I took a few liberties with that passage
17:33 the first time I read it.
17:36 Even if you did live longer,
17:38 even if you had a thousand-year life span,
17:42 it wouldn't be enough
17:44 because what your heart craves
17:45 more than anything else in the world
17:48 cannot be found by accumulating more information.
17:52 I mean, let's say I did have the ability
17:55 to harvest the thoughts of 8 billion people,
17:57 would that be enough?
17:59 Would I finally come to a place where I can say,
18:02 man now I know what I've been missing,
18:04 now I know enough and my mind is finally at rest.
18:09 The answer is no,
18:12 because what you're really looking for
18:14 is not more knowledge.
18:17 What you're looking for is the source of that knowledge
18:21 the answer to the puzzle of our existence.
18:24 By sorting through more and more data,
18:26 your mind is trying to discover the reason you're here.
18:31 To put it simply, what you're really looking for is God
18:35 and until you find Him,
18:37 your mind is gonna be forever restless.
18:40 Now I've got to take another quick break
18:42 because that's the way it works around here,
18:43 but I'll be right back after this.
18:47 - [Narrator] Life can throw a lot at us.
18:50 Sometimes we don't have all the answers
18:53 but that's where the Bible comes in.
18:56 It's our guide to a more fulfilling life.
18:59 Here at the Voice of Prophecy,
19:00 we've created the Discover Bible guides
19:02 to be your guide to the Bible.
19:04 They're designed to be simple, easy to use
19:06 and provide answers to many of life's toughest questions
19:10 and they're absolutely free.
19:12 So jump online now
19:13 or give us a call and start your journey of discovery.
19:17 - Hey, if you're just tuning in,
19:19 we've been talking about all the knowledge
19:20 that disappears from this planet on a daily basis.
19:23 How we lose something like 150,000 people every single day,
19:28 and all their thoughts are just gone.
19:30 What a loss that is.
19:33 And then we talked about the fact that one short lifetime
19:36 seems like a pretty raw deal
19:38 because you were born with this insatiably curious mind,
19:43 and you're never going to have the time
19:44 to satisfy your curiosity.
19:46 At least not completely.
19:49 Then I posed a question
19:50 about what it is that you're actually looking for
19:53 in the first place?
19:54 I mean, I know that I'm personally curious
19:56 about just about everything.
19:57 I like science,
19:59 I love music,
20:00 I like philosophy,
20:01 I like psychology,
20:02 I like theology,
20:04 I like just about everything that people like to study.
20:08 And part of that is because I'm just a wide-eyed kid
20:10 who happened to be born in a big, interesting world
20:13 that has a lot to offer.
20:15 But you've always got to wonder,
20:18 what am I actually looking for?
20:20 Why do I think it's important to learn anything?
20:23 I mean, we all know you have to learn something,
20:26 if you're gonna earn a living,
20:27 but beyond that why do I feel the need to keep on studying?
20:31 Why are documentaries and books so fascinating?
20:34 Why do I always, always wanna see something new?
20:38 And what is it that gives me this audacious notion
20:41 that there's actually something valuable out there to learn?
20:46 If think about it,
20:48 if you didn't believe the universe had a purpose
20:51 and you didn't think
20:52 there was some kind of order to our existence,
20:54 that was mean that there is nothing useful
20:57 out there to learn.
20:59 And yet something hardwired into our brains tells us,
21:03 this isn't true.
21:05 So what in the world are you looking for?
21:08 Let me show you another ancient passage
21:10 this time from the book of Jeremiah.
21:13 And I think there's a chance I've read this on the show
21:16 at least once before
21:18 because this is one of my personal favorites
21:19 so bear with me.
21:21 We're gonna read it again
21:22 and you'll probably hear me read it again
21:23 and again and again, in the future.
21:25 Here it comes,
21:26 it's Jeremiah chapter 9, starting in verse 23.
21:29 It says, "Thus says the Lord:
21:32 'let not the wise man glory in his wisdom...'"
21:36 Now, let me push the pause button right there
21:39 because that's kind of a bitter pill to swallow
21:42 when you happen to love knowledge.
21:45 Of course knowledge isn't exactly the same as wisdom.
21:49 Wisdom is knowing what to do with your knowledge.
21:52 And if you read the rest of this book,
21:54 there's absolutely no doubt
21:56 that this book places a very high value on acquiring wisdom.
21:59 In fact, most of the book of Proverbs
22:02 advises us to seek wisdom.
22:04 And in the book of James, it says,
22:06 "If any of you lacks wisdom,
22:07 "let him ask of God who gives to all liberally
22:11 "and without reproach,
22:12 "and it will be given to him."
22:14 So here in the book of Jeremiah,
22:18 it's not really saying that wisdom isn't important
22:20 because as it is
22:22 and of course you don't wanna be the opposite of wise
22:24 which would be foolish.
22:25 And the Bible clearly advises against becoming a fool.
22:29 So what is Jeremiah saying?
22:31 Well, let's read the whole thing,
22:34 "Thus says the Lord:
22:36 'let not the wise man glory in his wisdom,
22:38 let, not the mighty man glory in his might
22:40 nor let the rich man glory in his riches.'"
22:44 Now here it comes the important part
22:47 "but let him who glories glory in this
22:50 that he understands hands and knows me."
22:55 Here's what's hiding behind your insatiable desire to learn.
23:01 You're not just filling your brain
23:02 with mountains of trivia for no particular reason.
23:05 You're out there looking for something.
23:08 I mean, if it's just a matter of accumulating knowledge,
23:12 it's really a pretty depressing enterprise
23:14 because the moment you die [snapping fingers] it's over,
23:17 the information is gone
23:19 and all that effort was for nothing.
23:23 And honestly, it wouldn't make sense
23:26 at least not as far as the universe is concerned.
23:30 Why would the universe produce all these thinking,
23:32 feeling, curious people,
23:34 if it's just going to amount to nothing.
23:37 I mean, why didn't we make our entrance
23:39 into this universe as mere sea cucumbers?
23:42 Who as far as I can tell, aren't really curious about much
23:45 besides what they're gonna have for lunch.
23:48 Why are you as a human so sophisticated?
23:51 Why are you so inquisitive?
23:53 Who pushed the button to make you this way?
23:57 It says, "Let him who glories glory in this,
24:01 that he understands and knows me that I am the Lord."
24:07 This is what you're looking for.
24:10 This is what you're hoping to find
24:12 under that vast mountain of data.
24:15 There is somebody who put you here
24:18 and then he gave you a questioning mind
24:20 so that you would find him.
24:23 And if you understand that,
24:25 if you understand that this is what you're looking for,
24:29 I promise you you're going to find some peace of mind
24:32 and you will come to the finish line of your life
24:35 completely satisfied
24:37 because you've realized your ultimate purpose.
24:42 That book, the book of Jeremiah,
24:44 it was written to a group of people
24:46 who had been conquered by the Babylonians.
24:49 And a lot of them
24:50 were going to spend the rest of their lives in captivity.
24:54 And if you think that life can feel a little meaningless
24:57 when you're free,
24:59 it can really hit home when your one and only lifetime
25:03 gets completely used up doing the bidding of your overlords.
25:09 It was an oppressive way to live.
25:11 And so here's what Jeremiah said to the people
25:14 who were just beginning that life of captivity.
25:18 "And you will seek me", it's God speaking.
25:20 "And you will seek me and find me,
25:22 when you search for me with all your heart.
25:25 I will be found by you", says the Lord
25:28 "and I will bring you back from your captivity..."
25:33 So how in the world does this all matter to you?
25:38 Well, think about this.
25:40 You're a captive to this world
25:42 and there's a part of you that is looking
25:44 for something much better than this place
25:47 the way that you're currently experiencing it.
25:50 So don't you go away,
25:51 I'm gonna be writing back.
25:55 - [Narrator] Are you searching for answers
25:57 to life's toughest questions
25:58 like where is God when we suffer?
26:01 Can I find a real happiness?
26:02 Or is there any hope for our chaotic world?
26:06 The Discover Bible guides
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26:31 Find answers and guides
26:32 like does my life really matter to God?
26:35 And a second chance at life.
26:37 You'll find answers to the things that matter most to you
26:39 in each of the 26 Discover Bible guides,
26:42 visit BibleStudies.com
26:44 and begin your journey today to discover answers
26:47 to life's deepest questions.
26:54 - Okay, so here's what happened,
26:56 I talked too much and we're out of time for another week
26:59 but here's what I want you to think about
27:01 until we can meet again.
27:04 The one that you're actually
27:06 looking for says He can be found.
27:09 He's what you're gonna find
27:10 under that mountain of information
27:11 that swirls past your brain every single day.
27:15 And when you find Him,
27:17 He can take you out of the captivity of a meaningless life
27:21 and bring you right into His presence
27:24 where He guarantees you'll be learning new stuff forever.
27:30 And all of that knowledge you've been picking up
27:31 for an entire lifetime,
27:33 well, if you take all of that and compare it to this book
27:37 it's all going to fall together in a beautiful pattern
27:40 and help you understand the infinite mind of God.
27:45 And according to what that God says in this book,
27:48 you're gonna keep on using what you've been learning
27:51 for a very, very, very long time.
27:58 That's all the time we've got for another week though.
27:59 You chew on that until we're together again.
28:02 I'm Shawn Boonstra
28:04 and this has been another episode of "Authentic".
28:07 [upbeat music]


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Revised 2021-05-19