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Daily Reading Michael Key Daily Reading Michael Key

Daily Reading: January 17

 

Today’s Scripture Reading


Reflection and Prayer

  • What do these passages reveal about God, and how can his revealed character cause me to praise him, give him thanks, or wonder at his mystery?

  • How does God speak into the historical situation of the original readers and work to bring about his redemption in Jesus Christ? How does this build my trust in God's ability to fulfill his promises regardless of my present circumstances?

  • What sins do these passages expose that I need to confess before the Lord? In response to the grace of God and by the power of the Holy Spirit, how am I to think, act, and worship differently, putting off my sin and putting on Christ's righteousness?

  • How do these passages challenge the ways I typically engage my spheres of influence? How do they encourage me to live in the Kingdom of God and pray for the redemption of all things?

 

These passages follow the TPC daily Bible reading plan, which leads us as a community through the full breadth of God’s Word over the course of two years. For more information, click here.

To receive these readings to your inbox, sign-up with your email using the link below.

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Shared Practice Michael Key Shared Practice Michael Key

Simplify Your Schedule: Week of January 17

Reduce the number of meetings, activities, commitments, or outings that you participate in this week.

What?
Reduce the number of meetings, activities, commitments, or outings that you participate in this week.

Why?
Busyness and clutter plague our culture, distracting our attention and confusing our desires. Pulled in a thousand directions and burdened by a million commitments, we have become a fragmented people with unclear purpose, shallow devotion, and countless anxieties. A practice of external simplicity resists this tendency in our culture and allows us, by the power of the Spirit, to train towards the kind of internal simplicity that characterized Jesus — that single-minded intention to glorify God with one’s whole life.

How?
Plenty of blogs can teach you how to declutter your life. For advice on acknowledging your priorities, distinguishing what is essential from what is extra, and making necessary cuts in your schedule, you should do a Google search and see what you find. But as believers in Jesus Christ, our purpose in practicing simplicity runs deeper: We want to utilize external disciplines to cultivate our spiritual life so that at our core we look more and more like Jesus.. That means supplementing the blogs’ advice with spiritual insights. Prayer ought to accompany this practice in several important ways.

  1. In prayer, we must acknowledge that we are finite creatures who cannot be at all places or do all things and that only the Lord is God. We must lay aside our culturally-imposed ideal of playing God. 

  2. In prayer, we must ask for the discernment to identify the areas in our life in which we have busied ourselves, whether in productive ways (meetings, activities, house care, etc.) or in unproductive ways (“scrolling,’ binge watching, shopping, etc.). 

  3. In prayer, we must lay our anxieties about not doing and going at the Lord’s feet and ask that he build our trust in him. 

  4. Finally, in prayer, we must ask for the focus to seek first the Kingdom of God. With fewer distractions, spend time away from the doing and going and simply be with God in silence and prayer and the Word. Ask him how you can glorify him more fully and make that the entire goal of your life.

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Daily Reading Michael Key Daily Reading Michael Key

Daily Reading: January 15

 

Today’s Scripture Reading


Reflection and Prayer

  • What do these passages reveal about God, and how can his revealed character cause me to praise him, give him thanks, or wonder at his mystery?

  • How does God speak into the historical situation of the original readers and work to bring about his redemption in Jesus Christ? How does this build my trust in God's ability to fulfill his promises regardless of my present circumstances?

  • What sins do these passages expose that I need to confess before the Lord? In response to the grace of God and by the power of the Holy Spirit, how am I to think, act, and worship differently, putting off my sin and putting on Christ's righteousness?

  • How do these passages challenge the ways I typically engage my spheres of influence? How do they encourage me to live in the Kingdom of God and pray for the redemption of all things?

 

These passages follow the TPC daily Bible reading plan, which leads us as a community through the full breadth of God’s Word over the course of two years. For more information, click here.

To receive these readings to your inbox, sign-up with your email using the link below.

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Daily Reading Michael Key Daily Reading Michael Key

Daily Reading: January 14

 

Today’s Scripture Reading


Reflection and Prayer

  • What do these passages reveal about God, and how can his revealed character cause me to praise him, give him thanks, or wonder at his mystery?

  • How does God speak into the historical situation of the original readers and work to bring about his redemption in Jesus Christ? How does this build my trust in God's ability to fulfill his promises regardless of my present circumstances?

  • What sins do these passages expose that I need to confess before the Lord? In response to the grace of God and by the power of the Holy Spirit, how am I to think, act, and worship differently, putting off my sin and putting on Christ's righteousness?

  • How do these passages challenge the ways I typically engage my spheres of influence? How do they encourage me to live in the Kingdom of God and pray for the redemption of all things?

 

These passages follow the TPC daily Bible reading plan, which leads us as a community through the full breadth of God’s Word over the course of two years. For more information, click here.

To receive these readings to your inbox, sign-up with your email using the link below.

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Daily Reading Michael Key Daily Reading Michael Key

Daily Reading: January 13

 

Today’s Scripture Reading


Reflection and Prayer

  • What do these passages reveal about God, and how can his revealed character cause me to praise him, give him thanks, or wonder at his mystery?

  • How does God speak into the historical situation of the original readers and work to bring about his redemption in Jesus Christ? How does this build my trust in God's ability to fulfill his promises regardless of my present circumstances?

  • What sins do these passages expose that I need to confess before the Lord? In response to the grace of God and by the power of the Holy Spirit, how am I to think, act, and worship differently, putting off my sin and putting on Christ's righteousness?

  • How do these passages challenge the ways I typically engage my spheres of influence? How do they encourage me to live in the Kingdom of God and pray for the redemption of all things?

 

These passages follow the TPC daily Bible reading plan, which leads us as a community through the full breadth of God’s Word over the course of two years. For more information, click here.

To receive these readings to your inbox, sign-up with your email using the link below.

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Daily Reading Michael Key Daily Reading Michael Key

Daily Reading: January 12

 

Today’s Scripture Reading


Reflection and Prayer

  • What do these passages reveal about God, and how can his revealed character cause me to praise him, give him thanks, or wonder at his mystery?

  • How does God speak into the historical situation of the original readers and work to bring about his redemption in Jesus Christ? How does this build my trust in God's ability to fulfill his promises regardless of my present circumstances?

  • What sins do these passages expose that I need to confess before the Lord? In response to the grace of God and by the power of the Holy Spirit, how am I to think, act, and worship differently, putting off my sin and putting on Christ's righteousness?

  • How do these passages challenge the ways I typically engage my spheres of influence? How do they encourage me to live in the Kingdom of God and pray for the redemption of all things?

 

These passages follow the TPC daily Bible reading plan, which leads us as a community through the full breadth of God’s Word over the course of two years. For more information, click here.

To receive these readings to your inbox, sign-up with your email using the link below.

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Daily Reading Michael Key Daily Reading Michael Key

Daily Reading: January 11

 

Today’s Scripture Reading


Reflection and Prayer

  • What do these passages reveal about God, and how can his revealed character cause me to praise him, give him thanks, or wonder at his mystery?

  • How does God speak into the historical situation of the original readers and work to bring about his redemption in Jesus Christ? How does this build my trust in God's ability to fulfill his promises regardless of my present circumstances?

  • What sins do these passages expose that I need to confess before the Lord? In response to the grace of God and by the power of the Holy Spirit, how am I to think, act, and worship differently, putting off my sin and putting on Christ's righteousness?

  • How do these passages challenge the ways I typically engage my spheres of influence? How do they encourage me to live in the Kingdom of God and pray for the redemption of all things?

 

These passages follow the TPC daily Bible reading plan, which leads us as a community through the full breadth of God’s Word over the course of two years. For more information, click here.

To receive these readings to your inbox, sign-up with your email using the link below.

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Daily Reading Michael Key Daily Reading Michael Key

Daily Reading: January 10

 

Today’s Scripture Reading


Reflection and Prayer

  • What do these passages reveal about God, and how can his revealed character cause me to praise him, give him thanks, or wonder at his mystery?

  • How does God speak into the historical situation of the original readers and work to bring about his redemption in Jesus Christ? How does this build my trust in God's ability to fulfill his promises regardless of my present circumstances?

  • What sins do these passages expose that I need to confess before the Lord? In response to the grace of God and by the power of the Holy Spirit, how am I to think, act, and worship differently, putting off my sin and putting on Christ's righteousness?

  • How do these passages challenge the ways I typically engage my spheres of influence? How do they encourage me to live in the Kingdom of God and pray for the redemption of all things?

 

These passages follow the TPC daily Bible reading plan, which leads us as a community through the full breadth of God’s Word over the course of two years. For more information, click here.

To receive these readings to your inbox, sign-up with your email using the link below.

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Shared Practice Michael Key Shared Practice Michael Key

Prayer of Adoration: Week of January 10

During your time of daily prayer, offer a prayer of adoration, worshipping and praising God for who he is.

What?
During your time of daily prayer, offer a prayer of adoration, worshipping and praising God for who he is.

Why?
Every deep relationship requires that we acknowledge the worth of the other person whose fellowship we enjoy. Offering compliments and praise reminds us of their value and completes our enjoyment of their fellowship. This is why Jesus taught his disciples to pray as he did. Purposefully acknowledging the infinite worth of God — “hallowed be your name” — steers our hearts away from adoring ourselves and other creatures, reveals that our heart has truly grasped the magnificence of “our Father in heaven,” and allows us to rest more deeply in fellowship with him.

How?
First, we should observe that in adoration, we acknowledge the marvelous attributes and works of God. These are words of praise focused solely on honoring God apart from any particular circumstances. To adore God is simply to express what is true about him. This in turn functions as a sort of gateway to other forms of prayer like confession, thanksgiving, and petition. For example,

  • Adoration: God, you are great, and there is no one like you.

  • Confession: Lord, I fail to recognize your greatness and constantly try to build up my own reputation and success.

  • Thanksgiving: I thank you that there is none greater than you and that I can have confidence in your care of me.

  • Petition: My troubles are overwhelming, but I know that you are greater, Lord. So please rescue me from my suffering.

Second, if adoration is praising God for who he is, or what is true about him, we can pick any of his attributes and works and express these back to him. (Not that he needs our validation, but this completes our enjoyment of him just as it complete one’s enjoyment of one’s partner to express to them, “You are beautiful” or “You are handsome.”) So explore in prayer God’s holiness, self-sufficiency, omnipotence, grace, love, justice, truthfulness, and more. Helpful resources include:

  • Praying the Attributes of God by Rosemary Jensen (Follow the link to see a preview of seven chapters. This also demonstrates how each attribute is rooted in Scripture and leads to other forms of prayer.)

  • The Knowledge of the Holy by A.W. Tozer (The link provides the full text of the book. Each chapter begins and ends with a prayer concerning an attribute of God.)

  • “Praying the Names and Attributes of God” (This article lists thirty names of attributes of God with simple definitions and relevant Scripture.)

Third, besides the Word-made-flesh, there is no better teacher of prayer than the written Word to enlarge your vocabulary for prayer.

  • As you read Scripture, ask yourself what that passage reveals about God, and turn this into praise. 

  • Take a look at specific prayers of adoration by God’s faithful like Moses (Exodus 15:1-18), Hannah (1 Samuel 2:1-10), Isaiah (Isaiah 40:9-31), Mary (Luke 1:46-55), Paul (Ephesians 1:3-14), or the angels in heaven (Revelation 4:8, 11; 5:9-14).

  • The Psalms, what some have called the Bible’s prayerbook, contain innumerable prayers of worship throughout. Some that focus on adoration include Psalm 8, 18, 24, 29, 33, 34, 36, 46, 47, 65-68, 84, 89-100, 103-107, 111, 113-118, 121, 130, 135-136, 139, and 144-150. Make these your own prayers.

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Daily Reading Michael Key Daily Reading Michael Key

Daily Reading: January 8

 

Today’s Scripture Reading


Reflection and Prayer

  • What do these passages reveal about God, and how can his revealed character cause me to praise him, give him thanks, or wonder at his mystery?

  • How does God speak into the historical situation of the original readers and work to bring about his redemption in Jesus Christ? How does this build my trust in God's ability to fulfill his promises regardless of my present circumstances?

  • What sins do these passages expose that I need to confess before the Lord? In response to the grace of God and by the power of the Holy Spirit, how am I to think, act, and worship differently, putting off my sin and putting on Christ's righteousness?

  • How do these passages challenge the ways I typically engage my spheres of influence? How do they encourage me to live in the Kingdom of God and pray for the redemption of all things?

 

These passages follow the TPC daily Bible reading plan, which leads us as a community through the full breadth of God’s Word over the course of two years. For more information, click here.

To receive these readings to your inbox, sign-up with your email using the link below.

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Daily Reading Michael Key Daily Reading Michael Key

Daily Reading: January 7

 

Today’s Scripture Reading


Reflection and Prayer

  • What do these passages reveal about God, and how can his revealed character cause me to praise him, give him thanks, or wonder at his mystery?

  • How does God speak into the historical situation of the original readers and work to bring about his redemption in Jesus Christ? How does this build my trust in God's ability to fulfill his promises regardless of my present circumstances?

  • What sins do these passages expose that I need to confess before the Lord? In response to the grace of God and by the power of the Holy Spirit, how am I to think, act, and worship differently, putting off my sin and putting on Christ's righteousness?

  • How do these passages challenge the ways I typically engage my spheres of influence? How do they encourage me to live in the Kingdom of God and pray for the redemption of all things?

 

These passages follow the TPC daily Bible reading plan, which leads us as a community through the full breadth of God’s Word over the course of two years. For more information, click here.

To receive these readings to your inbox, sign-up with your email using the link below.

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Daily Reading Michael Key Daily Reading Michael Key

Daily Reading: January 6

 

Today’s Scripture Reading


Reflection and Prayer

  • What do these passages reveal about God, and how can his revealed character cause me to praise him, give him thanks, or wonder at his mystery?

  • How does God speak into the historical situation of the original readers and work to bring about his redemption in Jesus Christ? How does this build my trust in God's ability to fulfill his promises regardless of my present circumstances?

  • What sins do these passages expose that I need to confess before the Lord? In response to the grace of God and by the power of the Holy Spirit, how am I to think, act, and worship differently, putting off my sin and putting on Christ's righteousness?

  • How do these passages challenge the ways I typically engage my spheres of influence? How do they encourage me to live in the Kingdom of God and pray for the redemption of all things?

 

These passages follow the TPC daily Bible reading plan, which leads us as a community through the full breadth of God’s Word over the course of two years. For more information, click here.

To receive these readings to your inbox, sign-up with your email using the link below.

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Daily Reading Michael Key Daily Reading Michael Key

Daily Reading: January 5

 

Reflection and Prayer

  • What do these passages reveal about God, and how can his revealed character cause me to praise him, give him thanks, or wonder at his mystery?

  • How does God speak into the historical situation of the original readers and work to bring about his redemption in Jesus Christ? How does this build my trust in God's ability to fulfill his promises regardless of my present circumstances?

  • What sins do these passages expose that I need to confess before the Lord? In response to the grace of God and by the power of the Holy Spirit, how am I to think, act, and worship differently, putting off my sin and putting on Christ's righteousness?

  • How do these passages challenge the ways I typically engage my spheres of influence? How do they encourage me to live in the Kingdom of God and pray for the redemption of all things?

 

These passages follow the TPC daily Bible reading plan, which leads us as a community through the full breadth of God’s Word over the course of two years. For more information, click here.

To receive these readings to your inbox, sign-up with your email using the link below.

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Daily Reading Michael Key Daily Reading Michael Key

Daily Reading: January 4

 

Today’s Scripture Reading


Reflection and Prayer

  • What do these passages reveal about God, and how can his revealed character cause me to praise him, give him thanks, or wonder at his mystery?

  • How does God speak into the historical situation of the original readers and work to bring about his redemption in Jesus Christ? How does this build my trust in God's ability to fulfill his promises regardless of my present circumstances?

  • What sins do these passages expose that I need to confess before the Lord? In response to the grace of God and by the power of the Holy Spirit, how am I to think, act, and worship differently, putting off my sin and putting on Christ's righteousness?

  • How do these passages challenge the ways I typically engage my spheres of influence? How do they encourage me to live in the Kingdom of God and pray for the redemption of all things?

 

These passages follow the TPC daily Bible reading plan, which leads us as a community through the full breadth of God’s Word over the course of two years. For more information, click here.

To receive these readings to your inbox, sign-up with your email using the link below.

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Daily Reading Michael Key Daily Reading Michael Key

Daily Reading: January 3

 

Reflection and Prayer

  • What do these passages reveal about God, and how can his revealed character cause me to praise him, give him thanks, or wonder at his mystery?

  • How does God speak into the historical situation of the original readers and work to bring about his redemption in Jesus Christ? How does this build my trust in God's ability to fulfill his promises regardless of my present circumstances?

  • What sins do these passages expose that I need to confess before the Lord? In response to the grace of God and by the power of the Holy Spirit, how am I to think, act, and worship differently, putting off my sin and putting on Christ's righteousness?

  • How do these passages challenge the ways I typically engage my spheres of influence? How do they encourage me to live in the Kingdom of God and pray for the redemption of all things?

 

These passages follow the TPC daily Bible reading plan, which leads us as a community through the full breadth of God’s Word over the course of two years. For more information, click here.

To receive these readings to your inbox, sign-up with your email using the link below.

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Shared Practice Michael Key Shared Practice Michael Key

Memorize Scripture: Week of January 3

To mark the season of Epiphany, which draws our attention to the revelation of Jesus’ glory, memorize Hebrews 1:3 by the end of the week.

What?
To mark the season of Epiphany, which draws our attention to the revelation of Jesus’ glory, memorize Hebrews 1:3 by the end of the week.

Why?
When the devil sought to tempt Jesus, the Son of God responded with the Word of God: “Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that comes from the mouth of God” (Matt 4:4, quoting Deut 8:3). He resisted the lure of sin by storing the Word in his heart (Ps 119:11) and relishing it as sweeter than honey (Ps 19:10). By following this pattern of Scripture memorization, we discover the will of God more fully, discern truth from error more easily, disciple others more effectively, and commune with the Father more deeply. In short, we grow more into the image of Christ — full of his life, love, peace, and righteousness.

How?
Memorization techniques abound, and a simple internet search could track down some effective methods (like this one for long-term memorization). But to store the Word in your heart is a deeper process that ought to integrate as much of you — mind, spirit, and body — as possible. With that in mind, here are some helpful tips:

1. Understand the text. Look at the full context in which the passage falls and take time to consider what the author intended to communicate. Do a little study.

2. Meditate on the text. Allow the Word to fill your imagination, considering all the implications of the text and how it affects you directly. Wonder at the majesty of God revealed in the text, express gratitude for his goodness, and join your story to his Story.

3. Pray the text. Turn those verses into a prayer of praise, thanksgiving, confession, or petition.

4. Embody the text. This could mean two things. Embodying the text could refer to living it out, practicing what it says. And you should certainly do that. But also engage the text with your body: Speak it out loud, listen to it, and write it. To challenge your creativity, draw it or turn it into a song.

Combine these with traditional memorization techniques, which usually involve a fair amount of repetition and quizzing yourself, and ask the Holy Spirit to “let the word of Christ dwell in you richly” (Col 3:16). Commit with another person to practice this discipline and hold each other accountable.

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Daily Reading Michael Key Daily Reading Michael Key

Daily Reading: January 1

 

Reflection and Prayer

  • What do these passages reveal about God, and how can his revealed character cause me to praise him, give him thanks, or wonder at his mystery?

  • How does God speak into the historical situation of the original readers and work to bring about his redemption in Jesus Christ? How does this build my trust in God's ability to fulfill his promises regardless of my present circumstances?

  • What sins do these passages expose that I need to confess before the Lord? In response to the grace of God and by the power of the Holy Spirit, how am I to think, act, and worship differently, putting off my sin and putting on Christ's righteousness?

  • How do these passages challenge the ways I typically engage my spheres of influence? How do they encourage me to live in the Kingdom of God and pray for the redemption of all things?

 

These passages follow the TPC daily Bible reading plan, which leads us as a community through the full breadth of God’s Word over the course of two years. For more information, click here.

To receive these readings to your inbox, sign-up with your email using the link below.

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Daily Reading Michael Key Daily Reading Michael Key

Daily Reading: December 31

 

Today’s Scripture Reading


Reflection and Prayer

  • What do these passages reveal about God, and how can his revealed character cause me to praise him, give him thanks, or wonder at his mystery?

  • How does God speak into the historical situation of the original readers and work to bring about his redemption in Jesus Christ? How does this build my trust in God's ability to fulfill his promises regardless of my present circumstances?

  • What sins do these passages expose that I need to confess before the Lord? In response to the grace of God and by the power of the Holy Spirit, how am I to think, act, and worship differently, putting off my sin and putting on Christ's righteousness?

  • How do these passages challenge the ways I typically engage my spheres of influence? How do they encourage me to live in the Kingdom of God and pray for the redemption of all things?

 

These passages follow the TPC daily Bible reading plan, which leads us as a community through the full breadth of God’s Word over the course of two years. For more information, click here.

To receive these readings to your inbox, sign-up with your email using the link below.

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Daily Reading Michael Key Daily Reading Michael Key

Daily Reading: December 30

 

Today’s Scripture Reading


Reflection and Prayer

  • What do these passages reveal about God, and how can his revealed character cause me to praise him, give him thanks, or wonder at his mystery?

  • How does God speak into the historical situation of the original readers and work to bring about his redemption in Jesus Christ? How does this build my trust in God's ability to fulfill his promises regardless of my present circumstances?

  • What sins do these passages expose that I need to confess before the Lord? In response to the grace of God and by the power of the Holy Spirit, how am I to think, act, and worship differently, putting off my sin and putting on Christ's righteousness?

  • How do these passages challenge the ways I typically engage my spheres of influence? How do they encourage me to live in the Kingdom of God and pray for the redemption of all things?

 

These passages follow the TPC daily Bible reading plan, which leads us as a community through the full breadth of God’s Word over the course of two years. For more information, click here.

To receive these readings to your inbox, sign-up with your email using the link below.

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Daily Reading Michael Key Daily Reading Michael Key

Daily Reading: December 29

 

Today’s Scripture Reading


Reflection and Prayer

  • What do these passages reveal about God, and how can his revealed character cause me to praise him, give him thanks, or wonder at his mystery?

  • How does God speak into the historical situation of the original readers and work to bring about his redemption in Jesus Christ? How does this build my trust in God's ability to fulfill his promises regardless of my present circumstances?

  • What sins do these passages expose that I need to confess before the Lord? In response to the grace of God and by the power of the Holy Spirit, how am I to think, act, and worship differently, putting off my sin and putting on Christ's righteousness?

  • How do these passages challenge the ways I typically engage my spheres of influence? How do they encourage me to live in the Kingdom of God and pray for the redemption of all things?

 

These passages follow the TPC daily Bible reading plan, which leads us as a community through the full breadth of God’s Word over the course of two years. For more information, click here.

To receive these readings to your inbox, sign-up with your email using the link below.

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