“For the ways of man are before the eyes of the Lord, and He ponders all his goings.'”
Don’t you agree that it is a sobering thought that God sees everything that we do? That is what our text reveals. It is even goes on to say that “He ponders (our) goings.” This can also be translated the Lord “examines all our ways.” That is even more sobering – at least it is to me. Be honest, it is sobering to you too. (lol, or “oh me.”) What does God see in our lives? (I will use “you” with the understanding that I’m including myself.) Does God see you making excuses for making bad decisions? What I mean by this is, does God see you making decisions that are obviously not in His will for your life? A decision to sin is always a bad decision. We are faced with these decisions every hour on the hour, minute on the minute, or second on the second. Our eyes are bombarded with sinful scenes today everywhere we turn. That is why we need the leadership of the Holy Spirit every minute of the day. I do not mean that we need to obsess about this, but I mean that we need to stay prayed up and read up enough to turn our eyes, minds, and bodies from sinful decisions. (Don’t you agree that this makes us glad that God is a forgiving God?) This leads me to, instead of making excuses for bad decisions, let’s just ask for God’s forgiveness, accept His forgiveness be thankful that He does forgive. Does God see you making excuses for being quiet when you should speak up, and for talking when you should keep quiet. This is a two-edged sword. Let’s just say that there are times when we should speak up for Jesus, and then there are times that we should “shut up for Jesus.” We need to speak up when it is obvious that we can do some good; on the other hand, we need to shut up if what we say will only lead to a meaningless argument. Here again, we need to seek the leadership of the Holy Spirit, and speak up when He prompts us and stay quiet when He does not. We also need to pray that we will be wise enough to know the difference. I will deal briefly with this final point: Does God see you making excuses for bad behavior. There is bad behavior that is just plain old sin, and there is bad behavior that may not be sinful but is useless, and doesn’t do any good. Hey, you know what bad behavior is….stay away from it. (Please understand that I mean me too!!) Amen, Selah, and oh me. Bro. Joe
0 Comments
“Wherewithal (how) shall a young man cleanse his way? By taking heed therein according to your word. 10. With my whole heart have I sought you: O let me not wander from your commandments. 11. Your word have I hid in my heart that I might not sin against you.”
Living a clean life does not seem to be the goal of many people today, but it is certainly still possible to live that kind of life. Living a clean life makes sense spiritually, of course, but it also makes sense physically. Many ailments today stem from people living unwholesome lives. These three verses from Psalm 119 tell us how we can live a clean life. First, we can heed the word of God. To the psalmist the word of God was the Ten Commandments and other laws that were given to Moses on Mt. Sinai and written down for the enlightenment of the people of God. To us the word of God is both the Old and New Testaments, and also Jesus, who fulfilled the Old and New Testaments and made possible the New Testament. John refers to Jesus as "the word,” and Hebrews 1:1-2 declares Jesus to be the ultimate word of God. In order for us to live clean lives, we need to heed what is in the Bible, for there in is a moral law, and we need to heed our relationship with Jesus, for therein is our moral compass. Jesus has given us the Holy Spirit to guide us in the study of the Bible and in the way we live our lives. We cannot ignore the word of God and expect to live a clean life. There are many frustrated church members out there who think that they can live a clean, Christian life and ignore the Bible, and not nurture their relationship with Jesus Christ. Second, we can obey the word of God. The psalmist declared that he sought the Lord with his whole heart. I think that a lot of our spiritual problems arise because of a half-hearted seeking of God in daily life. How do we seek God? One of the main ways we seek Him is by the reading and studying of God's word. It is impossible to stay close to God and ignore His word. Furthermore, the psalmist pleaded: "O let me not wander from your commandments.” We are not saved by keeping the commandments, but we are saved in order to be able to keep the commandments. We can’t take straying from the word of God lightly. This is what happens too many times in the lives of people who are struggling to live a clean life. David always serves as an example in this matter. David did not write this psalm, but he wrote many, if not most of them. We see what happened in David’s life when he wandered from God’s commandments. One night, while he was at “loose ends,” not out with his army, David saw the beautiful Bathsheba and just had to have her. In that weak moment, he strayed from God’s commandments, and his life was never the same afterward. We have to watch those weak moments, for we all have them in one way or another. It is at these times that Satan enters the picture and makes sin look so pleasant to us. This is why we need to wholeheartedly seek every day of our lives and be careful that we do not “wander from (God’s) commandments." Third, we can internalize the word of God. The bottom line was that the psalmist did not just read and study God’s word; he digested it and made it an integral part of his life. This means that we need to read and study the word of God until it becomes part of us. We can memorize scripture, but I prefer to read it until it is stuck in my mind and heart. I do not call this memorizing; I call it internalizing. He hid God’s word in his heart so that he “might not sin against God.” In the scene of Jesus’ temptation in Matthew 4, Jesus defeated Satan by quoting scripture to him. Jesus wasn’t just quoting words that he had memorized, but words that were ingrained in His heart and mind.. Read these three verses again and ask God to help you to use them to live a clean life. Bro. Joe “Then I went down to the potter’s house and there I will cause you to hear my words. 4. And the vessel that he made of clay was marred: so he made it again another vessel, as seemed good to the potter.”
The question is: Will God use broken vessels? According to what Jeremiah wrote in the text above, He will. The gist of what Jeremiah wrote was that when a nation, or as in our case, an individual, goes against God and repents they can be used of God again. There are many people who do not feel that they can be of any use to God because of past transgressions. This might be an excuse on their part not to serve the Lord, or it might be that they genuinely feel that they are unusable. One thing is certain: if they have repented they can be used again, just like the marred pottery in Jeremiah 18:4. This would include you and me. We forget that God’s forgiveness is complete and if our confession and repentance was genuine, God has forgiven it and expects us to forgive ourselves. This doesn’t mean that there will not be scars, but scars are a sign of healing. I want to use some examples from the Bible of how God used “broken vessels.” Of course you know that David comes to mind. In one of his sermons in Antioch in Acts 13:22 Paul wrote: “And when He had removed (Saul) he raised up unto them David to be their king, to whom He also gave testimony and said, I have found David the son of Jesse, a man after mine own heart, which shall fulfill my will.” The point is that David’s sin did not disqualify him to be recognized as God’s servant. Paul obviously wrote this many years after David died. In fact, Jesus referred to Himself as the “root and offspring of David” in Revelation 22:17. If you know the rest of the story about David, you know that things did not go easy for him after his sin with Bathsheba, but he was still used of God after that, and was well-spoken of in the Bible. Another person who comes to mind is Simon Peter. The person with even a minimal knowledge of the New Testament knows that Peter denied Jesus. Before Jesus’ arrest, Peter had declared that, in essence, he would defend Jesus with his own life. Of course you know that when it came time to stand up for Jesus he didn’t do it, but he denied even knowing Jesus. Surely, God couldn’t use such a person as this. But in events after His resurrection, Jesus challenged Peter to “feed my sheep…” On the Day of Pentecost, after Jesus’ resurrection, Peter stood and preached a bold sermon about Jesus and His resurrection and three-thousand people were won to Jesus. God used this “broken vessel” to win many people to Himself. We think of Paul as a mighty man of God who wrote a third of the New Testament and started many churches. But we need to remember that before his conversion on the Damascus Road, Paul had been the number one enemy of Christ’s church in Jerusalem, and sought to go beyond that when he was saved on the Damascus Road. Paul never forgot that he had persecuted the church, and actually referred to himself as “the chief of sinners,” but no one can doubt that this “broken vessel” was used mightily of the Lord. That brings us to you and me. If you are like me, you can’t claim to have lived a faultless life. You might not consider yourself a “broken vessel” but you are a “sinner saved by grace.” Some of you reading this might describe yourself as “broken vessels,” but like the piece of pottery in Jeremiah 18:4 you can be “made over” and be used of God. Don’t give up on yourself, and certainly don’t give up on God. Bro. Joe “And when the Lord saw her, He had compassion on her, and said unto her, Weep not. 14. And He came and touched the bier; and they that bare him stood still. And He said, Young man, I say unto you, Arise. 15. And the dead man sat up, and began to speak. And He delivered him to his mother.”
The incident began when Jesus was approaching the city of Nain, where He saw a funeral procession. The dead man had been the son of a widow. He was the only son that she had, which meant that she was left alone. Jesus did what only Jesus could do – He raised her son from the dead. Jesus didn’t raise every dead person He saw, but He did raise those He was supposed to raise. This incident reveals some interesting things about Jesus. Jesus knew that the dead man was the only son of the widowed mother. This was a desperate situation because there were no social safety nets like those we have today, e.g., Medicare, Medicaid, welfare or Social Security. When her only son died, the woman was left alone in the world with no one to care for her. It could have been that some of her family might help, but evidently Jesus knew that this was not the case. Isn’t it great to know that Jesus is aware of desperate situations like this? I use “is” because Jesus has not changed. He is still aware when we are in desperate situations, and He will help us in whatever way we need helping. I hope that when you are in a situation where there seems that there is no solution that you will look to Jesus, for He will have an answer for you. It is not usually as dramatic as our text, but He will be there in our desperate situations. Notice that Jesus had compassion for the woman. This is typical of Jesus. When Jesus looked out over the multitude of lost people in Matthew 9:36, it is recorded that: “When He saw the multitudes, He was moved with compassion on them, because they fainted, and were scattered abroad, as sheep having no shepherd.” Whatever the situation, when Jesus saw people having seemingly insoluble problems, He had compassion on them. He has not changed. He still has compassion for us. Do you think that as Jesus looks out over the world today that He is not moved with compassion? Jesus doesn’t look at the lost multitudes around the world and turn away with an indifferent shrug. He doesn’t look at people who are hurting in many kinds of situations and just shake His head and say “poor dears.” Just as Jesus had compassion for the woman in the text, and just as He had compassion on the people in Matthew 9, He is still filled with compassion. Indeed, whatever you might be going through Jesus has compassion for you. Rejoice! It is interesting that Jesus acted on His compassion, raised the woman’s son from the dead and returned him to her. Jesus acted on His compassion for the lost multitudes in Matthew 9:37-38: “Then He said unto His disciples, The harvest truly is plenteous, but the laborers are few; 38. Pray ye therefore the Lord of the harvest, that He will send laborers into His harvest.” Do you get the point? Sometimes those of us who are His followers are called upon to act in compassion on His behalf. No one else could have raised the widow’s son from the dead, but that was not true of the lost multitude. Jesus wants us to look at the world with the same compassion that He had while He was on earth and still has today. Jesus does not want us to turn away in disgust, though we see many things that disgust us, but He wants us to be filled with compassion and go lnto the fields which are “ripe unto harvest.” Could it be said of us that we had compassion for the world as Jesus had compassion for the woman in the text? Bro. Joe “For I desire mercy and not sacrifice, and the knowledge of God more than burnt offerings.”
The first thing that I need to do is to define ritual so that there will be no doubt what I mean. Ritualism is defined as: “adherence to and fondness for decorous ceremonial customs in public worship.” (New Webster’s Dictionary) Hosea was writing to the northern kingdom of Israel about God’s judgment on them for the way they were living. The problem was that they were going through all of the rituals of animal sacrifices that God had prescribed through Moses, but that was not enough. The sacrifices were to God, but they were to remind the people what God was/is and how they should live. In other words, Israel was going through the motions of religion, but their hearts and lives were not in it. What the people of Israel did not understand was that God did not just want their empty ceremonies as much as He wanted their hearts. It is the same with us. It is important for us to worship together in church, sing, pray, give and preach. But the act of doing those things in public worship does not mean much if the life that we bring to the worship experience is devoid of dedication to God. God wants us to let our rituals make a difference in the way we live our lives. It is not enough to just “go to church.” Going to church is a good thing, but it is a means to an end. To just go to church and not let it have some effect on our lives is like the Israelites taking their sacrifices to the altar without it touching their lives and making a difference in how they lived. The Bible tells us in Hebrews 10:25 to not forsake “the assembling of ourselves together.” Therefore it is important to attend public worship, but our mere bodily presence is not enough. I compare going to church to fueling my car. I do not take my car to the service station (usually convenience store) to buy gas just for the sake of buying gas. The church is our service station where we go to get fueled up to live each day for the Lord, just as I take my car to buy gas so that it will take me where I need to go. If you think that just being in church is all that God requires, you have missed the point. It is not enough to just read the Bible. Reading the Bible can be an empty ritual if reading it does not help us to live better lives. One of my daily rituals is to read eight chapters from the Bible. But when I stand before the Lord, He is not going to commend me for arbitrarily reading eight chapters each day. He is going to be more interested in what reading the Bible did for my life. We will not be commended for just reading the Bible, but we will be commended for the difference that reading it made in our lives. Don’t misunderstand me, ritually reading the Bible is not a bad thing, for if we do not read it, we cannot know what’s in it. But the reading of it should make a difference in our lives. As you live your life today, remember that God “desires mercy and not sacrifice, and the knowledge of God more than burnt offerings.” Bro. Joe “For whoso findeth me findeth life, and shall obtain favor of the Lord.”
Several Years ago coming back from Albany I read an interesting saying on the bulletin board at the Church of the Nazarene: “Are you living or just existing.” It is a good question. Our text was about finding the wisdom of God to find real life. (The “me” in our text is spoken by “wisdom.”) The question asked by our title suggests that there is real life that is full of meaning, or there is life that is not full of meaning and just goes on from day to dreary day. I want to share with you what I have found to be real life that has kept me from “just existing.” Proverbs 9:10 records that: “The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom.” I believe that a full and meaningful life begins with a deep reverence for God. People sometimes take God lightly by calling Him something like “the man upstairs,” or the “old man in the sky,” or some name that takes away from the reverence and worship of God. Life is made more meaningful when we worship our Creator. I can’t imagine anything more boring and meaningless than going through life thinking that there is no God, no Jesus who loves people sacrificially. If we would “find life” we would live for something beyond ourselves. A lot of the problems that people have today is that they live only for themselves. They could be good providers for their families, good citizens, involved in the community, but their lives are not built on anything beyond themselves. Everything that they do is for their own good or for the good of their loved ones. The parameters of their lives are too small. If all I had to live for is myself, I think life would be humdrum, and that I would be merely existing. It is good to go to bed each night and know that God/Jesus is alive and at work in the world through the Holy Spirit. It is satisfying for me to know that He loves me and has use for me in His purposes for this world. If we would find life and not just exist, we would have a great purpose for being alive. It begins with receiving Christ as Savior and finding our purpose within His will. This came easily to me because I was called to preach at an early age, and was the pastor of a church when I was twenty-one-years old. I have often said that the only reason I persevered through college and later through seminary, then a year of further study was that I had a purpose for doing it. If I had just been floating through college, I probably would have “shipped over” in the Navy. Now you know that Christian ministry is not the only thing in my life, for I have two daughters, a son-in=law and four grandchildren. (I also have two Grand=dogs.) They are all very special to me, but having a great purpose has even helped me enjoy them more. You don’t have to be a preacher to have a prevailing purpose for your life. You can be a servant of God wherever you are and whatever job you go to each day. Having God involved in your purpose would make you a better plumber, a better salesman, or whatever your occupation. I have known many fine lay people whose lives were enriched in every way that their purpose for living was to please God. If we would find life and not just exist, we would really serve God with all of our hearts. Jesus said that He came to bring abundant life to those who would believe in Him. That abundant life includes loving God with all of our hearts, minds, souls and strength. It also involves loving our neighbor as ourselves. If a person loves God and people he or she will be really living and not just existing. Look at your own life and ask yourself if you are really living or just existing. Bro. Joe “From that time many of His disciples went back, and walked no more with Him. Then said Jesus unto the twelve, Will you also go away?”
We usually think of Jesus’ twelve disciples as the only people who followed Him. They were appointed as apostles, but He had more followers than "the Twelve." A lot of people followed Jesus because of His miracles, and because they were fascinated with His teaching. But when it became clear that following Him would call for complete devotion, many turned away from Him and went on about their mundane lives. There are many people today who are fascinated with Jesus, but when it becomes clear to them that Jesus will make demands on their lives, they turn away without being saved. I want to explore reasons why I think people turn away from Jesus before they give their lives to Him. People today turn away from Jesus for much the same reason that the people in the text turned back, i.e., Jesus was not what they wanted Him to be. Jesus is who the Bible says He is. I hear and read many things about Jesus today that are not true. There is some idea afloat out there that Jesus does not really care how people live, or what people believe. These people have divorced Jesus from the rest of the Bible. People want to accept Jesus and do away with Paul. Jesus teaches us to be humble and to love all people, but He does not expect us to agree with people who have rejected Him and His calling on their lives. When it became clear to these people in the text that Jesus was not just a miracle worker, and that He would make some demands on their lives, they turned back from following Him. Jesus came to give His life as a ransom for our sins. He came to call out people to serve Him and , if need be, at some cost to themselves. Jesus is who and what He is, and we can’t make Him be what we want Him to be. People turn away from Jesus because He does not always do what they tell Him to do. Some people seem to think that praying in the name of Jesus is simply a formula for success. It is true that we have abundant and victorious life because of Jesus, but our every wish is not His command. It is thought today that all Jesus wants is for us to be happy. I’m not going to say that Jesus is against our being happy, but He wants to make a difference in what makes us happy. Let’s turn to the “beatitudes” in Matthew 5 for an example. In verse 10, Jesus said: “Blessed are they which are persecuted for righteousness’ sake: for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.” “Blessed” also means “happy.” This does not tell us that if we follow Jesus, we will not have any problems. It is not just that Jesus is happy when we are happy, but that we should also be happy when He is happy. Jesus will answer all of our prayers, but at times He will tell us what He told Paul in 2 Corinthians 12:9 after Paul asked for healing from his thorn in the flesh: “And He said unto me, My grace is sufficient for thee: for my strength is made perfect in weakness.” People turn away from Jesus because He is not popular with the world. The name of Jesus is almost a lightning rod in some places today. It is like people want to remove His name from the public conscience. Jesus told His disciples in John 15:18-19: “If the world hate you, you know that it hated me before it hated you. 19. If you were of the world, the world would love his own: but because you are not of the world, but I have chosen you out of the world, therefore the world hates you.” The Jesus of people’s imagination might be popular, but the Jesus who makes demands on people’s lives is not popular, and we will not be popular in the world at large if we follow Him. I don’t mean to turn you away from following Jesus, but to remind you that if you follow Jesus, it must be for the right reasons. Bro. Joe “And she (Martha) had a sister named Mary, which also sat at the feet of Jesus, and heard His word. 42. But one thing is needful, and Mary has chosen that good part, which shall not be taken away from her.”
\Mary and Martha both loved Jesus, and Jesus, evidently, considered them to be His good friends. He seemed to be comfortable in their home. The problem arose when Martha became irate with Mary because she sat at the feet of Jesus and was not helping her with the work that had to be done. Mary’s response to Jesus impressed Him more than Martha’s. Mary sat at His feet. Martha was concerned about preparations for the important guest, but Mary chose to take advantage of His presence to sit at His feet. We need to follow Mary’s example. To see why we should follow Mary’s example, let’s look at what took place between Mary and Jesus as she sat at His feet. The first thing that took place was worship. Mary forgot about everything but Jesus. This is the essence of worship. Worship doesn’t occur just because we say that we are at worship. No matter where we are, at home, at church, or anywhere else, worship takes place when we give Jesus our complete attention. Mary worshiped Jesus because she knew that He was more than a mere man. Her conversation with Jesus in John 11 reveals that she knew that Jesus was the Messiah, and that He was the Son of God. She knew that Jesus was worthy of worship. What we know about Jesus should cause us to sit at His feet in worship as well. With this in mind, how much time do you spend at the feet of Jesus. Who Jesus is and what He did for you at Calvary should teach you that worshiping Him is important. The second thing that took place between Mary and Jesus was teaching. Mary “heard His word….” What took place was not just idle chit chat. Jesus shared His word with Mary. We can compare this to Jesus sharing His word with the men on the Emmaus Road. Jesus taught those men about Himself from scripture. This is possibly what took place with Mary. Sitting at Jesus’ feet and worshiping Him, Mary learned about the scriptures that referred to Jesus. Mary heard Jesus’ word because she knew what He said was important. Mary knew that she needed to grow in her knowledge of Jesus. We can grow in knowledge of Him if we will take the time to sit at His feet in prayer and in study of His word. The third thing that took place between Mary and Jesus was that she was commended for sitting at His feet worshiping Him. This was the “one needful thing” at that moment. Jesus did not love Mary more than He loved Martha. He commended Mary because she chose “the good part, which shall not be taken away from her.” The meal that Martha was preparing would be eaten and be over, but what Mary received from Jesus could never be taken away from her. Temporal things can be taken away from us, but time spent with Jesus has eternal meaning and can never be taken away. Mary chose what was best. Spending time at Jesus’ feet is an urgent matter, and worshiping Him and learning His word is always the best thing to do. Could Jesus commend you for sitting at His feet and hearing His word? Could Jesus commend you for choosing the most important over the least important? Learn from Mary’s experience. Spend more time worshiping Jesus and hearing His word. Do not let the distractions of the world keep you from Him. Bro. Joe “Rejoice in the Lord always(s): and again I say: Rejoice!"
This is virtually a command to rejoice, but not to just rejoice but to “rejoice in the Lord.” This doesn’t mean to just be happy when everything is going in our favor. We are reminded to “always” rejoice – “in the Lord.” I want to share with you what I think that it means to “rejoice in the Lord.” We should rejoice in the salvation that God offers us through His grace. Being saved, being made right with God through faith in Jesus, is ample reason to rejoice, even in the difficult times. Hebrews 7:24-25 reminds us of a good reason to rejoice: “But this man (Jesus), because He continues ever, has an unchangeable priest hood. 25. Wherefore He is able also to save them to the uttermost those that come to God by Him, seeing He ever lives to make intercession for them.” Do you see what this means? It means that, through Jesus, and the Holy Spirit, who indwells us, God is personally involved in our lives. That Jesus intercedes for us, means that He is praying for us, and leading us to a better life. We should rejoice in the hope that we have in Christ. Romans 12:12 reminds us of this hope that we have in Christ: “Not slothful in business; fervent in spirit, serving the Lord; 12. Rejoicing in hope; patient in tribulation (trouble); continuing instant in prayer.” The hope that we have in Christ is not the “hope so” kind of hope that we think of today. According to Vine’s Dictionary of New Tesatment Words it means, “favourable and confident expectation.” We are secure in our relationship with Jesus Christ, for He “is our hope.” (1 Timothy 1:1b) According to Colossians 1:27, Jesus is our “hope of glory.” This doesn’t mean that we will have self glory, but that we have the eternal glory that He alone can give, that is, eternal life beginning in this life and continuing through all eternity. Rejoice in the hope that Jesus gives, and is, in our lives. We should rejoice in the peace that we have in Christ. Look at the promise given in John 14:27: “Peace I leave with you, my peace I give unto you: not as the world gives, give I unto you. Let not your heart be troubled, neither let it be afraid.” We are reminded in Philippians 4:27 that through prayer we can have “the peace of God, which passes all understanding.” We should not just seek peace of mind, but we should seek the “peace of God” that we have by faith in Jesus Christ, and by the indwelling of the Holy Spirit. There is much, much more that could be written on this subject, but I think that the three that I have given here can give you a good start in “rejoicing in the Lord always.” Bro. Joe "After this manner pray ye: Our Father which art in heaven, hallowed be thy name."
Today is a good time for us to remember the Father that Jesus referred to in the Model Prayer. We need to remember that He is our Heavenly Father. We do not know where heaven is, but we know that it does exist and that our Heavenly Father is there. This means that He is always above us and knows what is going on in the universe that He created. We need to remember that He is our Holy Father. Jesus told us to pray, "Our Father which art in heaven, hallowed be thy name." We should never forget that He is our Holy Father, and that He is all holy all of the time. There is nothing about our Heavenly Father that is imperfect. I do not even know how to explain His holiness, except to write that He is holy and that there is never anything about Him that is unholy. We need to remember that He is our loving Father. The Bible reminds us that He "so loved the world that he gave His only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in Him should not perish but have everlasting life." (John 3:16) This is one of my favorite texts in the Bible. It amazes me that the One Who abides in heaven, Who created the World and Who is all holy, loves me. We cannot claim holiness for ourselves, but we can know that God Who is all holy loves everyone of us. He loves you!!! Pause for a moment and praise Him, and thank Him for His love. We need to remember that He is our present Father, our available Father. Our Heavenly Father is always only a prayer away. The remarkable thing is that He is always available to us, and that He longs for us to avail ourselves of His availability. He is only a prayer away from you. Pause for a moment and thank Him for His availability. If you have not received the salvation that He offers, you can do that now by confessing that you are a sinner, that you want to be forgiven for sin and that you want to invite His Son into your life! If you have received His salvation, thank Him and praise Him! Bro. Joe |
AuthorDr. Joe Beauchamp is the author of this blog and website. Categories
All
Archives
September 2021
|