“O Praise the Lord, all ye nations: praise Him, all ye people. 2. For His merciful kindness is great toward us: and the truth of the Lord endures forever. Praise ye the Lord."
There are times that the fewer the words, the better the statement. This is not true all of the time, but it is certainly true of Psalm 117. This short psalm says so much in so few words that it takes only a few seconds to read it. In fact, when I am reading through Psalms I always enjoy reading the short one, because the next two psalms are very long – particularly Psalm 119. Both of those psalms take a good while to read and to garner all of the truth in them. However, it takes more than a few seconds to meditate on the truth that is contained in the few words of Psalm 117. The first thing about this psalm is that it calls upon us to praise the Lord: “O praise ye the Lord.” Throughout the Bible we are reminded to praise the Lord. In Psalm 117, we are told who should praise the Lord: “O Praise the Lord, all ye nations: praise Him, all ye people.” As many times as I have read this psalm, it occurred to me this time that the psalm is calling for the universal praise of God. As you probably know, the Old Testament is primarily about God’s work with the Israelites, but this psalm calls for all of the nations to praise the Lord. Perhaps, it is looking forward to the time when the Messiah would call the whole world to Himself, and to praise almighty God. Notice that the next call to praise is to “all ye people.” What I see here is that the call is for the nations in general to praise God, then for the people of God to praise Him. Today, we call this people groups. This psalm reminds us that God is God of all nations and all of the people groups that make up all nations. It is a call for everyone to praise God. What we need to do is to do our part in praising God on a daily basis. The second thing about this psalm is that it reminds us about the “merciful kindness” of God. Another translation of this line is “faithful love” of God. The wonderful thing is that the faithful love of God leads to His merciful kindness to His people. It really upsets me that God is getting such bad press from some corners today. Unbelievers talk about how terrible He is because of wrath and judgment. What they are missing in their lostness is that this is just part of the nature of God. He faithfully loves us and is always ready to show His merciful kindness to us. If these unbelievers would take a deep breath and believe they would see this aspect of God that calls us to Himself. It was God’s merciful kindness that led Abraham from Ur of the Chaldees to Canaan. It was God’s merciful kindness that divided the Red Sea for the Israelites. It was God’s merciful kindness that led the Israelites by “a pillar of cloud by day and a pillar of fire by night” in their journey from Egypt to Canaan. It was the merciful kindness of God that sent His Son into the world to offer Himself as a perfect sacrifice for our sins so that we could live with Him in heaven forever if we believe in Him. The third thing about this psalm is that it reminds us that “the truth of the Lord endures forever.” There are a lot of people in the world who think they know the real truth. The real truth is embedded in the person of God Himself. In fact Jesus said in John 14:6: “I am the way, the truth and the Life.” Jesus was the culmination of the Bible’s drive toward the full revelation of the truth of God. The truth is that God loves the world and that it was in His great loving heart, and His great merciful kindness, to save us through His Son. The truth that we have in the God of the Bible reaches from one end of eternity to the other, or as the psalmist often wrote: “from everlasting to everlasting. We don’t know all of the truth about everything, but we know One who does and we join Him by faith in His great truth that endures forever. The psalm closes with a repeat of the call to praise: “Praise ye the Lord.” Bro. Joe
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"Thy mercy, O Lord, is in the heavens; and thy faithfulness reacheth unto the clouds."
Messages about God's nature can be very confusing today. If you listen to some preachers, God has given up and encourages us in any old kind of lifestyle. If you listen to others they tell you that God is so mad at you that you had better watch yourself. Of course, both of these are caricatures of the two natures of God portrayed in the Bible. He is a God of wrath. He even refers to Himself as a "jealous God." But the Bible never says that "God is wrath." It does, however, teach us in 1 John 4:8b that "God is love." Psalm 36:5 gives us two of the greatest evidences of God's love - mercy and faithfulness: Thank God that He is the God of mercy (and grace), for, if He wasn't we would all be in very deep trouble. The greatest example of His mercy, of course, is the coming of Jesus Christ into the world to share His mercy on the cross. Jesus is God's personal statement of His mercy - "mercy in the flesh" if you please. Without the mercy of God, we would have to live daily with His wrath. What I know about His wrath from the Bible, I prefer mercy. The second aspect of His love is faithfulness. Throughout the Bible, God proves Himself faithful to us. 1 John 1:9 states that "If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins." This means that if we sin and come to God in true repentance, He will practice mercy and be faithful to forgive us. Being faithful means that when we come to Him in true confession, the Lord will always forgive us. This is one of the greatest promises of the Bible. Let us be grateful that in His great love, God did not leave us with only His wrath, but that He practices mercy and faithfulness in our lives. Thank Him! Bro. Joe “Sing to the Lord, you saints of His, praise His holy name. 5. For His anger lasts only a moment, but His favor lasts a lifetime; weeping may remain for a night but rejoicing comes in the morning.”
These verses remind us of what our response should be to God no matter how trying life has become. When things are not going well for us, we have a tendency to blame God. We might not consciously admit this, but in the back of our minds we think that God owes us more than we are getting. Blaming God for hardships will get us nowhere. We live in a fallen world and that is the way life is in a fallen world. Trials and tribulations are part of living, and they can be tests of our faith. The question is what is our response to God when things are tough? These two verses from Psalm 30 will tell us what our response should be – regardless. “Sing to the Lord, you saints of His, praise His holy name.” What God wants from us at all times is to praise Him. Praise was not always easy for David and other psalmists. The psalms are full of complaints to the Lord because of what life was handing them at the time. Yet the psalmists also remind us time after time that we are to praise God. In psalm 35:28 David wrote: “And my tongue shall speak of your righteousness and of your praise all the day long.”If we praise God “all the daylong” we will surely, at some point, praise Him in the midst of trouble. Asaph wrote in psalm 50:15: “And call upon me in the day of trouble; and I will deliver you, and you shall glorify (praise) me.” I looked up “praise” in my Strong’s exhaustive Concordance of the Bible, and I found passage after passage about praising God. The Bible is full of the praises of God. I know that life can be hard, and that some things that happen to us are awfully hard to overcome, but it does us no good to give in to self-pity or grumbling and complaining. What we need to do during these times is to “sing to the Lord…praise His holy name.” You will be a better person for it, and you will feel better about yourself. “His anger lasts only for a moment, but His favor lasts a lifetime.” This is a good reminder for us that God is not against us. He might be against the way we are living at a given time, as we are told: “His anger lasts only a moment,” which does mean that He gets angry with us. That anger comes because He knows that we can do better. When you feel God-forsaken, and think that God is not doing anything in your life, remember that you have His favor. We need to be careful with this word “favor.” We can get the idea that when things are not going our way, we have lost God’s favor. Read it again: “But His favor lasts a lifetime…” There are times when we feel God’s favor more than at other times, but God always wants the best for us, and when we forget that fact we stray from what the Lord Jesus wants of us. We do well to remember His favor, especially when we are going through difficult times. “Weeping may endure for a night, but rejoicing comes in the morning.” There are four words that have come to mean a lot to me over the years, and they are: “this, too, shall pass.” That is what David meant when he wrote: “Weeping may endure for a night…” We need to remember that nothing lasts forever. Whatever you are going through right now will come to an end, and at the end of it there will be joy and rejoicing. Sometimes it seems that woes will never end, but they do. What we need to focus on is not the weeping but the joy and rejoicing. The choice as to how we will respond to the “weeping” is really up to us. We can pout and simmer, but that will only prolong the weeping. We just need to remember that when “morning” comes there will be joy and rejoicing. Grab a hold of this truth, and make it a way of life. The right response to the Lord is to praise Him, remember His favor and accept the joy that He sends “in the morning." Bro. Joe “Rejoice the soul of thy servant: for unto thee, O Lord, do I lift up my soul. 5. For thou, Lord, art good, and ready to forgive; and plenteous in mercy unto all them that call upon thee. 6. Give ear, O Lord, unto my prayer; and attend to the voice of my supplication. 7. In the day of trouble I will call upon thee: for thou wilt answer me.”
Someone mentioned to me one day that a lot of my articles are based on Psalms. I thought about that and came to the conclusion that since I am in the process of reading the Bible through all of the time, and there are one hundred fifty psalms, a lot of my Bible reading time is spent in psalms because there are so many of them, and they teach us a lot about life and about God. The text that I have used today is a case in point. David gives a wonderful description of God in the entire 86th psalm, but verses 4-7 especially spoke to my heart. In verse 4, David was rejoicing in the Lord and was in a spirit of prayer. He stated it “I lift up my soul.” When David thought about God, he was touched in the deepest part of himself – his soul. When is the last time that you meditated on God and He touched your soul? I asked myself the same question and concluded that I don’t do it nearly enough. In verses 5-7, David points out why he chose to go in this way. David meditated on the goodness of God: “For thou, Lord, art good.” There are many people who dwell on the judgments of God, and dismiss Him. That is a bad mistake, because God is not just a wrathful deity; rather, He is the God who sent His Son into the world to die for our sins. Take a little time today and meditate on the ways that God has been good to you, and you will feel Him in your soul. If you can’t think of the ways that God has been good to you, you need to do some soul searching and discover, or rediscover the ways that God has been good to you. What about your family? What about your children? What about your grandchildren? What about your Christian friends? What about the fact that you live in this great country? What about the fact that he died on the cross for you that you might have everlasting life as well as a relationship with Him. These ought to give you a few hints about how good God has been to you. David meditated on the forgiveness of God: “For thou, Lord, art good, and ready to forgive." I don’t know what point in his life that David wrote this psalm, but if you know the full story of David, there was plenty for God to forgive. I like to think that David wrote this psalm after he wrote Psalm 51, which was David’s prayer for forgiveness after his sin with Bathsheba. Take a little time and read David’s heart cry to the Lord to take him out of the misery of his guilt. We should praise God, for He is a forgiving God, who will cast our sins behind us and lead us on to a better life. The problem with a lot of people is that they think that they have no reason to be forgiven. Whatever you need to be forgiven for today, take it to the Lord in prayer and you will find that He is still “plenteous in mercy unto all them that call upon Him.” David meditated on the willingness of God to hear his prayer: “In the day of my trouble I will call upon thee: for thou wilt answer me.” David didn’t have to wonder if God would answer him; he knew that God would answer him. He will answer you too. He might answer immediately, or He might tell you to wait for the answer, but He will answer. He is, after all, Sovereign God, and He will answer you based on what is best for you. I have heard people say that they prayed and God did not answer. This is because they do not realize that God answers in His time. Take a little time today and meditate on these verses and draw closer to the God who is good, who is plenteous in mercy, ready to forgive and to answer your prayers. Bro. Joe “Come, see a man, which told me all things that ever I did: is not this the Christ?”
Jesus was traveling from Judea to Galilee, and we are informed in 4:4: “And He must needs go through Samaria.” In other words, Jesus had to go through Samaria. In His infinite mind, Jesus knew that He had an appointment with a sinful woman there, and that a whole town needed Him. Jesus met the woman at Jacob's Well, where she had come to draw water and talked with her. She was a sinful woman who had been married five times and was living with a man out of wedlock at that time. Jesus told this sinful woman that He was/is the Messiah. That’s when she went into the town and told the town’s people about Jesus, and they went out to meet Him and accepted His message as well. (You can read the whole story in John 4.) This is an incident in the New Testament where Jesus changed a desperate woman’s life, and the lives of the people in the town in which she lived. How was she changed? First, before Jesus came into her life the woman was friendless. Women usually went to the well to get water together, but she was there by herself. Since she was a sinful woman, the other women in town wouldn’t have anything to do with her. I like to think that after she told the people about Jesus, she found a new acceptance in that town. The Bible doesn’t follow up on her life, but I believe that she was a changed woman after that encounter with Jesus, and because of Jesus she found a new acceptance among her neighbors. At least they listened to her when she told them about Jesus, and they went out to meet Him and also accepted Him as Messiah. Most importantly, the woman was, no doubt, able to accept herself because of her changed life. Jesus knew this woman’s predicament, and He acted to change her life. After Jesus came to town, the woman had a new fellowship with her neighbors. This is a beautiful picture of Jesus’ acceptance of sinners. Jesus promised that He would accept all who came to Him in faith. This woman was not too sinful to be saved, nor is anyone else if they will just come to Jesus in faith. Second, before Jesus came into her life, the woman was hopeless. Not only was she an outcast in her own community, she was lost in sin, which was reflected in her lifestyle. I imagine to the people who knew her, this woman was hopeless. I think that she probably thought she was hopeless too, and she was until she encountered Jesus at the well. She was given a new lease on life that was filled with the hope of Jesus. We need to understand that no one is really hopeless where Jesus is concerned, and if they have an encounter with Jesus they will be filled with hope. Jesus came to bring hope into a seemingly hopeless world. All over the world, people are accepting Jesus as Savior. Many of them are accepting His hope in spite of the threats on their lives. There is nothing greater than the hope that we have in Jesus. This woman shows us that people can be saved and enter into the hope of Jesus, regardless of what they have done in the past. To get a clearer picture of what I have written, I would like for you to read the fourth chapter of John’s gospel. It might be that there is something in your life that an encounter with Jesus can help you with and give you a renewed hope. It can also help us see that the people we know who seem hopelessly lost can encounter Jesus as well. Like the woman in the text, it might be that we could lead someone to an encounter with Jesus. Read this chapter and think about your own 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 "When I cry unto thee, then shall my enemies turn back: this I know; for God is for me.”
This verse gives us great reassurance when it states: “for God is for me.” Now don’t misunderstand me to be intimating that God approves of everything that we do, and that He is thoroughly impressed with us. Let’s just take this as a statement of fact – God is for us. He is not willing that any should perish, and He does not want anyone to throw their lives away. In fact, throughout the Bible, especially in the accounts of Jesus, there are some things that God offers that we need to claim, because they are there in God’s word for all of us to claim. We need to claim God’s grace. Grace means that, though we are sinners, God is for us anyway and wants the best for us. Grace does not mean that we have God’s blanket approval for everything that we do. It means that in spite of our sins and shortcomings, God still offers us salvation. In Ephesians 2:8 Paul wrote: “For by grace through faith are you saved, and that not of yourselves it is the gift of God.” We can be saved from sin because God is the God of grace. Throughout the Bible we see the grace of God at work. In the Old Testament, we see God’s grace at work in Israel. Time after time the Israelites let God down, and they had to suffer His discipline, but still they were His chosen people and by grace they continued on and it was through them that our Savior came to us. We see God’s grace at work in the life of Paul. Saul of Tarsus was a real, and dreaded, enemy of Christ and His church, but Christ came into His life and turned Paul around. This is grace and it is available to you – claim it. We need to claim God’s mercy. I believe that mercy is God’s grace in action. There are times when we take the grace of God for granted and go too far, but in spite of this, God, through Christ, shows us His mercy. I think of Simon Peter when I think of mercy. During Jesus’ trial in Jerusalem, he denied Jesus three times, in spite of the fact that he had sworn he would not. One would think that Jesus was through with him, yet because of God’s mercy, Peter became a powerful advocate of the gospel of Jesus Christ. Without God’s mercy, this would not have happened. This mercy is available to you – claim it. We need to claim God’s love. Grace and mercy are at our disposal because of God’s love for us. A lot of people read the Bible and all they see is the wrath of God. In fact, they might think, whether they would admit it or not, that God ought not to be like that. But God is who He is and what He is and we cannot change His nature, but one thing is certain – wrath is not the final word about God. Throughout the Bible, God is depicted as the God of love. John wrote that “God is love.” (1 John 4:8) Anyone who has ever been to Sunday School will remember John 3:16, which tells us of the extent of God’s love for us. This has not changed. God still loves us, in fact, God loves you. This love is available to you – claim it. We need to claim God’s forgiveness. God’s grace, mercy and love come together in His forgiveness. Our God of grace, mercy and love, revealed to us through Jesus, is the forgiving God. Throughout the Bible, we see God’s forgiveness at work. We see it at work in Israel. We see it at work in Jesus. In fact, the first words that Jesus offered from the cross were: “Father forgive them, for they know not what they do.” (Luke 23:34) If you have not been forgiven by God for whatever sin, or sins, that you have committed, God will forgive you. We see God’s grace, mercy and love at work in His forgiveness. This forgiveness is available to you – claim it. I don’t know what your present view of God is, but if it does not include His grace, mercy, love and forgiveness, you need to go back and take another look. All that God has to offer is available to you – claim it. Bro. Joe “As Jesus was getting into the boat, the man who had been demon-possessed begged to go with Him. 19. Jesus did not let him, but said, ‘Go home to your family and tell them how much the Lord has done for you, and how much He has had mercy on you. 20. So the man went away and began to tell in Decapolis how much Jesus had done for him. And all the people were amazed.”
I am assuming that you know something about the incident that took place between Jesus and the Gadarene demoniac. I will share a little background that led up to the three verses of our text. Jesus was in a place called Gadara, where He saw a man literally running around necked among the tombs. He was possessed by at least one-thousand demons. Obviously the man was a social outcast. In fact, he was dangerous. The gist of the incident is that Jesus cast the demons out of the man and he was immediately sane. This incident tells us some things about Jesus that we need to know Jesus saw the man and immediately went to him in order to help him. Keep in mind that everyone else passed by the demon-possessed man . Let’s not be too hard on them, because the man was dangerous. The point is that the man whom everyone else shunned, ignored or simply ran away from was loved by Jesus, and Jesus did something to change him. This is how Jesus was in His earthly life, and this is how He is today as He reaches out to us from the right hand of the throne of the Father. Jesus is intensely interested in every aspect of our lives, and He will not pass by us. When we reach out to Jesus, we find Him reaching out to us. When we call out to Jesus, we find that He is ready to hear us and to help us. We are His representatives on earth, and we are to love people as He did. We need to love the “down and out” as much as we do the “up and in.” Through Faith in Jesus, we can have a lot of good things happen in our lives, and through that same faith, we can help other people to have good things happen in their lives. I’m not suggesting that you go out looking demoniacs, I am telling you to love people enough to reach out to them with your faith and love. Jesus knew what the man’s problem was before He encountered him. He did not go to the tombs by accident. In the first place, a naked man running around among the tombs would be well-known. That is not to say that the man was popular, but he would have inevitably been well-known. In fact, if you will read the text, you will find the demons that possessed the man knew who Jesus was. They knew what Jesus could do and begged Jesus not to send them into the abyss (the pit of hell) but into the pigs that were nearby. The point is that the problem that the man had was demon-possession and Jesus rid him of the demons. Jesus will do the same in our lives. Whatever our besetting sins and problems are, Jesus knows about them and He can rid of us them. We must want to be as tired of our besetting sins as much as the demoniac must have wanted to get rid of the demons. We do not have one problem, whether caused by sin or not, that Jesus does not know about and that He cannot help is with. We need to surrender to Jesus and reach out to Him in faith. Jesus did not heal the man of his demons and then just walk off and leave him. Instead, Jesus gave the man a challenge. The demoniac wanted to become a follower of Jesus, but Jesus had another plan for his life. Jesus told him to go home and tell the people who had known him as a demoniac about what Jesus had done for him. He did this and the people were in wonder over what Jesus did for the man. Just as Jesus did for the demoniac, He will do for us. He will give us a greater purpose than we have ever known. He wants us to go out and tell people about what He has done for us. It is quite possible that people will be in wonder over what Jesus has done for you. Keep this in mind: Jesus has a purpose for your life. Put your faith in Jesus, release yourself to His will, and see what He will use you to do. The same Jesus that we saw in this text is alive and at work today. I pray that Jesus is alive and at work in your life. Bro. Joe “Withhold not your tender mercies from me, O Lord: let your loving-kindness and your truth continually preserve me.”
“Have mercy upon me, O God, according to your lovingkindness: according to the multitude of your tender mercies, blot out my transgression.”
Reading the Bible is like a literary feast. For example, every time you read a passage, you can find a new meaning in it. From my standpoint, I believe that God reveals new meanings to believers. That was the case when I read this verse from the fifty-first psalm that I must have read hundreds of times. I want to share with you what I found in this familiar verse. What I saw in the verse this time are three of the greatest blessings that God offers us. First, I saw the greatest appeal that we can make to God, i.e., the appeal to His mercy. David prayed, “Have mercy upon me, O God.” He added to that “according unto the multitude of your tender mercies.” This is the beginning of David’s prayer for forgiveness for his sin with Bathsheba, and against her husband Uriah, after he was confronted by the prophet Nathan. David knew that he had sinned greatly, and that he was not demanding for God to forgive Him but to have mercy on Him. Any of us who come to God for forgiveness must realize that we are appealing to His mercy and His grace. God doesn’t owe it to us to forgive us, but it is according to “the multitude of (His) tender mercies.” Second, I saw the greatest love that we can claim. David not only appealed for God’s mercy, but he made the appeal, knowing that God loved him. The greatest claim that God has over us is His love. The Bible reveals all kinds of things about the vengeance of God on sin, but despite that, we know that He loves us. David did not come away scot free from this sinful episode in his life, but even in the negative things, David knew that God loved him and was teaching him a lesson. He knew that the nature of God is “loving kindness.” This is still true. You can always make a claim on the love of God, and if you are truly repentant and mean what you pray, the love of God will pervade your life. All of we who are sinners, know that this is true. Know that according to God’s abundant mercy, shown to us through Jesus Christ, He loves you and is ready to forgive you. If He forgave David’s adultery and murder, what have you done that in His love and mercy, God will not forgive. Third, I saw the greatest transaction that can take place between God and people, i.e., that David asked God to blot out his transgressions. “Transgression” is defined as “going out of bounds.” David knew that he had gone out of bounds, and he wanted that blotted out in heaven’s record. I know this, that if you come to God through His mercy and love, in real repentance, He will blot out your transgressions as well. The New Testament claim of this is found in 1 John 1:9: “If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.” This was what David asked for in this verse and what we can ask as well. Well, go to it. These three things can happen in your life. Bro. Joe |
AuthorDr. Joe Beauchamp is the author of this blog and website. Categories
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