Leaving Matters with God

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The following message by Alistair  Begg is made available by Truth For   Life  for more information visit  us online at truthforlife.org. I invite you to follow along as I read  from 1 Samuel and chapter 24. First Samuel   24 and reading from the first verse: “When Saul returned from following the   Philistines, he was told, ‘Behold, David is  in the wilderness of Engedi.’ Then Saul took   three thousand chosen men out of all Israel  and went to seek David and his men in front   of the Wildgoats’ Rocks. And he came to the  sheepfolds by the way, where there was a cave,   and Saul went in to relieve himself. Now David  and his men were sitting in the innermost parts   of the cave. And the men of David said to him,  ‘Here is the day of which the LORD said to you,   “Behold, I will give your enemy into your hand,  and you shall do to him as it shall seem good to   you.”’ Then David arose and stealthily cut off  a corner of Saul’s robe. And afterward David’s   heart struck him, because he had cut off a  corner of Saul’s robe. He said to his men,   ‘The LORD forbid that I should do this thing to  my lord, the LORD’s anointed, to put out my hand   against him, seeing he is the LORD’s anointed.’  So David persuaded his men with these words and   did not permit them to attack Saul. And Saul  rose up and left the cave and went on his way.  “Afterward David also arose and went out of the  cave, and called after Saul, ‘My lord the king!’   And when Saul looked behind him, David bowed with  his face to the earth and paid homage. And David   said to Saul, ‘Why do you listen to the words  of men who say, “Behold, David seeks your harm”?   Behold, this day your eyes have seen how the LORD  gave you today into my hand in the cave. And some   told me to kill you, but I spared you. I said,  “I will not put out my hand against my lord,   for he is the LORD’s anointed.” See, my father,  see the corner of your robe in my hand. For by   the fact that I cut off the corner of your robe  and did not kill you, you may know and see that   there is no wrong or treason in my hands. I have  not sinned against you, though you hunt my life   to take it. May the LORD judge between me and  you, may the LORD avenge me against you, but my   hand shall not be against you. As the proverb  of the ancients says, “Out of the wicked comes   wickedness.” But my hand shall not be against you.  After whom has the king of Israel come out? After   whom do you pursue? After a dead dog! After a  flea! May the LORD therefore be judge and give   sentence between me and you, and see to it and  plead my cause and deliver me from your hand.’  “As soon as David had finished speaking these  words to Saul, Saul said, ‘Is this your voice,   my son David?’ And Saul lifted up his voice and  wept. He said to David, ‘You are more righteous   than I, for you have repaid me good, whereas I  have repaid you evil. And you have declared this   day how you have dealt well with me, in that you  did not kill me when the LORD put me into your   hands. For if a man finds his enemy, will he let  him go away safe? So may the LORD reward you with   good for what you have done to me this day. And  now, behold, I know that you shall surely be king,   and that the kingdom of Israel shall be  established in your hand. Swear to me therefore   by the LORD that you will not cut off my offspring  after me, and that you will not destroy my name   out of my father’s house.’ And David swore this to  Saul. Then Saul went home, but David and his men   went up to the stronghold.” Amen.  Your Word, Lord, reminds us that all the things  that were written down concerning the past have   been recorded for our encouragement, so that  through endurance and the encouragement of the   Scriptures we might have the hope about which  we’ve just been singing. And we pray now that   our study in this twenty-fourth chapter of  1 Samuel will fasten us to the Rock that   is higher than ourselves, even to Christ  himself. For we pray in his name. Amen.  Well, if you’re looking for a summertime read, a  book that you can enjoy, let me suggest to you a   book called The Meaning of Everything. It was  written by Simon Winchester. It’s not a book   about science. It’s actually a book that concerns  the creation of the Oxford English Dictionary—I   think some of you are probably already taking  that off your list rather than putting it on,   but it is very fascinating—under the editorship  of a Scotsman by the name of James Murray, who   was called Professor James Murray, although he was  never a professor. Anyway, I won’t spoil the book   for you. You will only be interested if you share  my interest in the origin of words—etymology,   as it’s called, technically—and particularly  the way in which the meanings of words often   change with the passage of time. For example,  the verb to grab. To grab. That word comes out of   Middle Dutch, or Middle German, in the sixteenth  century. And the meaning of the word—its essential   meaning—is to seize something forcibly or roughly,  or to get something by unscrupulous methods.  Now, allow that to settle in your mind, and then  acknowledge with me that it is quite common today   to be invited, for example, if you have attended  a church service, and someone says to you,   “If you do not have a bulletin, why don’t you  grab one right now?” Or, “Why don’t you wait for   a moment,” says the waitress, “and I will grab for  you a menu?” Now, depending on your age and your   cultural context, you may have been taught not  to grab, but instead to wait until you’re served,   so that in family life, you remember your  mother saying, “Now, don’t grab from your   sister. Wait until she gives it to you.” Now, the reason for this brief introduction   is in order that we might note that this passage  gives us an indication of how David refuses to   succumb to the temptation to grab something which  is only God’s to give. He refuses to grab at it,   recognizing that it is only God’s to dispose. You  see how important it is that our understanding of   the verb to grab is in concurrence with this  unfolding story. You have it, actually, in   relationship to the priesthood in Hebrews, where  the writer to the Hebrews says of the priesthood,   “No one takes this honor for himself,” or “no  one grabs this,” “but only when called by God,   just as Aaron was.” So that’s the principle. Now, in this twenty-fourth chapter, all of the   action is in the first seven verses, and then what  you have in the balance of it is a conversation.   Or, if you like, the drama is in verses 1–7,  and the dialogue follows in verses 8 to the end.  First of all, we recognize that here we’re  told that Saul renews his pursuit. We have   been following along as David has been chased  from one place to another, and most recently,   he and his men had made their way up from the  Dead Sea into the caves that are in the region   of Engedi. And Saul, who had been diverted from  his pursuit because of a war with the Philistines,   has now apparently dealt with the Philistines.  Incidentally, it was his legitimate task to deal   with the Philistines. It was entirely illegitimate  for him to be doing what he was doing,   which is seeking to kill the Lord’s anointed. And so, out of 23 and into 24, the scene moves   from the Rock of Escape to the Wildgoats’ Rocks.  And if you have had the privilege of visiting   Israel, you will have this scene very firmly  in your mind, because it would be surprising   if your guide did not take you here, up in  the region from the Dead Sea up to Engedi,   where a perennial spring pours out and down  that hillside, offering respite to the parched   travelers who are trying to make their way to the  top, and dotted all around it a variety of caves.  We’re told that Saul has taken “three thousand  chosen men out of all Israel.” If you remember   at all, it will take you all the way back to 13,  when that is how the whole story of Saul begins,   with him taking hold of three thousand chosen men.  And in some ways, not much has moved on, and yet   a whole lot has moved on. You see the disparity  between the force that he is able to amass and the   six hundred people that David now has, a variety  of losers and vagrants and misfits. And so,   when you look at that on the basis of simply the  numbers alone, it appears very clearly that Saul   and his men have the upper hand. But as we’re  about to see, things are different from that.  And Saul chooses to use one of these caves  as a toilet. This is a detail that doesn’t   often come into the Scriptures, and so it  comes very purposefully, because it is a   key part of the narrative—a reminder that even  kings have to go to the bathroom. Little did   he know that the cave that he had chosen was  the exact cave in which David and his men were   sequestered. You see that in the text: that  he went in there, and “David and his men were   sitting in the innermost parts of the cave.” It’s a really quite funny picture, isn’t it?   In he goes, he’s completely oblivious to this, and  I imagine that somebody says, “It looks to me that   someone has just come into the cave,” looking out  from the depth where they find themselves. Someone   says, “Well, can you see him?” And the person  says, “Well, actually, he has his back to me at   the moment. Oh, but wait a minute. It looks like…  It looks like Saul!” “Saul!” says someone. “This   is perfect! This is ideal! Surely this is the  day of which the Lord has spoken. Here is our   chance,” looking at David, “to eliminate him!” And you can see there in verse 4 that the men of   David seek to interpret the circumstances as  being a clear indication of the plan of God.   They’re the ones who apparently know what David  should do. And what they’re actually doing is   they’re collating what they had heard previously.  If you look back to chapter 23—it’s easy for me,   it’s an open page here—in 23:4, “David inquired of  the LORD again. And the LORD answered him, ‘… Go   down to Keilah, for I will give the Philistines  into your hand.’” Well, that was the word that   God had spoken: “I will give the Philistines  into your hand.” And David’s men, I think,   are putting two and two together, and they’re  saying, “Well, the Philistines are your enemy,   and Saul is your enemy; he’s your enemy  continually. And therefore, it seems only right,   David, that you should go and do to him as it  shall seem good to you.” Let me just pause and   say, let’s be careful about taking counsel from  people. Just because there’s a lot of them all   saying the same thing doesn’t mean they’re right. And so, what happens is that David then arose in   response to this circumstance, in the balance of  verse 4, and he “stealthily cut off a corner of   Saul’s robe.” Now, every time we have a mention of  the robe, our ears should prick up. You remember   that we had in 15, in that dramatic moment, the  tearing of the robe of Samuel. If you go way,   way back to the very beginning, you remember  that Hannah made for Samuel, as a boy,   a robe. And the story of Samuel and his robe  will appear again before we get to the end   of the book. We remember, too, in chapter 18  that it is the robe that Jonathan is wearing,   as the one who is the heir to the kingdom, that  he removes and places then on David. And so it   is a very significant thing here that David does  as he does by cutting off a corner of the robe.  Now, compared to what he could have cut off,  this seems pretty tame. And it seems to me   that his men were saying to one another, “Well,  goodness gracious, if you’re not going to do this,   then why don’t we just take care of it for you?”  I think that’s the significance of verse 7,   where he has to persuade his men and grant  them no permission to go and get ahold of Saul.  Now, in relationship to this, a couple of  things to observe. How this has actually taken   place—whether his cunning and his stealth  is such, and the sharpness of his sword,   makes it possible for him to execute this  while the robe is still on Saul’s back,   or whether Saul had removed his robe in order  to go about his business—we don’t know. All   that we know is he cut off a corner of the robe. Now, in light of that, how do we account for verse   5? “And afterward[s] David’s heart struck him,  because he had cut off a corner of Saul’s robe.”   I mean, our immediate reaction is to say, “Well,  surely it’s no big deal. I mean, he didn’t do what   the men said.” And we don’t even know whether,  when he went towards Saul, he even had it in his   mind to do. What we do know is his reaction to it. You see, David knew that although the Spirit of   God had departed from Saul, he was still  the Lord’s anointed king. And he knew that   the anointed of the Lord should never be  cursed or killed. And so his conscience   is immediately burdened by what he’d done. It’s  his conscience that gets him here. The men must   have been mystified when he said to them, “The  LORD forbid that I should do this … to my lord,   the LORD’s anointed.” You see, what he is  actually doing is he is cutting off—cutting   off, as it were, symbolically—the kingdom. Conscience is a very important part of our lives,   isn’t it? In fact, there is a sense in which we  could view this story in terms of a hardened,   seared conscience, as found in Saul, and  a sensitive conscience, as found in David.  If I may just pause for a moment and say a  couple of things concerning conscience. Now,   don’t look to Freud and those who have followed  him to explain this. Conscience, the Bible says,   is a basic building block of our very humanity.  And it’s because of that, if you think about it…   Why is it that even from infancy—why is it  from infancy—we know the experience of guilt   or of shame; we know, when our conscience is set  right, the joy of innocence and of peace? Why is   it that even when you’re a tiny boy or a girl  and you reflect on your words or you reflect   on your actions, you attribute to them a moral  evaluation? Why do people do that? Of course,   Freud and those who follow him say, “Well, that’s  just a problem. They’re influenced by events   outside of them, the expectations of society, and  so on.” But no! Children will come to you and say,   “I’m sorry, that was a wrong thing to do,”  or “I’m so glad that I did the right thing.”  Now, we mustn’t delay on this, but if you want  to follow up on it, you should. And consider   the fact that when Paul addresses this aspect  in Romans chapter 2, where he has spoken about   the law of God—how the law of God, the natural  law, is written into the human heart—and then he   goes on to say, “But even people who don’t  know anything about the Ten Commandments,   if you meet them, they also operate on  the basis of this natural law.” Peterson,   paraphrasing a couple of verses in Romans 2: when  we react in this way, we “show that God’s law is   not something alien, imposed on us from without,  but woven into”—“woven into”—“the very fabric of   our creation … something deep within [us] that  echoes God’s yes and no, [his] right and wrong.”  A guilty conscience is a heavy burden. In  fact, conscience, and a guilty conscience,   lies at the very heart of mental health. And it is  in Jesus that conscience is settled. Walt Chantry,   in a wonderful sentence, says, “Conscience is  a friend to hurry you into the arms of the only   Saviour from the broken law and its curse.” David  had a sensitive conscience. Saul had a seared   conscience. What kind of conscience do you have? Now back, and quickly, to the text. Notice that   in verse 3 we’re told that Saul went into the  cave, and in verse 7, he came out of the cave,   so that all that we have in the intervening  verses he was completely unaware of. He was   unaware of the fact that he was so vulnerable,  because the sword that cut the corner of his   robe could easily have taken over his life. But with verse 7 the action ends and we go to   the conversation. Essentially, what we have are  two speeches: one made by David, whereby he gives   to Saul an explanation, and then one by Saul,  by which he gives to us a virtual confession.  Verses 8–15. Picture the scene. Saul is now on  his way to join his men, and as he makes his   way out of the cave and down the hillside,  he hears his name being called—actually,   not just his name but his title: “My lord  the king!” And when he turns, he sees his   archenemy standing outside the entrance to the  very cave that he had just used as a bathroom.  And so, here we have this pivotal moment. Not  only does the Lord know when a sparrow falls to   the ground, but he knows when Saul goes to the  bathroom—and frankly, he knows when you go too.   Saul might have looked and said, “I can’t believe  it, that you would stand there, you rascal,   you crazy rascal! Do you realize that I have  got three thousand men here that I can call,   and we’ll take care of you in an instant!” It’s  interesting he doesn’t do that. But he’s got a   history with David, doesn’t he? I mean, at the  very beginning, when none of his great soldiers,   none of his army of three thousand, would go out  to fight Goliath, it was a boy, a shepherd boy,   who had explained, “The LORD who delivered me  from the paw of the lion and … the paw of the   bear will deliver me.” Maybe that reverberated  in Saul’s mind as he looks at him there.  So, consider David’s greeting. Respectful: “My  lord the king.” His posture: he bows in homage.   His question, verse 9: “Why do you listen to the  words of those who seek to steer you wrong? Why   are you listening? Why are you taking advice from  the wrong people, from the people who tell you,   ‘You have a real problem, because David seeks  your harm’?” He has reason to say to him,   “You know, I was on the receiving end of bad  advice just earlier today, but I rejected it,   and you should have rejected it too. They told me  to kill you. But I spared you. I spared you—even   though the Lord had given me into your hands;  even though God, in the mystery of his providence,   had so worked that by your own free choice  you ended up in the particular cave in   which all of us were hiding. But I spared you.” “And here’s my evidence, Saul.” You can see him   holding up a corner of the robe. “See, my father.”  See his tenderness again? “See, my father.” This   is not playacting by David. This is sincere. He  has a sincere view of God. He has a sincere view   of the servants of God, and even the flawed  servants of God. “See, my father. And you can   consider, by the fact that I cut off the corner  of your robe and did not kill you, you can realize   that I am not a rebel. You can understand that  my hands are guiltless. And yet, although I am   not seeking to do this to you,” the end of verse  11, “you are hunting my life to take it.” He’s   very straightforward, isn’t he? He’s quite brave,  I would say. It’s one thing to say, “I haven’t   been looking for you,” but then to challenge him  in this way and say, “but I know that what your   plan is, what you want to do, is to eliminate me.” And then notice in verse 12: he says, “Let’s leave   it to the Lord to decide this matter. May the Lord  judge between me and you. May the Lord avenge me   against you. If he chooses to do so, fine,  but my hand shall not be against you.” Now,   notice, he says that twice, there at the end of  verse 12, and then again at the end of verse 13:   “My hand shall not be against you. You should hear  this, Saul. You should understand this.” And those   two statements provide the bread, as it were,  and the center of the sandwich is this ancient   proverb, “Out of the wicked comes wickedness.” Now, David is very skillful here. Because what   he actually does is apply it to himself. He  doesn’t immediately say, “And you’re wicked,   and I’m not wicked.” No. What he essentially says  is, “If I was wicked, I would have acted wickedly.   And I would have done what I have chosen not to  do—namely, to take matters into my own hands.”  We could pause here for a while, but we won’t. And  some of us have made a career out of phraseology   like this: “Well, I just took matters into my own  hands.” “Well, I knew a shortcut to take.” “Well,   I cut through the things that everybody  else says are important.” You don’t find   any of that in him at all: “If I was  wicked, I would have acted wickedly.”  “Wickedness comes out of the wicked.” You see  that? Out of the wicked comes wickedness. And   then he says, “After whom has the king of Israel  come out?” You see what he’s doing? Now he pushes   the envelope. “After whom do you pursue? After a  dead dog! After a flea!” You see what he’s saying?   “I don’t represent much of a threat. You’re the  one with three thousand. I’m in a cave here with   six hundred men. If I introduced you to them, you  wouldn’t be impressed with hardly any of them at   all.” And so, once again, leave it to God: “May  the Lord,” verse 15, “therefore be the judge. May   he give sentence between me and you, and see to it  and plead my cause and deliver me from your hand.”  You notice that David is not saying, in  contemporary terms—and this is another word that   has been parlayed into interesting service—he’s  not saying, “Whatever.” He’s not saying that.   He’s not saying, “Leave it to God. Who knows?” No,  no. He says, “Let’s leave it to God, and I would   actually like God to act right now and see to it  and plead my cause and deliver me from your hand.”  Now, what is happening here? Well, having  chosen not to seize by force what is his by   promise—namely, the throne—he then, like another  shepherd king, whom we meet in the New Testament,   commits his cause to him who judges justly.  That’s for homework: 1 Peter chapter 2,   Peter uses that when he’s talking about the  difficulties of life and of when we are persecuted   and when we are reviled, and then he says, “And  if you want an example of how to deal with this,   let’s look to he who is the Shepherd King, for  when he was reviled, he did not revile in return,   but he committed his cause to him who judges  justly.” A very hard thing to do! But many an   issue would be settled—many an issue would be  settled—if we would refuse to try and cut the   corners, if we would refuse to try and take  matters into our own hands, if we would refuse to   try and avenge ourselves. It’s the way of David.  It’s the way of Jesus. It’s the way of the Master.  You may recall, actually, that when the person  brings forward David as a potential for the   kingdom and introduces him in all of his various  elements of usefulness, one of the things that   is said of him is that he is a young man who is  “prudent in speech.” “Prudent in speech.” And   if we had no other place to illustrate that  than here, we certainly have it confirmed.  Well then, we turn to the final section,  whereby Saul in his response gives us   something of a confession: “As soon as David  had finished speaking these words to Saul,   Saul said, ‘Is this your voice, my son David?’” Now, we’ve noted in the past that he doesn’t   like calling anybody by their name; it  kind of puts them on a level with him.   And so he’s been referring to him all along as  “the son of Jesse,” in a sort of disarming and   disregarding way. But now, no: “My son David,  is this your voice?” Have his eyes flooded with   tears so that he cannot see clearly? And  what would produce tears in the big king,   filled with animosity? Not the sword of David, but  the sweetness of David. If you think about that:   “Who knows but that God’s kindness would lead  you to repentance?” Kindness! Through his tears.  Now, what’s going on here? Is this the stirring of  his conscience? Or is this just the chilling sense   of all that has gone? Suddenly, in the moment, he  realizes what could have been—all of the regret,   all of the failure, all of the disappointment just  flooding his heart? And then he has to be honest   and, in verse 17, tell David, “You know, you’re  more righteous than I. For you repaid me for good,   and I repaid you with evil. You didn’t try and  kill me, even though every day I try and kill   you. And you even had the opportunity to do  so, when I was so vulnerable and didn’t even   know it. Because,” he says, “if a man,” verse 19,  “finds his enemy, will he let him go away safe?”  But see, here’s the thing: David was Saul’s  enemy, but Saul wasn’t David’s enemy. Saul   wasn’t gonna let him go away safe. As we’re  going to see, the story continues. But you see,   David was the one upon whom God had set  his heart, that David might be the king.  It’s really quite wonderful. It’s a precious  moment in Holy Scripture, isn’t it? Because   what we’re really listening to is the voice of a  broken man. And when God breaks into a life, it’s   a moment of opportunity. And it can be seized, and  it can lead on to forgiveness and reconciliation   and glory. And here there is a moment of  reconciliation, but there is no relationship   that is reestablished. It’s a passing moment. And Saul, recognizing what’s going on, he says,   “Well, I know that you shall surely be the king,  that the kingdom of Israel shall be established in   your hand.” Do you remember back in chapter [23],  that is what Jonathan said? He said, “You know,   my father knows this.” But this is the first time  that from the lips of Saul it’s been acknowledged.  But you know, what is sad about this is that his  response, as genuine as it may be in the moment,   is clearly ultimately superficial. It is in  some measure sentimental, and it’s definitely   short-lived. It’s very hard, as we get to  the end of the chapter, not to recognize the   sense of self-preservation that is part of this  man Saul. If you remember back in chapter 15,   when, in that encounter with Samuel, and he  tears Samuel’s robe, and Samuel says to him,   “You’re done, you’re finished,” and then he’s  so concerned that he will preserve something   for himself and for those who come after him.  And that’s what he’s doing here in verse 21:   “Swear to me therefore by the LORD that you will  not cut off my offspring.” In other words, “David,   you’ve cut off my robe, but please don’t cut off  my future.” Is he really concerned about his place   in history? Yes. Has he any idea of how he will  be viewed? No. In contemporary terms, he wants   his own library, not realizing that when people  in subsequent generations go into his library,   he will be remembered as a malevolent  king who sought out the Lord’s anointed.  David, if he was like me, he would have said, “You  know what? I shoulda killed you right there in the   cave. I think I’ll kill you now.” But David swore  to Saul. Why? Well, because he’d already made a   covenant with Jonathan, his dear buddy, his best  friend in the world. You remember Jonathan had   said to him, “If I am still alive, show me the  steadfast love of the LORD, that I may not die;   and do not cut off your steadfast love from  my house forever, [for] when the LORD cuts   off every one of the enemies of David from the  face of the earth, [please don’t do that.]”   So his sweet response to Saul, who doesn’t  deserve it, is on the basis of a covenant that   he had made with his dear and best of friends. So “Saul went home, but David and his men went   up to the stronghold.” Why? There’s  going to be more fields to furrow,   more walls to mend, more chases to elude. Let me finish in this way. David’s pathway   to the throne as we’re following it is clearly  a long and a winding road. As we watch him,   he’s chosen not to try and cut the corners. He has  chosen not to take matters into his own hands and   try and speed the process. It becomes very, very  clear that in his life, what we’re dealing with   is not a series of accidental events, but that God  is working his purpose out. Actually, if you allow   yourself to go all the way back to the beginning  and catch up again, and you go back to Hannah’s   prayer in chapter 2, it was there that Hannah, as  she prays, says God is the one who raises up and   God is the one who brings things down. David—look  at him—was prepared to wait for God’s time and   was prepared to rest in God’s providence. And  like him, and in turn like Jesus, we learn,   then, to leave God to order all our ways. Is that what you’re doing in these days?   Is that what I’m doing? With the things  that threaten us, the things that annoy us,   the people that challenge us? Do you want to  cut the corners? Do you want to take it into   your own hands? You want to say, “I’m bigger  than this, I’m better than this”? Or do you   want to acknowledge that you are weak and that  all your strength is found in God alone? In the   words of Jesus, am I prepared to seek first  the kingdom of God and his righteousness,   and trust that all these other things that are  my preoccupations or my passions—all these other   things—will be taken care of by God? Leave God to order all your ways.  Well, a brief prayer before our closing song: In your time, in your time,  You make all things beautiful In your time. Lord, please show me every day, As you[’re] teach[ing] me your way,  That you do just what you say In your time.  Lord, help us to take our hands from the  steering wheel and to rest in your divine,   providential care. For Jesus’ sake. Amen. This message was brought to you from Truth For  Life where the learning is for living to learn   more about truth for life with Alistair  Begg visit us online at truthforlife.org
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Channel: Alistair Begg
Views: 115,113
Rating: 4.8876281 out of 5
Keywords: Biblical Figures, Providence of God, Sovereignty of God, Trusting God, King David, King Saul, Alistair Begg
Id: U8VRfwSE1nU
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Length: 38min 53sec (2333 seconds)
Published: Tue Jul 21 2020
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