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The Apostle: The Life of Paul
The Apostle: The Life of Paul
The Apostle: The Life of Paul
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The Apostle: The Life of Paul

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Enter the world of ancient Rome through the eyes of one of history's most transformative figures. The Apostle by John Pollock seamlessly weaves together drama, scholarship, and historical accuracy in this book about the apostle Paul's extraordinary life.
 
Starting with the dramatic death of Stephen, you'll witness Paul's incredible transformation from persecutor to preacher. Follow him on his daring missionary journeys that took him to the far corners of the Roman Empire, where he spread the teachings of Christianity.
 
Through detailed maps and a study guide, readers can choose to look deeper into the historical and New Testament aspects of Paul's life or simply enjoy it as a compelling true-life story.
 
Originally published in 1969, and later revised, this newer edition breathes fresh life into a timeless tale. As you immerse yourself in this rich narrative, you'll find yourself on a journey of discovery, uncovering the complexities of Paul's character, his unwavering faith, and the profound impact he had on the world.
 

LanguageEnglish
PublisherDavid C Cook
Release dateJan 1, 2012
ISBN9781434703248

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  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    The Book, "The Apostle Paul" took me in retrospect to a time on earth, when Paul lived. The vivid description of places , characters and the events all weaved a beautiful tapestry of Paul's life and The purpose god had for his earthly life. It seems to be a motion picture without reels, and projector nonetheless the message is lived intensely as John Pollock so skillfully narrates what life was for Paul in different episodes in his life. Consequently, I experienced this journey of a murderer converted to a great missionary of the Gospel. I walked beside Paul as he executed his roles in the early church. His lessons, teachings and wisdom leaped off the pages as the Holy Spirit guided him to be one of the greatest apostle, missionary and martyr.

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This is an incredibly good biography of Paul. Reading this has given me the "big picture" of Paul's life, which puts Acts and the Pauline Epistles in context for me more than ever before. The author is very good about identifying when he is speculating, but that said, he's not afraid to speculate here and there about obscure details. This book is fairly easy reading, and very enjoyable, yet highly informative.

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Excellent work on the life of Paul.

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The Apostle - John Pollock

Pollock

Part One

The Pursuer Pursued

One

From the Land of Black Tents

The judges leaped from their places in fury. The Hall of Polished Stones, scene of grave debates and historic trials, reverberated to the baying of a lynch crowd that rushed at the young defendant and manhandled him down the steps into the strong sunlight of the Court of the Priests. Across this wide, open space, down more steps, through court after court, Stephen was swept by judges, bystanders, worshippers, and traders, until they had him out of the sacred temple precincts and into the streets of the Holy City.

No sentence of death had been passed, nor could be executed unless confirmed by the Roman authorities after a solemn ritual to ensure justice to the last. But judges and mob cared nothing for that. When the northern gate was behind them and they reached the Rock of Execution, twice the height of a man, they should have solemnly stripped him and thrown him cleanly over to break his neck, or at least to stun him, so that death by stoning would not be too unmerciful. But they did not. Instead they pushed Stephen down as he was, his tangled clothes breaking the fall, and he staggered to his feet fully conscious.

The mob was shocked into reverting to forms of law. In a judicial stoning the first stones must be aimed by those who had brought the charges. These witnesses therefore elbowed their way to the front, threw off their outer clothes, and looked around for someone to guard them. A young lawyer, panting from the race through the streets, stepped forward. They recognized the Pharisee from Cilicia in Asia Minor, known as Saul among the Jews and Paul among Greeks and Romans.

Paul watched approvingly as each witness picked up a heavy, jagged stone, raised it above his head, and threw it to gash and maim the man below. Then Paul heard Stephen’s voice. Pained but clear, he spoke as if to someone invisible yet close: Lord Jesus, receive my spirit.

Stones showered as the mob scrambled to complete what the witnesses had begun. Stephen mastered his pain while blood gushed from cuts and bruises. He knelt down in an attitude of prayer. Paul could not miss the words that came with surprising volume for a dying man: Lord, do not hold this sin against them.

The next stone knocked Stephen flat. He lost consciousness. The mob continued stoning until the body became obscene.

Paul was born in a city between the mountains and the sea. The year was probably AD 1, but all early details are shadowy except his clear claim: I am a Jew of Tarsus, a citizen of no mean city, of the people of Israel, of the tribe of Benjamin, a Hebrew born of Hebrews.

Tarsus was the principal city of the lush plain of Cilicia in the southwest corner of Asia Minor. The sea lay out of sight a dozen miles south. The Taurus mountains curved in a great arc some twenty-five miles inland, coming nearly to the sea on the west and marked to the north by gorges and cliffs that stood like rock fortresses before the snows; a magnificent background for childhood, especially in winter when the snow showed smooth on cloudless peaks.

The river Cydnus, narrow and swift, and usually brilliantly clear, ran through the city. It flowed into the artificial harbor, an engineering masterpiece of the ancient world, where Cleopatra had stepped ashore some forty years before Paul’s birth to meet Antony, while all Tarsus marveled at silver oars, a poop deck of beaten gold, and purple sails so perfumed that the winds were lovesick with them. Here, each spring when navigation resumed and the mountain pass thawed, slaves unloaded goods of the Orient. The city grew full of noise, smell, and prosperous bustle. Caravans set off due north up the Roman road and crossed the mountains by the Cilician Gates, a crevice that had been chiseled wide enough for a wagon—another feat of ancient Tarsian engineering.

Tarsus was a fusion of civilizations at peace under the rule of Rome: indigenous Cilicians; Hittites whose ancestors had once ruled Asia Minor; light-skinned Greeks; Assyrians and Persians; and Macedonians who had come with Alexander the Great on his march to India. After the carve-up of Alexander’s empire, when Tarsus became part of the kingdom of the Seleucids who ruled from Syria, King Antiochus IV settled a colony of Jews about 170 BC. They had rights and privileges, and a determination never to marry into those outside their faith and blood, whom collectively they called Gentiles (meaning nations or Greeks). Paul’s ancestors probably were among them. They may have sprung from an obscure town called Gischala in Galilee.

His father most likely was a master tentmaker, whose craftsmen worked in leather and in cilicium, a cloth woven from the hair of the large long-haired black goats that grazed (as they still do) on the slopes of the Taurus. The black tents of Tarsus were used by caravans, nomads, and armies all over Asia Minor and Syria. Of Paul’s mother nothing is known; he never mentions her. Perhaps she died in his infancy or became alienated in some way, but he may simply have had no particular occasion to do so. He had at least one sister. His father must have been a citizen or burgess of Tarsus and obviously wealthy, for in a reform fifteen years earlier the rank of citizen had been removed from all householders without considerable fortune or property. Moreover, the family held the coveted title Citizens of Rome. At that period the civis Romanus was seldom granted except for services rendered or for a fat fee. Whether Paul’s grandfather aided Pompey or Cicero when Rome first governed Cilicia, or whether his father paid money, the Roman citizenship conferred local distinction and hereditary privileges, which each member could claim wherever he traveled throughout the empire.

Roman citizenship also meant that Paul had a full Latin name, which would have been threefold (like Gaius Julius Caesar). The first two names were common to all the family (in Caesar’s case Gaius Julius), but in Paul’s case these are lost because his Greek colleague first wrote his life story and no Greek could understand Latin names. The third, the personal cognomen, was Paullus. He was given also a Jewish name at the rite of circumcision on the eighth day after birth: Saul, chosen either for its meaning, asked for, or in honor of the most famous Benjamite in history, King Saul.

Saul was the name used at home and emphasized that the Jewish inheritance meant the most in early years. Gentiles were all around, and the columns of pagan temples dominated the marketplace. Nineveh of the Assyrians, Babylon, Athens, and Rome had combined to create Tarsus, and Paul was unconsciously the child of his Oriental-Hellenic world. In his youth it seemed remote, for although many Jews throughout the Mediterranean had been influenced by the Greek view of life, Paul’s parents were Pharisees, members of the party most fervent in Jewish nationalism and strict in obedience to the Law of Moses. They sought to guard their offspring against contamination. Friendships with Gentile children were discouraged. Greek ideas were despised. Though Paul from infancy could speak Greek, the lingua franca, and had a working knowledge of Latin, his family at home spoke Aramaic, a derivative of Hebrew, the language of Judea.

They looked to Jerusalem as Islam looks to Mecca. Their privileges as freemen of Tarsus and Roman citizens were nothing to the high honor of being Israelites, the people of promise, to whom alone the living God had revealed His glory and His plans.

The school attached to the Tarsus synagogue taught nothing but the Hebrew text of the sacred Law. Each boy repeated its phrases in chorus after the hazzan, or synagogue keeper, until vowels, accent, and rhythm were precisely correct. Paul learned to write the Hebrew characters accurately on papyrus, thus gradually forming his own rolls of the Scriptures. His father would have presented him with another set of rolls, on vellum: the Greek translation of the Old Testament known as the Septuagint, from which the set readings were taken in synagogue each Sabbath. By his thirteenth birthday Paul had mastered Jewish history, the poetry of the psalms, and the majestic literature of the prophets. His ear had been trained to the very pitch of accuracy, and a swift brain like his could retain what he heard as instantly and faithfully as a modern photographic mind retains a printed page. He was ready for higher education.

Tarsus had its own university, famous for local students such as Athenodorus, the tutor and confidant of the emperor Augustus, and the equally eminent Nestor, both of whom had returned in old age to be the most distinguished citizens in Paul’s boyhood. But a strict Pharisee would not embroil his son in pagan moral philosophy. (Such studies would have to come later.) So, probably in the year that Augustus died, AD 14, the adolescent Paul was sent by sea to Palestine and climbed the hills to Jerusalem.

During the next five or six years, he sat at the feet of Gamaliel, grandson of Hillel, the supreme teacher who a few years earlier had died at the age of more than a hundred. Under the fragile, gentle Gamaliel, a contrast with the leaders of the rival School of Shammai, Paul learned to dissect a text until scores of possible meanings were disclosed according to the considered opinion of generations of rabbis. These had obscured the original sense by layers of tradition to protect an Israelite from the least possible infringement of the Law and, illogically, to help him avoid its inconveniences. Paul learned to debate in the question-and-answer style known to the ancient world as the diatribe, and to expound, for a rabbi was not only part preacher but also part lawyer, ready to prosecute or defend those accused of breaking the sacred Law.

Paul outstripped his contemporaries. He had a powerful mind, which could have led to a seat on the Sanhedrin in the Hall of Polished Stones and made him a ruler of the Jews. The state was a theocracy, in which religious and national leaders were identical, so that the seventy-one members of the Sanhedrin were equally judges, senators, and spiritual masters. The court was supreme in all religious decisions and in what little self-government the Romans allowed. Some of its members were drawn from the hereditary priesthood. Others were lawyers and rabbis.

Before Paul could hope to be a master in Israel, he had to master a trade, for every Jew was bred to a trade, and in theory no rabbi took fees but rather supported himself. Paul therefore left Jerusalem in his early twenties. Had he been there during the ministry of Jesus of Nazareth, he would surely mention having argued against Him like other Pharisees did; in later years he spoke often of the death of Jesus by crucifixion but never as an eyewitness. Paul probably returned to Tarsus to work in the family tentmaking business and resumed the old routine: winter and spring in Tarsus until the plain grew steamy and malarial, then the summer city in the Taurus foothills. Winter or summer he would have taught in synagogue.

A hint in one of his letters suggests he was strongly missionary-minded. Wherever Jews worshipped, Gentile sympathizers were admitted as God-fearers. Pharisees like Paul urged God-fearers to become proselytes, full Jews: to submit to the simple but painful rite of circumcision, and thereafter to honor the ceremonial and personal demands of the Law in all its rigor. The burden might be heavy but the reward would be great, as they earned the favor of God. Paul’s father could take full and justified delight in this son who had followed in his steps as a Pharisee and had the intellectual force to reach the highest office in Israel.

Soon after his thirtieth birthday, Paul returned to Jerusalem—with or without a wife. He almost certainly had been married. Jews rarely remained celibate, and parenthood was a qualification required of candidates for the Sanhedrin. Yet Paul’s wife is never mentioned in his writings. He may have suffered bereavement, losing not only his wife but an only child, for in later years, though he seemed impatient with women as a sex, he displayed gentleness toward individuals and an understanding of marriage, which belie his being a misogamist or misogynist; and he virtually adopted the young man Timothy as if to replace a son.

More likely his wife and family returned with Paul. In Jerusalem they could discharge the Law’s more complicated and praiseworthy obligations and display zeal where it would be noticed.

There Paul could also combat the movement launched by Jesus of Nazareth. Tarsus must have heard echoes of the teaching and claims of the new prophet. And strange reports of miracles. Even a tale that He had risen from the dead.

Two

Stephen

Compared with the marble and gold terraces of the temple, the synagogue in Jerusalem for Jews from Cilicia was small and austere, and cool despite the summer sun. The men sat on stone benches along the walls, beneath columns that supported the women’s galleries. The elders faced the congregation. Near them stood a small platform and beside it the seven-branched candlestick and the veiled chest or ark for the Scrolls of the Law. Here the Law was read aloud and expounded by any whom the elders might invite. Paul accepted such an invitation as his due.

In Jerusalem there was no lack of candidates; he had to listen more than he spoke, and so he happened to hear a disciple of Jesus named Stephen.

Stephen and Paul were probably much the same age—the Greek word translated young man, with which the historian Luke introduces Paul, denotes a male between youth and forty. Stephen’s birthplace is unknown, for Jews from Egypt and elsewhere used the same synagogue as Cilicians, but he spoke Greek as fluently as Aramaic. Both men were quick thinkers, powerful minds, able controversialists. No tradition remains of Stephen’s physique. Paul is believed to have been short, though he held himself well enough to stand out in a crowd. His face was rather oval with beetling eyebrows and fleshy from good living. He had a black beard, since Jews scorned the Roman taste for shaving, and his blue-fringed robe and the amulet strapped to a turban-like headdress displayed his pride in being a Pharisee. As he strode about the temple courts, he wore the arrogance of a man whose ancestors and actions made him feel important. He carried out the unending cycle of ritual cleansings of platters and cups as well as his own person. He kept the weekly fasts—between sunrise and sunset—and said the daily prayers in exact progression and number. He knew what was due to him: respectful greetings, high precedence, a prominent seat in the synagogue.

His days were consumed by his legal career and grooming himself for heaven. No time was left for the poor, the lame, and the outcast. Deep down in his character lay a vein of compassion, but he believed that a good man should keep away from bad men: Paul would have approved the Pharisee who, on seeing Jesus allow a prostitute to wash His feet with her tears and rub them with ointment, concluded that the man could be no prophet. Jesus’ immortal picture of the Pharisee and the tax collector who went up to the temple to pray would have fitted Paul. Like that Pharisee, Paul was sure he deserved God’s favor, despised others, and could have prayed, God, I thank Thee I am not like other men, extortioners, unjust, adulterers, or even like this tax collector. I fast twice a week; I give tithes of all I get.

Stephen, on the other hand, spent much of his time in giving food and necessities to widows.

In the two years since the execution of Jesus, the Holy City had become pervaded with those who believed that He had risen from the dead. Most were nondescript and poor. Many lived in communal groups, and all of them shared their resources. When Greek-speaking disciples complained that widows were being neglected, Stephen and six others were chosen to undertake routine daily distribution of food.

Paul was disturbed that a man of Stephen’s academic caliber should demean himself in social concerns and go around bringing happiness. Men respected Paul but feared him; they respected Stephen and loved him.

When Stephen preached, Paul could not fail to discern the gulf between them: Stephen always turned the Scriptures in the direction of Jesus of Nazareth as the Deliverer or Messiah (or Christ, when he used Greek), whom every Jew awaited; and Stephen proved his point by citing the evidence of eyewitnesses who reported that, incredibly, a corpse had come to life again and climbed out of the grave. He claimed they had talked with Jesus in different places during the six weeks following His execution. Stephen himself was not an eyewitness, but he was sure Jesus was alive, and he claimed to know Him.

Paul considered Stephen’s arguments nonsense. The Christ had not come yet. And the way to God was fixed forever: A man must belong to God’s chosen people the Jews, and try to obey the Law’s every detail. When he sinned, forgiveness depended on the ritual slaughter of animals day after day, year after year in the temple. Paul could not stomach Stephen’s idea that the dying of one young man, by a common if degrading and revolting form of punishment, could blot out sins. As for the alleged resurrection, he pitied those who narrowed their lives to the following of a dead Messiah.

Paul felt no personal concern, knowing his own goodness, but he recognized Stephen’s contentions as dangerous. Gamaliel had advised toleration; Simon Peter and other disciples of Jesus worshipped at the temple and continued to obey the Law. But Paul saw, as Stephen saw, that the old and the new were incompatible; man was saved either by the temple sacrifices and obedience to the Law, or by faith in Jesus. The old must destroy the new, or be destroyed.

Paul dedicated himself to demolishing Stephen’s argument by the time-honored method of public debate. The synagogue benches were filled; the elders listened gravely.

Paul and his supporters argued from the Law that since Jesus had been nailed to a tree He must have lain under God’s curse and could not possibly be the Christ. Paul disposed of the resurrection by the accepted explanation: The disciples stole the body. The alternative, that the resurrection was an imaginative symbolism or myth by which believers expressed the spiritual survival and triumph of Jesus, was not open to him. The tomb was empty. He knew that if the Jewish authorities had known that Jesus’ body lay moldering in the grave, they would have exhumed it and thus exposed a fraud.

Stephen in reply showed that Moses and the prophets, David and the psalms, foreshadowed how the Christ would not strut as a conqueror when He came but allow Himself to be jeered at, hurt, and murdered. And He would rise from the dead. Stephen retold the story of that Passover two years before when Jesus died and once again capped his case by quoting eyewitness evidence that Jesus had been seen alive after death.

Stephen won. The congregation voted him the honors, and some asked how to become believers in Jesus. It must have been then that Paul and his friends first had the sensation that they did not fight only Stephen but also a force they could not fathom. Luke stated, They could not stand up against his wisdom or the Spirit by which he spoke.

Paul’s reaction to defeat, to judge by scattered reminiscences in his letters, was the very opposite of the advice he would give in old age: The Lord’s servant must not be quarrelsome but kindly to everyone, correcting his opponents with gentleness. Instead, Paul pursued Stephen vindictively, stirring enmity, dissension, and jealousy, insulting and deriding Jesus and restraining neither hot temper nor sarcasm, both of which were strong components in Paul’s character. Stephen did not retaliate. The qualities people recalled in Stephen were strength and charm; any indignation and scorn he kept for more positive use.

Paul’s party had a stronger weapon than insult. If they could twist Stephen’s words to sound blasphemous, they could silence him forever by due process of law. They set about it in a way from which Paul himself would often suffer in later years—the tortuous and indirect. They did not call at the high priest’s house to lodge a formal complaint. Instead, there was much coming and going in the narrower lanes of the lower city. Soon afterward, apparently spontaneous incidents blew the activities of Stephen into the public eye. His meetings were disrupted by violence, until scribes and elders who had found no time for hearing him discovered that his suppression was urgent.

They had temple guards arrest him, and they arraigned him summarily before the Sanhedrin, while Paul and his fellow Cilicians remained in the background.

The seventy-one judges sat on great benches that curved on either side of the president’s place in the Hall of Polished Stones. At each wing a secretary wrote on papyrus, trying to keep pace with Stephen’s speech. Facing the judges and behind the prisoner were court servants, lawyers, teachers, and candidates for the Sanhedrin.

Paul sat among them, riveted to his opponent’s words. Stephen held the court spellbound—from the president in his high priest’s robe and jeweled breastplate to the youngest lawyer. They appeared gripped by the expression on his face, a blend of serenity and authority unusual in a man on trial for his life, and by his grasp of Jewish history as he delivered, ex tempore, a masterly analysis in answer to the charges. Paul never forgot the theme of that speech and would use it himself in very different circumstances in a faraway land; one phrase, The Most High does not live in houses made by man, so engraved itself on his memory that it emerged even later when he was speaking below the Parthenon at Athens.

As Stephen continued, the atmosphere changed. Admiration gave way to annoyance. Uncomfortable memories obtruded of another trial in the same hall two years before and of that executed body that could not be found. Suddenly Stephen seemed to sense that his judges would not hear him out. Throwing caution to the winds, he asserted to their faces that they were obstinate hypocrites, who had betrayed and murdered their Messiah.

The learned judges snarled. The prisoner’s reaction was astounding. He ignored their rage. He lifted his head in a gaze above and beyond them, and they could hardly believe their ears when this young enthusiast, whom they sought to condemn for blasphemy, called out that he saw God and that in the place of honor at God’s side stood the Son of Man—by which, as everyone knew, he meant the late Jesus of Nazareth.

Thus began the mad rush that ended with a smashed corpse in a pool of blood below the Rock of Execution. It was no accident that the witnesses threw their clothes at the feet of a young man named Saul; they knew his responsibility. But Paul did not throw a stone. He watched and approved—and heard Stephen call out, Lord Jesus, receive my spirit. Lord, do not hold this sin against them. And Paul’s sharp mind saw, and repudiated, the essence of the prayer. Lord, do not hold this sin against them meant, in Stephen’s teaching, Lord, You took their sin on Yourself. May they believe in You, know You, love You.

During the rest of the summer when Stephen died (probably AD 31) and throughout the following winter, the Jewish authorities, with Paul as their chief agent, embarked on systematic suppression of Jesus’ followers.

Paul charged like an animal tearing its prey. This was not the sad efficiency of an officer obeying distasteful orders; the heart was engaged, and the mind too, with the thoroughness of an inquisitor unmasking treason, until Paul’s operations had reduced a vigorous citywide community to apparent impotence. Its leaders fled or went into hiding. Paul went from house to house, then held formal inquiries at the synagogues when the congregation assembled. Every suspect, man or woman, had to stand before the elders, while Paul, as the high priest’s representative, put to them the demand that they should curse Jesus. On refusal, they were formally accused but had the right to employ the time-honored formula: I have something to argue in favor of my acquittal.

Thus Paul heard the stories and beliefs of a cross-section of those who called Jesus Lord. Many had met Him in Jerusalem or had traveled to Galilee to find Him, and these would repeat His words. Again and again the same phrases, the same parables would come up in the synagogue court. Nor was Paul surprised, since every rabbi insisted that his disciples should grasp his sayings word-perfect, reproducing the very tones of his voice. And the sayings, whether Paul wished or not, were at once stored in the expanding library of his retentive brain.

Some of the Nazarenes defended their devotion by recounting the influence of Jesus on their physical health, like the man with congenital blindness that Jesus had cured, who would have retorted to Paul as saucily as he had answered the indignant Pharisees after the miracle. Some had seen Jesus stumbling toward Golgotha or had watched Him die. Several insisted that they had seen Him alive after He was dead, not a wraith but vigorous—despite the scourge that had stripped the skin and laid the muscles of His back bare, and the shock, exhaustion, and exposure of a Roman crucifixion with its unavoidable finish by suffocation if death had not come already. Most of the accused, however, did not claim to be eyewitnesses themselves, but converts of those who were, particularly of Simon called Peter or The Rock.

Again and again a nondescript disciple—poorly educated, uncouth, timid—would be hustled in front of the tribunal. After a few shy sentences, the man would be transformed: clear words, unashamed convictions, it was almost as if he were prompted. A few such prisoners would assert that they certainly were being told what to say. Oblivious of Paul’s rage, they drew apt quotations from the countless sayings of Jesus committed to memory:

When they bring you before the synagogues and the rulers and the authorities, do not be anxious how or what you are to answer or what you are to say; for the Holy Spirit will teach you in that very hour what you ought to say.

This will be a time for you to bear testimony.… I will give you a mouth and wisdom, which none of your adversaries will be able to withstand or contradict.

Paul could laugh at that.

He helped throw many of these prisoners into dungeons. One or two may have been stoned: Paul seemed to suggest this (When they were put to death I gave my vote against them), but Jewish rights of capital punishment were strictly limited by the Romans. The majority were punished by public flogging, the forty stripes save one, which was no sight for the squeamish. The courage of a few collapsed. About to be lashed, or after a few strokes, or when forced to watch a wife’s or husband’s torture, they screamed a curse on Jesus

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