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What Does God Say To Us About The Next Generation
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If you have a copy of the Word of God today I want you to look with me into the 13th chapter of the book of Acts, and also the 16th chapter of the book of 1 Samuel. Acts chapter 13 and 1 Samuel chapter number 16.
When the Bible talks about a generation it is speaking about a generation of time of about 40 years. When we talk about the word generation it can also mean all of the people who have been born and/or living and living at the same time. So for us to say our generation today it would mean we’ve all been born. Amen? And we’re all living; therefore, it would be our generation.
Now when I speak about, and I might say the phrase “I want us to reach our generation today,” we are speaking about reaching our generation that is living today from the youngest baby to the oldest adult. We are talking about reaching our generation.
Now if I were to say these words, it would also be proper to use the generation in this capacity. I want us to think about how we can reach the next generation. When we talk about reaching the next generation, that means, for me, it means anybody under my age. All right? If someone here today is 80, 90 years of age or more, then you’re speaking about the next generation. I might be on the youngest end of that next generation that you’re referring to. For my generation to talk about reaching the next generation we are talking about people that are maybe in their 30’s and younger. But you know, my problem is, but it’s a great problem to have is, I’m getting more generations under me. So in reality anybody who is you know, 39 to 50ish is also part of that next generation.
But what I want to challenge you in today is letting me answer a very important question. The question is, “What does God say to us about the next generation?” From the scripture what does the Lord tell us about the next generation? Now when I speak to the next generation, and about the next generation, I’m speaking about all those people underneath my age.
But also today I want to guide a few or my remarks, especially right up front, to the teenage community and to the parents of teenagers today. Do you realize how difficult it is to be a teenager today? Some would tell us as many as 94% of the teenage population and below is lost, without a relationship with Jesus Christ. That is a pretty astounding statistic. When you think about and you drive by some of the major high schools, all high schools in our region, middle schools, and you think about an average, even if we hit close to that average, some 94% of those people that attend that school do not have a personal relationship with God through His Son Jesus Christ.
There is an enormous pull of the enemy that is pulling this generation away from God, away from truth, and away from the opportunity of what we call life. But when we speak about and we talk about this next generation, this, especially the teenagers just for a moment today, I mean you think about all that they have been raised with, and all that they’re dealing with today. It’s a massive challenge.
For example, let me speak about for a moment about some of these. Let’s talk first of all about cell phones. Think about cell phones. We didn’t grow up with cell phones. I remember when the first cell phone I had, I mean you know it went down in the floorboard, and that thing was honking big. You know but that’s not the way cell phones are today. We think about this cell phone generation, I mean they’ve been raised with a cell phone. Many of these students have had cell phones for years. And we have adults in our church that still don’t have a cell phone.
So all of that leads to all kinds of challenges. Cell phones are great as long as they are used for the proper purposes. But cell phones can also be very negative if they are used improperly. For example, do you realize today that one of the biggest problems in the teenage population today and below into children, and let me just say today it is a huge issue also in the adult population, and that is the downloading of pornography on a cell phone.
While you can easily trace pornography that is downloaded to a computer, it is much more difficult to track pornography that is downloaded to a cell phone. Therefore, now Satan is having a hey day in relationship to pornography being downloaded on cell phones all across the world. For all of you parents who have boys, young men in your home, do you realize today that the average age that a boy is exposed to pornography is 8 years of age? 8 years of age?
When I think about that, I think about my oldest grandson who’s 4. I mean that is amazing when you think about an 8 year old being exposed to pornography. But pornography will absolutely choke the life out of you. Pornography never helps anyone at any time, anywhere. To many of you men and women who are grown-ups here today, who are playing around with pornographic material, whether it be printed, or whether it be on the web, or whether it be cast into your home, or into your computer, you are praying, playing with fire, and sooner or later it will cost you your family, and sooner or later it may even cost you your career. You need to be very, very careful and get rid of it.
But also in relationship to that another major issue in the teenage community is what we would call sexting. Sexting. Now most of us even adults know what texting is. Texting is when you take your phone and I can text with the best of them by the way, and I enjoy texting. You know some people will wear you out with it, but you know, I enjoy doing it because it saves time, and it’s good most of the time.
But sexting is when you all of a sudden use the means of texting to send sexual messages, sexual overtones, engaging in sexual interaction, whether it be with the same sex, or the opposite sex, even to the point of becoming sexually illustrative, meaning sexually revealing. Whereby those conversations will move from teasing to sexuality into deeper curiosity of sexuality, into sharing sexuality, into interacting about sexuality, into the final reality of unveiling clothing, taking pictures or video of yourselves, and then sending to someone out here that you want to sext with. And it is shared a major issue in the teenage community and below today.
I realize that might surprise some of you who are adults, and older adults today, but that’s where our kids live today. Parents you better check your cell phones of your children. In fact you ought to check the cell phone of your own spouse every now and then. But you need to check the cell phones of your child. Find out how late it is at night when your child is texting. Some say that one reason that teenagers are deprived of their sleep is because they are texting at all hours of the night with their friends.
Beyond that we’ve got to understand is you need to check out and see what your children are getting and doing out here in the world about this sexting issue. Not at all of you teenagers and young adults, other adults, older adults who would be into that, can I just remind you of something today? Once it’s out there on the worldwide web, it’s out there! You can’t grab it back. You can’t wish you wouldn’t have done it, even though you can wish it, it doesn’t bring it back, and it can come to haunt you later in your life.
Another issue teenagers are grappling with is what is called being bi-curious. Bi-curious. You know what it means to be bi-curious? It means to have such a curiosity about sexuality that you are bi-curious, meaning you are, you are interested in, you are curious about, not only the opposite sex, but your same sex, therefore, you are willing to tamper with, play with, interact with, test, if you may, and see which way you want to go. Being bi-curious.
And a lot of all this happens because of what we call a lack of accountability. Which is a real issue in the teenage generation. You know a lack of accountability can be very dangerous, and there’s not a lot of accountability to teenagers and it’s because parents are acting like they’re running for a popularity contest with their kid just to try to get the approval of their child. They’re not willing to hold a child responsible, and they’re trying to see if they can get the approval of all the other parents that their kids run around with because oh my, what’s going to be said if you by chance are the one who is tough on your child and no one else is?
Well parents let me just say to you today, if you didn’t want to make your child responsible and accountable, you didn’t to have your child. But you’re to lead them, and you need to make them responsible, and they need to be accountable. And let me tell you today, those kids are crying out for accountability. They are crying out for accountability, and you need to help them appreciate the accountability along the way of life. Don’t cease ever making your child accountable.
One of the great stories of the Bible is about David, and how God raised up David after God took the kingship away from Saul. This story is very illustrative in relationship to our subject today about what does God say about the next generation. I want you to look with me to Acts 13 this morning. Acts chapter number 13. And as we look at Acts chapter number 13, let’s read 2 verses of scripture.
The first verse is found over in verse number 22. The scripture says, “After removing him,” that is King Saul, “He,” that means God, “raised up David as their king of whom he testified,” meaning that God testified these words about David. Listen to what the words are. “I have found David the son of Jesse, a man after My heart who will carry out My will.”
And if you would look at verse 36, “For David after serving his own generation in God’s plan fell asleep,” meaning he died, “and he was buried with his fathers and he decayed.”
Verse number 22 when it talks about how God raised him up, it means that God is sovereign, and God chooses people to do certain things in life. And even though Saul was outwardly gifted, outwardly handsome, outwardly strong, outwardly quite a man, they forgot to unwrap the inside package of his heart because in the heart of Saul was extreme wickedness and sin.
One day Saul crossed over the line, and when he crossed over the line, God said that’s it, it’s over Saul. I’m going to raise up another king. And that is when he began to lift up this young man by the name of David. He found David because he was attracted to the heart of David. You know what it was He was attracted to concerning his heart? Is that he was a man after God’s heart, and what does that mean? He was man who was willing to do God’s will. What a powerful statement.
If you want to know what it’s like to be a man or a woman after God’s heart, it means that you’re willing to do the will of God. Not a lot of people are willing to do the will of God. But He said I saw in this young man someone who was willing to do the will of God, and I was attracted to that, and I was drawn to that, and I’m going to raise him up to be king. Having or being a person after God’s own heart doesn’t mean you’re perfect. Don’t misunderstand. But it means that even when you mess up in your life you are still pursuing God. You are still racing toward God. A person after the heart of God doesn’t rest well when they sin, but they want to be in the favor of God, and in the pleasure of God, and in the forgiveness of God, and the greatness of God, in the Spirit of God, in the leadership of God, therefore, they pursue God even after they mess up. A person after God’s own heart.
In verse number 36 it talks about how David served his own generation and in God’s plan after he served his own generation he died. Some translations say it this way, and I quote, “After he served the purpose of God in his own generation, He died.” After he served the purpose of God in his own generation, he died. You see God directs history. And when God directs history that means that God has a purpose. God has a plan for everyone in history today. He has a plan for each one of us today.
And let me tell you something about God, interesting here, notice it in verse number 36. After David fulfilled God’s purpose and plan for his life, you know what happened to him? He died. He died. It’s hard to know why certain people die at certain ages. Some die young, some die at middle age, and some have the privilege of living old, to older years. Can I say a word to all of you today that are older in your age, and you’re still breathing? You are here because God has a purpose for you and you need to discover that purpose and you need to do it. You don’t need to bemoan that you’re still here, and bemoan how bad you feel, and how bad things are. You need to understand God has a purpose for you. You need to be excited about that purpose. You need to discover that purpose. And you need to get in on whatever that plan is that God has for your life.
You see the question that everyone of us need to wrestle with today, it doesn’t’ matter whether we’re 8 or a 108, is this question: What is God’s purpose and plan for me in helping my generation to come to Christ? What is God’s purpose and plan for me to help my generation, everyone who is living now in the time that I’m living, to come to Christ?
With the time that I have left today, I want to raise 3 questions, and I want to answer each one of them for you based off what we learned from this story about David’s life.
Question number 1: What would God say to us about the next generation? What would HE say? Would you please look with me into the 16th chapter of the book of 1 Samuel? 1 Samuel’s over in the Old Testament. It’s about that thick from the beginning of Genesis. See that? Wonderful. If you can’t see that far, you’re in trouble. Go to table of contents.
But 1 Corinthians chapter 16, notice the words beginning in verse 7 reading through verse number 13. “But the Lord said to Samuel, ‘Do not look at the appearance of his stature because I have rejected him,” speaking about Saul. Notice these words here. He says, “Man does not see, man does not see what the Lord sees.” Boy is that not true? “For man sees what is visible,” but notice what God sees. “But the Lord sees the heart.” That is absolutely profound!
Next verse. “Jesse,” whom Samuel had been instructed by God to go to the house of Jesse, and he would have the king waiting on him there, the future king would be raised out of the house of Jesse. “And Jesse called Abinadab presented him to Samuel. The Lord hasn’t chosen this one either, Samuel said. Jesse presented Shanab, but Samuel said, ‘The Lord hasn’t chosen this one either.’ And after Jesse presented seven of his sons to him, Samuel told Jesse, ‘The Lord hasn’t chosen any of these.’ Samuel asked him, ‘Are these all the sons you have?’ There is still the youngest, he answered. But right now he’s tending the sheep. Samuel told Jesse, ‘Send for him. We won’t sit down to eat until he gets here.’ So Jesse sent for him. He had beautiful eyes and a healthy, handsome appearance. And the Lord said, ‘Anoint him for he is the one.’ So Samuel took the horn of oil, anointed him in the presence of his brothers, and the Spirit of the Lord took control of David from that day forward. And then David set out and went to Ramah.”
What would God say to us about the next generation from 1 Samuel 16, verse 7 through 13? How old was David when David was chosen to be king? David was a teenager. Did you know that teenagers today? Adults did you grasp that? When God chose David, David was a teenager. God found him and God made him a major player in all of history when he was a teenager.
Boy I tell you what, that is so powerful because I think about so many things when I read that. I think about how years ago God came and found me in a small Texas town, chose me as a teenager. God has a way of choosing teenagers.
What would God say to us about this next generation today? From David’s life I believe He says these things that’s right in the text. First of all:
(1) God chooses them. Did you know God chooses teenagers? And we need to relax about it, and we need to rejoice on it because I wonder how many of us have been chosen as teenagers? God chooses them.
(2) God calls them. God chose and God called David when David was a teenager.
(3) God anoints them. God anointed him to be king as a teenager. Think about that. That is incredible. Here is a young teenager God’s hand was on, and God anointed this man for greatness when he was a teenager.
(4) God uses them. Oh I tell you what, God used David dramatically, used him on that day when his brother saw that God chose him. Used him later on to minister to his brothers while they were out fighting or wanting to fight this big giant by the name of Goliath. God uses them. And then:
(5) God gives them courage. He gives them courage. He can give courage even to a teenager. The courage to say yes and the courage to say no. The courage to follow God, and the courage to walk away from that, which is wrong and sinful.
In David’s life God gave him courage when David was out there just simply
taking food to his brothers. And he really ticked him off that nobody was willing to go out there and fight Goliath. Then he said I’m going to go fight him. And so you know what he did? He went and prepared to fight him. The biggest man in the world who intimidated all the armies of God, and all of a sudden here’s this young teenage boy, and they started putting the armor of Saul on him where he couldn’t even walk. And he said get this armor of me. I’ve got all I need because I’m going in the name of the Lord. And I’ve got these little stones here and I’m going to take him out. And that young teenager walked out there and planted on right in the forehead of Goliath. He went down. David went and got his sword and chopped his head off. Wow what a story. You say that’s in the Bible? Absolutely.
Now is there any personal application to that in our generation? Don’t go that far. There’s application but don’t make it chop the head off. You see God gives them courage.
Now all of you who are 40 and younger today, especially those of you who may be 25 and younger, let me, let me just say a word to you. God has a dream for your life. Don’t sell God short on your life. No one else may be speaking good to you and about you, and breathing hope into your ears, but you hear me today, I am because I’m telling you God has a dream for your life. A big plan for your life, and He has a plan for greatness for you.
And there is no telling what God may want to do with you. Don’t sell yourself short! All you need is God and you’ve got God I’m telling you there’s no telling what in the world you can do with your life. To all the rest of you who would be older than that group, I want to challenge you, you believe in that next generation. And you recognize that God does choose, that God does call them. God does use them. God does anoint them. And God does give them courage. And don’t you give up on the generation that is behind you in your life.
Question Number 2: What would God say to the parents of the next generation? What would God say to the parents of the next generation? I mean listen man those of you that have already raised your children to some degree you’re very blessed. But many of you also have grandchildren, and great-grandchildren; the parents today have a real struggle in how to raise their children. But what would God say to the parents of the next generation?
Notice what happened with Jesse and David. First of all:
(1) Entrust your child with responsibility. You see David had responsibility. Entrust your child with responsibility. David was tending the sheep. David was taking responsibility for something in his family. Parents, listen today, your children are more capable than you think, and you need to entrust them with levels of responsibility. If you do not teach them responsibility, and hold them accountable for the responsibility that you have entrusted them with, you are handing society a real challenge. And worse than that, you’re handing their spouse in the future a real mess. Entrust your child with responsibility. Don’t think you have to do everything for your children. Your children at times will succeed, but guess what? Your children will not always succeed. Many times they will fail. You entrust them with responsibility. And then you:
(2) Release your child to do God’s will. That’s what Jesse did. David’s father released him to minister to Saul. Remember what he did to minister to Saul? He played the harp to minister to Saul. He was released him to go fight Goliath, and defeat him. He released him to go be king. David you’re not ready to be king. His father didn’t tell him that! But he released him to go and be the king! Hey what is your career goal for your child today as a parent? It might help if you understand your career goal may not be their career goal. While you need to instill dreams in the heart and the mind of your children, your dreams will not always become their dreams. And you need to release them to do the will of God. Release them to do the will of God. Talk to them about the will of God, and release them to do the will of God.
This past week I had an older teenager come see me. And um, he is a very gifted
young man. And his future is absolutely unlimited with opportunities. And he was telling me what this person wanted him to do, and what this group wanted him to do. What he was thinking about doing, and he was giving me all this stuff, and finally I just really felt that God wanted me to say, “Okay dear friend, what do you believe God wants you to do?”
You see that’s a question we all need to ask our children because in that conversation with that young man, everyone was in his ear, everyone’s breathing into his life because people want something from him. They want something from him, and I told him, I said, “Listen, the only way you’re ever going to leap over all that noise out here is what does God want you to do?”
I want to say to every one of you parents, you need to look at your child sometime and you need to ask your child, “Honey, what do you believe God wants you to do? Son, what do you believe God wants you to do?” And you need to let them do it, and you need to release them to do it. You see if we’re going to be serious about touching the world for Jesus Christ, and really making a difference long-term, parents, and grandparents, and great-grandparents need to release their children to go and do great commission work around the world!
So many times young boys especially will come and they will chat with me about various matters, and they believe God is calling them to ministry, or to missions. But my dad… But my mom… But they’ve got these dreams… And they’ve got this… And I just don’t feel like I can… Oh listen; we need to be willing to release our children and our grandchildren to go do great commission work. That’s quite a statement. But I mean if we’re serious that the world needs to know, well if God calls them, let them go! I would rather my grandchildren and great-grandchildren be in the will of God in the jungle of South America than out of the will of God in the comfort of America. What about you?
I mean we need to understand that’s really what it’s all about. I’ll never forget when my dad died, I remember on the Saturday morning before we did his funeral that afternoon, and buried him late afternoon just before dark. I’ll never forget being beside my dad’s casket there. My mom was there. Jeana was by me. My kids were there. And they were behind me. And I think they were seated if I’m not mistaken. I just began to weep. I began to weep. I was heaving weep, weeping. Because it overwhelmed me, and I told my mom, I said, “Mom, dad, he never understood. He always would ask me when are you coming home?” And I’m just crying my eyes out saying he didn’t understand, he didn’t understand that God had given me a church to take care of, and people to minister to, and maybe at times he didn’t fully understand I feel so bad about that. And I felt this enormous guilt in my heart. And in my life. And mom said, “Oh no, no, no, that’s so wrong. He understood. The day after you surrendered to preach at our little church we began to tell each other we need to let him go, and we may never see him again.”
And this morning on my way to church when I did my normal call to my mom, I was talking to her about what I have before me tomorrow night, and she said, “Oh Ronnie I was telling somebody this week you don’t need to worry about it. God’s called you. He’s given you the opportunity. You go over there and you tell them what you believe you need to tell them, and they like it, fine, and if they don’t like it, fine. You do what God wants you to do, and you’ll be all right.” I thought now that kind of cuts through it all. But it all started with this, I released you a long time ago. She didn’t even know what I’m doing today.
My mom’s 81, almost 82. She’s been diagnosed with pre-leukemia. Is now on some chemotherapy, shots every other, every 3 or 4 weeks, and you know things have changed a little bit in her life, and she’s doing good, but I mean, you know, it’s, it’s a deal. But God speaks in some unique ways in your life sometimes.
The final question today is: What is God saying to the church about the next generation? What is God saying to the church about the next generation? Well, you know before I tell you what I believe the Lord wants to say, I just want to say this to all of you as your friend and your pastor, they’re not going to come to granny’s church, so we better get ready for it. Now I don’t mean anything bad about that. I mean, but this generation today, I’m just telling you they’re not going to buy it. They’re not going to do it. And we need to be willing to change what we need to change. Never change the message. Did you hear me? Never, underline change the message! But be willing to change methodology if necessary. Be willing to change music when necessary. Be willing to change the things that really don’t ultimately matter at all in order to get the message into their hearts! Because the bottom line is history is showing us, and we had better get a clue, we are not touching the present generation!
Let me give you an illustration. Our church is a part of a denomination with 50,000 churches and congregations. The largest Protestant denomination in the world. You listen to what I’m saying to you. In 1972, that’s the year I was called to preach. In 1972, Southern Baptist churches reached and baptized 140,000 teenagers. In 2008, with more churches, with less population, with more population in America today than there was in 1972, Southern Baptist churches reached and baptized 75,000 teenagers. 140,000 to 75,000? Wow. How embarrassing. I mean we’re in trouble!
So what is God saying to the church? Let me just kind of share my heart with you today. First of all:
(1) Accept them. Accept the next generation. Accept them regardless of what they look like, what they have on their bodies, either tattoos, or hanging, regardless of what they wear! Leave them alone! Let it go! Accept them! Man some of you need to chill about dress a little bit, and you need to chill about those kind of things, because the bottom line is I’d rather have them in here hearing the message. I don’t care what they wear! Don’t care what they look like! Don’t care what they smell like! We need to accept them! If God gets a hold of them, He’ll take care of all that stuff it needs to be taken care of, sooner or later. Let me just say everything that some of think need to be taken care of, we’re not God, all right? Accept them.
(2) Love them! Unconditionally love the next generation! Do you realize it is the most unloved generation probably in the history of all humanity because most of them do not even grow up in a home with where both mom and dad’s exist? And if they will find a people that will love them unconditionally, it would be amazing to know what could happen to a church that would love the next generation unconditionally.
(3) Believe in them! Tell them you believe in them. I told you for years I believe some of the most powerful words you can say to the young generation is I believe in you. I believe in you. I believe in you.
(4) Entrust them. Entrust them to do the ministry of gospel work. Entrust them to serve Christ. Entrust them to the church and the ministry of the church. Entrust them! That doesn’t mean you do nothing, but it means you partner with them. You share with them. You entrust them. You:
(5) Pray for them. Pray for them by name and generally. You pray for them for God to raise them up and to use them. And you:
(6) Reach them. You reach them. You pour your time, resources, and life into reaching the next generation! Because the urgency is to reach them now! Not later, but now! So all of our preschool workers today, and children’s workers, I’ve got this; this is my response for your life because you pour into those children. I want to give you this today. That’s what I want to give you. You see pouring their lives into the next generation.
And for all of you who have honored the Lord with the first-tenth and additional
offerings to the local church, I want to do this for you today. I want to say thank you for pouring into the next generation. Resources.
You see I believe with all of my heart today we must understand and we must grasp this pouring in to the next generation. Now this morning we’re going to be in closure in a little bit different way than we normally do. We’re going to do it in Springdale in the service that’s right now being simulcast my message, as well as in this auditorium here at Pinnacle Hills.
I want you to put your stuff down for a moment, every one of you. When you do that today, here’s what I want us to do. If you are, this is going to humble some of you, but if you are 39 and below. Now remember we have all of our children out of both of our rooms right now who are in children’s church. Now most of the time I feel great about that, sometime, you know like today, I wish they were kind of here, at least the older ones. But I probably would not wish that if I’d had them in here too long.
But 39 and under, I want you to stand right now. Would you stand? Pinnacle Hills and Springdale both, would you stand? You’re 39 and under, I want you to stand. Look at all these people. Now to those of you who are now totally insulted that for the first time in your life you’ve had to admit to everybody you’re over 40, I want all of you to some degree kind of turning a little bit. Those of you that are standing, I want you to turn a little bit to the some people that you can see who are not standing. All right? You got that? You’ve got to hunt for them, don’t you?
Now those of you that are seated, here’s what I’m going to ask you to do. I’m going to ask you to bless this group. And I just want to remind every one of you I expect participation. I have nowhere to be until tomorrow ultimately. So we’re going to play by my rules. So are you ready to bless them out loud? Are you ready to shout it out loud? In a good manner. Because here’s what I want you to tell them, the people that are standing, I want the people who are seated; I want you to tell them these things. Are you ready? Are you ready? That means those of you that are seated respond.
Boy I tell you what, man; we’ve got some issues in this group. We’ve got, we don’t have the sharpest knives out of the drawer today. All right now. Here we go. Are you ready? Better. Those of you who are seated this is what you’re going to say to everybody around you that’s standing. And here’s what you’re going to say. You ready? We accept you. Now we’re going to say it again cause ya’ll didn’t sound very convinced. Ready? We accept you. This isn’t a way, all right? Ya’ll, boy ya’ll don’t get out much, do you?
I tell you what, you change something in church, some of ya’ll really struggle. Then the next thing we’re going to say is, you follow me, all right? We love you! We believe in you! We entrust you with this ministry! We will pray for you. We want to help you reach your generation. Now I want ya’ll to sit down.
Now I want all of you that were seated 40 and above, I want ya’ll to stand if you would please. Boy I know that’s hard on some of you women. May the God of heaven give you whatever you need to make you feel better about where you are today. Now I want all of you that are 39 and under, I want you to bless these people. Are you ready? All right now.
Those of you that are 40 and under kind of turn a little bit, because I want you to see some of those people. All right? This is your moment. All right? Here’s what we’re going to do, 39 and under, are you ready to bless them? Here we go. Follow me. We accept you. I like that. That’s what I call participation. We love you! We thank you! Listen now, we will not forget you. And I like this one, we need you.
Do you realize all of you that are 39 and under, do you realize you have what you have in this ministry usually because of the people that are standing right now around you? Somebody has paid a great price, and you never forget those who have gone before you.
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