The Jeff Cavins Show (Your Catholic Bible Study Podcast) - Raising Warriors for God
Episode Date: August 18, 2023How are we supposed to prepare our children for what is out in the world? If you are on social media or pay attention to the news, you know that there are a lot of challenges you and your children wil...l face in our world. Today, Jeff Cavins speaks honestly about the war we are in and how to prepare ourselves for it. Snippet from the Show The real battle is in the unseen territories. Email us with comments or questions at thejeffcavinsshow@ascensionpress.com. Text “jeffcavins” to 33-777 to subscribe and get Jeff’s shownotes delivered straight to your email! Or visit ascensionpress.com/thejeffcavinsshow for full shownotes!
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Welcome to the Jeff Kaven Show, where we talk about the Bible, discipleship, and evangelization, putting it all together in living as activated disciples.
This is show 337, Raising Warriors for God.
Hello, my friend. Good to be with you once again, as we discuss everything that deals with Scripture and being a disciple.
evangelicalization, living our faith, literally walking with Jesus. That's what it's all about.
Today we're talking about raising warriors for God, and maybe that title caught your attention.
Because a lot of people today are wondering how they're supposed to raise their children,
particularly in the face of this culture that we are living in. And that's a big question that
parents have is how do I prepare my children for what is out there in the world? Do I just isolate
them? Do I just not teach them anything about it? Or do I let them just indulge, you know, and
kind of say, Lord, they're yours, and I'm not going to do anything, but I trust them to you. What do you
do in raising children? I want to give you a biblical response to that and a response that is doable
in your life and effective in your life.
You look at those little kids sound asleep at night,
little Ralph and little Peggy Sue,
and you're thinking to yourself,
Warriors? Really? Well, yeah.
And by Warriors, we're not talking today
about running around hurting people
or anything like that. In fact,
what we are going to see is that there is a war
in the invisible realm that is manifesting itself
in the physical natural realm, and our children are going to be faced with making choices when
they grow up. Are they going to stand against this and stand strong for the Lord in his word,
or are they going to give in to the request of our culture and relegate their faith to some
kind of backseat tolerance position? I don't think so. And I don't think you want that either.
And I don't think you want your grandchildren to be that way, or your niece or your nephew.
You say, well, I don't have children.
Well, you do have nieces and nephews, most likely.
We're grandchildren.
And so there's something for all of us to gain by looking into this particular topic.
Now, what I'm going to do is I'm going to delve back into Maccabee and Revolt.
And I want to read some stuff to you from there and give some commentary as to what they did in a culture that was changing and putting a lot of pressure on them to change.
Before we get into that, however, you need the notes?
Well, I've got some notes for you.
today. And you are probably driving, running, whatever it might be. You don't have time to
write all this down. So I did. And I'll give them to you free. All you got to do is type my name,
Jeff Kavens, and that's one word, Jeff Kavins, and send it to 3377. That's 3377. You'll get the notes
in perpetuity. So you don't have to worry about it in the future. Okay, so let's take a look at this.
we're facing a culture war we are and we're facing a culture that is not just enjoying quote unquote
enjoying the fruits of their own change and their own community but feel that it's important to
to make sure that everybody else in the culture agrees with them and that we don't put up
any resistance to the norms in our culture.
Now, I'm speaking from the United States,
but I think it's true that this would apply in Canada.
It would apply in Europe.
It would apply everywhere,
but I'm just telling you that I'm an American
and I'm in the midst of it,
even though I'm deep in the woods today.
I have the most beautiful view of a lake
and a walking path and trees.
It's the middle of summer.
Still the battle rages.
and if I wanted to, I guess I could just hide out here with the animals and raise some food and forget about it.
But that's not what we're called to do.
We're called to be salt and light in the community.
And so we are facing a culture war that wants to force us to change.
From the outside, the pressure to change or at least discern your own sexuality.
And your children's own sexuality is very real.
Where people are literally going to challenge your son or daughter.
to conclude, are you really a boy or are you really a girl?
Now, if somebody would have said to me back in the 1970s that that was going to be a reality
in 20, 2023, I would have said, you are out of your mind.
That is social science fiction.
And it's not going to happen.
But it's happening today.
And it's happening in your kids' school.
You know, if your kids go to a public school, they're talking about.
this right now the definition of family is being treated like like plato you can do what you want
with it you can make it whatever you want you can mold it and shape it and nobody can tell you
differently that's happening right now the expectations of buying and possessing much you know
materialism they're out there right now what you buy where you live has you know it's it's a big
deal the pressure to change your faith because of popular opinion that you can no longer believe
what you believe because that will be bigoted oppression that will be a bigot's opinion and that
if you do have an opinion that's different than the popular culture it's seen as offensive
and aggressive and and needs to be dealt with in other words you need to be dealt with your
kids need to be dealt with well this isn't new at all
I want to take you back to the Jewish people before Jesus came on the scene in a period of
history called the Maccabian Revolt. The Maccabian Revolt. Now, before we get into that
Maccabian Revolt, I want you to understand one thing, and that is that the Maccabian Revolt
that happened a couple hundred years before Jesus was not a revolt against just simply ideology.
it was a revolt against
against real people who are trying to bring
real change on Israel
and behind that though
is a spiritual battle and Paul said this
he said that we don't
we don't war against flesh and blood
but against principalities and powers
in high places
so he's saying hey
the battle that's taking place is not
against people but there is a battle
against the ideology of principalities and powers
the devil's cohorts, his minions.
And the culture war is the manifestation of a spiritual war.
And I know one thing, and that is that the other side is willing to fight all the way to the end.
All the way to the end.
And so what we are going to go over here with the Maccabian Revolt,
think in terms of the modern era today,
and that the real battle is in the unseen territories.
But we have to respond to it.
We do have to respond to our fellow citizens as well.
But the story of the Maccabee and Revolt is so interesting.
And before I read about this revolt,
I need to bring up one topic here that is really the focus of this show.
As you are facing the pressure of a cultural upheaval,
you look around and you see families with great kids,
Your neighbors, and the people that go to church with have 11 kids, and five of them are priests, four of them are sisters, and the other two are running nonprofits or good cause.
And you look at your own family and you think, oh, man, I wonder how our kids are going to turn out.
I wonder what's going to happen to them.
Will they be able to withstand the pressure of the culture to change?
Are we going to lose them to our culture?
Is there a way to raise them so they'll be strong?
Well, the latter is the case.
You can raise them in a way where they can be strong.
I'm not saying that it's easy.
I'm not saying that it's an overnight deal,
but it is the way to respond to a culture that's trying to bring about changes.
So I want to go back and give you the setting of this, okay?
Okay, so if you go back into the Old Testament, the last book really is Malachi, the prophet,
but the last real big book that tells the stories before Jesus is first and second Maccabees.
Now, first and second Maccabees is all about the pressure of the Greek empire,
the Seleucids, the Ptolemae's and the Seleucids, the pressure that they're bringing to change the life in Jerusalem.
So it kind of goes like this.
after you have the Babylonians in 587 BC taking Israel into captivity, they come back
after 70 years of captivity.
And at that point, things look like they're going to go pretty well until the Greeks
took over as the world power.
And the leader of that world power introducing a philosophy of Hellenization, meaning
to make the world Greek thinking, great Greek section.
sexuality, the gods and everything else. That's led by Alexander the Great, the son of Philip of
Macedonia. So Alexander the Great really does an amazing campaign and conquers the known
world, stops just short of India, because his troops were worn out. But he was impressed with the
people in Jerusalem. He was actually impressed with him. And then after Alexander the Great died
in 323, suddenly of some kind of virus, some people think he was poison, but he died suddenly
leaving his entire empire to the Ptolemais out of Alexandria, Egypt. You might remember that
the Ptolemais had a big impact on Israel. So the Ptolemais ended up ruling over the land at that
point, and they allowed Israel to keep their Jewish identity, to continue to circumcise, to
continue to offer sacrifices in the temple, teach Torah, all of that. Well, that came to a sudden end
when the Seleucids, the other branch of Alexander's army, the first was the Ptolemais,
then the Seleucids defeated them and they took over as the ruling power in Jerusalem. But they
didn't allow this doctrine of tolerance. No? They wanted change to take place in Jerusalem. And so,
when they came in they forced conversion they took the temple they desecrated it and they offered sacrifices of pigs in the temple
and if somebody broke the rules and circumcised their child they themselves would be destroyed and their children would be hung around their necks
this was serious stuff that the greeks under the rule of the solucid's serious stuff it was going on at that time
And the leader of the Seleucids was Antiochus Epiphanes. He's kind of a madman, but the word epiphany
meaning God, he thought he was, God made manifest, which he wasn't. You know, story spoiler right
there. So what was the response to Israel? What was their response at that point? Well,
the response to this terror was divided. There were a lot of people.
willing to bow to this, to cooperate with the Greeks and the demands of Antiochus Epiphanes,
also known as Antiochus the fourth. And in so doing, they compromised the very ethos that was
established under the reforms of Ezra and Nehemiah earlier. It's like giving it all back. Give me a
break. Others resisted and soon found out that resistance, resistance was going to be hard.
And Antiochus Epiphanes, he targeted a city about 17 miles north, west of Jerusalem, called Modin.
And Modin was where the real Orthodox were.
They were the ones that, man, they weren't going to give up at all.
And it was in Modin that an aged priest by the name of Matathias rose up.
Matathias had five sons.
John, Simon, Judas, Elyzer, and Jonathan.
And those five sons countered.
They countered the king's officers, the Greeks' officers, who had been sent to force them to become apostate.
And when the village was summoned to a public assembly and commanded to offer the pagan sacrifices, guess what Mattathias, the son of the five guys?
What did he say?
First Maccabees 2, 19, and 20, I'll put it.
in the notes for you. He said this, get this. Even if all the nations that live under the rule of the
king obey him and have chosen to do his commandments, departing each one from the religion of his
fathers, yet I and my sons and my brothers will live by the covenant of our fathers. Far be it from us
to desert the law and the ordinances, we will not obey the king's words by turning aside from our
religion to the right hand or to the left.
Woo-hoo.
Got some spunk there, Mattathias.
When the Jewish man came forward to perform the, another guy came forward to
perform the requisite pagan sacrifice.
You know what Mattathias did?
Matathias, moved by a zeal for the Torah, killed both this Jewish man and the
king's enforcer, reminiscent of Phineas in Numbers 25 or Elijah in first kings 18.
This triggered a revolt against the Greeks.
Now, this was so serious of what the pressure on these people in Jerusalem
that they actually, many of them,
underwent a reversal surgery for circumcision
because the men were in the gymnasiums,
and that's where men, that's where they would oftentimes, you know, meet,
and that's where they would do business and so forth.
and they did not want to give away by means of circumcision that they were Jews.
They didn't want to give that.
They didn't want to give it away.
So there was all of this pressure.
But Mattathias, the father of the five sons, says, no way are we going to do that.
And he rallied all those people into a resistance in his sons, and he fled at that point.
But before Mattathias' death, you know what he did?
He encouraged his sons.
You can read about this in 1st Maccabees 251.
He encouraged his sons to, quote, remember the deeds of the fathers, unquote.
So Mattathias is continually recalling the deeds of the great men throughout salvation history,
kind of like Hebrews chapter 11 in the New Testament that goes through all the men and women of faith.
Keep that in mind towards the end.
into this podcast. It'll come in handy. First Maccabees 2, 51 through 64, talk about this how he would
raise up the lives of these holy men before the eyes of his sons. Do you get that? I'm giving you
some of the hints here. So how do we fight? How do we respond? How do we raise warriors for God?
Well, Mattathias raised up the lives of these holy men and women before his sons, stirring their
hearts and rousing their courage. Matathias knew well the stories of Israel's great heroes and
forefathers and had taught them to his sons so that they could recall them often to strengthen their
resolve to be faithful to God's truth. Isn't that what you want of your kids? Don't you want your
kids to have a strong resolve and courage to be faithful to God's word? Matathias taught his sons the
story and the lessons of salvation history. I am so pleased that over the last three years,
millions of people have gone through Bible in a year and have followed that great adventure
method of reading through salvation history as a narrative, because when you do that,
you review all the stories of the great men and women in salvation history.
Now, Judas, his son, Judas Maccabees, himself, recalls.
these people in events when he encourages his men before battle. So Judas is one of his sons.
You might remember that he has John, Simon, Judas, Eliezer, and Jonathan. The third son
is going to rise up as being very, very strong. And in First Maccabees, four, six through
11, he is going to do what his daddy did. He's going to do what his papa did. He's going to read
the stories of the valiant men and women in salvation history to encourage his men before battle.
You see a pattern taking place here? Pause. How often have you read the great stories
of the men and women in salvation history to your children? You're listening to the Jeff Kaven
show. We'll be right back. Is it possible for you to live a life of greatness that is more than just
confusing relationships, endless scrolling, and unfulfilling friendships.
I'm Sarah Swafford, author of Emotional Virtue.
And I'm Andrew Swofford, Professor of Benedictine College,
and co-author of a Catholic Guide to the Old Testament
and editor of the Great Adventure Catholic Bible.
And we wrote a book with Ascension called Gift and Grit.
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slash gift and grit.
Talking today about raising warriors for God, the pattern is right here in scripture
in the Maccabee and Revolt.
By the way, the first and second Maccabees are not in the Protestant Bible.
They have 39 books in the Old Testament.
We have 46.
We have seven more because before Jesus, there was a Greek translation of the Old Testament
called the Septuagint.
translated into Greek down in Alexandria, Egypt, and that's what the early church adopted as
the full Old Testament. It wasn't until the Reformation that a group of reformers decided not to
go with that canon anymore, but to go with a Jewish canon in Hebrew. I thought I'd just throw that in
right there. So we go from Mattathias now to Judas Maccabias. So after Mattathias' death,
leadership of the revolt fell on on judas the third son and he is he's nicknamed macabias
the hammer that's what i mean a hammer and uh as a as a military strategist and commander
judas overwhelmed his enemies he defeated more powerful opponents such as apollonius the governor
of samaria saran the commander of syria it goes on and on this guy was really really powerful
And so the greatest contribution that Judas Maccabees made was that he recaptured Jerusalem in the temple in 164, and then exactly three years after the incursion of Antiochus Epiphanes in the overtaking of the temple, he cleansed the temple, rebuilt the altar, and replaced the sacred vessels that had been plundered.
1 Maccabees chapter 4 and so this was celebrated by a great feast now get this this is an
important little point that you don't hear very often the reconsecration was celebrated with
sacrifices and great fanfare for how many days eight days well if they're going to dedicate
the temple again they got to have enough oil for for eight days but they have only enough oil for
one day. Now, why for eight days? Well, because this dedication of the temple after it was desecrated
is going to be with the memory of the feast of tabernacles, which was the feast during which Solomon
dedicated the first temple. That's all contained in First Maccabees four. So get this. In order to
fight the war that is taking place, they brought up the memory of the feast of tabernacles,
Feast of Booths.
Now, in the Transfiguration, in the New Testament,
Jesus meets with Moses and Elijah and Peter, James, and John, on Mount Tabor, he's
transfigured, and it is a recalling of the Feast of Tabernacles.
And that's why Peter says, should we build three booths?
One for you and one for Moses and one for Elijah.
You see, Jesus spoke to the men on the Transfiguration about his own
exodus, which would begin in Jerusalem, his own freedom and the freedom of those who are
following him. Jesus didn't need freedom in the sense of sin, but he was building freedom into
his followers by bringing up the feast of tabernacles. And that's what Judas Maccabees did.
Judas and all the people instituted the annual commemoration. You know it as Hanukkah. In the New
Testament, it's the Feast of Lights for the Feast of Dedication. So Judas continues successful,
is successful against the Gentile forces, and then Antiochus Epiphanes dies, and his death creates
a power vacuum, and then all hell breaks loose. Now, under Judas's leadership, the Jewish people
entered into an alliance with another Gentile power that was beginning to make itself felt,
and that was Rome. And I don't want to go into that. I don't want to go into that. I don't want to
go into that right now. But after the sudden death of Judas Maccabias in the battle on Mount
Azatis, Jonathan assumed leadership in difficult times. So Jonathan becomes the leader. And he also
is a mighty man. Now that's one story in the Maccabean revolt where you have Mattathias and his
five sons and they are going to fight the fight, but it will require their life. Now there's
There's two ways to fight here. Two options. To kill or be killed. Now, in both instances, they ended up losing their lives. The Maccabees chose martyrdom as the weapon finally to deal with the occupation of the Syrians, the Greek Empire. And Jesus, for Jesus, it was crucifixion that was used against the real enemy, which was death, hell and the grave against Satan.
so this becomes the seed this sacrifice of their lives becomes the seed of jesus era where the path was
suffering the path was suffering and paul understood that well because in coloshans 124 he says
i rejoice in my suffering for your sake and i fill up in my body that which is lacking in the
sufferings of christ so suffering became the choice of warfare
Now, does that mean all we do is roll over and die? No, we fight. We fight for our families. We fight for
what is right. We fight for the truth. But we are willing to give our own lives. And we raise
children as warriors to fight for the fight, fight for the truth, fight for the faith, and to be willing
to give their own lives. That's the only way that we can be successful. We cannot be successful
if we are a bunch of theological pansies who just want to do apologetics with our culture.
because we will lose
that if we're willing
to give our lives
nothing can stop us
now I'm not saying that we go out and kill people
that's wrong right but we go out
and lay our lives down
to fight for the truth
and the key to
Mattathias
was that he read the stories
of the great men and women
of faith to his sons
he soaked them
in those stories
so that when they faced the battle themselves,
they were strong and they were willing to lay down their own lives.
Let me ask you a question.
Are you raising your kids to die for the gospel?
I remember a story I was just with Kimberly and Scott Hahn this last week.
And Kimberly was telling again this story she told me a year or so ago
and her son was ordained a priest, Jeremiah.
He ordained a priest, and there was so much going on out there in persecution of priests
because of the priest scandal that it concerned her.
And she had some kind of vision or dream where she saw her own sons, you know, on the cross
and cried out to Mary and said, please protect them.
And it was almost like Mary was saying to her,
you're asking me to protect your son?
can promise you this I'll be at the foot of their cross
the way I was at the foot of my own son's cross
you see we've been willing to give our lives for the gospel
brings this whole battle to a new level
a level that the world is not used to right now
when they face people who love the Lord so much
and their faith so much that they will not bow to the whims of our culture
they will not do it but they'll stand for for the truth now there's another story here
dealing with with with martyrdom that is so powerful it concerns a mother and her seven sons
you can read about it in second samuel or second maccabees rather chapter seven second
maccabees chapter seven it's a mother with seven sons who were subjected to torture
and killed, cruelly treated for doing what?
For refusing to break the Torah.
By doing what?
By eating swine's flesh.
You say, oh, come on, Jeff.
I mean, what's a BLT?
You give your life for a BLT?
No.
I'm not saying give your life for a BLT.
Neither is this mother.
She's saying, give your life for the word of God.
We're not going to disobey the Lord.
we're not going to do it in our families and the way we teach our children and schools we go to
and the choices that we make sorry world we're not going to do it we're not going to do it
will you be tortured will you be cruelly treated perhaps perhaps but listen to what what she said
the sons repeatedly proclaimed that they are willing to die her sons or seven sons
continually are saying i'm willing to die for faithfulness to god
law. And I'll quote it right here from Second Maccabees 7, too. We are ready to die rather than
transgress the laws of our fathers. We have died for his laws because of his laws. And I obey the
command of the law that was given to our fathers through Moses. And before his death, the sixth
son out of the seven said, for we are suffering these things on our own account because of our
sins against our own God, therefore astounding things have happened. The martyrs did not see
their subjugation to Antiochus epiphanies as a consequence of their political weakness per se,
but rather as a result of their unfaithfulness to the covenant. That was why they were facing what
they're facing. I want to say something to you, my friend today, and you can share this with as many
people as you want, and that is this. The culture that we are facing today may just be,
the fruit of the lives of Americans or the last 50 years.
God used his enemies to deal with them.
And as this sixth son said,
we are suffering for these things on our own account
because of our sins against our own God.
And now our response is,
we must be faithful.
Don't continue down that track.
So one of the most striking features in this account of the martyrdom of the mother and her seven sons is that these martyrs believed that their suffering, which was brought upon them because of their own infidelity to God, would bring about the redemption of the nation.
That's what they believe.
They believe that they're suffering would bring about the redemption of the nation.
In other words, of the youngest and last of the sons killed, listen to what he says.
He says, I, like my brothers, give up my body and life for the laws of our fathers, appealing to God to show mercy soon to our nation, and by afflictions and plagues to make you confess that he alone is God.
And through me and my brothers to bring to an end the wrath of the Almighty which has justly fallen on our whole nation, is there a chance that we are reaping what we have.
have sown in America, in the United States.
If so, then our posture must be the same as Matathias and his five sons and this woman
and her seven sons.
And so this conviction about suffering for our sins in fighting the true fight of principalities
and powers by giving our lives.
is emphasized by the literary strategy of Second Maccabees, the accounts of martyrdom.
They're inserted into the story of Judas Maccabeus so as to interrupt its progression.
When the narrative about Judas and his companions resumes, the author states explicitly
that the Gentiles could not withstand him, Judas, for the wrath of the Lord had turned to mercy.
See that?
The wrath of the Lord turned to mercy.
and it was due to the willingness to lay down their lives.
That's what we have to do.
And so I want to encourage you, and by the way, I encourage you to read first and second Maccabees.
And if you have the book Walking with God, a Journey Through the Bible that Tim Gray and I wrote,
I really encourage you to read the chapter on the Maccabian Revolt.
It's chapter 10, and it will really open your book.
your eyes if you haven't read it or if you've read it reread it it'll open your eyes anew but here's the
thing this whole mindset of the woman in her seven sons and mattathias and his five became the seed
of jesus era where the path was suffering and that suffering had had redemptive power and it was the blood
of the martyrs became the seed of evangelization and growth so with your own children now as we get ready to
come into the airport here with your children, you can do one of two things. You can teach
them to kill or you can teach him to die, where the path was suffering. And so you can teach
them to die. It is dying for the faith that inspired. Do we have any heroes today? Do we have
any priests, bishops, cardinals? Do we have any laymen, married, and single women?
who are dedicated virgins, married, grandmothers, grandfathers,
do we have anybody who's willing to fight by laying down their lives and saying,
I'm not going to give up.
I will be an example to my grandson.
I'll be an example to my daughter.
I'll be an example to my nephew.
This mother watched her seven sons die for the faith,
and it turned everything around.
So I would encourage you to do this continually.
Continually review the heroes of the faith.
They will do something magnificent for your sons and daughters.
I would recommend, this is just an idea.
I would recommend that on their birthdays, your sons and daughters' birthdays,
I would recommend that you read Hebrews chapter 11.
Because of Hebrews chapter 11 goes through the entire Hall of Faith,
of all the people, men and women who were faithful,
and it goes through the whole story of them.
I'd recommend you read it on their birthdays and say,
son, you know, Johnny, Greg, Paul, Susan, Martha, Donna, whoever.
I would say, I want to read this to you
because you are a part of a long story of faithful men and women
who are willing to give their lives.
And this is what we want to pass on to you.
would read second maccabees seven with the woman i would read it to your children i'd read first
maccabees chapters one through four about mattathias and his son judas jonathan warriors for god
i would read ephesians talking about the equipment of a soldier of god and if you will do this
over and over, you will be in the line of Mattathias and this woman
who confronted the cultural changes of their time
with faithfulness, faithfulness, not capitulating,
but faithfulness.
I just have this sense, as I'm sharing this right now,
that there are some of you, my friends,
that this could be a change in your family,
a change that may manifest tremendous fruit in 15, 20, 30 years from now.
But you've got to make the choice today.
Make the choice today.
If you read the great stories to your children,
they will have built,
you will have built into them a way to stand against the culture
that wants to force them to change.
You heard the world say,
hell no. Not going to do it. I'd say heaven. Yes, we're going to do it. We're going to fight
the faith. We're not going to roll over and go away. In the name of the Father and the Son and the
Holy Spirit, Lord Jesus, we love you. We thank you. We desire Lord to be with you and to be like you.
In Jesus, we are facing such a changing world. And you said, in the world we'll have tribulation.
but behold be of good cheer you have overcome the world you overcame the world by giving your life
on the cross oh lord may we follow in your footsteps and may we pick up our cross and follow you
may we teach our children to pick up their cross and to follow you not to just come up with
psychological and and cultural ways of explaining things away but to share with our children
what's really happening and to by example fight the good fight or faith pick up our cross
and walk in joy and love.
Blessed Virgin Mary, you were at the foot of the cross
where the victory was won.
We thank you for being at the foot of the cross of our children,
where the victory will be won.
We ask you to pray for our children.
Help them with your intercession and your example.
In Jesus' name, we pray.
Amen.
I love you, my friends.
I know this has been a heavy one,
but I think it's needed right now in our times.
Look forward to seeing you next week.