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I see the hunched woman saying the same thing.
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I see Hegar being seen by God.
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I see the bleeding woman being healed and saying, God, you've taken my morning and you've
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turned it into dancing.
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I see Leah and Elizabeth.
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He has brought fruit where there was bareness.
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He's brought life into the dark places.
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He's brought soul satisfaction to those who have unfulfilled longings.
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God is still doing this today.
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He's doing this all around us and hopefully in us.
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Welcome to Beauty and the Brokenness, where we have honest conversations about the Bible,
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our real life struggles, and the hope God brings for healing.
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I'm your host, Theresa Whiting, an author, Bible teacher, and trauma-informed life coach,
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but mostly a friend and fellow-struggler.
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No matter who you are or where you've been, I'm inviting you to encounter the God who
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is still creating beauty right in the midst of your brokenness.
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Psalm 30 is a song of praise to the God who answers our prayers.
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He lifts us from the depths of despair and transforms our weeping into rejoicing.
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The Lord is our hope, our healer, and our deliverer.
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We see this so vividly in the life of the hunched woman that we've been studying from
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I want to read Psalm 30, and then we'll talk about the beautiful things that it teaches
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us about the heart of God.
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So I'm going to read from the ESV.
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I will extoll you, O Lord, for you have drawn me up and have not let my foes rejoice over
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O Lord, my God, I cried to you for help, and you have healed me.
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O Lord, you have brought up my soul from Sheol.
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You restored me to life from among those who go down to the pit, seeing praises to the
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O you His saints, and give thanks to His holy name.
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For His anger is but for a moment, and His favor is for a lifetime.
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Weeping may tarry for the night, but joy comes with the morning.
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As for me, I said in my prosperity, I shall never be moved.
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By your favor, O Lord, you made my mountains stand strong.
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You hid your face, I was dismayed.
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To you, O Lord, I cry, and to the Lord I plead for mercy.
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What profit is there in my death?
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If I go down to the pit, will the dust praise you?
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Will it tell of your faithfulness?
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Hear, O Lord, and be merciful to me.
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O Lord, be my helper.
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You have turned for me my morning into dancing.
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You have loosed my sackcloth and clothed me with gladness.
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O that my glory may sing your praise and not be silent.
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O Lord, my God, I will give thanks to you forever.
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So I read it in the ESV, but as we go through the study notes, I'm going to be quoting
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I love to use different versions, whenever I'm studying Scripture, and I highly recommend
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that, that you use apps like Bible Hub or Blue Letter Bible or Logos software, where
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you can kind of compare and contrast different versions of Scripture.
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When we look at this song, it's easy to see how the hunched woman could have related
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These verses about, Lord, you lifted me.
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You didn't allow my enemies to gloat over me.
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You made me stand firm.
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I can see how she might have experienced some of the things in this song, but I also
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can see those things in my own life.
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One of the phrases that really resonated with me was where the Psalmist said, you lifted
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me out of the depths.
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You spared me from going down into the pit.
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I always talk about my life before I knew Christ.
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I felt like I was on this path of self-destruction.
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I was kind of just going down a slimy pit, and I feel like God reached down and rescued
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He pulled me out of that pit.
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Whenever I share my rescue story, I was loved to share some of these verses from Ephesians
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chapter 2, which say, and you were dead in the trespasses and sins in which you once walked,
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following the course of this world, following the prince of the power of the air, the spirit
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that is now at work in the sons of disobedience, among whom we all once lived in the passions
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of our flesh, carrying out the desires of the body and the mind, and were by nature, children
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of wrath like the rest of mankind, but God being rich and mercy, because of the great
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love with which He loved us, even when we were dead in our trespasses made us alive
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together with Christ.
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We were dead in our sins, and God made us alive in Christ.
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And that's something I don't want to forget.
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I don't want to get so far along in my Christian life that I forget what God rescued me from.
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But not just then, not just when He first saved me, but on a regular basis, God lifts
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He pulls me out of the depths of despair, of regret, of sorrow and pain.
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And He also, when I am in those places, He laments with me.
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He sits in the dark with me.
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One of my favorite verses is verse seven, where it says, Lord, when you favored me, you
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made my royal mountain stand firm.
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But when you hid your face, I was dismayed.
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That idea of being favored, it's God's delight, His pleasure in us.
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The Psalmist is saying, Lord, by your goodness, by your delight, by your good pleasure,
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you make me stand strong and firm like a mountain.
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But when you hide your face from me, when we're not in that close face to face fellowship,
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it says, I was dismayed.
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That word means terrified, disturbed, alarmed.
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And I wonder, as I think about my own life, and as you think about your life, when you
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are face to face with God, when He is delighting in you, and you're delighting in His presence,
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there is a strength and a power there.
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But when we're not face to face with Him, are we even troubled?
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Do we even know that we're not face to face with Him, or are we too busy, too distracted,
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too engrossed in our own lives to realize that we have pulled away from Him, or that it's
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been a while since we've sat and spoken with Him.
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For the Psalmist, it's God's presence that brought safety, security, strength, power.
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I also notice a lot of contrasts in this Psalm, talks about God's anger lasting for
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a moment, but His favor lasting for a lifetime.
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Verse 11 says, you've turned my wailing into dancing, or my morning, my weeping into dancing,
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you removed my sackcloth and clothed me with joy.
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Lament has been a big part of the scene series, and we have talked about lament, and how
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God welcomes our lament, and how lament is supposed to be a language that we're very familiar
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But it doesn't always stay as lament.
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That word actually where He says, you have turned my wailing into dancing.
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That can be translated, you have turned my lament, or my morning into dancing.
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The Hebrews use dancing in their celebration, in their praise.
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It's a picture of celebration and joy and freedom.
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It says, you've put off my sackcloth.
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Sackcloth was this coarse, loose clothing, I think of like burlap, right?
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That's kind of what sackcloth is.
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They would wear that when they were lamenting, and it says, you have, in the original language,
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it says, you have put off my sackcloth and clothed me with gladness.
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So in other words, God has taken that dry, hard, itchy thing and clothed me instead.
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With joy, gladness, rejoicing.
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Okay, I know I did this already with Psalm 71, but this is a different Psalm, and one of
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the things I love to do, as you know, is look at what is the psalmist doing in this psalm,
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and what is God doing?
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We see the psalmist saying, I will exalt.
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The psalmist infers that he has been weeping and rejoicing, that he's been warning and
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dancing, that he's spoken praise, and he's been silenced.
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But when we look at God, look at the things that God does for the psalmist and for you and
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I, you lifted me out of the depths.
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You didn't let my enemies gloat over you.
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You brought me up from the realm of the dead.
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You spared me from going down to the pit.
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You turned my wailing into dancing.
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You removed my sackcloth and clothed me with joy.
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We can look at that list, and we can say yes.
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There are things on that list that I can specifically say God has done for me.
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My story is not exactly like the psalmist.
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It's not exactly like yours, but we have a lot in common.
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All of us at one time were dead, and God has made us alive in Christ.
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Maybe that's where you are today.
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Maybe you're in a place of celebrating all the goodness God has done to you, or maybe
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you're in the place of verses eight and nine, where you're saying to you, Lord, I called
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to the Lord, I cried for mercy.
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What is gained if I'm silenced?
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If I go down to the pit, will the dust praise you?
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Will it proclaim your faithfulness, verse 10, here, Lord, and be merciful to me?
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This psalm kind of hits it all.
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Whether you are mourning, or whether you are celebrating and dancing, there are things
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that we can all relate to.
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That's why I love the psalm so much.
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They hit the whole gamut of our emotions.
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Even in one psalm, it's up, it's down, it's mourning, it's celebrating.
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And as the psalm closes, you see this celebration, you see this psalmist coming at a place of saying,
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God, look at what you've done.
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Look what you've done in my life.
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I see the woman, the hunched woman saying the same thing.
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I see Hegar being seen by God.
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I see the bleeding woman being healed and saying, God, you've taken my mourning and you've
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turned it into dancing.
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I see Leah and Elizabeth, and I see my sisters, the ones who I've done this study with, the
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ones who I know have walked through deep, dark waters, and God has restored.
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He has brought fruit where there was bareness.
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He's brought life into the dark places.
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He's brought soul satisfaction to those who have unfulfilled longings.
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God is still doing this today.
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He's doing this all around us and hopefully in us.
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And so the psalm closes with that my heart may sing your praises and not be silent.
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Lord my God, I will praise you forever.
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This is such a fitting psalm to have toward the end of the scene series because we can
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look back over the women that we've studied.
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We can look back hopefully, prayerfully at our own lives and we can see God's healing,
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His deliverance, His presence in the midst of the darkness.
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We can see Him walking beside us, being face-to-face with us, carrying us through hard times.
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And then we can speak that praise aloud, we can shout it, we can sing it, we can share
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it with one another.
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One of the things I hope you'll do is you'll get this study and you'll do it with a
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group of friends and together you can share the goodness of God.
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And whether it's this study or something else, sometimes we go to church on Sundays and
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we have opportunities to communally sing praise to God.
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We have opportunities to lift His name with our voices, with songs of praise and that
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is a beautiful opportunity.
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I want to encourage you to be a part of that.
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But when the service is over, I want to encourage you to find somebody around you and tell them
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about the goodness of God in your own life.
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And like the psalmist, let's speak and sing His praise forever.
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Thanks for hanging out with me today on Beauty and the Brokenness to find anything I mentioned
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Go to TeresaWeiting.com slash episode dash 148 to find all the show notes.
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To find anything I mentioned on the episode, go to TeresaWeiting.com slash episode dash 149
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to find all the show notes.
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If you're interested in being kept up to date on what's happening with scene, maybe being
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on my prayer team and helping the launch of this book, I have a link for that in the
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I would love for you to join the scene team.
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In closing, I want to leave you with this prayer from number 6, 24 to 26.
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The Lord bless you and keep you.
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The Lord make His face shine on you and be gracious to you.
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The Lord turn His face toward you and give you peace.