Here is the second post regarding Jack Hayford.
Text of forwarded message follows:
>Jack Hayford
>
>General Teachings/Activities
>http://www.rapidnet.com/~jbeard/bdm/exposes/hayford/general.htm
>
>- Jack Hayford (born 1934) is the
>hyper-charismatic pastor of The Church on the
>Way, The First Foursquare Church of Van Nuys,
>California. Hayford started the church in 1969
>with 18 people; it is now the largest Foursquare
>Church (Pentecostal) in the U.S. -- about 9,000
>members (of which about 80% speak in tongues as
>a prayer language, according to Hayford) with
>weekly attendance between 8,500 and 10,000.
>Hayford promotes the "four-square" doctrines of
>Pentecostalism -- that Jesus is Savior, Baptizer
>with the Holy Spirit, Healer, and Coming King.
>He also teaches the false doctrine that healing
>is promised in the atonement (Charisma, June
>1992). Pat Boone is an elder in Hayford's
>church, and Trinity Broadcasting Network's (TBN)
>heretical founders, Paul and Jan Crouch, are
>members. Hayford has authored more than two
>dozen books, and is also a prolific "hymn"
>writer, composing more than 400 popular
>charismatic "gospel" songs, including "Majesty"
>(which promotes the false charismatic "Kingdom
>Now" philosophy in which Christians are thought
>to be able to exercise kingdom authority over
>sickness and the devil in this present hour).
>
>Hayford's teaching can be heard nationwide
>through his "Living Way" radio and television
>ministries. The half-hour weekday radio program
>was started in 1981 (originally titled,
>"FreeWay") and is now heard in over 40 states
>and in several foreign countries. In 1989,
>Living Way began a Sunday morning "live"
>broadcast of the church services from The Church
>On The Way. The now one-hour Sunday television
>program was started in 1977 and is seen in all
>50 states on TBN (as well as in Canada and South
>Africa). Also on its 24 acre campus, the Church
>on the Way operates The King's College, The
>King's Seminary, and the Jack W. Hayford School of Pastoral Nurture.
>
>Hayford writes in A Man's Worship and Witness
>(p. 80) that since the inception of The Church
>on the Way 25 years ago, over 40,000 "decisions
>for Christ" have been made at his church, more
>than 30 churches have been planted elsewhere,
>and over 100 pastors and church leaders have
>gone out to serve in other places. Also, Hayford
>claims to have given over $20 million to "serve
>human needs and spread the Gospel" throughout the world.
>
>- Foursquare was founded in 1923 by flamboyant,
>twice-divorced Pentecostal female preacher Aimee
>Semple McPherson. (In a 1990 sermon about
>McPherson's ministry, Hayford defended her on
>the grounds that "she certainly should not be
>viewed as one who 'bounced' from marriage to
>marriage," and that in his view, her ministry
>was validated by the fact that "a half-century
>later, the devil still hates her sufficiently to
>spray lying venom on her memory.") In a 3/93
>Charisma magazine article, Hayford says
>Foursquare was "one of the first to fully
>embrace the charismatic movement as being a
>legitimate movement of the Spirit." Yet,
>Foursquare teaches physical healing in the
>atonement, "Spirit-slaying," spiritual
>warfare/demon-deliverance, tongues-speaking,
>signs & wonders evangelism, extra-revelatory
>prophecy, etc., etc. In the face of mounting
>criticism, Hayford now admits to a more flexible
>attitude. In his latest book, he also refrains
>from demanding tongues as a proof of Spirit
>baptism, and instead presents "spiritual
>language" as a "divine and desirable provision
>to assist every believer ..." [still error
>though]. (Reported in the 8/17/92, Christianity
>Today; the 3/15/93, Calvary Contender; and the 3/8/93, Christian News.)
>
>- Evidence abounds of Hayford's
>hyper-charismatic, ecumenical, and occultic
>tendencies: (Reported in the 11/1/89 and
>9/15/91, Calvary Contenders; and the 12/91, CIB Bulletin.)
>
>(a) Hayford spoke at the 1989 Billy
>Graham/Lausanne II conference (with John Wimber,
>David Yonggi Cho, and Dick Eastman), and has
>appeared at other ecumenical events such as
>Robert Schuller "success" conferences. [Hayford
>also endorsed Schuller's 1996 autobiography --
>Prayer: My Soul's Adventure With God.]
>
>(b) In 10/91, Hayford visited Sydney, Australia
>with John Wimber (the "signs & wonders," Church
>Growth, Power Evangelism, Vineyard Movement
>founder and leader who died in 1997) to hold a
>"holiness conference" (a number of Catholic
>priests also spoke at the conference).
>
>(c) In the 10/91 issue of Charisma magazine,
>Hayford relates a vision of seeing Jesus seated
>in heaven and then rising from the throne.
>Hayford states: "As the anointing caught in the
>folds of His garments, it began to splash out
>and fall over the church." Jesus then supposedly
>said, "I am beginning to rise now in preparation
>for my second coming. Those who will rise with
>me will share in this double portion of anointing."
>
>(d) Hayford praised Richard Foster for his
>efforts in bringing together all the streams of
>the church. (Foster is the head of Renovaré, an
>international ecumenical organization that
>espouses the use of guided imagery and
>visualization as means of obtaining "personal spiritual renewal.")
>
>- Charismatic Bible Ministries (CBM) was
>founded in 1986 by hyper-charismatic Oral
>Roberts. Jack Hayford was one of the original
>officers and trustees of CBM. (Others included
>such hyper-charismatics as Richard Roberts,
>Kenneth Copeland, David Yonggi Cho, Charles
>Capps, Morris Cerullo, Paul Crouch, Kenneth
>Hagin, Benny Hinn, Charles and Frances Hunter,
>Robert Tilton, Casey Treat, John Osteen, Earl
>Paulk, Fred K.C. Price, Tommy Reid, Stephen
>Strang, and Lester Sumrall.) CBM conducts
>leadership conferences for its charismatic
>coalition, many of whom espouse dominion
>theology tenets. CBM's slogan is "Love and Unity
>through Signs and Wonders." When people look to
>signs and wonders to produce love and unity,
>they will find themselves united with everything
>that appears miraculous regardless of the source
>(Vengeance is Ours, pp. 125-127).
>
>- Paul Crouch, the founder of the blasphemous
>Trinity Broadcasting Network (TBN), is a member
>in good standing at the Hayford-pastored Church
>on the Way. Crouch publishes the monthly
>newsletter Praise the Lord . I think it's fair
>to assume that Hayford is in agreement with
>Crouch's theology, or else as his pastor,
>Hayford would correct Crouch and discipline him
>if necessary. The following are quotes from the
>3/93 Praise the Lord newsletter: (All emphases in the original.)
>
>(a) "I love a good fight! ... who the REAL enemy
>is! ... the heretic hunters [e.g., Martin
>Bobgan] ... searching endlessly for some new
>flaw in doctrine, picking, picking, picking some
>new splinter of error from the eyes ..."
>
>(b) "... the many documented miracles under
>Kathryn Kuhlman's ministry and, of course, Benny
>Hinn's present-day ministry. ... if there is no
>power -- no healings -- no miracles in a church
>or ministry, the only thing left to do is to
>develop a new theology to justify their [the
>"heretic hunters"] pitiful, spiritually barren
>lives and ministry!" [Kuhlman was one of the
>first of many "stage show healers," in effect,
>blazing the trail for the Benny Hinn's and Oral Roberts of today.]
>
>(c) "If miracles really did cease at 90 A.D. ...
>the heretic hunters were right! If we are not
>'little Gods,' we will apologize to you in front
>of ten thousand times ten thousand before the
>Crystal Sea!" [Hayford has taught the "little
>gods" heresy himself, specifically in a message
>first recorded in 1979 (titled "Marching Against
>Mammon") and rebroadcast on a on a 10/2/86 Living Way radio program.]
>
>(d) "A host of evil spirits ... responsible for
>much, if not most, of the personal difficulties,
>spiritual pressures and aggravated forms of evil
>that characterize our modern social order. ...
>this constant and fiendish disruption of the
>human social order is explained only by the mass
>activity behind the scenes of a vast, well
>organized host of wicked spirits under the
>control of their master prince. ... When will
>YOU take back everything Satan has stolen from
>you by bluff, bluster, lying and deceit? ... Say
>it with me -- 'Satan, I bind YOUR EVIL WORKS in
>Jesus' name.' Say it with me, 'I claim my
>healing, in Jesus' name; I take back what is
>mine, in Jesus' name!'" ["Name-It-and-Claim-It"/demon-deliverance].
>
>(e) "If and when we finally lay down these petty
>doctrinal and traditional differences and JOIN
>TOGETHER as an awesome UNITED body and force,
>all hell will finally retreat into the abyss,
>and, together, we will bring back the king! ...
>When will we realize that the enforcement of
>Christ's Victory is UP TO US? " [Dominion Now theology].
>
>(f) "Some of you have, indeed, grasped this
>truth and victory -- Glory! Some of you have
>repossessed your rightful ownership and
>possessions. ... Praise the Lord, David's God is
>teaching our hands to war too! Soon our enemy
>will be destroyed! Soon our enemy will have to
>yield even his remaining strongholds. Together,
>we are: 'Destroying the works of the Devil' --
>just as Jesus commanded us to do." [Charismatic spiritual warfare]
>
>- Hayford is an endorser/participant in the
>National Evangelistic Census (NEC), a Kingwood,
>Texas charismatic/ecumenical ministry to "turn
>the nation back to God by winning our city to
>Jesus." NEC sponsors an annual one day
>"census"/global neighborhood survey where teams
>of two go door-to-door asking questions from a
>form and presenting the "gospel"; an NEC
>brochure predicts: "The angels in heaven will be
>shouting when the goal of 25 million souls are
>reported won to Jesus in one day!" (Among other
>endorsers are the Evangelical Free Church of
>America, Youth With a Mission, Campus Crusade
>for Christ, and A.D. 2000 & Beyond Movement, as
>well as charismatic-loonies John Osteen, John
>Hagee, Charles and Frances Hunter, Frederick
>K.C. Price, Morris Cerullo, Marilyn Hickey, Dick Eastman, and Richard Roberts.)
>
>- Campus Crusade founder Bill Bright fasted 40
>days during the summer of 1994, during which he
>claims to have received a "prophecy from God"
>that a mighty revival is coming. He then issued
>a call for hundreds of liberals, charismatics,
>and new-evangelicals to gather in Orlando
>12/5/94-12/7/94 to fast and pray for revival. An
>Invitation Committee made up of a hodgepodge of
>72 liberals, new evangelicals, and charismatics
>was formed. Included were: Robert Schuller,
>Charles Colson, E.V. Hill, Jack Hayford, James
>Dobson, W.A. Criswell, Charles Stanley, Paul
>Crouch, Luis Palau, Bill Gothard, Pat Robertson,
>Kay Arthur, and Larry Burkett. CCC's Bill Bright
>cites "a great sense of urgency to link arms and
>unitedly call upon God for help in the spirit of
>King Jehoshaphat (2 Chr. 20)." This ecumenical
>"linking" is in the "spirit of Jehoshaphat"
>indeed, but the Jehoshaphat of 2 Chr. 18
>(instead of 2 Chr. 20) where he "linked" with
>wicked King Ahab and incurred the wrath of God.
>(Reported in the 11/15/94, Calvary Contender.)
>[Another three-day "Fasting & Prayer" conference
>was held in 11/95 in Los Angeles; it attracted
>3,500 "evangelicals" and charismatics. The
>Invitation/Host Committee for this event
>included most of those listed above, plus Dick
>Eastman, Chuck Smith, Bill McCartney (Promise
>Keepers), Tim and Beverly LaHaye, Shirley
>Dobson, Paul Cedar (E-Free), Ted Engstrom (World
>Vision), Joseph Stowell (Moody), and Joseph
>Aldrich (Multnomah). A third conference was held
>11/14/96-11/16/96 in St. Louis. New additions to
>the Host Committee included Max Lucado, Henry
>Blackaby, Loren Cunningham (YWAM), Greg Laurie,
>Dennis Rainey, Randy Phillips (Promise Keepers),
>Josh McDowell, D. James Kennedy, Howard
>Hendricks, and Neil Anderson. Conferences were also held in 1997 and 1998.]
>
>- Eugene Peterson's The Message has swept into
>Christian bookstores, homes, and churches from
>coast to coast. In the first four months after
>its mid-July, 1993 release, 100,000 copies of
>this "New Testament in contemporary English"
>were printed by NavPress and 70,000 books were
>sold. Apparently, most readers were delighted:
>"The Message is so good it leaves me
>breathless," wrote popular New Age author
>Madeleine L'Engle in her endorsement. Jack
>Hayford has also endorsed The Message: "The
>Message is certainly destined to become a
>devotional classic, not to mention a powerful pastoral tool."
>
>But The Message teaches a different gospel and a
>different morality than the Bible (as well as a
>worldly/warm fuzzy view of life)! For example,
>The Message translates Jesus' statement in John
>14:28, "The Father is the goal and purpose of my
>life," versus the Bible's "... The Father is
>greater than I." In l Cor. 6:18-20, the words
>"sexual immorality" are deleted and the words
>"avoids commitment and intimacy" are added. (One
>could conclude that now "commitment and
>intimacy," not marriage, set the boundaries for
>acceptable sex.) In Rom. 1:26-27, the words "God
>gave them over ..." are deleted and words that
>qualify homosexuality are added (a loophole is
>provided for committed homosexuals who "love"
>each other; thus lust becomes the sin, not the
>choosing of a same-sex partner). There are
>hundreds of examples like these in The Message.
>
>Peterson himself, in his introduction to The
>Message, says, "This version of the New
>Testament in a contemporary idiom keeps the
>language of The Message current and fresh and
>understandable in the same language in which we
>do our shopping, talk with our friends, worry
>about world affairs, and teach our children
>their table manners ..." This all sounds like an
>excuse for "dumbing-down" Scripture to match our
>culture's downward trends. Should we then
>rewrite God's holy Scriptures to fit our more
>shallow and worldly communications? And what
>does it say about a man like Jack Hayford when
>he endorses it as an authentic translation of
>the Bible rather than as Peterson's personal,
>politically correct interpretation? (Also
>endorsing The Message were Warren Wiersbe and
>J.I. Packer.) [Adapted from "What Kind of
>Message is THE MESSAGE, an article by Berit Kjos.]
>
>- In the Foursquare World Advance magazine of
>Jan-Feb '94, when asked why he was among a group
>of evangelical Christian "leaders" who met with
>President Clinton on 10/18/93 at a private
>breakfast in the White House (since Clinton is
>pro-abortion and pro-homosexual), Hayford said
>he respects the office of the presidency and
>"Finally, I believe in the power of presence.
>Just my being there would leave a deposit of
>some sort." He also said he has "deep love" for
>Clinton as "a human being," and views Clinton as
>"a personable, devoted public servant." Indeed!
>And it's what Clinton is devoted to that should
>be denounced by all real Christians. [Among the
>other attendees with Hayford were social radical
>and pantheist Tony Campolo, church growth
>movement guru and psychologizer Bill Hybels (who
>stayed overnight at the White House and helped
>Clinton set the agenda), and the psychologized
>president of Taylor University Jay Kesler.]
>(Reported in the 4/94, Lofton Letter .) [Later,
>in a congregational report, Hayford expressed
>his conviction regarding the "clarity of
>President Clinton's commitment to Jesus Christ,"
>and said he was convinced that Clinton was
>indeed a believer! (6/20/94, Christian News).]
>
>- Hayford spoke for Renovaré at its 1991 Los
>Angeles Conference -- Renovaré is an
>international, New Age, ecumenical organization
>that emanates from the religious traditions of
>Quakerism, whose message is that today's Church
>is missing out on some wonderful spiritual
>experiences that can only be found by studying
>and practicing the "meditative" and
>"contemplative" lifestyle "of early
>Christianity." In actuality, Renovaré espouses
>the use of the early pagan traditions of guided
>imagery and visualization, astral projection,
>"Zen" prayer techniques for meditation (i.e.,
>Buddhism), and Jungian psychology (i.e., a blend
>of Eastern mysticism and Roman Catholic mystical
>spiritual tradition, which nicely fits the New
>Age model), all as means of obtaining "personal
>spiritual renewal" in the lives of believers.
>(For a more detailed analysis of Renovaré and
>the teachings of its co-directors, psychologist
>Richard Foster and William Vaswig, see Media
>Spotlight's Special Report of March, 1992:
>"Renovaré: Taking Leave of One's Senses.")
>
>- Promise Keepers is the gigantic new (1991)
>"men's movement" among professing evangelical
>Christians. Its roots are Catholic and
>charismatic to the core. PK's contradictory
>stand on homosexuality; its promotion of secular
>psychology; its unscriptural feminizing of men;
>its depiction of Jesus as a "phallic messiah"
>tempted to perform homosexual acts; and its
>ecumenical and unbiblical teachings should
>dissuade any true Christian from participating.
>Promise Keepers is proving to be one of the most
>ungodly and misleading movements in the annals
>of Christian history. Nevertheless, Hayford is a
>promoter of this ecumenical, charismatic,
>psychologized men's movement. Hayford is on PK's
>board of directors and has spoken at major
>events for Promise Keepers every year since PK's
>inception. (He also patterns the men's program
>at The Church On The Way after the PK model.) On
>5/14/94, Hayford spoke at a regional Promise
>Keepers conference in Anaheim, California.
>During his message, Hayford gave three reasons
>why God required circumcision in the Old Testament:
>
>"[1] God wants to touch your very identity as a
>man; [2] He wants to reach out and touch your
>secret and private parts. This enables Him to
>better perform surgery on the heart; [3] God
>wants to touch man's creative parts. This
>represents the idea that since God has touched
>our creative parts, we as God's people need to
>be creative in our witnessing to others."
>
>Hayford also spoke at the PK "1996 National
>Clergy Conference" (2/13/96-2/15/96) in
>Atlanta's Georgia Dome stadium. The theme for
>the conference was "Fan the Flame," because
>McCartney (PK's founder) believes "God wants to
>bring revival to His church through its clergy"
>(2/26/96, Christian News, p. 10). The purpose of
>this gathering, according to McCartney, was to
>"tear the hearts of pastors wide open so that a
>single leadership can be produced." He had hoped
>to "bring as many as 100,000 ministers and
>priests of all races together" (7/1/95, The
>Atlanta Journal-Constitution, p. C8). [Actual
>attendance was 38,914, which represented all 50
>states and more than a dozen foreign countries;
>600 in attendance were Roman Catholic priests!]
>At the beginning of the conference, Hayford was
>speaking and trying to influence everyone to
>"dance in the Lord," an unscriptural routine
>favored by the fanatical wing of Pentecostal
>charismaticism. Hayford said he learned the
>dance in Africa, and later the Lord spoke to him
>directly saying, "May I have this dance?" He
>then began doing an African folkdance around the
>podium, suggestive of the dances associated with heathen witch-doctoring.
>
>- Hayford's psychological teachings are less
>chronicled than his charismatic doctrines, but
>they nevertheless are prominent. Hayford is a
>frequent guest on Dr. James Dobson's Focus on
>the Family radio program, and he endorses many
>of the newly published books by "Christian"
>psychologists as they come to market.
>
>- In the Church on the Way's Mission Statement,
>Hayford espouses the following about
>tongues-speaking and spiritual warfare (from the
>Living Way Ministries Internet web site -- 8/6/96):
>
>(a) "Vitality of the Spiritual Language -- The
>biblical exercise of Holy Spirit enabled
>supernatural utterance is vital for prayer,
>praise, intercession, and edification and is a
>desirable and an available resource for every
>believer." (Emphasis added.) [Hayford offers to
>sell the book The Beauty of Spiritual Language,
>and a 2-tape cassette album titled "The Holy Spirit: The Great Psychiatrist"!]
>
>(b) "Committed to Spiritual Warfare -- The
>reality of the invisible realm of spiritual
>conflict demands biblical confrontation through
>prayer and ministry with discernment and love;
>that the triumph of Calvary is not minimized,
>but applied by such means." (Emphasis added.)
>[Hayford offers to sell the book Prayer is
>Invading the Impossible, and a 2-tape cassette
>album titled "Resisting the Devil."]
>
>- In endorsing ecumenical evangelist Luis
>Palau's 1991 book Say Yes!, Hayford says: "There
>are many practical reasons for supporting the
>ministry of Luis Palau: his fidelity to the
>truth, his constancy of passion for the lost,
>and his integrity in personal life ... the
>evidence of God's sovereign choice to anoint and
>use this man mightily at this crucial juncture
>in church history." (Palau is a Catholic
>sympathizer whose ecumenical message is heavily
>diluted with pop psychology and Arminian
>easy-believism -- hardly God's "sovereign
>choice.") [Hayford has also taken part with
>Palau in the annual ecumenical/charismatic/
>Catholic-accommodating March For Jesus campaigns.]
>
>- Hayford has endorsed Catholic-sympathizer
>Chuck Colson's book, The Body: Being Light in
>Darkness (which is also endorsed by Jerry
>Falwell, J.I. Packer, Pat Robertson, Bill
>Hybels, Carl Henry, and Cardinal O'Connor).
>Colson, ever ecumenical, praises the Catholic
>chain of command, and includes the Catholic
>Church as a part of the body of Christ. He also
>says, "the body of Christ, in all its diversity,
>is created with Baptist feet, charismatic hands,
>and Catholic ears -- Fall with their eyes on
>Jesus." In blindly praising the Roman Catholic
>church Colson says it, "to its great credit,
>does call heretics to account." Indeed she does,
>having burned more than a million at the stake! (4/93, Berean Call).
>
>Hayford also writes: "Redeeming worship centers
>on the Lord's Table. Whether your tradition
>celebrates it as Communion, Eucharist, the Mass,
>or the Lord's Supper, we are all called to this
>centerpiece of Christian worship" (Seven
>Promises of a Promise Keeper, p. 19).
>Historically, the Roman Catholic mass has been
>recognized by Bible believers as blatant
>blasphemy, Yet, today, Hayford teaches that this
>false view of Christian worship is approved by
>God and proper for all Christians to accept.
>
>- Almost all of the major apostate religious
>organizations (including a large Roman Catholic
>contingent) had representatives/ participants at
>Orlando '95 (North American [charismatic]
>Congress on the Holy Spirit and World
>Evangelization.) A Catholic bishop led one
>session. There was also conga-style
>aisle-dancing by the Haitian Catholics during
>the evening worship sessions. Others "praised
>God" by dancing around the convention center
>waving open umbrellas, signifying that the
>invisible rain of the Holy Spirit was falling.
>Of the 8,000 attending, over half were
>charismatic Catholics. The 10/95 Charisma said,
>"Charismatics abandoned their theological
>differences ... at least for four days. ...
>Today millions of Catholics, including Pope John
>Paul II's personal preacher ... have joined
>ranks with charismatics." A Catholic priest
>added, "This is the greatest ecumenical movement
>in the Christian church." Some of the
>hyper-charismatic teachers at Orlando '95 were
>Pat Robertson, Benny Hinn, Jack Hayford, Marilyn Hickey, and Paul Crouch.
>
>- Hayford also has a strange idea of what
>constitutes true worship of God (although not
>strange by charismatic standards):
>
>"Let Holy Spirit-filled worship be a blend of
>our highest thoughts and our deepest feelings so
>that the goal of true worship be reached: the
>reshaping of our lives." (Emphases added.)
>
>Wrong! The goal of worship is not the reshaping
>of our lives. True worship focuses on God, the
>object of worship, as worthy of all glory and
>honor and power and obedience for Who He is,
>regardless of what we are. If we were perfect in
>every way we would still be unworthy of Him. It
>is not worship, but Scripture which is useful
>for reshaping our lives (2 Tim. 3:16-17). For
>Hayford and others of the charismatic ilk,
>Scripture is fast giving way to experience as
>the standard upon which to base belief. Nowhere
>in Scripture are we told that the goal of
>worship is the reshaping of our lives. That is
>just self-centeredness. [Source: Comments/Essays
>in The Answer To Happiness, Health, and
>Fulfillment in Life: The Holy Bible (with
>Selected Writings by Leading Inspirational
>Authors.] [Comments excerpted/adapted from Media
>Spotlight, Vol. 14 (1993), No. 1.]
>
>- Rave is a dance movement from Europe in which
>teens take designer drugs, use virtual-reality
>devices, and dance (usually alone) away the
>night and early mornings hours to repetitive
>techno-pop dance music. Often there is no
>lighting except for strobes and lasers.
>"Christian" rave parties have been adopted by
>several youth ministries worldwide (including
>Chuck Smith's Calvary Chapel movement). In April
>of 1997, Hayford's Church on the Way sponsored its second rave concert.
>
>
>Biblical Discernment Ministries - Revised 2/99
>http://www.rapidnet.com/~jbeard/bdm/exposes/hayford/general.htm
>
>
>
>
>
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John
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