Author: Os Guinness and David Wells
Date: 13.07.2010
Category: Globalization
Editor’s Note: This Cape Town 2010 Advance Paper has been written by Os Guinness and David Wells as an overview of the topic to be discussed at the Multiplex session on “Globalization.” Responses to this paper through the Lausanne Global Conversation will be fed back to the authors and others to help shape their final presentations at the Congress.
“Globalization” is a monumental challenge that represents quite simply the most pressing face of “the world” in our time, as well as the greatest opportunity for mission and the greatest challenge for discipleship the church of Jesus Christ has faced since the Apostles in the first century. Never has the vision of “the whole Gospel for the whole world through the whole church” been closer yet more contested.
The double-edged strength of the church
As Christians, and as the church of Jesus Christ, we are called by our Lord to be “in” the world, but “not of” the world. “No longer” who we were before we came to Christ, we are “not yet” what we will be when Christ returns. This bracing call to tension in both time and space lies at the heart of our faith. Individually and collectively, we are to live in the world in a stance of both Yes and No, affirmation and antithesis, or of being “against the world/for the world.”
This tension is crucial to the faithfulness of the church, and to her integrity and effectiveness in the world. When the church of Christ remains faithful to this calling, she lives in a creative tension that is the prerequisite of her transforming power in culture and history. For the Christian faith is unashamedly world-affirming, and has a peerless record in contributing to education, to philanthropy, to social reforms, to medicine, to the rise of science, to the emergence of democracy and human rights, as well as to building schools, hospitals, universities, orphanages, and other beneficial institutions. Yet at the same time, the Christian faith is also world-denying, insisting on the place of prophets as well as priests, on sacrifice as well fulfillment, on the importance of fasts as well as feasts, and on the place for exposing and opposing the world when its attitudes and actions are against the commands of God and the interests of humanity.
Not surprisingly, the church’s constant temptation has been to relax this tension from one side or the other, so that the Christians in different ages have sometimes been so much in the world that they are of it, or so much not of the world that they were “no earthly use.” Either way, such unfaithfulness means that the church grows weak, but unfaithfulness in the direction of worldliness is worse than weak, for it puts the church, like Israel in the Old Testament, under the shadow of the judgment of God.
This challenge carries an inescapable implication: Christian faithfulness in any generation requires a clear-eyed understanding of the world of its day. The biblical view of “the world” has several dimensions, ranging from the world that God created and loves to the world that is “over against” the kingdom of Christ, and we in turn should have several appropriate responses. Seen positively, understanding the world is assumed and required by our desire to witness, for communication always presupposes understanding of context. Seen negatively, understanding the world is assumed and required by vigilance against the danger of worldliness, for we can only avoid what we accurately understand.
We meet in Cape Town in October 2010 one hundred years after the great world missionary conference in Edinburgh in June, 1910. It would be true to say that Edinburgh’s missionary vision and enterprise has been gloriously vindicated and fulfilled in the emergence of the burgeoning global church over the last hundred years. But it must also be said that the tragic blind spot of the Edinburgh Conference was its lack of self-criticism of its own position in the world, and in particular its failure to recognize its captivity to the powerful delusions of European “Christendom” just before its titanic collapse in the Great World Wars, the repudiation of imperialism, and its own self-induced secularization. While we today are no more omniscient than our sisters and brothers who met in Edinburgh, we must endeavor to be more self-critical through understanding our world and our own place in it.
Coming to terms with “globalization”
What, then, is “the world” of our day? Beyond any question, the single, strongest expression of the face of the world in our time—the advanced modern world of the early twenty-first century—is globalization, the process by which human interconnectedness has expanded to a truly global level. There are many people, such as the writers of The Economist magazine, who attribute globalization to the spread of market capitalism throughout the world, and use the word only as a synonym for this expansion. But this is self-interested as well as wrong. Globalization is a multi-dimensional process, and the decisive driver in its present expansion is not capitalism but information technology, powerful and important though capitalism is. At the centre of the current wave of globalization are “the triple S-forces” of speed (with the capacity for instant communication), scope (the capacity to communicate to the entire world), and simultaneity (the capacity to communicate to everywhere at the same time). Together, these forces have shaped our “wired world” and led to an unprecedented triple impact on human living: the acceleration, compression, and intensification of human life on earth in the global world.
To call the present levels of globalization “unprecedented” is accurate, but it must be qualified at once. Today’s globalization is unique in history so far, but there are many earlier precedents of movement toward globalization, including the missionary expansion of the great world religions, the impact of the advances in transport and the widening networks created by trading, and the expansive effects of military conquest and imperialism. Equally, there are grand advances in earlier times that can claim a similar revolutionary impact on human life, such as the invention of writing, the alphabet and the wheel.
Thus, if viewed from the longer historical perspective, advanced modern globalization is only the latest of a series of waves of expanding human interconnectedness. But if viewed from the shorter perspective of the modern world, globalization represents a decisive shift from the Industrial Revolution, centered on production and epitomized by the factory, to the Information Revolution, centered on communication and epitomized by the computer. Either way, we must take into account both continuities and discontinuities with the past, and we must make our claims about the present with accuracy and humility.
Needless to say, globalization poses a sharp challenge to both accuracy and humility, and we need to start by avoiding the two equal and opposite pitfalls into which so many fall: the excessive “Wow!” attitudes of the cheerleaders and the excessive “gloom and doom” of the curmudgeons (who in their Christian form view globalization as the precursor to “the end times”). In any age, there are three tasks facing Christians who would wrestle with the world of their day and live faithfully as followers of the Way of Jesus.
The first task is to discern, and so to make an accurate description of the realities of the world in which we find ourselves.
The second task is to assess, and so to evaluate the pros and cons, the benefits and costs, of the world as a whole as well as of individual items and aspects of that world – all assessed within the framework of the biblical worldview.
The third task is to engage, and so to enter the world as disciples of Jesus called to be salt and light, gratefully using the best of the world as gifts of God and vigilantly avoiding the worst of the world. Or as the early church expressed it, we are to “plunder the Egyptian gold,” as the Lord told Israel to do, but we are never to set up “a golden calf,” as Israel was later judged for doing.
Easy to say, these basic Christian tasks are harder than ever to do because of globalization. History is always more complex than we can understand, and it proceeds not by the simple influence of certain factors but by their complicated interplay and through the ironies of their unintended consequences. Globalization only compounds our difficulty in understanding, for by its very nature, globalization means that we who are finite now have to deal with the whole world—in other words, a world that is always far beyond our full comprehension. And we are dealing with the world when the world is communicating and changing at an unprecedented speed—in other words, when the world may have changed even before we have finished describing it.
One safeguard is that to remember that many of our best descriptions always require immediate reminders. First, globalization almost always involves two countervailing forces, and not simply one—if the world is “universalizing” in new ways, it is also “localizing” in new ways (which has helped coin the odd term “glocal,” used to describe the impact of the global on the local and the local on the global). Second, in every new trend there are always both winners and losers—and Christians who honor their Master must never lose sight of the poor, the oppressed, and those left behind economically, especially those caught by the savage inequities of the globalized world. Third, there are “multiple modernities,” or different ways of being modern—so that the old adage that “Globalization equals Westernization equals Americanization” is not only wrong but a dangerous conceit. Different cultures, with their own history and their own values, are able to adapt to the modern world in their own way, and may always attempt to say No to what is considered “progress,” and not simply Yes.
The Global faith par excellence
The crucial and supreme point of the whole discussion is that globalization has a special relevance for Christians because the Christian faith is an essentially global faith. To any observer of the global scene, certain facts are evident and beyond question: The Christian faith is the world’s first truly global religion. Christians are the most numerous of religious believers in the world. The Christian church is the most diverse community on earth. The Bible is the most translated book in history. And in many parts of the world, the Christian faith is the world’s fastest growing faith, especially when growth is through conversion rather than birth rate. And so on.
Such facts are not accidental, for globalization is integral to the Christian faith. For one thing, the Christian faith was global before the term, beginning not simply with the Great Commission to the whole world but with the promise to Abraham that he would be the father of the faithful and a blessing to the whole world. For another thing, the Christian church has been one of the great “carriers” of globalization throughout history, such as in the missionary expansion of the first century church, the Protestant missions in the nineteenth, and the reaching out to the whole world today by the churches from all around the world—the remarkable enterprise of the Korean churches is a shining example. For yet another thing, Christian NGOs (non-governmental organizations) such as World Vision, Opportunity International, Compassion, Food for the Hungry and the International Justice Mission are often the pioneering carriers of globalization in the world today.
Put these factors together and it is clear that, if the Christian church lives up to its calling and proclaims the Gospel in its fullness, it is the natural carrier of a global Gospel for the global era—“the best news ever” for all humankind. No less than that is our privilege and our responsibility in the global era.
Grand transformations
Our core focus at the Lausanne Congress in Cape Town will be on the implications of globalization for discipleship and evangelism. But it is crucial to underscore that globalization is transforming almost every aspect of human life on the planet, and all these transformations have a bearing on discipleship and evangelism in one way or another. Some of the major transformations that require further exploration can be summarized briefly as follows:
f worldwide emotions, such as fear and the shameless pandering to fear-mongering and alarmism
A proper description of these profound transformations is far beyond the scope of this brief introductory essay. But such consequences must never be forgotten, for they define the world in which we live and in which we bear witness to our Lord. Our focus, here, however, is on two central areas: globalization and discipleship, and globalization and mission.
Christian discipleship in the global era
If globalization has both local and global dimensions, and if its enormous benefits are also trailed by extraordinary shadows, as they are, then it poses for Christian discipleship challenges that are complex. How do we think about both the benefits and the costs as Christ’s followers? And how do we think of this world that lives in our consciousness at both a macro and a micro level?
Christian mission in the global era
The increased opportunities for mission and evangelism in the global era are obvious and huge. Christians are by definition great communicators, and the global era is by definition the great age of communication, so the potential for outreach in the global world can hardly be overstated. With the destruction of traditions, the collapse of traditional certainties, and the melting down of traditional roles and allegiances, there is greater political liberty, greater social fluidity, greater religious diversity and greater psychological vulnerability than ever before in history. As a result, human beings in the global era have been described as “conversion prone,” and more open than ever to consider new faiths. We therefore face the prospect of spreading the Gospel in a manner that is “freer, faster, and farther” than ever before in the church’s history, a prospect that must be seized with faith and courage.
At the same time, it would be naïve not to see that the increased challenges to mission and evangelism are equally powerful, and must be faced frankly. The following nine issues are examples of the sort of challenges we must consider in the global era:
Either way, history shows that such attempts are almost always ineffective for the culture and disastrous for the church. And in the process, the Christian faith gets pressed into the service of some political ideology or other, losing the distinctiveness of the way of Jesus, and ending up as the court chaplain to the powers of the age. Both extremes must beware the idolatry of politics in the modern world, and consider the maxim: “The first thing to say about politics is that politics is not the first thing.”
Is not this partly why the single strongest difference between the early church and the modern church is the lack of supernatural power in the modern church, and there is such an attendant lack of prayer, spiritual discernment, and capacity for healing, deliverance, and supernatural warfare?
Secularization means that in the advanced modern world we live in “a world without windows,” so that for many modern Christians, the unseen tends to be also the unreal. Thus it is possible for us to live as “functional atheists,” and in more and more of life to have “no need of God,” so that mission is driven by statistics, demographics, and the “roll out” of the Gospel to the “unreached,” rather than by the traditional passion for Christ and for “the lost.”
At the same time, the pluralized world amplifies the fears surrounding the challenges of living with deep religious differences, so that religion is viewed as divisive and evangelism as unwarranted and politically incorrect “proselytization.”
Two particular dangers must be highlighted here. One is the subtle distortions of the Gospel in the various forms of modern “possibility thinking,” and the other is the crass and vile distortions of the Gospel in the various forms of the “prosperity” or “health and wealth Gospels” that are now exported from the USA to parts of the Global South, where their effects are pernicious to both the Gospel and the poor.
Among many issues on which Evangelicals have both the biblical resources and the historical experience to speak out constructively is the issue of forging civility in the emerging “global public square.” Whereas some Western Christians are now widely attacked as part of the problem of religion and public life, the proper championing of freedom o
f conscience and religious liberty for people of all faiths would make us part of the answer—not only for our own good, but for the wider good and the shalom of humanity. Lausanne III at Cape Town could take a strong lead at this point.
In sum, while the global world offers unprecedented opportunities for reaching peoples and parts of the world that have never been reached before, it sharpens the contrast between the wisdom of the world and the foolishness of the Gospel to a daunting and uncomfortable degree. Evangelism in the global era appears easier, and in many ways it truly is, but discipleship is unquestionably harder, and so too is costly incarnational evangelism that is patterned on the life and death of Jesus rather on the brilliance of modern insights and techniques.
Serving God in our own generation
Every generation is as close to God as every other, and we are responsible only for our own generation. Yet it is claimed today that the generation of young people who are now entering adulthood are the “crunch generation,” in the sense that many of the global trends of our day are converging to create unprecedented challenges for humanity. Regardless of whether this proves true, it is not too much to say that globalization represents the greatest opportunity for the Gospel since the Apostles, as well as the greatest challenge to the Gospel since the Apostles, and that we must respond to both with faith and with courage.
Above all, we must face both the opportunities and the challenges of globalization as the united people of God. In particular, and remembering the tragic blind spot of the Edinburgh Conference in 1910, we must avoid the peril of two equal and opposite forms of the worldliness of power. On the one hand, we must not confuse the spread of the Gospel with the spread of Western power, and on the other, we must not confuse a prophetic stand against Western power with the premises and prejudices of anti-Western “post-colonialism.”
With Western power in visible decline, there is less excuse for the first confusion than at Edinburgh, though the economic and cultural power of the West may well outlast its political and military dominance. In many parts of the world, the current temptation is to fall for the opposite confusion introduced by post-colonialism, but this would divide Christian against Christian in the name of suspicion, envy and resentment. And it would also divide the church along such lines as “the West” versus “the Rest,” the “global North” against the “global South,” or the churches of the “more developed” world against the churches of the “less developed” world. Such “accidental” and extra-biblical definitions and boundaries were the very mistake that Edinburgh made in light of the artificial and territorial notion of “Christendom.” More recent missionary themes such as “The whole church to the whole world,” or “Everyone to everyone, and everywhere to everywhere” are not only more in tune with the global era but more faithful to the Great Commission.
We all thank God together for the abundant evidence of the spectacular growth of the churches in the global South, with all their courage, passion and spiritual power. They put to shame the all-too obvious contrast with the marked spiritual poverty of the churches in the West. But at the same time, we must all be humbly aware that much of the global South is not yet fully modernized, and therefore not yet fully tested by the coming challenges and seductions of modernity (to which the Western church has fallen captive). That test is still to come.
Equally, we all openly acknowledge and sorrow over the dire weakness and worldliness of much of the church in the West, and its profound need for revival and reformation. Yet its sorry condition can stand as a helpful warning to all the churches elsewhere in the world: Do not do as Western churches have done over the past two hundred years—falling captive to the spirit and systems of the modern world. Thus, all the global churches can join hands in prayer with Western churches in this hour of their greatest challenge.
Then, the global churches around the whole world can be true partners and join forces to face the task of recovering a faith with such integrity and effectiveness that it can prevail over the challenges of the advanced modern world, and so do honor to our Lord and bring his Good News to the world.
No less than that is the supreme challenge posed by globalization to followers of Jesus Christ, and no less than that is the urgency of the topic we will explore together in this Multiplex session in Cape Town in October, 2010. Plainly, the topic of globalization is too large and the session too short to do justice to its immensity. But whether then or later, as this extraordinary century unfolds, we may trust that God is greater than all—globalization included—so God may be trusted in all situations, and we may have faith in God, and have no fear.
© The Lausanne Movement 2010
Keywords: Globalisation, discipleship, community, calling, tension, integrity, assessment, engagement, societal transformation, witness, mission, worldliness, Edinburgh Conference, secularisation, interconnectedness, discernment
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South Africa
Brilliantly insightful, sobering and cautionary. This provides valuable framework for further reflection and interaction.
14.08.2010
Argentina
Muchas gracias por esta excelente presentación, equilibrio y perspectiva que nos lleva a repensar la misión sobre “toda la iglesia a todo el mundo” o “todos a todos, y de todas partes a todas partes” en donde las iglesias globales de todo el mundo pueden ser verdaderos socios y unir fuerzas para enfrentar la tarea de recuperar la fe, integridad y eficacia enfrentando los desafíos del avanzado mundo, honrando al Señor y llevar sus buenas nuevas a todos lados.
Simplemente agregar que Edimburgo 1910 no pensó en Latinoamérica como una región para alcanzar con el evangelio. Recién esto tuvo lugar en el encuentro de agencias misioneras celebrado en 1916 en Panamá
11.08.2010
Kenya
Thanks Ian. A few comments:
You state that we need a ‘clear eyed understanding of the world’. What the piece does not mention is language. We won’t, I suggest, get any kind of ‘clear-eyed’ comprehension of ‘the world’ of people other than our own unless we learn their language. There is a desperate need for some Westerners to get into the languages of others.
In states that ‘with Western power in visible decline …’. I am not sure I agree. It seems that Western power is ever growing … The spread of English is one aspect of that. Where there is English, the West has power.
It is good to be self-critical in our understanding. The paper however seems grossly self-depreciating of the Western church, and raises the Southern church to come super-human prominence. I think that’s a case of ‘the grass is greener on the other side of the fence’, and not a global perspective.
06.08.2010
China
@ Jim_Harries:
China is always the asterisk at the bottom of any statistical global comparison. But to the degree that China is not Western, globalization is--at least so far--something that is coming to China rather than something that she exports to the rest of the world (though I recognize that this is changing). And--similar to Jim Harries’ comments--when I look around me I see a church that so far has not viewed globalization with anything resembling critical distance. I think we have much to learn from (in this case) the church in China, but I do not think they are doing much better at dealing with globalization than my passport country church (I am an American citizen).
I very much fear that the church here in China will lose some of its greatest gifts--the priority of the community over the individual, a great level of comfort with being counter-cultural, as examples--before it is even aware that they were at risk. Globalization has made tremendous inroads into Chinese society, but for most people it is not yet recognized as something that might need resisting. And, as I said below, I also think that the foreign missions community in China is if anything compounding the problem through... well, through our complicit participation in all the things listed as challenges in this paper under the section "Christian mission in the global era."
I hope to find a chance to discuss this paper with some local chruch leaders, and will report their comments as I am able.
09.08.2010
United States
Thanks for your wonderful insghts into the challenges and opportunities for spreading the Gospel in the age of Globalization. Your theses were extraordinary, but your conclusion was point on! It’s God in the beginning, God in the middle, and God in the end, regardless of the epochs of time, the wars in the name of religion, post-this or post-that, industrialization, globalization, the wisdom of man, the argments of scholars, the changing church, the secularization of society, and on and on. He is still on the throne; He has already won the battle. No reason to fear or tremble, worry or fail. It’s all in His hand.
Thanks for your wonderful enlightenment on the current challenges and opportunities to spread the Gospel in this increasingly faceless age.
09.08.2010
India
This paper is a helpful reminder of the significance of globalisation for followers of Christ. I appreciate the effort the authors have taken to produce an analysis and appraisal of this reality. They have clearly highlighted some significant themes that we not only need to be aware of but also issues that we need to engage with as incumbent on disciples of Christ. Indeed their recommended three stages of a Christian response are suggestive: first, discern; second assess; and third engage.
Having said that though a certain disquiet rumbles in my mind about their first stage. For me the primary question is: Who does the discerning? The simple and plain answer would seem that Christians do the discerning. Well, while that may be right, a further question is then raised. Which Christians?
To be honest when I read the paper I felt that the whole tenor of the paper suggest that this is a white, male, first world discerning of issues. But surely that in itself does not disqualify the paper does it? A categorical no will be my answer. What that particular perspective does do however is to open it for critique from other contexts and voices.
Let me briefly explain two points that seem to stand out from my experience of globalisation. First is the innocent take on or almost naive understanding of globalisation. While it seems that globalisation is treated as a movement that offers some positives and some negatives its deeper underlying ideology is not engaged with sufficiently. A thick description of and an ideological critique of the fundamentals of globalisation seems to be missing here.
A major underlying philosophy of globalisation is to be recognised for what it is –the cultural logic of global capitalism. While ‘technological globalisation’ is highlighted in the paper (though even there little engagement is mounted with the deeper implications of what the 24/7 news culture, for example, means for world society), ‘economic globalisation’ and ‘cultural globalisation’ is not engaged with in any substantive manner, let alone touch upon politics. In fact I feel that these weighty matters are summarily dismissed. Globalisation is therefore treated primarily as an ideologically neutral and hence benign reality in itself.
This then leads me to my second point, which is about the way globalisation is seen from another vantage point. For many in the majority world globalisation is, to put it mildly, not seen with rosy spectacles. On the contrary it is seen as the cause for much of the financial crisis that the world is facing, the root cause behind the ecological damage that we are causing to nature, and the list can go on. Likewise, though poverty is mentioned in the paper in passing, little acknowledgement that some of the root causes of poverty and injustice are found in globalisation is made let alone analysed or engaged with.
One would do well to understand that lying behind the phenomena of globalisation is a view of the world and a view of ultimate value. It is that precise worldview which needs to be discerned; it is that precise worldview which needs to be deconstructed; it is that precise world view which is to be challenged by a deeply biblical worldview. Globalisation cannot be treated as colonialism, for example, was seen by many, in the colonial heyday, as a providential vehicle for mission. Globalisation’s bluff must be called. And who better to do it than the disciples of Christ!
While phenomenological awareness may be the first step in the process of ’discernment’ it cannot be substituted for rigorous philosophical and ideological interrogation. If, as I feel, the first step, discernment of the world, seems to lack an appropriate existential and philosophical rigour does this perhaps render the second and third steps, assessment and engagement, standing on less than solid ground?
31.07.2010
China
Thank you for this excellent contribution to the Congress. One summary comment from the paper strikes me as profoundly true, reflecting the reality of what I have encountered on the field.
"Evangelism in the global era appears easier, and in many ways it truly is, but discipleship is unquestionably harder, and so too is costly incarnational evangelism that is patterned on the life and death of Jesus rather on the brilliance of modern insights and techniques."
I constantly find my self in situation where I am asked to comment and advise with respect to practical life issues--parenting techniques, educational theory, marriage relationships, business management styles--and in every case I find that globalization has both constricted and expanded the distance between my own cultural experience, the cultural inclinations of those I am addressing, and the Biblical norms. With each passing year I find it more difficult to keep these influences clear in my own mind, and so the inclination and the real possibility of me peddling western preferences as Biblical norms seems to increase. To put this in the terms of your paper, the challenges to Christian Mission in the Global Era that you outline seem to be growing more and more inviting. For the cross cultural worker, the superficial similarities of the globalized world lead him or her to believe that there is in fact little cultural differentiation: what worked or simply what was liked in the home culture will surely work well and be embraced in this new host culture. For members of the host culture, to the degree that these challenges come dressed in the clothes of global culture, these same values are often perceived as "modern" and thus inherently valuable. And so the words of the missionary--now an ambassador for something vaguely global--are accepted with less and less critical distance.
And so I feel the paradox: precisely as the world seems to be getting smaller--as differences appear to be eroding--the challenges to faithful ministry in the name of Jesus are increasingly difficult to recognize and resist. In my own context I very much fear that the same shallowness of Christian faith that we have been developing in evangelical North America over the last 20 years will be carried into the Chinese church by the exact same forces--and this time with the complicit support of the China missionary community.
I would greatly appreciate any practical tips on how to faithfully resist the various challenges to mission that this paper outlines.
27.07.2010
United States
Globalization for all of its benefits creates a great threat to Christian unity. How important is Jesus’ John 17 prayer for us today. We must unite in prayer and work for unity that the world may know our Lord. The intensity of criticsim published globally via the internet not of ideas but of Christian people and ministries is distressing. Polarization can be the result and evangelism is compromised. Face-to-face or letter to letter exchange of ideas or concerns that promotes peace and mutual understanding would reflect Christ. Let us engage each other with humility, decency and respect for the whole world is watching our witness.Let us not use the internet as a tool of criticism which destroys.
26.07.2010
United States
Globalization has added such complexity to our lives while most are seeking to simplify. The comments about the triple S-forces was especially helpful. The irony of unintended consequences is very important to consider as it has a long history in missions - coming from good intentions but often misguided good intentions. We have learned much about this over the years and hopefully, we have learned from our mistakes.
The major transformations listed are very real for us as Westermers but I find we often have to step back in time as those different "senses" often do not apply in majority world cultures. There are some effects but not dramatic and we have to change our attitude and especially sense of time and reality where computers are not the order of the day.
Excellent challenges - I look forward to further discussion in CT.
Mary Ann Smith
22.07.2010
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