Episode Transcript
Alright, last week we went over the beginning of creation, in the beginning God.
And so by studying that we learned that only God was here in the beginning.
God was here before the beginning of the beginning.
And we learned that God exists outside of time, space, and matter.
Remember the continuum, time, space, and matter.
God asked yesterday, who created God?
They said, I always wanted to know that, no one can answer that question.
Well, if someone created God, then who created that person?
Then who created that person? Who created that person?
You have to have a creator that exists outside of time, space, and matter, as we've already learned.
It's impossible to have anything else, or else you're chasing a never-ending back, back, back, back.
Who created that? Who created that? Who created that?
And it never stops, so it's not logical, therefore it's not real.
In Exodus chapter 3, if you turn there please, it's the second book of your Bible, Exodus chapter 3.
Exodus chapter 3.
And we're going to be looking here at verses 13-14.
And this is where we're commanding Moses, and we haven't gotten that far in our study yet.
We will eventually, we're abandoning Moses, ask God who he was, or what his name was.
It says in verse 13, Moses said unto God, Behold, when I come to the children of Israel,
and they shall say unto them, and shall say unto them,
The God of your fathers hath sent me unto you, and they shall say to me, What is his name?
What shall I say unto them? What do I tell them your name is?
Verse 14, and God said unto Moses, I am that, I am.
And he said, Thus shalt thou say unto the children of Israel, I am, hath sent me unto you.
Isn't that a strange name? I am that. I am.
Now the word I am, now of course in English, am is a being verb.
Am means you're existing, you're being, right?
He didn't say I was. He said I am.
How long is God am? How long is God existing forever?
He said I am that, I am. And the Hebrew, he is literally saying, I am that ever existing, self existing one.
I am the one who exists independent of everything. I am self existing.
No one brought him into being, rather everything is brought into being by him.
Something has to exist on its own, right?
In other words, like we said before, well who created God?
Well then who created that person? Then who created that person?
Who created that person? Eventually, logically, therefore realistically,
there has to be someone who exists independent of everything else, who simply eternally is.
We could say God is. He simply exists. He simply is.
God speaking of himself, he said, I am, say I am, it would be improper.
He said I am. And so that's what he's telling Moses, I am the self existing eternal God.
So God is self existing. He is eternal. That's one of his attributes.
If you'll take your bowels and turn to the book of Psalms, check with 139, or 139 Psalm, Psalm 139.
We'll see something else about God.
Psalm 139, let's write it up.
Psalm 139.
There's no there now.
So he's using his phone for revival, so you can find your scripture to put it for the phone.
I like using that or a tablet.
Psalm 139. Hello, lakes. Good to see you all on here this morning.
The Great Lakes. Psalm 139.
And let's look at verse 12.
The Psalms is saying, God, where can I go to get away from you?
How can I flee to get away from your presence? Of course, he's not trying to.
It's a question that's trying to prove the statement or prove the truth.
Verse 8. If I send them into heaven, thou art there.
If I make my head in hell, behold, thou art there.
If I take the wings of the morning and dwell in the uttermost parts of the sea,
even there shall thy hand lead me and thy right hand shall hold me.
If I say, surely the darkness shall cover me, even the night shall be light about me.
Yea, the darkness heighteth not from thee, but the night shineth as the day,
the darkness and the light are both alike today.
So how can you get away from God?
The psalmist is very pleased that there's nowhere he can go to escape God
because he wants God always with him to lead and guide him.
But think about it from another perspective. What if you don't know God?
What if you don't want God? The same goes true for you.
Where can you go to lie from God?
You can't go high in the darkness.
The lie and the dark are all the same to him, not for us.
We have to have light to see. It's just the way we are.
Dogs don't have to have so much light to see as we do.
We have to have a light to see. The darkness and the light are both the same to God
as far as knowledge, as far as knowing things and seeing things.
So he says, if I go up into heaven, you're there.
If I were to go down to hell, you're there.
If I were to, hell being death, if I were to go to the sea, you're there.
We learn about God that God is omnipresent.
That means God is everywhere at the same time. He's not like us.
Remember, he exists outside of time, space, and matter.
We are restrained because we were created within the continuum of time, space, and matter.
You'll see that when God created Adam, God made a garden called Eden,
and there he put the man whom he had formed.
Adam had a beginning. When God created him, he had a location where God put him,
and he would exist as a matter from the earth that God formed him from.
Time, space, and matter were all the same way.
You read an obituary. It will have the date of birth. It will have the date of death.
It will have the date of internment.
It's just that simple where you go back to the matter that you came from.
You turn back into it over time.
But God is not limited to space or time. God is everywhere.
God sees everything you do. God knows everything. That's the next thing.
He's omnipresent. He's omnipotent and omniscient, which means he's all-powerful and all-knowing.
Turn to the book of Isaiah, if you would, please.
Isaiah chapter 40.
Isaiah chapter 40.
Isaiah chapter 40.
Alright, and verse 28.
Isaiah 40, 28.
The Bible says,
"'Hast thou not known, hast thou not heard,
that the everlasting God,"
You see, how long is God? He's everlasting. He's outside of time and space.
"'The everlasting God, the Lord, the Creator of the ends of the earth fainteth not,
and the Creator is weary.'" That means he doesn't get tired. He doesn't wear out.
There is no searching of his understanding. That means he knows everything.
There's no searching of it. That means there's no limit to his understanding.
You see, our understanding all comes from him.
And he gives his creatures limited understanding.
Man has the greatest understanding.
Some animals, a little lower than the man. Some animals are just plain dumb.
And they're not very smart animals.
Some are just mere, lowly creatures that don't seem to have much intelligence at all.
But there's no limit to God's understanding.
There's no limit to God's power.
He doesn't think. He doesn't get weary. He doesn't have to eat food like us.
He doesn't get tired like us. There's nothing he doesn't know.
He is all-powerful, all-knowing, self-existing, eternal.
What's the next thing about God?
Turn to just four chapters ahead. Turn to Isaiah 44.
Isaiah 44.
Isaiah 44.
Isaiah 44, if you look with me in verse 8.
Isaiah 44, 8, Fear ye not, neither be afraid.
Have not I told thee from that time, and have declared it?
Ye are even my witnesses. Is there a God beside me?
Ye there is no God, I know not any.
And then in Isaiah 45, verse 5, if you'll turn there please.
Isaiah 45, 5, I am the Lord, and there is none else.
That's pretty plain, isn't it?
There is no God beside me.
So how many gods are there? Just one.
Not a bunch of gods, just one God.
In the Roman mythology and Greek mythology, or the Hindus, they have thousands and thousands of gods.
But it's all gods they make up.
And they say, well, we'll make this one up. I was reading about one yesterday.
I don't know what religion it came from, I was reading about this particular goddess.
And she was the goddess of vengeance.
And so the goddess is lame, is crippled. So she can't move very fast.
But she always catches her victims.
Because while they're sleeping, she continues to pursue them, and she finally gets them.
And that was people's way of describing how things eventually catch up to you.
You eventually reap what you sow.
And so they invented a goddess, and since it takes a while to reap what you sow, sometimes they say, well, she's lame.
What kind of goddess is that?
Well, who made her? How does she get lame? Did she have a car wreck? I mean, what happened?
See, none of that makes any sense. All that stuff is man's inventions.
Here, we don't have man's inventions. We have God revealing Himself to us as He spoke here.
I am the Lord, and there is none else. God's speaking to man through His prophets.
There is no God beside me.
What else about God? Terms of the book of Leviticus, that is the third book in your Bible.
The book of Leviticus, you were asked this earlier, such as one book forward from there.
Leviticus chapter 20, please.
Leviticus chapter 20.
Leviticus chapter 20.
Leviticus chapter 20.
Look here in verse 26.
God told Israel, and ye shall be holy unto me, for I the Lord am holy, and have severed you from other people, that ye should be mine.
So we learn that God is holy. When you think of the word holy, think of the word whole.
Sometimes you'll, you'll notice where it came from. Whole, holy.
If I am missing an arm, am I a whole man? No.
If my heart is defective, is my heart whole? No. There's an imperfection.
Okay? So in the Bible, sometimes you'll see, like if Jesus is healing someone, you'll say your faith has made you whole.
So that physical imperfection is now made whole. Spiritually, God is whole.
He lacks nothing. He needs nothing. He has no imperfections.
And when it comes to morality, which is how God was speaking to Israel here, he's whole.
God is perfectly good, perfectly righteous, all good, all loving.
God has no deficiencies morally whatsoever. He has no deficiencies in any way at all whatsoever.
But here he was talking to Israel morally. Don't be deficient morally because I'm holy. You be holy.
This is what you're to shoot for. This is what I want to make you, is holy.
And so our God is holy. He always does everything good, perfectly good, because he's God. He's holy.
He has no deficiencies. Look, Matthew would, in the Gospel of John, chapter 4,
if you're the New Testament, Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, John, chapter 4,
John, chapter 4.
Alright, if you look down to verse 23.
But the hour cometh, and now is, when the true worshipper shall worship the Father
in the Spirit, watch this now, in Spirit and in truth, for the Father seeketh such to worship Him.
Next verse. God is a spirit, and that worship Him must worship Him in Spirit and in truth.
So God is a spirit. He's not flesh and blood like us. Why?
Because if He was flesh and blood like us, then someone would have had to make Him from the earth,
and He's the one that made the earth. God's Spirit. Spirit is real. Spirit is superior to flesh and blood.
Because God is spirit, He is invisible. We don't see spiritual things. We can comprehend them,
but we cannot see them with our physical eyes because they're not physical things.
And so God is spirit, and true worshippers will worship Him in Spirit,
and the person saying this was the Father's son.
And so we see that God is what we call a trinity.
And we'll get more into this later when we get into the creation of man.
The word trinity is not in the Bible. It is a word that the man came up with to describe what is in the Bible.
Just real quick while we're here, because I don't want anyone to be confused on this,
but turn to the Gospel of John. Just a moment here.
This was not in my notes that I talked about last night.
This is going to be...here we go. Turn to Matthew. Turn to Matthew 3.
I'll go to some John and Matthew.
Matthew 3 is the first book in the New Testament. We're getting way ahead, but this will help you understand.
Matthew 3.
In verse 16.
In Jesus when He was baptized, went up straightway out of the water, and lo, the heavens were opened unto Him,
and He saw the Spirit of God descending like a dove.
And here's the Spirit of God. The Spirit of God's descending like a dove.
In other words, the Spirit of God manifested Himself in the image of a dove so that people could see Him.
He's not a dove. He's not a virgin. But He manifests Himself.
Or else they couldn't see Him.
And so it says, He saw the Spirit of God descending like a dove, and lying upon Him that is lying upon Jesus.
And lo, a voice from heaven sang, This is my beloved Son, now we circle Son,
who has a Son, the Father, who's speaking from heaven.
So here we see that God is a Trinity.
The Holy Spirit is a person. He's descending on the Son.
The Son is a person. He's being spoke of by His Father.
The Father is a person. He's speaking about His Son and sent His Spirit to descend on Him.
And so God is a Trinity. He is not three gods.
Remember, He said, I am God beside me or as none else. There's only one God.
But this God exists in three persons.
We will learn more about this when we get into creation of man because we were made in God's image.
And it will help you understand what we mean when we say trinities.
Just now understand there is one God who exists in three persons, not three roles.
It's not one God doing three different things.
Some people say, well, here's how the Trinity is.
I am a pastor. I am a husband. I am a father.
So God is a Father, a Son, and a Spirit. That's not how the Trinity is.
I am only one person. I have many different roles.
God is one God. He exists in three persons.
When we get into the creation of man, you'll go, that makes sense, okay?
But we have to get into the creation of man first.
We don't want to get too far ahead.
But just to understand, there's only one God.
That one God exists in three distinct persons of the Godhead.
But they're one God. Think the same, believe the same, everything.
But they're three distinct persons, right?
Now, let's go ahead now and look in 1 John 4.
1 John, not the Gospel of John, the 1 John.
The 1 John is toward the back of the New Testament, the 1 John chapter 4.
We'll see another attribute, the last attribute we'll study today about God.
The best attribute about God.
1 John chapter 4.
Just do that sometime. Just look it up there in the front.
Take your right to that page.
I'll come back for you real quick. New Testament?
New Testament.
In 1 John, there it is.
I just overlooked it.
What's that? 1654.
Would it be nice if we all had the same Bible, the same page numbers?
They just say, turn to this page.
We could do that.
Maybe the next class, I'll just hand out Bibles.
You know what? That may be a thing.
That may be a thing.
Alright, so 1 John 4.
Look at verse 8 with me please.
Verse 8.
He that loathe not, knoweth not God, said with me,
For God is love. God is love. God is holy. God is love.
God is perfect. God is eternal.
Aren't you glad that someone who is all-knowing, all-powerful,
you know, is fortunately all-loving.
I mean, you can take a person,
there are people in this world right now, if they were to be all-powerful,
they'd destroy so many people.
And, but God, even though He's all-powerful, He loves.
He's perfectly loving.
Now, He's also perfectly holy.
Remember, He's just, He's righteous.
He's in every way morally perfect.
So, being a perfectly holy God and a perfect loving God, He loves.
But He loves in the way that He wants to make people right.
He doesn't love in the way that He will accept people who are wrong.
You see? He will not accept you're wrong.
Because the moment He accepts imperfection,
the moment He accepts unholdiness,
now He would be unholdable Himself.
And so, I'm glad that we have a God that, God, just because God loves,
doesn't mean He tolerates everything.
Have you, y'all, would like to think that you're a person that loves people.
Alright? That's pretty much every hand in here.
And, but if someone were to decide that everyone,
they thought it was, you know, good for them to get up,
go on a Walmart, strike on a gun, and kill anyone that,
they didn't think met the standards of life that He needed to be.
So, He's just wondering if they just killed people every morning.
Would y'all feel good about relying on them to do that?
No. But you're loving, right?
So, love does not mean you have no standards.
It means that you care about people.
But because you care about people, if someone hates people
and tries to kill those people,
wouldn't you say if a person truly loved,
He would try to stop that person from harming those other people?
Absolutely. And God's the same way. God loves.
He's a perfect God, a loving God.
But God has perfect standards because He's perfect.
And He wants to bring us up to where we need to be,
and make us what we want to be, what we're supposed to be,
what we're created to be.
But at the same time, He will never tolerate madness.
Okay? This is a way to put it for now. We'll get into this.
But sin is what we'll end up seeing as later.
Now, we've got a few minutes left,
and so let's get into the next thing.
And that is this. God not only created the heavens and the earth,
which we'll get into more next week, God love Him.
But God created inferior spirits to Him.
God created people, animals, out of flesh and blood, like us,
trees, vegetation, we'll get into all that.
But God also created a higher order of creation,
and we call those, and the Bible calls those, angels.
Angels were created before man was created.
Okay?
Angels.
The word angel means messenger, or dispatcher.
Or someone who's dispatched.
Not a dispatcher, but dispatched.
So as a truck driver, you know what it means to be dispatched.
As a former highway patrolman, I know what it means to be dispatched.
You have a dispatcher who sends you out to a certain place to perform a certain task.
Angels are dispatched by God. They're His messengers, His servants.
And if you'll turn to Psalm 103,
if you don't have time to turn there,
don't want to try to get us out of here in about 12 minutes,
then look on with your neighbor,
or just listen and I'll read it to you.
Psalm 103, you can hide it down in the notebook if you want,
and go back a bit later if you like.
The Psalm 103, verse 20.
Psalm 103, verse 20.
Talks about the angels that God created.
Bless the Lord, ye His angels,
that excel in strength,
that do His commandments,
that's what they were created with.
They harken to the voice of His Word,
whatever God tells them to do.
How many angels are there?
Revelation 511,
Revelation is the very right to look in your Bible.
Revelation 511 tells us something about these angels.
The Psalm is a number that's concerning.
How many angels did God make?
Revelation 511.
This is an indication, I'm listening, I'm going to talk.
We actually go and we see what the Bible says itself.
Listen to what the Bible says.
I was talking to a couple of people yesterday,
and the man thought I was going to hell,
but I was a false teacher,
and I invited him to my home,
so I could go and see what the Bible says.
I was trying to find you to the church,
and he said, you got to do all these different things to go to heaven.
He said, sir, I don't believe like you,
so I wish I could have a Bible study with you.
I said, come on in.
Come on in.
Well, I didn't bring a Bible with me.
I got one for you.
Come on in.
And my Bible.
And we got through,
and we got through,
and we got through the Bible.
And we got through talking,
and it was really sad, you know.
I kept showing, pointing him to Scriptures.
He kept giving me illustrations.
I kept pointing him back to the Scriptures.
He kept giving me illustrations.
It's like, well, what if I had a check,
or if I sent you down the store,
he'd give me illustrations like that.
And I said, sir, do you notice,
every time I speak to you,
I point you to what God's Word says.
When you're speaking to me,
you're giving me illustrations that you come up with.
And so that's the difference.
And it's real sad, but it's so wonderful in here.
We can point you to Scriptures,
and let you see for yourself what God's Word says.
Revelation 5 and 11.
And I beheld, and I heard the voice of many angels,
round about the throne, and the beasts and the elders,
and the number of them was ten thousand, times ten thousand,
and thousands of thousands.
There's a bunch of angels, okay.
The ten thousand thousand, I'm talking about the beasts and the elders,
those were already not, they're somewhat of the angels.
Myriads of angels.
Second Peter 2, 11.
Second Peter 2, 11.
Second Peter 2, 11.
I appreciate everybody taking notes while he does.
Again, if you can't get there at times,
and I wrote a jest as well, I see that too.
But then just write the scripture down and you can go look it up and get on.
In second Peter 2, 11, the Bible says,
Whereas angels which are greater in power and might,
bring not really accusation against them before the war.
So your angels are greater in power and might than we are.
Psalm 104.
Psalm 104.
What is an angel's composition?
As I said before, God is a spirit, or God is spirit.
He created angels also as spirits.
In Psalm 104, verse 4,
the Bible says,
To make it his angels spirits,
spirits his ministers are flaming fire,
which is a whole other talker, you know, a cell.
It doesn't mean they're on fire or anything like that.
But they're flaming fire in another sense.
That's a metaphor.
But his angels are spirits.
In the New Testament,
demons are called unclean spirits.
And let us know about angels before we move on.
There's two categories of angels.
And so when you come to angels,
angels are always, always in the Bible.
Refer to them as masculine genders.
They're not male and female.
They're not even male.
But they are in the masculine gender.
Masculine gender is the,
what did you say, the original gender or whatever.
It's always in the masculine.
They're not subservient.
They're not, you know, to another category of angels.
So it's in the masculine.
Every time you see God referring to himself,
or someone referring to God in the Bible,
it's always in the masculine.
And so, angels are always in the masculine gender.
If you see a picture of a woman angel
with flowing wings on it, it's not biblical.
Somebody made it up in their head.
There's nothing like that in the Bible whatsoever.
Angels are always full grown in the Bible.
They're spirits, okay?
So they don't come from mommies and daddy angels.
They come from God, created them.
And they're spirits.
They're full grown,
but they never had to grow to get full grown.
Does that make sense?
They don't really have a growing process.
So if you see a little baby,
half-naked baby with little wings and stuff,
that's not real either.
That's not in the Bible, okay?
Angels aren't exceedingly strong,
superior to us.
They're spirits.
And there's two categories of angels.
Not two sexes, not two genders of angels,
but two categories.
And those categories are cherubims.
Or cherubim, depending on what age of English you're using.
But today we say cherubim,
or in the singular a cherubim.
Makes sense?
And they're also serifum.
Serifum, or in the singular a serif.
Okay?
Esitut, categories of angels.
Alright?
Genesis chapter 3, verse 24.
Genesis chapter 3, verse 24.
First book of the Bible, Genesis 3.
Genesis chapter 4.
Look in verse 24.
And it says,
So he drove out the man,
and he placed at the east of the garden of Eden cherubims.
Now they would say cherubim,
but cherubims,
and a flaming sword,
which turned every way to keep the way of the tree of life.
So we see that cherubims are like guardians.
They guard, they protect.
In Isaiah 6, 6,
we do not have time to turn their voice a lot,
we're really fast,
but I don't have time to wait,
because we're running out of time.
Isaiah 6, 6 says,
Then flew,
well they fly,
they do fly.
One of the serifums unto me,
having a live cold in his hand,
which he had taken with the tongs from off the altar.
So you're looking at two different categories of angels,
just like you would have a policeman and a fireman,
and they just perform different roles and different functions.
Now, before,
I believe before God created heaven and the earth,
from what I can tell in Scripture,
that's when God made these angels.
Of course God made them all perfect,
because God is perfect, he's holy.
He made them holy angels.
The problem is, one of the angels,
an angel named Lucifer,
whoops, okay, I thought it,
an angel named Lucifer,
decided to rebel against God, his creator.
Lord Lucifer means light bearer, or bearer of light.
I believe Lucifer was created
to bear the glory of God as a leading angel,
perhaps a head angel, you know, the head angel.
And Lucifer was created so magnificently,
so beautifully, so wonderfully,
in that spirit realm,
that he began to get prideful,
and he decided, you know what,
I'm not happy in the wonderful place of God,
I want to take God's place, I want to be God.
I want everyone to listen to me,
which is not possible, it's not even logical.
But that's what happened.
In Isaiah chapter 14, verse 12 through 14,
Isaiah 14, verse 12 through 14,
the Bible speaks about what happened to Lucifer,
which says,
How art thou fallen from heaven, O Lucifer,
son of the morning?
How art thou cut down to the ground,
which didst weaken the nations?
For thou hast set in thy heart,
I will ascend into heaven,
I will exalt my throne above the stars of God,
I will sit also upon the mount of the congregation
in the sides of the north,
I will ascend above the heights of the clouds,
look here now, I will be like the most high.
Now he said in that heart, I will ascend,
I will exalt, I will sit,
I will ascend, I will be like the most high.
Five times, Lucifer said in his heart,
I will, I will, I will.
What was Lucifer wanting to accomplish,
his will or God's will?
He wanted to accomplish his will.
He said, well, then God did a bad angel, no.
Remember God, above everything else,
God is love, God's love.
And here's the thing,
Tanya, do you love Gabriel?
Yes.
Do you love Tanya?
Yes.
I'll sit down.
Who made you love him, Tanya?
God.
Well, yeah, that's true, but...
He made me love him.
Huh?
He made me love him.
Yeah, well, that's true.
But let me ask you this, I'll put it this way.
If someone were to come to you and say, Tanya,
I want you to love somebody else,
they'd want it to, I don't know,
maybe the, maybe some guy over at the drug cartel
or something in Mexico.
And they kidnapped you, and they took you,
and there was the leader of the drug cartel in Mexico,
and here you are in Mexico, and they said,
Tanya, you need to love this man right here.
Can they make you love him?
No.
What if they put a gun to your head?
No.
What if they offer you tons of money?
Can that make you love him?
No.
The thing about love is, love is a choice.
Love is a choice.
And a lot of people have found out the hard way,
you can't make somebody love you.
You can love somebody in 10 years, into a marriage,
20 years into a marriage, an hour long.
So they say, I don't love you, maybe,
no matter what you do, you can't make somebody love you.
And so the thing is, in order to love,
you have to have the ability to choose.
And so God created his angels, and he created us
with what we call free will, the ability to choose,
because our ability to love God hinges upon our ability to choose God.
Does that make sense?
If you found out that this whole time that Gabriel's been living with you,
if you found out this whole time, maybe through looking through some records or something,
he's been getting payments from a family trust,
where they paid him and made a contract with him,
that if you'll act like you love time and you'll stay with her,
we'll pay you so much money a month until you die.
Would that make you feel good, the only reason he's been there is getting paid off?
No. Now it's not by choice.
You want him to love you on his own.
Even if there is no money, better or worse, death do you part, right?
Sickness and hell, that's a real love.
The Lucifer chose to not love God.
He chose to reject God who loved him.
And listen, if you've ever been through this before, you know what it's like
to have someone who you love reject your love and not love you.
It hurts terribly.
And this is what happened to God.
Lucifer rejected God's love and tried to stir up the angels in heaven to follow him.
And it's good to follow God.
In Luke chapter 10 verse 18, we don't have time to turn there if you write it down,
Jesus said, that is by the Son, said,
I beheld Satan as lightning fall from heaven.
So Lucifer, whose name meant light bearer, his name has now been changed to Satan.
Sometimes it's called the devil.
And it basically means an adversary, our enemy, someone who trips us up
and comes against us.
And we estimate in Scripture that he ended up convincing about a third of the angels to follow him.
They are now called demons or unclean spirits or unholy spirits,
but they're spirits nonetheless.
And so we have, the devil is an angel.
Demons are angels who have rejected God,
been cast out of heaven and who now do occupy the earth.
And they're very, very real.
And that's what drives a lot of the wickedness that we see today.
With that in mind, we're now set up for when we get to the creation of man.
You can understand what's going on.
And we're willing to get back to creation, the next stage of creation,
in the Bible, next week.
All right, any questions?
All right, thanks for coming.