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												Verse 1-2Psalms 69:1-2. Save me, O God — 
												O most mighty God, in whom alone 
												I trust for safety, deliver me 
												from these distresses; for the 
												waters — Of tribulation; are 
												come unto my soul — Have reached 
												my vital parts, so that I am 
												ready to expire, and my soul is 
												exceeding sorrowful even unto 
												death. I sink in deep mire — 
												Hebrew, ביון מצולה, in the mud 
												of the deep. I am not in the 
												shallows, or nigh the bank, but 
												in the middle and deepest parts, 
												and sinking in the very mire 
												which is at the bottom of the 
												waters. Where there is no 
												standing — No firm and sure 
												footing, but I sink deeper and 
												deeper, and without thy speedy 
												and almighty help I shall be 
												overwhelmed and perish.
 
 
 Verse 3-4
 Psalms 69:3-4. I am weary of my 
												crying — I have prayed and cried 
												to God long and fervently, and 
												yet God seems to neglect and 
												forsake me. My throat is dried — 
												With loud and frequent cries. 
												Mine eyes fail — With looking to 
												God for that aid and deliverance 
												which he hath promised, and 
												which I confidently expected, 
												but hitherto in vain. They that 
												hate me without a cause — 
												Without any injury or occasion 
												given them by me; are more than 
												the hairs of my head — Are grown 
												more formidable, both for their 
												number, which is exceeding 
												great, and for their power, for 
												they are mighty — So that, if 
												thou do not interpose for my 
												deliverance, they are well able 
												to destroy me, to which they do 
												not want the will, having 
												conceived an implacable and 
												undeserved hatred against me. 
												Though “I have been so far from 
												provoking their malice, that I 
												restored that which I took not 
												away — For I was content, rather 
												than quarrel with them, to part 
												with my own right, and make them 
												satisfaction for a wrong which I 
												never did them.” — Bishop 
												Patrick. Under this one kind of 
												ill usage he comprehends all 
												those injuries and violences 
												which they had practised against 
												him.
 
 Verse 5
 Psalms 69:5. O God, thou knowest 
												my foolishness — Hebrew, אולתי, 
												ivalti, rendered in the Liturgy 
												version, my simpleness. As if he 
												had said, Thou knowest the 
												simplicity and uprightness of my 
												heart, that I have never 
												intentionally injured those that 
												thus cruelly hate and persecute 
												me, but have always designed and 
												endeavoured to act right toward 
												them. And my sins are not hid 
												from thee — But, O Lord, 
												although I have been innocent 
												toward mine enemies, yet I must 
												confess I am guilty of many sins 
												and follies against thee, and 
												have given thee just cause to 
												punish me by giving me up into 
												their hands, and by denying or 
												delaying to help me.
 
 Verse 6
 Psalms 69:6. Let not them that 
												wait on thee — The truly pious, 
												who believe thy promises, and 
												look to thee for the fulfilment 
												of them; who are conscious of 
												their own weakness, and of the 
												insufficiency of all human aid, 
												and therefore apply to thee, and 
												trust in thee for the help they 
												want; be ashamed — That is, 
												frustrated of their just and 
												reasonable expectations, which 
												would make them ashamed of their 
												past confidence in thee, and 
												either to look up to thee in 
												future, or to look upon their 
												enemies with assurance, when 
												they shall reproach them for 
												their trust in thee; for my sake 
												— Because of my sad 
												disappointments. For, if they 
												see me forsaken, they will be 
												discouraged by this example; or, 
												let them not hang down their 
												heads for shame to see me, who 
												am thy worshipper, deserted of 
												thee. He was afraid, if God did 
												not appear for him, it would be 
												a discouragement to other pious 
												people, and give their enemies 
												cause to triumph over them; and 
												it was his earnest desire, 
												whatever became of himself, that 
												all the true people of God might 
												retain their confidence and hope 
												in God, and their boldness in 
												his cause, and neither be 
												discouraged in themselves, nor 
												exposed to contempt from others.
 
 Verses 7-9
 Psalms 69:7-9. Because for thy 
												sake — For my trust in thy 
												promises, obedience to thy 
												commands, and zeal for thy 
												glory; “because I adhere to 
												thee, and will use no unlawful 
												means to right myself;” I have 
												borne reproach — For they turn 
												all these things into matter of 
												contempt and derision. I am 
												become a stranger to my 
												brethren, &c. — They behave 
												themselves toward me as if I 
												were a perfect stranger, or a 
												man of another country and 
												religion. For the zeal of thy 
												house — That fervent love which 
												I have for thy house and 
												service, and glory, and people; 
												hath eaten me up — Exhausted my 
												spirits. And this is the reason 
												of that alienation of my 
												brethren and others from me, 
												because there is a great 
												difference and contrariety in 
												our dispositions, desires, and 
												designs. For they regard not thy 
												service and glory, nor the 
												concerns of religion; but are 
												wholly taken up with the world, 
												and the cares and pursuits of 
												it. And the reproaches of them 
												that reproached thee — That 
												spoke contemptuously or wickedly 
												of thy name, or providence, or 
												truth, or worship, and service; 
												are fallen upon me — I have been 
												as deeply affected with thy 
												reproaches as with my own. This 
												whole verse, though truly 
												belonging to David, yet was also 
												directed by the Spirit of God in 
												him to a higher use, to 
												represent the disposition and 
												condition of Christ, in whom 
												this was more truly and fully 
												accomplished than in David; and 
												to whom, therefore, it is 
												applied in the New Testament, 
												the first part of it, John 2:17, 
												and the latter, Romans 15:3.
 
 Verses 10-12
 Psalms 69:10-12. When I wept — 
												For their impiety, and the 
												reproaches they cast upon God 
												and godliness; and chastened my 
												soul with fasting — That is, 
												either my body or myself; that 
												was my reproach — They derided 
												me for my piety and devotion, 
												and for my faith in God’s 
												promises and hopes of assistance 
												from him. I made sackcloth also 
												my garment — In token of my 
												humiliation and hearty sorrow, 
												as the manner then was in days 
												of fasting. I became a proverb 
												to them — They used my name 
												proverbially of any person whom 
												they thought to be vainly and 
												foolishly religious. They that 
												sit in the gate — That is, as it 
												is generally interpreted, the 
												judges and magistrates, the 
												gates of cities being the places 
												of judicature. But it seems 
												better to agree with the design 
												of the psalmist, and to suit 
												with the next clause, to suppose 
												that he rather meant vain and 
												idle persons, that spent their 
												time in the gates and markets; 
												or such as begged at the gates 
												of the city, as St. Hilary 
												interprets it. And I was the 
												song of the drunkards — Of the 
												scum of the people; of all lewd 
												and debauched persons.
 
 Verse 13
 Psalms 69:13. But my prayer is 
												unto thee — While they scoff, I 
												will pray, and not be driven 
												from thee, nor from prayer and 
												other duties, by all their 
												reproaches, or any other 
												discouragements. In an 
												acceptable time — Hebrew, עת 
												רצון, gneet ratzon, in a time of 
												grace, of good will, or good 
												pleasure. These words may be 
												joined, either, 1st, With the 
												following, by way of limitation, 
												thus: Hear me in thy accepted 
												time, that is, I do not limit 
												thee to any time; but when thou 
												seest it will be best, hear and 
												help me. Or rather, with the 
												foregoing, as an argument to 
												enforce his prayer: as if he had 
												said, I pray in a time of grace, 
												or acceptance; I seek thee when 
												thou mayest be found, (see 
												Psalms 32:6; Isaiah 55:6,) in a 
												good day, as they said, 1 Samuel 
												25:8, in the day of grace and 
												mercy: or, in a time of great 
												trouble, which is the proper 
												season for prayer, Psalms 50:15; 
												and while I have thee engaged to 
												me by promises, which thy honour 
												and truth oblige thee to 
												perform. I come not too late, 
												and therefore do thou hear me. 
												In the truth of thy salvation — 
												That is, for, or according to, 
												thy saving truth, or 
												faithfulness; whereby thou hast 
												promised to deliver those who 
												trust in thee.
 
 Verses 14-18
 Psalms 69:14-18. Let me be 
												delivered from them that hate me 
												— By thus speaking, he explains 
												his meaning in the metaphors 
												here used of mire, waters, deep, 
												and pit. For thy loving-kindness 
												is good — Is eminently and 
												unspeakably good; is gracious, 
												or bountiful; the positive 
												degree being put for the 
												superlative: it is most ready to 
												communicate itself to miserable 
												and indigent creatures: the 
												Hebrew word חסד, chesed, here 
												used, signifying abundance of 
												goodness, or mercifulness. Draw 
												nigh unto my soul — To support 
												and relieve it, O thou who 
												seemest to be departed far away 
												from me. Deliver me because of 
												mine enemies — Because they are 
												enemies to thee as well as to 
												me, and if they succeed, will 
												triumph, not only over me, but 
												in some sort over thee and over 
												religion.
 
 Verse 19-20
 Psalms 69:19-20. Thou hast known 
												my reproach, &c. — Thou seest 
												how much of it I suffer, and 
												that for thy sake. Mine 
												adversaries are all before thee 
												— Thou knowest them thoroughly, 
												and all their injurious and 
												wicked devices, and implacable 
												malice against me. None of them, 
												nor of their secret plots and 
												subtle lies, whereby they seek 
												to defame and undo me: are 
												hidden from thy all-seeing view: 
												nor art thou unacquainted with 
												their impiety and contempt of 
												thee and thy truth. Reproach 
												hath broken my heart — Reproach 
												is the most grievous to those 
												whose spirits are the most 
												generous and noble; and this was 
												the highest degree and the worst 
												kind of reproach, being cast 
												upon him for God’s sake, and 
												upon God also for his sake. I 
												looked for some to take pity, 
												but there was none — That is, 
												few or none; for whether it be 
												understood of David or of 
												Christ, there were some who 
												pitied both of them. Dr. 
												Delaney, who considers the 
												distress which David was now in 
												as being occasioned by his fall, 
												observes, “There were two 
												circumstances of it which, 
												though they are beyond all 
												question the greatest and 
												severest which human nature, can 
												suffer, are not sufficiently 
												considered. The first is, the 
												distress he endured on account 
												of the obloquy and reproach 
												brought upon the true religion 
												and the truly religious by his 
												guilt; and the second, the 
												reproach and endless insults 
												brought upon himself, even by 
												his repentance and humiliation 
												before God and the world. Let 
												any ingenuous man, who feels for 
												virtue and is not seared to 
												shame, put the question to 
												himself: I appeal to his own 
												heart, whether he would not 
												infinitely rather die than 
												endure the state now described 
												one day; forsaken by his 
												friends, scorned by his enemies, 
												insulted by his inferiors, the 
												scoff of libertines, and the 
												song of sots? What then must we 
												think of the fortitude and 
												magnanimity of that man who 
												could endure all this for a 
												series of years? Or rather, how 
												shall we adore that unfailing 
												mercy and all- sufficient 
												goodness which could support him 
												thus, under the quickest sense 
												of shame and infamy, and deepest 
												compunctions of conscience; 
												which could enable him to bear 
												up steadily against guilt, 
												infamy, and the evil world 
												united; from a principle of true 
												religion! and, in the end, even 
												rejoice in his sad estate; as he 
												plainly perceived it must 
												finally tend to promote the true 
												interest of virtue, and the 
												glory of God; that is, must 
												finally tend to promote that 
												interest, which was the great 
												governing principle and main 
												purpose of his life.” — Life of 
												David, b. 3. vol. 3. pp. 30-33.
 
 Verse 21
 Psalms 69:21. They gave me gall 
												for my meat — Instead of 
												affording me that pity and 
												comfort which my condition 
												required, they barbarously added 
												to my affliction. These words 
												were only metaphorically 
												fulfilled in David, but were 
												properly and literally 
												accomplished in Christ; the 
												description of whose sufferings, 
												it seems, was principally 
												intended here by the Holy Ghost, 
												who therefore directed David’s 
												pen to these words. And hence 
												what follows may as truly, and 
												perhaps more properly, be 
												considered as predictions of the 
												punishment which should be 
												inflicted on the persecutors of 
												our Lord, than as imprecations 
												of David against his enemies.
 
 
 Verse 22
 Psalms 69:22. Let their table, 
												&c. — Dr. Waterland renders the 
												verse, Their table shall be for 
												a snare before them, and their 
												peace-offerings for a trap. 
												“This and the following verses 
												are to be read in the future 
												tense, and considered as 
												predictions rather than as 
												imprecations. The meaning of the 
												whole verse seems to be, The 
												oblations and prayers of those 
												who have dealt thus barbarously 
												with me, shall be so far from 
												pacifying God, or being accepted 
												of him, that, like the offerings 
												made to false gods, styled the 
												preparing a table, Isaiah 65:11, 
												they shall provoke God, and turn 
												to their mischief: see Romans 
												11:9.” — Dodd. The sacrifices, 
												peace- offerings, and other 
												oblations of the Jews, were, in 
												a remarkable manner, a snare to 
												them, in that their dependence 
												on them, and their conceit of 
												the everlastingness of the 
												Mosaic dispensation, was one 
												chief cause of their rejection 
												of Christ.
 
 Verse 23
 Psalms 69:23. Let their eyes, 
												&c. — Their eyes shall be 
												darkened — Not the eyes of their 
												bodies, (for, in that sense, the 
												prediction was neither 
												accomplished in David’s nor in 
												Christ’s enemies,) but of their 
												minds, that they will not 
												discern God’s truth, nor their 
												own duty, nor the way of peace 
												and salvation. As they shut 
												their eyes and will not see, so 
												they shall be judicially 
												blinded. This was most solemnly 
												threatened, or rather foretold, 
												Isaiah 6:9-12, and most awfully 
												fulfilled: see the margin. “They 
												who loved darkness rather than 
												light,” says Dr. Horne, “were 
												permitted by the righteous 
												judgment of God to go on in 
												darkness, while the blind led 
												the blind. And such still 
												continues to be the state of the 
												Jews, notwithstanding that 
												intolerable weight of wo which 
												made their loins to shake, and 
												bowed down their backs to the 
												earth. The veil remaineth yet 
												upon their hearts, in the 
												reading of the Old Testament, 
												nor can they see therein the 
												things which belong to their 
												peace.”
 
 Verse 24
 Psalms 69:24. Pour out — Thou 
												wilt pour out thine indignation 
												upon them, &c. — Thou wilt, on a 
												sudden, bring so many evils upon 
												them, that they shall not be 
												able to escape; but will feel 
												that they suffer the most dismal 
												effects of thy severest and 
												lasting displeasure. How 
												terribly and awfully has God 
												fulfilled this threatening also! 
												“Never was indignation so poured 
												out, never did wrath so take 
												hold on any nation, as on that 
												which once was, beyond every 
												other, beloved and favoured. The 
												wrath, says St. Paul, 1 
												Thessalonians 2:16, is come upon 
												them to the uttermost, εις τελος, 
												to the end, to the very last 
												dregs of the cup of fury. Let 
												every church, which boasts of 
												favours bestowed, and privileges 
												conferred upon her, remember the 
												consequences of their being 
												abused by Jerusalem; let every 
												individual do the same.”
 
 Verse 25
 Psalms 69:25. Let their 
												habitation — Hebrew, שׂירתם, 
												tiratham, their palace, as the 
												same word is rendered Song of 
												Solomon 8:9, or castle, as 
												Genesis 25:16, and Numbers 
												31:10. It is meant either of 
												their temple, in which they 
												placed their glory and their 
												confidence for safety, or more 
												generally of their strong and 
												magnificent buildings and houses 
												in which they dwelt, as it 
												follows in the next clause. And 
												let none dwell in their tents — 
												None of their posterity, or none 
												at all. Let the places be 
												accounted execrable and 
												dreadful. Bishop Patrick’s 
												paraphrase is, “Let their most 
												magnificent structures be laid 
												waste; and root them out so 
												entirely, that there may not be 
												a man left to dwell in their 
												poorest cottages.” This verse 
												had a most eminent completion in 
												the final destruction of 
												Jerusalem, and of the Jewish 
												state and nation, according to 
												the predictions of the Lord 
												Jesus, Matthew 23:36-38; Luke 
												21:6, &c. Jerusalem has indeed 
												been again partly rebuilt, and 
												inhabited by Gentiles, by 
												Christians, and by Saracens, but 
												no more by the Jewish people.
 
 Verse 26
 Psalms 69:26. For they persecute 
												him whom thou hast smitten — 
												Christ was he whom God had 
												smitten, for it pleased the Lord 
												to bruise him, and he was 
												esteemed stricken, smitten of 
												God, and afflicted, Isaiah 
												53:4-5; and him the Jews 
												persecuted with a rage which 
												reached up to heaven, crying, 
												Away with him; crucify him, 
												crucify him. And the psalmist is 
												here assigning the cause of the 
												forementioned calamities 
												inflicted on them; namely, that, 
												instead of mourning and 
												sympathizing with him, when the 
												Lord laid on him the iniquity of 
												us all, they, by reproaches and 
												blasphemies, aggravated his 
												sufferings to the uttermost; and 
												afterward continued to persecute 
												his disciples in the same 
												manner.
 
 Verse 27
 Psalms 69:27. Add iniquity to 
												their iniquity — Or, give or 
												permit, as תנה, tenah, may be 
												properly rendered. The old 
												version expresses the psalmist’s 
												meaning accurately, Let, or 
												permit, them to fall from one 
												wickedness to another. It is not 
												unusual with God, as a 
												punishment of some great sin or 
												sins, though not to infuse into 
												men any evil, yet, by 
												withdrawing his grace, and 
												leaving them to themselves, to 
												suffer them to commit more sins, 
												and to be so far from being 
												reformed, as daily to grow worse 
												and worse, and at last to become 
												quite obdurate and 
												irreclaimable. The words, 
												however, may be rendered, Add 
												punishment to their punishment, 
												(for the word עוןis often put 
												for the punishment of iniquity.) 
												Send one judgment upon them 
												after another, without ceasing. 
												And let them not come into thy 
												righteousness — Into that way of 
												obedience which thou requirest, 
												and which thou wilt accept, the 
												obedience of faith in the 
												Messiah and his gospel, 
												producing love, and universal 
												holiness and righteousness; or, 
												to thy mercy, thy pardoning 
												mercy, as the original word 
												frequently signifies, so as to 
												be made partakers of it. Let 
												them not obtain an interest in 
												the everlasting righteousness 
												which the Messiah shall bring 
												into the world, Daniel 9:24; the 
												righteousness of God by faith, 
												revealed in the gospel, and 
												witnessed by the law and the 
												prophets, Philippians 3:9; 
												Romans 1:17; and Romans 3:9, 
												&c., according to which God 
												justifies the ungodly, and 
												accepts them as righteous in his 
												sight. For this was the 
												righteousness which the Jews 
												rejected, Romans 10:3, according 
												to this prediction. Thus, as the 
												first branch of this verse 
												foretels their being guilty of 
												many sins, and adding iniquity 
												to iniquity, so this predicts 
												their rejection of, and 
												therefore their exclusion from, 
												an interest in the only remedy, 
												the remission of sins through 
												faith in the Mediator, and the 
												holiness and happiness 
												consequent thereon.
 
 Verse 28
 Psalms 69:28. Let them be 
												blotted out of the book of the 
												living — “Let them be cut off 
												before their time, and enjoy 
												none of the blessings which thou 
												hast promised to the righteous.” 
												— Bishop Patrick. The psalmist 
												is thought to allude to 
												registers or catalogues, in 
												which the names of living men 
												used anciently to be recorded, 
												and out of which the names of 
												those who died were blotted. 
												This was awfully fulfilled with 
												respect to the unbelieving Jews, 
												vast multitudes of whom fell by 
												the sword and famine, while none 
												of those who embraced the 
												Christian faith perished among 
												them. The nation, as a nation, 
												was blotted out of the list of 
												nations, and became not a 
												people. The words may also be 
												understood, as they are by many 
												commentators, of their rejection 
												from God’s covenant, and the 
												privileges of it, which is the 
												book of the truly living, or the 
												book of life. “Let the 
												commonwealth of Israel itself, 
												Israel according to the flesh, 
												now become alienated from that 
												covenant of promise, of which it 
												has hitherto had the monopoly.” 
												—
 
 Henry. This has long been the 
												case with the degenerate and 
												apostate Jews, who are no longer 
												the peculiar people of God, nor 
												have they any part or portion in 
												the inheritance of his children. 
												Thus Ezekiel, speaking of the 
												false prophets, They shall not 
												be in the assembly of my people, 
												nor shall they be written in the 
												writing of the house of Israel, 
												Ezekiel 13:9. This accords well 
												with the next clause, Let them 
												not be written with the 
												righteous — Let them not have, 
												or, they shall not have, a place 
												in the congregation of the 
												saints, when they shall all be 
												gathered in the general assembly 
												of those whose names are written 
												in heaven.
 
 Verses 29-31
 Psalms 69:29-31. But I am poor, 
												&c. — Bishop Hare reads it, “But 
												as for me, though I am low and 
												full of pain,” (Hebrew, כואב, 
												choeeb; rendered, in the plural, 
												they were sore, Genesis 34:25,) 
												“thy salvation, O God, shall 
												protect me.” I will praise, &c. 
												— I will not be unmindful of the 
												benefit, but praise thy power 
												and goodness in joyful hymns. 
												This shall please the Lord 
												better than an ox, &c. — This 
												sincere and hearty sacrifice of 
												praise is, and shall be, more 
												acceptable to God than the most 
												costly legal sacrifices. So such 
												moral and spiritual services 
												ever were, (1 Samuel 15:22; 
												Hosea 6:6,) and such were to be 
												offered, and would be accepted, 
												when those ritual ones should be 
												abolished. That hath horns and 
												hoofs — “These are mentioned as 
												being conspicuous in an ox going 
												to be sacrificed; being probably 
												gilded and adorned with flowers, 
												as among the Romans and other 
												people.” — Dodd.
 
 Verse 32-33
 Psalms 69:32-33. The humble 
												shall see this — Shall see, in 
												my case, how ready God is to 
												hear the poor and distressed 
												when they cry to him, and to 
												grant their petitions, and how 
												far he is from despising his 
												prisoners, namely, those who are 
												in prison or affliction for his 
												sake, though men despise them; 
												and be glad — Not only because, 
												when one member is honoured, all 
												the members rejoice with it, but 
												because it would be an 
												encouragement to them in their 
												straits and difficulties to 
												trust in God. It will revive the 
												hearts of those who seek God to 
												see more seals to this truth, 
												that God never said to any of 
												the seed of Jacob, Seek ye me in 
												vain.
 
 Verses 34-36
 Psalms 69:34-36. Let the heaven 
												and earth praise him — Let 
												angels and men, the visible and 
												invisible world, and all 
												creatures contained therein, 
												join together to celebrate him 
												with their highest praises; for 
												“the mercies of God in Christ 
												are such, that they cannot 
												worthily be praised by any thing 
												less than a universal chorus of 
												the whole old and new creation; 
												and what should such a chorus 
												celebrate but those mercies by 
												which all things have been made, 
												preserved, and redeemed.” — 
												Horne. For God will save Zion — 
												The city of Zion, or Jerusalem; 
												and his church and people, which 
												are frequently expressed by that 
												title, and the salvation and 
												edification of which were the 
												consequence of the sufferings 
												and resurrection of Christ. He 
												will save Zion, the holy 
												mountain, where his ordinances 
												are administered, and his 
												service performed. He will save 
												all that are sanctified and set 
												apart for him, all that employ 
												themselves in his worship, and 
												all those over whom the once 
												suffering, but now exalted, 
												Saviour reigns, for he is the 
												king set upon the holy hill of 
												Zion. He will do great things 
												for the gospel-church; in which 
												let all, who wish well to it, 
												rejoice. For, 1st, It shall be 
												peopled and inhabited. There 
												shall be added to it such as 
												shall be saved. The cities of 
												Judah shall be built — Which is 
												to be understood figuratively, 
												as well as literally; particular 
												churches shall be formed, and 
												incorporated according to the 
												gospel model, that there may be 
												a remnant to dwell there, and 
												have it in possession — To enjoy 
												the privileges conferred upon 
												it, and to pay the tributes and 
												services required from it. 2d, 
												It shall be perpetuated and 
												inherited. Christianity was not 
												to be res unius ætatis, an 
												affair of one age; no, the seed 
												of his servants shall inherit it 
												— God will secure and raise up 
												for himself a seed to serve him, 
												and they shall inherit the 
												privileges of their fathers. The 
												land of promise shall never be 
												lost for want of heirs; for God 
												can out of stones raise up 
												children to Abraham, and will do 
												it rather than the entail shall 
												be cut off. David shall never 
												want a man to stand before him. 
												The Redeemer shall see his seed, 
												and prolong his days in them, 
												till the mystery of God shall be 
												finished and Christ’s mystical 
												body be completed.
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