Showing posts with label trust. Show all posts
Showing posts with label trust. Show all posts

Saturday, January 30, 2021

A Future and Some Hope


Have you ever hoped for something…only to have your hopes dashed?  Have you ever found yourself really disappointed by life?  Many of you, during this reign of Covid, have probably had many plans thrown by the wayside.  Seniors…is this the year that you were hoping it would be?  I know it certainly isn’t the life I was expecting to be living just one year ago.  Remember last January?  We were barely hearing things about Covid…and it was happening somewhere over in China…so who really paid attention?  And now…note even 10 months after the shutdown, we have had over 425,000 deaths just here in the United States.  Crazy!  


And whenever huge stuff like this comes along, trusting in anything goes out the window.  The qualifier for just about every plan is worse than Atlanta traffic.  We used to say, we should be somewhere in South GA or Florida, and then we used the qualifier…depending on Atlanta traffic. Now all of our future plans, activities, trips, etc. have one big qualifier.  What is it?  Yeah…depending on Covid.  So everything seems uncertain, tenuous, scary and trust in anything seems to go out the window. 


Have you also noticed that trusting in God is even harder under these circumstances?  Ever noticed how hard it is to trust God, even though the Bible says over and over again that He is trustworthy?   But we’ve grown jaded.  Cynical.   Skeptical.   What we read and what we see seem to be two different things. Especially in this time of Covid, when things that we once had hoped and dreamed for keep falling by the wayside. I bet, Seniors, that you were hoping for more for your senior year.   I bet that all of you are just looking for the day that we can shed these masks and be normal again.  Where is God in the middle of Covid?  Why doesn’t He do something.  Why does He seem silent?


When it comes to trusting God with our future, we often opt for what we think we see over what scripture says about God.  And the devil uses the seeming contradictions to widen the trust schism between us and God.


Ever heard one of these?  “If God is so good, why does He allow innocent children to die of starvation?”  or “What kind of God would allow so much suffering in the world if He has the power to do something about it?”  or “I trusted, I prayed, I believed, and my loved one died anyway—so  how can I ever trust Him again?”   Or the most recent one… “Where is your God now?  Why doesn’t He do something about this horrible disease?”  Ever heard any of those?  If so, you’ve heard the devil speak to you.


Satan himself is the cause of all of the misery that we are suffering, and he looks up from his latest victim, with blood on his hands and screams—“If your God is so good, why didn’t he stop me from killing this one?  If He’s so powerful, why didn’t He step in and do something?”


And while this is not a sermon on death and dying and fairness and good versus evil, the question does beg an answer.  Perhaps a story by author Max Lucado from His book He Chose the Nails can help us understand more on this trust issue.  Listen to this.


Ever tried to convince a mouse not to worry? Ever succeeded in pacifying the panic of a rodent? If so, you are wiser than I. My attempt was not successful. My comforting words fell on tiny, deaf ears.


Not that the fellow deserved any kindness, mind you. Because of him, Denalyn screamed. Because of the scream, the garage shook. Because the garage shook, I was yanked out of dreamland and off my La-Z-Boy and called to defend my wife and country. I was proud to go. With shoulders high, I marched into the garage.


The mouse never had a chance. I know jujitsu, karate, tae kwan do and several other ... uh, phrases. I've even watched self-defense infomercials. This mouse had met his match.


Besides, he was trapped in an empty trash can. How he got there only he knows, and he ain't telling. I know, I asked him. His only reply was a mad rush around the base of the can.


The poor guy was scared to the tip of his whiskers. And who wouldn't be? Imagine being caged in a plastic container and looking up only to see the large (albeit handsome) face of a human. Would be enough to make you chuck up your cheese.


"What are you going to do with him?" Denalyn asked, clutching my arm for courage.


"Don't worry, little darlin'," I replied with a swagger that made her swoon and would have made John Wayne jealous. "I'll go easy on the little fellow."


So off we went-the mouse, the trash can, and me, marching down the cul-de-sac toward an empty lot. "Stick with me, little guy. I'll have you home in no time." He didn't listen. You'd have thought we were walking to death row. Had I not placed a lid on the can, the furry fellow would have jumped out. "I'm not going to hurt you," I explained. "I'm going to release you. You got yourself into a mess; I'm going to get you out."


He never calmed down. He never sat still. He never-well, he never trusted me. Even at the last moment, when I tilted the can on the ground and set him free, did he turn around and say thank you? Did he invite me to his mouse house for a meal? No. He just ran. (Was it my imagination, or did I hear him shouting, "Get back! Get back! Max, the mouse-hater, is here"?)


Honestly. What would I have to do to win his trust? Learn to speak Mouse-agese? Grow beady eyes and a long tail? Get down in the trash with him? Thanks, but no thanks. I mean, the mouse was cute and all, but he wasn't worth that much.


Apparently you and I are.


You think it's absurd for a man to become a mouse? The journey from your house to a trash can is far shorter than the one from heaven to earth. But Jesus took it. Why?


He wants us to trust Him.


Explore this thought with me for just a moment. Why did Jesus live on the earth as long as he did? Couldn't his life have been much shorter? Why not step into our world just long enough to die for our sins and then leave? Why not a sinless year or week? Why did he have to live a life? To take on our sins is one thing, but to take on our sunburns, our sore throats? To experience death, yes- but to put up with life? To put up with long roads, long days, and short tempers? Why did he do it? 


Because he wants you to trust him.   Even his final act on earth was intended to win your trust.      He Chose The Nails, p. 89 -91.


And so we return to the question: —“If your God is so good, why didn’t he stop me from killing this one?  If He’s so powerful, why didn’t He step in and do something?”


The answer: He did.  But He did it in the only way that still allows you a choice.  God valued your choice so much that He Himself will not violate it.  And so He wanted to show you that He can be trusted, but that trusting Him is a choice.  He never wanted to remove from you your power of choice, otherwise, He would have played into Satan’s accusations that God was not fair   And so the choice remains; your choice, my choice, and even Satan’s choice, along with the possibility of God being misunderstood and maligned.  And Satan uses that very choice to cause many to turn away from God.


But if you look past the apparent contradictions, you will find that there is ample evidence to trust Him.  Yet it still remains that it is all about the choice.  YOUR choice.  


And so we weigh the evidence. On the one side, we can see that God loves us.  He came and died to save us.  He’s promised to come back for us.  But on the other hand, we can also see that there is much evil in the world.  As Billy Bob once said, “That don’t take no rocket surgeon to figure out.” 


It is much easier to go with what is seen than to trust the unseen.  We can see all the violence and disease and death.  So much so, that sometimes it seems impossible to see God.  But that’s where the choice comes in.  We will see what we choose to look for.


I went to Prater’s Mill with my daughter, Andrea, several years ago when they were  having the old time country fair.  One of the exhibitor’s there took photographs of birds.  All of his photographs were of some type of wild bird.  He had an incredible display.  But there was one picture that really spoke to me.  The framed version was $195.  I’m too cheap to pay that much, but I had to have the picture, so I looked through all of  his mounted photographs, and finally found it.  And bought it.  


Check out this picture.  What do you see?    An old window frame. Cracked and peeling paint.   Broken glass.  Dead weeds.  Painted window panes.   Even some bird poop.  These are not the things that spoke to me.  We see those type of things all the time.  What spoke to me is what is in the lower right quadrant of this picture.


In the face of all the ugliness; in the midst of the old and broken down, your eye begins to see a few sprigs of green vine.  Signs that there is life in the brokenness.  But if you look a little higher, you will see a magnificent ruby-throated hummingbird sitting on the sill where glass has been broken out, and he is looking UP!


That’s the way God works.  In the midst of our broken and shattered lives, we’ve got to be looking for the tiniest evidence that shows that our God is still with us.  It’s all about the choice.  What are we choosing to focus on? The ugly and broken in this world?  The cracked and peeling paint of our lives?  The bird poop events that happen to us?  Or are we choosing to look at the tiny gorgeous ruby-throated  hummingbird promises that God has left for us.  I have had this picture in my office for years on the back wall directly in front of my desk chair, so that no matter what life may throw at me...it always reminds me that I have a choice.  You have a choice.  We get to CHOOSE where we place our focus.


We can either grow jaded or joyful.  We can grow bitter or better.  Stronger or weaker.  Hopeful or Hopeless.  It all depends on what we choose to focus on.  


Satan screams while God whispers.  In our current world it may seem that God is silent, but He isn’t.  He’s still speaking to those who will listen.  And you can be sure of this, while He may start in a still, small voice, one day God will thunder and Satan will whimper.  Our perspective makes all the difference.  

Which reminds me of a story I read.


A number of years ago, there was a little girl that walked daily to and from school. Though the weather that one particular morning was questionable and clouds were forming, she made her daily trek to the elementary school.


As the afternoon progressed, the winds whipped up, along with thunder and lightning. The mother of the little girl felt concerned that her daughter would be frightened as she walked home from school, and she herself feared that the electrical storm might harm her child. Suddenly, there was a roar of thunder, and lightning, like a flaming sword, cut the sky.


Now fully concerned, the mother quickly got into her car and drove along the route to her daughter’s school. As she did so, she finally spotted her child.  Rather than being terrified by the lightning, she saw her little girl walking along, and at each flash of lightning, the child would stop, look up and smile.


Another and another were to follow quickly, each with the little girl stopping, looking at the streak of light and smiling. After witnessing the fourth flash, the mother, shook off her amazement, rolled down her window and called her to come and get in the car. When the young girl was safely in the car her mother asked,  "What in the world were you doing?  Why didn’t you hurry?"  The child answered, "Well, I meant to come right home, but God just kept taking pictures of me."


How do you face your storms?  Are you fretful and worried, or do you see God taking your picture for his Faith Hall of Fame?  It all depends on how you choose.


Which brings us to the future.  How can you trust God with your future?   Wouldn’t it depend on how you see God operating in your past?


Christian Author and speaker, Ellen White, once wrote: In reviewing our past history, having traveled over every step of advance to our present standing, I can say, Praise God! As I see what God has wrought, I am filled with astonishment, and with confidence in Christ as leader. We have nothing to fear for the future, except as we shall forget the way the Lord has led us, and His teaching in our past history. {CET 204.1} (Christian Experience and Teaching by Ellen  White)


Did you catch that?  We have nothing to fear for our future, except as we shall forget the way the Lord has led us


How can you trust God with your future? Let me quickly take you through some things that can help, no matter if you are trying to figure out what to take in college or if your world  has caved in and you don’t know if you can go on, or if you are just simply seeking to make it through the day.  But rather than you hearing my words, let me take you straight to what God, Himself promised.  


First of all look at how He has led you in the past.  Go over His blessings to you. Look at His miracles in your life.  Remember what He did for you on the cross and what He continues to do for you now.  If you can see His faithfulness in the past, it is easier to trust God with your future.  Has He saved you in an accident or seen you through a critical illness or surgery?  Did He provide a way for you to be here at GCA?  Has he worked anything out for your family?  Can you see his faithfulness in the past? If so, remember it.


Secondly, choose not to worry but to look to God. Choose to trust that God will make a way. 

Psa. 37:3    Trust in the LORD and do good.

Then you will live safely in the land and prosper.

4  Take delight in the LORD,

and he will give you your heart’s desires.

Psa. 37:5    Commit everything you do to the LORD.

Trust him, and he will help you.

6  He will make your innocence radiate like the dawn,

and the justice of your cause will shine like the noonday sun.


When your heart lines up with His heart, He will give you what you desire…which is exactly what He desires.  Not only will He give you the desires of your heart, but God himself promises to walk with  you.

Is. 43:1    But now, O Jacob, (and here you could insert your own name instead of Jacob) listen to the LORD who created you.

O Israel,(insert your name again) the one who formed you says,

“Do not be afraid, for I have ransomed you.

I have called you by name; you are mine.

2  When you go through deep waters,

I will be with you.

When you go through rivers of difficulty,

you will not drown.

When you walk through the fire of oppression,

you will not be burned up;

the flames will not consume you.


Third, learn to wait on the Lord and seek His guidance.

Lam. 3:25    The LORD is good to those who depend on him,

to those who search for him.26  So it is good to wait quietly

for salvation from the LORD.


Waiting quietly can help you refocus your energy on what is really important. 

Matt. 6:33 Seek the Kingdom of Goda above all else, and live righteously, and he will give you everything you need.


We often spend so much time and energy in worrying about the future, rather than in seeking God.  But it is in the waiting and the seeking that we find our strength.


Fourth, Know that God has a plan for you and it includes hope.  Again, though, it is in seeking the Lord that we find that hope.

Jer. 29:11-13   For I know the plans I have for you,” says the LORD. “They are plans for good and not for disaster, to give you a future and a hope. 12  In those days when you pray, I will listen. 13  If you look for me wholeheartedly, you will find me.


Is. 40:28-31 Have you never heard? Have you never understood?  The LORD is the everlasting God,  the Creator of all the earth.  He never grows weak or weary.  No one can measure the depths of his understanding.

29  He gives power to the weak and strength to the powerless.

30  Even youths will become weak and tired, and young men will fall in exhaustion.

31  But those who trust in the LORD will find new strength. They will soar high on wings like eagles. They will run and not grow weary.  They will walk and not faint.


Fifth-Don’t get hung up on past failures.  Look expectantly to a new future with God.

Is. 43:18,19“But forget all that—it is nothing compared to what I am going to do.

19  For I am about to do something new.  See, I have already begun! Do you not see it?  I will make a pathway through the wilderness. I will create rivers in the dry wasteland.


God can make you prosper even in the driest of times or the worst of times in your life.  And as you grow in your trust relationship with Him, He will cause you to grow stronger and stronger.  What He doesn't deliver you from, He will bring you through to in order to strengthen you.


Sixth- Walk each day in trust and you will find new strength

Psa. 20:7,8 Some nations boast of their chariots and horses,  but we boast in the name of the LORD our God.  8  Those nations will fall down and collapse,  but we will rise up and stand firm.  See, trusting God helps you stand firm


Psa. 125:1Those who trust in the LORD are as secure as Mount Zion; they will not be defeated but will endure forever. 2  Just as the mountains surround Jerusalem,  so the LORD surrounds his people, both now and forever.


Seventh—Look  for the next natural step and be willing to take it.

Prov. 3:5 Trust in the LORD with all your heart;  do not depend on your own understanding. 6  Seek his will in all you do,  and he will show you which path to take.


As you follow His leading, the whole picture will come together for you.  If you focus on Jesus, He will order the pieces of your world and they will fit together perfectly.  Which reminds me of another story.


There was a man who had a little boy that he loved very much. Everyday after work the man would come home and play with the little boy. He would always spend all of his extra time playing with the little boy.


One night, while the man was at work, he realized that he had extra work to do for the evening, and that he wouldn't be able to play with his little boy. But, he wanted to be able to give the boy something to keep him busy. So, looking around his office, he saw a magazine with a large map of the world on the cover. He got an idea. He removed the map, and then patiently tore it up into small pieces. Then he put all the pieces in his coat pocket.


When he got home, the little boy came running to him and was ready to play. The man explained that he had extra work to do and couldn't play just now, but he led the little boy into the dining room, and taking out all the pieces of the map, he spread them on the table. He explained that it was a map of the world, and that by the time he could put it back together, his extra work would be finished, and they could both play. Surely this would keep the child busy for hours, he thought.


About half an hour later the boy came to the man and said, "Okay, it's finished. Can we play now?”


The man was surprised, saying, "That's impossible. Let's go see." And sure enough, there was the picture of the world, all put together, every piece in it's place.


The man said, "That's amazing ! How did you do that ?" The boy said, "It was simple. On the back of the page was a picture of a man. When I put the man together, I taped it so it wouldn’t mess up, and then I turned it over and the whole world was together.”


Matthew West has a great song called “Take Heart”. He premiered it just a few weeks after Covid caused the shutdown here in the US.

The lyrics start this way:


Woke up this morning

And life as you know it

Looks nothing like the kind of life you knew before

All of a sudden

Fear stole the headlines

And it don't feel safe to even step outside your door

In this world you will have trouble

But I have overcome the world

So take heart—- Listen to this.


If you just trust in Jesus, your problems will find resolution.  If you trust in Jesus, your fears can be quelled.  If you trust Jesus, your future will be sure.  If you trust Jesus with your future you will have not only hope, but a very bright future.    Pray with me.  


Rom. 15:13  May the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace as you trust in him, so that you may overflow with hope by the power of the Holy Spirit.



This blogpost  was taken from the manuscript of a talk I delivered to the students at Georgia-Cumberland Academy on Friday night, Jan. 29, 2021.  

Thursday, October 1, 2020

Will You Yield? NEVER!!!!

Storms are a natural part of life.  Small storms, like frantic searches for car keys when you are due at an important appointment.  Medium storms, like not having enough money to pay rent, or someone slamming into your parked car, putting your patience to the test as you walk through mountains of insurance issues and getting your car fixed or totaled and finding a replacement.  Finding a broken pipe, or a rotted floor or some other headache that you hadn't planned on dealing with. Then there are those HUGE storms.  Storms that threaten to do us in. That phone call that lets you know a loved one has been in a bad car accident, or has passed.  That doctor's report that tells you that you have cancer or COVID or some other equally bad piece of news.   How do you hold on then?  How do you not only hold on, but how do you actually grow stronger?  I believe it is in learning to yield your circumstances to God..

But that is much easier said than done, since yielding requires giving away even the last bit of the control we have.  But yielding to your circumstances to God can actually help you grow stronger as you meet the challenges of life. 



Yielding.  It means to “give way, to acquiesce.”  A more personal definition would be: to surrender or relinquish to the physical control of another : hand over possession of : to surrender or submit (oneself) to another.  


But we don’t like to yield (except, perhaps, to our temptations!)  It is not in our nature.  Everything within us revolts at the sound of yielding.  Oh, we do it when we have to…like when we come to a busy street and there is a yield sign.  But we don’t do it readily.  As a matter of fact, if the truth were to be known, we are approaching that yield sign to see if we have enough room to squeeze out in front of that car that is coming.  If we have just enough room, we will usually gun it to pull out in front and let them step on the brakes rather than yielding.  


In fact, as I have studied human nature, we don’t even value the idea of yielding, because we think it makes us look weak.  We, like Robin Hood, when presented with the question “Will you yield?” quickly respond...at least in our hearts, "NEVER!"  We would rather fight and go into the water before we would allow someone else to get the better of us.


So when someone says you can grow stronger through yielding, it almost sounds impossible.  But it is true.  Part of growing stronger as you go through the storms of life is realizing that God can use whatever circumstances you find yourself in if you will just rest in His care and yield to His will for you.  And if you’ve learned to trust Him in the good times, it is much easier not to panic in the storm.  


I had a mentor once, an older retired minister, named Sam. He still worked part time at the church I was at for a small stipend, but he loved people and he loved God and wanted to continue to spend his time bringing the two together. Sam was married to Dorothy.  And Sam and Dorothy had weathered many storms in life.  Family problems, many deaths of those close to them, financial pressures and at times, their own health challenges.  


One day Dorothy began to experience some abdominal pain.  She chalked it up to something she ate and figured it would pass.  But instead of going away, the pain got progressively worse, so she scheduled an appointment with her doctor.


A few tests, and the diagnosis did not take long.  She was already in stage 4 of pancreatic cancer.  I watched as Sam took care of her over the next few months, spending less time at the church and more by her side.  It wasn’t long before Dorothy died, her abdomen having swollen to the size of a basketball from the cancer inside her.


I will never forget that funeral and especially the graveside service.  Sam was there, and though he shed his tears over the one he had spent so much of life with, he wasn’t angry, he wasn’t questioning God and he wasn’t particularly trying to keep a stiff upper lip to put on a good show.


I walked up as he watched them shovel the dirt onto her casket and I put my arm around his shoulder.  He looked over at me and said, “I praise the Lord that He gave me such a good woman to go through life with.  She was my sweetheart.  The Lord gives and the Lord takes away. I trust Him to do what’s best. Blessed be the name of the Lord.”


That spoke volumes to me of a trust in God that can develop in a person who chooses to yield to the will of God for their life.


What about you?  Have you learned to yield your impossible circumstances to God?  Your suffering can make you bitter or better?  Closer to God or farther away.  It depends on what you choose to do.  Yield or retain control…But I think if we can learn to yield, we will find that our lives will be more in control and make more sense and we can have a peace about us that does not flee in the presence of bad circumstances.  And no matter what, we can say, “Blessed be the name of the Lord.”  


The question I (and you as well) have to answer as I meet each of life’s challenges: Will  you yield this circumstance to God?






Wednesday, March 18, 2020

Will You Trust Me...Even Here?

The disciples were in a storm...a bad one. So bad that they felt they were going to drown, and despaired of life itself. Sound familiar? Feel like you're going to drown in the mass hysteria of the Covid-19 Pandemic? Getting so nervous and panicky you are despairing of life itself? Feel like "we're going in and this is it"? Many are despairing, but you don't have to. Read on.

Jesus had been teaching all day and He was exhausted! So exhausted that He told the disciples to push off and head across the Sea of Galilee. Let's pick up the whole story in Mark. It happens in 6 short verses. Mark 4:35-41 (New Living Translation)

Mark 4:35 As evening came, Jesus said to his disciples, “Let’s cross to the other side of the lake.” 36 So they took Jesus in the boat and started out, leaving the crowds behind (although other boats followed). 37 But soon a fierce storm came up. High waves were breaking into the boat, and it began to fill with water.

Mark 4:38 Jesus was sleeping at the back of the boat with his head on a cushion. The disciples woke him up, shouting, “Teacher, don’t you care that we’re going to drown?”

Mark 4:39 When Jesus woke up, he rebuked the wind and said to the waves, “Silence! Be still!” Suddenly the wind stopped, and there was a great calm. 40 Then he asked them, “Why are you afraid? Do you still have no faith?”

Mark 4:41 The disciples were absolutely terrified. “Who is this man?” they asked each other. “Even the wind and waves obey him!”


These people had seen Jesus heal the sick, cast out demons, turn water into wine...in short...they had seen Him do the impossible! But when the storm came up, their faith went down. THEY FORGOT HE WAS IN THE BOAT WITH THEM!!! (Have you?)

And then, when they did remember, they asked Him an almost insane question! Look back at verse 38..."Teacher...Don't you care if we drown?" Of course He cared! These guys were a vital part of His mission to save the world! They would be the ones spreading the message! (And so are YOU!)

And then Jesus woke up. He didn't ream them out. He didn't scold them. He simply rebuked the wind and the waves...He said "Be Still!" and they were! Then He asked them a question. It's the same question I believe He is asking us even now. "Why are you afraid? Do you still have no faith?"

Put another way, I think this is the question that we, as Christians, have to answer every day. See, I believe that things come along to help us realize that we don't have the control we would like to think that we have. The fact is, we never really have had control of anything... except our choices.

Life happens fast, and as a Christian we are constantly having to re-examine where we stand with Christ...and the question is always there. It's His way of re-focusing us. Of calling us back to the basics and helping us reassess where we truly stand in our walk with Him.

And now, in this time of crisis, it is even more important that we both face, and daily answer, the question that Christ puts before us. The question: Will you trust ME...even here?

Oh wait, Pastor Don...He could sleep because He was God. I mean...He KNEW He wasn't going down. He had all of the power on earth. I would beg to differ. If He were all about saving His own life, He never would have gone to the cross. It wasn't death He was thinking about.

In fact, one of my favorite Christian authors, Ellen White, in her book The Desire of Ages, paints the scene a little better for us.

When Jesus was awakened to meet the storm, He was in perfect peace. There was no trace of fear in word or look, for no fear was in His heart. But He rested not in the possession of almighty power. It was not as the “Master of earth and sea and sky” that He reposed in quiet. That power He had laid down, and He says, “I can of Mine own self do nothing.” John 5:30. He trusted in the Father’s might. It was in faith—faith in God’s love and care—that Jesus rested, and the power of that word which stilled the storm was the power of God. {DA 336.1}






So it isn't in our own power that we are expected to meet this thing. It is in faith--faith in God's love and care--that we can rest as well. And we can look up as we hear His question, "Will you trust Me even here?" And though our answer may at first be feeble, we can choose, by faith to answer yes. And we can continue to answer yes until every time it is asked of us, whether in good times or in crisis, we can respond with a resounding yes. That's what is called the Faith Walk.

By faith I say YES...and God leads me one more step. Then asks again, "Will you trust Me even here?" And I choose, again, to say YES! And He leads me another step. I don't have to know every step from beginning to end. If I hold on by faith, He will continue to walk me, with both peace and confidence, through whatever the world or the devil may throw at me.

Will it be trying? Yes! Faith destroying? It doesn't have to be!  So hold on my friends and trust!

To hold on is not so much about bravery or courage, but a learned response from a long obedience in the same direction. It’s about being confident in the One who has called you.
· Hold on to your faith.
· Hold on to your care for one another
· Hold on to Jesus.
Every day Jesus asks you the same question: Will you trust Me even here? And your answer is?