Reflame Ministries International Kaua'i

In the Hands of the Potter
Our Sunday morning service, August 22, 2021. Guest Speaker Evangelist Marshall W Michael
Locations & Times
House of Prayer
4337 Rice St, Lihue, HI 96766, USA
Sunday 11:00 AM

“The Teacup”
A grandfather and a grandmother were in a gift shop looking for something to give their granddaughter for her birthday. Suddenly the grandmother spots a beautiful teacup. "Look at this lovely cup", she says to her husband. He picks it up and says, "You’re right! This is one of the loveliest teacups I have ever seen."
At that point something remarkable happened - something that could only happen in a children’s book. The teacup says to the grandparents, "Thank you for the compliment, but I wasn’t always beautiful. "Instead of being surprised that the cup can talk, the grandfather and grandmother ask it, "What do you mean when you say you weren’t always beautiful?" "Well", says the teacup, "once I was just an ugly, soggy lump of clay. But one day some man with dirty wet hands threw me on a wheel. Then he started turning me around and around until I got so dizzy I couldn’t see straight. ’Stop! Stop!’, I cried. "But the man with the wet hands said, ’Not Yet!’ Then he started to poke me and punch me until I hurt all over. ’Stop! Stop!’, I cried. But the man said ’Not Yet’.
"Finally, he did stop. But then he did something much worse. He put me into a furnace. I got hotter and hotter until I couldn’t stand it. ’Stop! Stop!’, I cried. But the man said ’Not Yet’. "Just when I thought I was going to burn up the man took me out of the furnace. Then some short lady began to paint me. The fumes got so bad that they made me feel sick. "Stop, stop!’, I cried. ’Not Yet!’ said the lady. "After a while she did stop. But then she gave me back to the man again and he put me back into that awful furnace. This time it was hotter than before. ’Stop! Stop!’, I cried. But the man said ’Not Yet’.
"Finally, he took me out of the furnace and let me cool. When I was completely cool a pretty lady put me on this shelf, next to this mirror. "When I looked at myself in the mirror, I was amazed. I could not believe what I saw. I was no longer ugly, soggy, and dirty. I was beautiful, firm, and clean. I cried for joy. It was then I realized that all the pain was worthwhile.
Without it I would still be an ugly, soggy lump of wet clay. It was then that all the pain took on meaning for me - it had passed - but the beauty it brought has remained."
A grandfather and a grandmother were in a gift shop looking for something to give their granddaughter for her birthday. Suddenly the grandmother spots a beautiful teacup. "Look at this lovely cup", she says to her husband. He picks it up and says, "You’re right! This is one of the loveliest teacups I have ever seen."
At that point something remarkable happened - something that could only happen in a children’s book. The teacup says to the grandparents, "Thank you for the compliment, but I wasn’t always beautiful. "Instead of being surprised that the cup can talk, the grandfather and grandmother ask it, "What do you mean when you say you weren’t always beautiful?" "Well", says the teacup, "once I was just an ugly, soggy lump of clay. But one day some man with dirty wet hands threw me on a wheel. Then he started turning me around and around until I got so dizzy I couldn’t see straight. ’Stop! Stop!’, I cried. "But the man with the wet hands said, ’Not Yet!’ Then he started to poke me and punch me until I hurt all over. ’Stop! Stop!’, I cried. But the man said ’Not Yet’.
"Finally, he did stop. But then he did something much worse. He put me into a furnace. I got hotter and hotter until I couldn’t stand it. ’Stop! Stop!’, I cried. But the man said ’Not Yet’. "Just when I thought I was going to burn up the man took me out of the furnace. Then some short lady began to paint me. The fumes got so bad that they made me feel sick. "Stop, stop!’, I cried. ’Not Yet!’ said the lady. "After a while she did stop. But then she gave me back to the man again and he put me back into that awful furnace. This time it was hotter than before. ’Stop! Stop!’, I cried. But the man said ’Not Yet’.
"Finally, he took me out of the furnace and let me cool. When I was completely cool a pretty lady put me on this shelf, next to this mirror. "When I looked at myself in the mirror, I was amazed. I could not believe what I saw. I was no longer ugly, soggy, and dirty. I was beautiful, firm, and clean. I cried for joy. It was then I realized that all the pain was worthwhile.
Without it I would still be an ugly, soggy lump of wet clay. It was then that all the pain took on meaning for me - it had passed - but the beauty it brought has remained."

God is the Master Potter, we are HIS clay. HE does not belong to us, we belong to HIM. God wants to mold us and make us in to vessels of honor to be use for His glory. If He were the clay and we the potter, like some do, try to make God in to the image they want Him to be. You can see that in today’s society. They try to conform God and His Word into what they want Him to be.
This is called creating an IDOL. And what did God say about that?
Exodus 20:3 God says, “You shall have no other gods before Me.”
The clay is the potter’s, not the potter the clay’s. It is the Potter’s prerogative on how the clay is to be shaped. If He wants to crush and remake the vessel that’s the Potter’s decision. The Potter has a plan when He starts making a vessel. He knows how much clay He needs to start, the type of vessel He wants it to be, because He already has a purpose and plan for what He is creating. Even when making multiples of the same type of vessel, each one is unique and a work of art from the Master’s hand.
There is a process the Master Potter puts the clay through and we are going to examine that process today. We talked about it a little in the story of the teacup. God wants to make us into vessels of honor, not dishonor. But still some fight the process.
Romans 9:20-21…“But indeed, O man, who are you to reply against God?
? Will the ting formed say to Him who formed it, “Why have you made me like this?” 21Does not the potter have power over the clay, from the same lump to make one vessel for honor and another for dishonor?”
Some Christians today see God as someone to give them what they want. They see Him as some supernatural “Santa Claus” and present Him with their shopping list of what they want, how they want to look. They look to Him to give them abundant life with nothing in return. Some just look to God as “fire insurance” someone that is going to keep them out of hell.
In Jeremiah 18, God gives the prophet Jeremiah a warning for Israel of what will happen if they turn from its evil, He said He would “relent of the disaster that I thought to bring upon you. (verse 8) He also says if they reject Him and His word and return to do what is evil He will “pluck it up, pull it down, and destroy it.” (verse 7) Sound familiar?
So here’s the process in a nutshell. The clay is shaped, reshaped, reshaped, reshaped, redone if it gets spoiled of marred. Once the vessel is the way the Potter wants it, it is set on the shelf to dry. If it is fired too quickly it will break in the process and the Potter will have to start all over again. Once it has sufficiently dried, it is placed in a KILN and then heated or fired to almost its shattering point. After it has cooled, then it is painted and coated, called glazing, and then fired once more. Once it has cool from the final firing, it is ready to be used for the purpose which it was designed.
Some want to rush to process. If the process is rushed the vessel will become unusable and the only choice is to be discarded and the work begun anew.
Psalm 40:1-3a… “I waited patiently for the Lord; And He inclined to me, and heard my cry."
THE HORRIBLE PIT & MIRY CLAY
This is the beginning of the process. The choosing of the clay. The type of clay used is determined by the type of vessel. So, what is miry clay?
MIRY CLAY is the wet, soggy, slimiest mud in the pit. It is also the best clay to use for most projects. It is tough to get because the POTTER has to actually climb down into the pit where the clay is to extract it. The walls of the pit are slick. It is a difficult place in which to be.
David was saying in Psalm 40 that he was in a difficult place, and it seemed as there was no escape. Unfortunately, life can seem like that. Even when we’re walking with the Lord, we come to times of difficulties that seem to carry on and on, without hope of ever ending.
2 Corinthians 4:8-9…“We are hard-pressed on every side; we are perplexed, but not in despair; persecuted, but not forsaken, struck down, but not destroyed..."
When you meet some people, they can’t stop talking about how rough they’ve had it in life. It’s almost like a bad country song straight out of Nashville, always singing “somebody’s done me wrong.” You just want to tell them, “Welcome to the club! Welcome to the human race!”
It is in those places, in the pit, where God comes to chose us. Being in the pit is like our life was before we got saved. Just like the POTTER chooses His clay, God CHOSE you and me.
John 15:16…“You did not choose Me, but I chose you and appointed you that you should go and bear fruit, and that your fruit should remain…”
WE are HIS clay, HE chose US. HE pulled us out of the horrible pit of sin we were in.
Question: The clay the Potter draws from the pit, does he use it right away?
NO He doesn’t. There is a separation process, or purification process the clay must go through before it is ready to be shaped and molded. When the clay is first extracted it contains impurities from the soil around it. Grass, rocks, moss, various kinds of debris that must be removed before the clay is ready to be used.
When we first come to Christ, we come with all kinds of impurities that have to be removed from us before we can be shaped and molded. This is done through discipleship, attending church, fellowshipping with other believers, but mainly by spending time alone with God in prayer and reading His word.
Ezekiel 36:26…“I will give you a new heart and put a new spirit within you; I will take the heart of stone out of your flesh and give you a heart of flesh.”
So there is a process before the process.
Once the Potter sees the clay is free of impurities, there is a step before the shaping may begin. It is the KNEADING process. This is the process of using the weight of your upper body to push and pull the clay, on a hard surface, making it pliable. This also helps to remove any air bubbles from the clay. If the clay has air bubbles it could cause problems in the shaping process and possibly cause the vessel to break or even explode in the firing.
This is the same process a baker goes through while making bread. In John 9:6, it’s also what Jesus did when he spit on the ground and kneaded the dust and spittle into clay, and smeared it over the blind man’s eyes.
SET UPON A ROCK
Once the clay is ready to be used, it is put on the pottery wheel. Today, those wheels can be made of wood, metal or plastic. In David’s time and still some prefer today, the wheel was made from a round rock. Another stone, called a “flywheel” was kicked to make to make the main wheel spin. It had a turning platform about 3 feet off the floor attached to the flywheel at floor level. Now there are motor driven potter’s wheels…ah technology.
In Psalm 40, David says “And set my feet upon a rock,” this is the time when the Potter takes a lump of clay and slams it down on the wheel. That is called “setting the foot.” The bottom of every vessel from bowl to pitcher is called the “foot” and it is the first thing that gets set on the wheel.
ESTABLISHED MY STEPS
In the King James version Psalm 40:2 finishes with “and established my goings.”
This is the process where the Potter centers the clay on the wheel. In the beginning the clay fights the potter, but the He gently keeps guiding the clay to “establish” its goings on the wheel and make sure it is in the very center of His will for that lump of clay. Sound familiar?
The Master Potter, God, does the same with us.
Isaiah 64:8… “But now, O Lord, You are our Father; We are the clay, and You our Potter: And all we are the work of Your hand."
Proverbs 16:9…“A man’s heart plans his way, but the LORD directs his steps.”
A Jewish paraphrase of that verse says, “Man makes his plans and God laughs.”
Jeremiah 29:11…“For I know the plans I have for you,” declares the LORD, “plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future.”
Proverbs 3:5-6… “Trust in the Lord with all your heart, and lean not on your own understanding; 6In all your ways acknowledge Him, and He shall direct your paths.”
THE NEXT STEP IN THE PROCESS…DRYING
Once the vessels are made to the Master Potter’s design, they are placed on a shelf to dry evenly and to a dryness that is perfect for trimming. Then they are stored covered for 1-2 days. Then they are trimmed, designed, and signed, and placed back on the shelf until they are bone dry.
Psalm 40:1…“I waited patiently for the Lord…”
Isaiah 40: 31…“But they that wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength; they shall mount up with wings as eagles; they shall un, and not be weary; and they shall walk, and not faint.”
Many think the waiting is the toughest part of the process.
TRIED BY FIRE
Firing clay transforms it from its humble, soft beginnings in to a new, durable substance: ceramic. The temperature needed to transform soft clay is extremely high, at more than 1,500 degrees.
When the desired temperature is reached, the kiln is turned off. The cooling is slow to avoid breaking the vessels due to the stress of temperature change. After the kiln is completely cool, it is opened and the newly created “bisqueware” is removed.
1 Peter 1:7…“that the genuineness of your faith, being much more precious than gold that perishes, though it is tested by fire, may be found to praise, honor, and glory at the revelation of Jesus Christ.”
This is the refining process for the clay.
This process is also known as the “PROVING” process.
Psalm 66:10 says that God has “proved us.”
In 2 Corinthians 4 the Apostle Paul refers to us as “Clay Jars” so that the “extraordinary treasure” can be seen that it belongs to God and not us. The treasure is the power of God at work in out lives. We are the clay jars that God uses, that are sometimes marred an fragile. God still uses us.
I like the saying, “Be patient. God isn’t finished with me yet.” That’s true for all of us. We’re a work in progress. God is continuing to work on us.
THE GLAZING
Once the vessel is cooled completely then it is ready to be decorated with a special paint called “glaze.” The type of design on the vessel is also at the will of the Potter. It is, after all, His design. The vessel is decorated and placed back into the kiln one more time.
The purpose of the glazing in addition to decoration is to waterproof the vessel. In this process it must not touch the other vessels or the glazes will melt together, fusing the vessels together permanently.
The second firing, heated slowly, causes a remarkable change in the clay and glaze. It completes the transformation from a soft, fragile substance to one that is rock-hard and impervious to water and time.
James 1:3-4…“knowing that the testing of your faith produces patience.
IN CONCLUSION
One thing I learned about vessels is once they’ve been fired, no matter how exquisite it is, in order to change it, you have to break it. This tells us a couple things. We want to stay in a state of being transformed, so that God can continue to work in our lives.
Romans 12:2… “And do not be conformed to his world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind…”
We want to be vessels of honor, fit for the Master’s use.
2 Timothy 2:20-21…“But in a great house there are not only vessels of gold and silver, but also of wood and clay, some for honor and some for dishonor. 21Therefore if anyone cleanses himself from the latter, he will be a vessel of honor, sanctified and useful for the Master, prepared for every good work.”
Sometimes we need to be broken, but brokenness is not a bad thing. In
Psalm 51:17 says, “A broken and contrite heart, O God, You will not despise.” We get to the point when we cry out to God, “I can’t do this on my own. I need You!”
I want to ask what kind of clay are you? Hard, not willing to listen to what God wants to do in your life. Un-moldable clay? Every time God wants to do something with you, you jump off the wheel. Or, are you pliable and useable, teachable and willing for God to do with you, to you and through you what He wills from a place of surrender?
Some people go to church, love God, believe in salvation, but that’s where it stops! They never surrender to the potter. They never let the finished product come off God’s wheel. They have a form of godliness, but deny His power. They are pretenders. Don’t be a pretender.
2 Corinthians 5:17…“Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation; old things have passed away; behold, all things have become new."
Let the Master Potter mold you and shape you, fire you, glaze you, and refire you, so you can become what He has planed for you to become all along.
This is called creating an IDOL. And what did God say about that?
Exodus 20:3 God says, “You shall have no other gods before Me.”
The clay is the potter’s, not the potter the clay’s. It is the Potter’s prerogative on how the clay is to be shaped. If He wants to crush and remake the vessel that’s the Potter’s decision. The Potter has a plan when He starts making a vessel. He knows how much clay He needs to start, the type of vessel He wants it to be, because He already has a purpose and plan for what He is creating. Even when making multiples of the same type of vessel, each one is unique and a work of art from the Master’s hand.
There is a process the Master Potter puts the clay through and we are going to examine that process today. We talked about it a little in the story of the teacup. God wants to make us into vessels of honor, not dishonor. But still some fight the process.
Romans 9:20-21…“But indeed, O man, who are you to reply against God?
? Will the ting formed say to Him who formed it, “Why have you made me like this?” 21Does not the potter have power over the clay, from the same lump to make one vessel for honor and another for dishonor?”
Some Christians today see God as someone to give them what they want. They see Him as some supernatural “Santa Claus” and present Him with their shopping list of what they want, how they want to look. They look to Him to give them abundant life with nothing in return. Some just look to God as “fire insurance” someone that is going to keep them out of hell.
In Jeremiah 18, God gives the prophet Jeremiah a warning for Israel of what will happen if they turn from its evil, He said He would “relent of the disaster that I thought to bring upon you. (verse 8) He also says if they reject Him and His word and return to do what is evil He will “pluck it up, pull it down, and destroy it.” (verse 7) Sound familiar?
So here’s the process in a nutshell. The clay is shaped, reshaped, reshaped, reshaped, redone if it gets spoiled of marred. Once the vessel is the way the Potter wants it, it is set on the shelf to dry. If it is fired too quickly it will break in the process and the Potter will have to start all over again. Once it has sufficiently dried, it is placed in a KILN and then heated or fired to almost its shattering point. After it has cooled, then it is painted and coated, called glazing, and then fired once more. Once it has cool from the final firing, it is ready to be used for the purpose which it was designed.
Some want to rush to process. If the process is rushed the vessel will become unusable and the only choice is to be discarded and the work begun anew.
Psalm 40:1-3a… “I waited patiently for the Lord; And He inclined to me, and heard my cry."
THE HORRIBLE PIT & MIRY CLAY
This is the beginning of the process. The choosing of the clay. The type of clay used is determined by the type of vessel. So, what is miry clay?
MIRY CLAY is the wet, soggy, slimiest mud in the pit. It is also the best clay to use for most projects. It is tough to get because the POTTER has to actually climb down into the pit where the clay is to extract it. The walls of the pit are slick. It is a difficult place in which to be.
David was saying in Psalm 40 that he was in a difficult place, and it seemed as there was no escape. Unfortunately, life can seem like that. Even when we’re walking with the Lord, we come to times of difficulties that seem to carry on and on, without hope of ever ending.
2 Corinthians 4:8-9…“We are hard-pressed on every side; we are perplexed, but not in despair; persecuted, but not forsaken, struck down, but not destroyed..."
When you meet some people, they can’t stop talking about how rough they’ve had it in life. It’s almost like a bad country song straight out of Nashville, always singing “somebody’s done me wrong.” You just want to tell them, “Welcome to the club! Welcome to the human race!”
It is in those places, in the pit, where God comes to chose us. Being in the pit is like our life was before we got saved. Just like the POTTER chooses His clay, God CHOSE you and me.
John 15:16…“You did not choose Me, but I chose you and appointed you that you should go and bear fruit, and that your fruit should remain…”
WE are HIS clay, HE chose US. HE pulled us out of the horrible pit of sin we were in.
Question: The clay the Potter draws from the pit, does he use it right away?
NO He doesn’t. There is a separation process, or purification process the clay must go through before it is ready to be shaped and molded. When the clay is first extracted it contains impurities from the soil around it. Grass, rocks, moss, various kinds of debris that must be removed before the clay is ready to be used.
When we first come to Christ, we come with all kinds of impurities that have to be removed from us before we can be shaped and molded. This is done through discipleship, attending church, fellowshipping with other believers, but mainly by spending time alone with God in prayer and reading His word.
Ezekiel 36:26…“I will give you a new heart and put a new spirit within you; I will take the heart of stone out of your flesh and give you a heart of flesh.”
So there is a process before the process.
Once the Potter sees the clay is free of impurities, there is a step before the shaping may begin. It is the KNEADING process. This is the process of using the weight of your upper body to push and pull the clay, on a hard surface, making it pliable. This also helps to remove any air bubbles from the clay. If the clay has air bubbles it could cause problems in the shaping process and possibly cause the vessel to break or even explode in the firing.
This is the same process a baker goes through while making bread. In John 9:6, it’s also what Jesus did when he spit on the ground and kneaded the dust and spittle into clay, and smeared it over the blind man’s eyes.
SET UPON A ROCK
Once the clay is ready to be used, it is put on the pottery wheel. Today, those wheels can be made of wood, metal or plastic. In David’s time and still some prefer today, the wheel was made from a round rock. Another stone, called a “flywheel” was kicked to make to make the main wheel spin. It had a turning platform about 3 feet off the floor attached to the flywheel at floor level. Now there are motor driven potter’s wheels…ah technology.
In Psalm 40, David says “And set my feet upon a rock,” this is the time when the Potter takes a lump of clay and slams it down on the wheel. That is called “setting the foot.” The bottom of every vessel from bowl to pitcher is called the “foot” and it is the first thing that gets set on the wheel.
ESTABLISHED MY STEPS
In the King James version Psalm 40:2 finishes with “and established my goings.”
This is the process where the Potter centers the clay on the wheel. In the beginning the clay fights the potter, but the He gently keeps guiding the clay to “establish” its goings on the wheel and make sure it is in the very center of His will for that lump of clay. Sound familiar?
The Master Potter, God, does the same with us.
Isaiah 64:8… “But now, O Lord, You are our Father; We are the clay, and You our Potter: And all we are the work of Your hand."
Proverbs 16:9…“A man’s heart plans his way, but the LORD directs his steps.”
A Jewish paraphrase of that verse says, “Man makes his plans and God laughs.”
Jeremiah 29:11…“For I know the plans I have for you,” declares the LORD, “plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future.”
Proverbs 3:5-6… “Trust in the Lord with all your heart, and lean not on your own understanding; 6In all your ways acknowledge Him, and He shall direct your paths.”
THE NEXT STEP IN THE PROCESS…DRYING
Once the vessels are made to the Master Potter’s design, they are placed on a shelf to dry evenly and to a dryness that is perfect for trimming. Then they are stored covered for 1-2 days. Then they are trimmed, designed, and signed, and placed back on the shelf until they are bone dry.
Psalm 40:1…“I waited patiently for the Lord…”
Isaiah 40: 31…“But they that wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength; they shall mount up with wings as eagles; they shall un, and not be weary; and they shall walk, and not faint.”
Many think the waiting is the toughest part of the process.
TRIED BY FIRE
Firing clay transforms it from its humble, soft beginnings in to a new, durable substance: ceramic. The temperature needed to transform soft clay is extremely high, at more than 1,500 degrees.
When the desired temperature is reached, the kiln is turned off. The cooling is slow to avoid breaking the vessels due to the stress of temperature change. After the kiln is completely cool, it is opened and the newly created “bisqueware” is removed.
1 Peter 1:7…“that the genuineness of your faith, being much more precious than gold that perishes, though it is tested by fire, may be found to praise, honor, and glory at the revelation of Jesus Christ.”
This is the refining process for the clay.
This process is also known as the “PROVING” process.
Psalm 66:10 says that God has “proved us.”
In 2 Corinthians 4 the Apostle Paul refers to us as “Clay Jars” so that the “extraordinary treasure” can be seen that it belongs to God and not us. The treasure is the power of God at work in out lives. We are the clay jars that God uses, that are sometimes marred an fragile. God still uses us.
I like the saying, “Be patient. God isn’t finished with me yet.” That’s true for all of us. We’re a work in progress. God is continuing to work on us.
THE GLAZING
Once the vessel is cooled completely then it is ready to be decorated with a special paint called “glaze.” The type of design on the vessel is also at the will of the Potter. It is, after all, His design. The vessel is decorated and placed back into the kiln one more time.
The purpose of the glazing in addition to decoration is to waterproof the vessel. In this process it must not touch the other vessels or the glazes will melt together, fusing the vessels together permanently.
The second firing, heated slowly, causes a remarkable change in the clay and glaze. It completes the transformation from a soft, fragile substance to one that is rock-hard and impervious to water and time.
James 1:3-4…“knowing that the testing of your faith produces patience.
IN CONCLUSION
One thing I learned about vessels is once they’ve been fired, no matter how exquisite it is, in order to change it, you have to break it. This tells us a couple things. We want to stay in a state of being transformed, so that God can continue to work in our lives.
Romans 12:2… “And do not be conformed to his world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind…”
We want to be vessels of honor, fit for the Master’s use.
2 Timothy 2:20-21…“But in a great house there are not only vessels of gold and silver, but also of wood and clay, some for honor and some for dishonor. 21Therefore if anyone cleanses himself from the latter, he will be a vessel of honor, sanctified and useful for the Master, prepared for every good work.”
Sometimes we need to be broken, but brokenness is not a bad thing. In
Psalm 51:17 says, “A broken and contrite heart, O God, You will not despise.” We get to the point when we cry out to God, “I can’t do this on my own. I need You!”
I want to ask what kind of clay are you? Hard, not willing to listen to what God wants to do in your life. Un-moldable clay? Every time God wants to do something with you, you jump off the wheel. Or, are you pliable and useable, teachable and willing for God to do with you, to you and through you what He wills from a place of surrender?
Some people go to church, love God, believe in salvation, but that’s where it stops! They never surrender to the potter. They never let the finished product come off God’s wheel. They have a form of godliness, but deny His power. They are pretenders. Don’t be a pretender.
2 Corinthians 5:17…“Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation; old things have passed away; behold, all things have become new."
Let the Master Potter mold you and shape you, fire you, glaze you, and refire you, so you can become what He has planed for you to become all along.
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Tuesdays, 6:30 pm at House of Prayer