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February 25, 2025 • 25 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Today on Summit Life with JD. Grear.

Speaker 2 (00:02):
God never says all you need is me. When he
looked at Adam in the garden, he said it's not
good that man should be alone. He didn't look at
Adam in the garden and say, hey, just do your
quiet time a little bit longer, right, You got need?
That's enough, isn't it, Adam. No, God created us with
the need for companionship. It's just that marriage is not
the only way that God takes.

Speaker 3 (00:20):
Care of that.

Speaker 1 (00:30):
Thanks for joining us today on Summit Life with Pastor JD.

Speaker 3 (00:33):
Greer.

Speaker 1 (00:34):
As always, I'm your host, Molly Vidovich. Let me start
with a strong statement. Singleness is a gift.

Speaker 3 (00:40):
That's right. It is.

Speaker 1 (00:42):
That might not be how we are told by culture
to view it, or even what the Church sometimes tells
us about it, but that's what God's word shows us.
Today on Summit Life, Pastor JD. Greer teaches us how
to view our season of being single as a unique
opportunity in ministry, relationships, and God's kingdom. Learn how to
clear the path so that you can leverage this gift

(01:04):
and cultivate a spiritual family that will last forever. Remember
if you've missed any of this teaching series called Forever Family,
you can catch up free of charge at Jdgreer dot com.
Let's jump back in where we left off yesterday in
our message titled God's Plan in Singleness.

Speaker 2 (01:22):
Loneliness is the one ache that we have that does
not come from sin. God created us in a perfect
state to still desire human companionship. In heaven, there will
be no marriage or biological family. And that is not
to say that we will there in heaven have lost
our need for companionship, or to say that it's okay
for us to be lonely up there.

Speaker 3 (01:42):
It's simply that God.

Speaker 2 (01:43):
Will deal with our loneliness in a new and better way,
and marriage is no longer going to be his plan
a for dealing with that loneliness. And so that means
whoever we are married to down here, we're not going
to be married to them up there. In fact, we
won't be married at all. Will admit to you freely, okay.
Part of me finds that a little sad. Well, there's

(02:04):
no sadness, of course, in heaven. That's because in heaven
you see are joys. We know this or not diminished
at all. Nobody's in heaven. In fact, they're missing out
in anything. Our joys in heaven are not diminished. Listen,
they're heightened, they're transformed, they're matured. C. S. Lewis, in
his book Miracles had a great example for this. He said,
a toddler, a toddler thinks that the single greatest pleasure

(02:27):
in life is candy. Right, So imagine you're a grandmother
trying to explain.

Speaker 3 (02:34):
To your toddler granddaughter some of.

Speaker 2 (02:37):
The things you most love about life, staring out at
the beauty of the grand canyon, reading a good book,
falling in love and getting married, watching one of your
kids graduate. And as you're trying to explain this to
your toddler granddaughter, she looks back at you and says, yeah,
but can you eat skittles while you do those things.
You've got a hard time explaining to her that these
pleasures that you're describing are so much better than eating candy,

(03:02):
so much so that when you're wrapped up in one
of those pleasures, you're not even going to think about skittles. C. S.
Lewis said that we like that little child, lack the
ability to understand the joys of eternity. What we know
now are the pleasures of earthly things like sex or
married life or nuclear family. We do not know except

(03:23):
in glimpses, though he said the other thing which in
heaven will leave simply no room for them. What that
means is whatever God has for us there is going
to be even better than what we have here.

Speaker 3 (03:34):
And that means that whatever it's like up there, I
will be.

Speaker 2 (03:37):
Even closer to my wife and closer to my kids
as the family of God there than I am here,
which makes me less sad. The point is, Jesus asserts
the radical idea that marriage is not ultimate, and that's
proven by the fact that we don't take it with us.

Speaker 3 (03:52):
In the resurrection.

Speaker 2 (03:52):
And that means that these relationships now that are so
important mothers and brothers, are.

Speaker 3 (03:57):
Wife or father, they're only temporary.

Speaker 2 (04:01):
The relationships you form in the Body of Christ, however,
those are permanent. Marriage is temporary, and it will finally
give way to the relationship to which it was pointing
all along Christ and the Church. It'll be put away
the way a picture is no longer needed when you
see somebody face to face. When you're separated from somebody
you love, you pull out a picture you look at him.
I do it when I'm on a trip and I

(04:22):
miss my kids, I'll look and pulled a picture of him.
But when I'm with them, I don't pull a pictures
of them and look at him, because they're standing right in.

Speaker 3 (04:27):
Front of me. He said, marriage is a picture. It's
a picture of.

Speaker 2 (04:31):
A more beautiful relationship Christ and the body of Christ
and the relationships there.

Speaker 3 (04:35):
And when you're finally in the face to face with a.

Speaker 2 (04:37):
Person, you're not gonna need a silly little picture like
marriage any longer. Let's go on to Paul. Now in
One Corinthian seven, here's how Paul talks about it. Picks
up on christ teaching, and he says, the appointed time
of Christ's return has grown very short.

Speaker 3 (04:50):
Won't we long for He's back? From now on? Then?
Let those who have wives live as though they had none.

Speaker 2 (04:56):
You're like, what in the world does that mean? Like,
let those be with wives live like they didn't have
a wife. That's sounds like a mantra of people going
to spend a weekend in Vegas. But that is not
what Paul is saying. I can assure you, Okay, Here's
what he says, verse thirty. For the present form of
this world is passing away. The world is passing away,

(05:16):
Paul says, and that means along with it, watch marriage
and biological families, because that's something for this world. So
for a married man to live as though we had
no wife means that he must reflect on the fact
that his marriage now is neither permanent nor ultimate. And
the flip side of that means that those of you

(05:37):
who are single now should reflect on the fact that
your situation is not permanent either. Both situations, marriage and
singleness are light and momentary, and soon both of those
situations will give way to what is permanent and ultimate,
the Body of Christ. Marriage and singleness, Paul says, are

(05:58):
temporary gifts that God God gives to fulfill his purposes
on earth in this age, but not in.

Speaker 3 (06:05):
The next one.

Speaker 2 (06:06):
So Paul says first Corinthian seven, regarding marriage, I wish
that all were as I myself am, but each has
his own gift. By the way, what is Paul Paul single?
I wish everybody was single like me, Paul says, but
each has his own gift. Charismata is the Greek word,
so we get the word charismatic from Everybody has.

Speaker 3 (06:23):
Their own spiritual gift from God.

Speaker 2 (06:24):
I wish all of you were like me, Paul says,
I wish you were single, but not all of you
were given that gift. Everyone has his own spiritual gift
from God, one of one kind, singleness and one of
another marriage. Marriage and singleness are charismata, they are spiritual gifts.
You need spiritual empowerment to do either marriage or singleness.
Well you're like, well, okay, I get how marriages could

(06:46):
be a gift.

Speaker 3 (06:47):
But because you you know, in marriage you get a companion.

Speaker 2 (06:49):
You get somebody that to compliment you, and not compliment you,
like tell you you're awesome, but compliment you, like complete you.
But how could singleness be a gift? Paul explains of
verse thirty three. He says, you see the married man.
Married man has to be anxious about worldly things like
how to please his wife, and as a result of that,
his interests are divided. But as a single, Paul says,

(07:11):
I've been freed up now to devote time to special
assignments that I couldn't give myself to if I were married.

Speaker 3 (07:18):
Me. You guys have heard me talking enough here.

Speaker 2 (07:19):
You know that I regard my wife to be an incredible,
a wonderful gift to me and the best earthly gift
that God has given me. But when I got married,
my interest became divided.

Speaker 3 (07:28):
They had to be.

Speaker 2 (07:29):
God gave me now somebody to serve, somebody to take
care of. He gave you through kids. He gave me
people whose needs I became responsible for. I had the
new responsibilities with my money.

Speaker 3 (07:40):
Right.

Speaker 2 (07:40):
I mean, before I got married, if I needed to move,
like from one apartment to the other, all I needed
was a Ford button Mustang, a few bungee cords, one
buddy in fifteen minutes and we could move.

Speaker 3 (07:50):
The whole the whole Jamang.

Speaker 2 (07:53):
Now, in order for me to move a far fam
was going to move, it would take a full sized SGV,
just a haul of pillows that sit on top of
him bed, maybe like three trips with that that I
would take another whole SUV just to hold the toiletry
products that Veronica has stocked in our bathroom.

Speaker 3 (08:09):
I look around our bathroom and I wonder, what does
all this stuff do? Right?

Speaker 2 (08:12):
But before I got married, I had I think my
entire bathroom set up was one bar of soap. Right,
So I started to start doing different things with my money,
and I couldn't live simply and just give it all away,
and I had new responsibilities with my time. I'm just
not able to go on all the mission trips I
want to go on anymore. One of our singles here
was telling me recently about the most amazing ministry that

(08:34):
God has given to her recently, hanging out with a
group of Muslim refugees until ten or eleven on multiple
multiple nights of the league. And she's like, listen, the
ministry really gets started around nine o'clock. That's when they
kind of open up and they let their guard down.
You can really start talking to them right And I
just can't do that anymore. I can't hang out at
eleven o'clock, you know. Around the community, I got to

(08:54):
run people to soccer practice.

Speaker 3 (08:56):
Hall evening, I got to help do homework, got to
help people get ready for bed.

Speaker 2 (08:59):
So I'm guzzling five hour energy drinks on the way
home from the office because not day is really about
to start when I get home. One of my married
friends said, he said, when you get married, particularly when
you have children, whatever pockets a margin you had just
disappear into black holes of obligation. Singleness can be a
gift that allows you to be more devoted to God's kingdom.

(09:20):
And that might be a gift he gives you temporarily
so that you can complete some assignment like your education
or a military service. Or it might be something he
gives you on a more permanent basis, or at least
permanent in this life. He gives it to you for
a lifetime. Well, if you're single, you're sitting there and
you say, well, yeah, but I just I don't want

(09:41):
to be alone. Didn't God himself say it's not good
for us to be alone. Let's see, that's the point.
They keep trying to emphasize. You're not supposed to be alone.
It's just that marriage is not the only way anymore
not to be alone. Listen, I told you this last weekend.
A lot of times I hear people.

Speaker 3 (09:55):
Say all you need is God, all you need is God.

Speaker 2 (09:58):
And that sounds so awesome and so spiritual, and I've
probably even set up from right here. It's just problem
is God never says that. God never says all you.

Speaker 3 (10:07):
Need is Me.

Speaker 2 (10:08):
When he looked at Adam in the garden, he said,
it's not good that man should be alone. He didn't
look at Adam in the garden and say, hey, just
do your quiet time a little bit longer. Right, You
got me. That's enough, isn't it, Adam. No God created
us with the need for companionship. It's just that marriage
is not the only way that God takes care of that.
Look at Mark ten, Mark ten. Truly, truly, I say

(10:28):
to you, there is nobody who's left house or brothers
or sisters of mother or father, children or lands for
my sake and for the Gospel's sake. Right So, God,
in obeying him as an brought to you that life
partner who will not receive one hundredfold Watch this now
in this time as well as he says the time
to come in this time means right now. It means

(10:49):
that the reward for that is not just in heaven,
it's also now. So what does he mean that you'll
see one hundredfold? He's talking about the church. That's what
he's talking about.

Speaker 3 (11:00):
He's seen right now in my forever family.

Speaker 2 (11:02):
I will actually multiply the relationships that are ultimate.

Speaker 3 (11:07):
Listen in the Book of Acts, you read it through.

Speaker 2 (11:09):
The early Church faced a lot of hardship, didn't they
persecution and famine and poverty. They went through the ringer
on just about everything. The one thing you never find
anybody in acts struggling.

Speaker 3 (11:19):
With is loneliness.

Speaker 2 (11:21):
And all the stuff they went through, that church was
a family to them, and nothing they went.

Speaker 3 (11:26):
Through did they go through alone.

Speaker 2 (11:29):
If you're single, you say, yeah, but if God assigns
me to that, then I really want to have kids.
Though Jesus would say spiritual offspring are more important and
more eternal than biological offspring. If you're single, that means
you need to get involved in the discipleship ministries of
the church because spiritual offspring are going to be more
important than biological offspring. Ever are listen, I just want

(11:50):
to say I don't want to try to be hyper
spiritual here. It's okay for you to mourn the lack
of ability to have biological kids. I understand that's a
real loss, but by grace, even that genuine grieve can
be overshadowed by the real joy of having eternal spiritual children.

Speaker 1 (12:07):
You were listening to Summit Life with Pastor JD. Greer,
and we'll get right back to today's teaching from this series
called Forever Family. In just a moment. But first, I
wanted to make sure that you heard about our new
featured resource that we are offering to our faithful supporters
this month. It's a sixty day devotional written by Pastor
Kyle Eidelman, called One Day at a Time, a sixty
day challenge to see, serve, and celebrate the people around you.

(12:31):
This time of year, we focus a lot on relationships,
specifically around Valentine's Day, but the Bible has a lot
to say about all of our relationships. One Day at
a Time offers a sixty day plan full of rich
teaching from the Bible, as well as a daily challenge
for how to practically love God and love other people.
Build a new habit of loving others with every moment,

(12:52):
every interaction, and see what God will do as you
trust Him in this way. With your gift of thirty
five dollars or more, be delighted to send you a
copy with our thanks. To give now and reserve your copy,
just give us a call at eight sixty six three
three five fifty two twenty or give online at Jdgreer
dot com. Now let's get back to today's teaching here

(13:15):
on Summit Life once again.

Speaker 2 (13:17):
Here's Pastor Jening, We got a letter recently from one
of our single missionaries who just came off the field
where she has served for six years. She read this,
and I just thought it was fantastic, she says. For
the first few years on the field, she said, when
I realized that at least for the next several years,
I was going to be single, I grieved the loss
of being able to have biological children.

Speaker 3 (13:38):
I grieved it.

Speaker 2 (13:38):
But God used that, by grace and through tears to
make me the proudest and most joy filled spiritual mom
on the planet the day that I saw my spiritual
son baptized in the unreached corners of East Asia. Honestly,
I don't know what it's like to hold my baby
for the first time in my arms after his being born.

(14:01):
I would imagine it feels like your heart's about to
burst with joy. I'd imagine that, because that's exactly how
I felt as this young man came up from the
baptismal waters reborn as a child of God.

Speaker 3 (14:12):
It was a beautiful moment for me.

Speaker 2 (14:14):
This doctrine of spiritual eternal children has by far been
the most inspiring, joy giving biblical doctrine. Maybe of my
whole life. And another perk, I only had to wait
six months for a spiritual grand baby.

Speaker 3 (14:27):
So there's that.

Speaker 2 (14:29):
Jesus was a eunuch, so to speak, who never had
biological children. Yet God gave him spiritual children all over
the world that he rejoices in and glories in, and
many of them sit right here in this room. The
only part of your life that will be unfulfilled if
you are single is sexual. And again that's a legitimate loss,
and I do not want to minimize that. But God

(14:51):
says he will give you a special charismata, a spiritual
empowerment for that. Listen, you don't have to turn to
porn to make up that loss. In fact, I beg
you with all of my heart to avoid that. That
is a black hole of decay that it is really
hard to come back from.

Speaker 3 (15:07):
Once you've gone down it.

Speaker 2 (15:09):
You got to look to God for the enablement to
live holy. It's a charismatide comes from Him and He
can give it to you. God can enable you to
live a happy and fulfilled life without sex. You should
remember the most joy filled, love filled man ever, who
won't the face of the earth lived without sex. But
the other things that marriage supplies for you companionship and offspring.

Speaker 3 (15:31):
God gives you those now in ultimate form and eternal
form through the Church.

Speaker 2 (15:37):
My point is, if God calls you to singleness, whether
that is for a season or whether that is for
your whole life, he will supply you with all the
necessary graces to live a happy and fulfilled life in
that calling. Which brings us now back to Matthew nineteen.
We'll pull the bus right back on the station where
we left. Jesus ends his little teaching on singing us

(15:57):
with this phrase, But the one who is able to
receive it, let them receive it. The Greek word for
received there is the word kore oh, and it means
literally to make room for, to clear.

Speaker 3 (16:08):
A path for.

Speaker 2 (16:09):
If this is what God has called you to, whether
it's temporary or it's gonna be.

Speaker 3 (16:14):
For the rest of your life, clear a path for
that calling. Well, what does that look like?

Speaker 2 (16:19):
I'll give you four quick little suggestions here, four quick
big applications. Number one, to make room for it would
be first of all, to devote yourself to God. You're
gonna need God's grace to make it as a single person,
just like you're gonna need his grace and make it
as a married person.

Speaker 3 (16:35):
So whatever state you're in, you.

Speaker 2 (16:36):
To look to God first, because what you will find
is that horizontal dysfunction always goes back to vertical disruption.
When this right here has broken, these relationships, whether they're
single or family, are gonna become problematic. And a lot
of times we're looking to fix the wrong problem. We're like,
the problem is here, The problem is I'm single and
I want to be married. The problem is my spouse
is a jerk. Problem isn't my kids are not honoring

(16:58):
and respecting me the right way. The problem is my
friends aren't taking care of me and they don't treat
me like a special enough perth.

Speaker 3 (17:03):
And that's never the problem.

Speaker 2 (17:05):
All that dissatisfaction, all that jealousy, all that worry, all
that kind of all that stuff, it goes back to
a vertical disruption where you're not you don't have God
in the right place.

Speaker 3 (17:16):
So you need to seek first the Kingdom of God.

Speaker 2 (17:18):
It's like he tells you you focus on that relationship
and let him add to you whatever blessing he wants
to add to at the time that he has. Okay,
so you need to focus on God's first. Some of
you may not like your singleness. I understand that, but
I can promise you God means it for good in
your life. He means it for good. He is going
to produce in that singleness a love for Christ in you,

(17:38):
and He's going to produce a Christ's likeness in you.
Number two, The way you can make a way for
it is you can leverage your singleness for all it
is worth. I plead with you who are single, don't
waste your singleness. Don't waste it by trying to get
to the next stage faster than God has it for you.

Speaker 3 (17:55):
I read.

Speaker 2 (17:56):
I read that the average young adult male spends ten
thousand hours of his life playing video games. Ten thousand
hours right here about singles who spend all their time
hanging out or goofing all for traveling.

Speaker 3 (18:10):
Understand, that's not why God gave.

Speaker 2 (18:12):
You that gift right now with you to focus on
you a decade of just me time and just focusing
on living a selfish life. God gave you that chapter
to leverage for the kingdom. And we desperately need a
generation of singles in this church who will rise up
with the compassion of Jesus and their hearts, who will
put the video games away and use the advantages that

(18:34):
were afforded by their singleness to open up their hands
and their hearts to the needs of the world, and
to invest in God's eternal family now to make disciples
for eternity. You might not know when you're gonna get married,
you might not know if you're gonna get married, but
I promise you if you use that chapter to invest
in God's forever family, that is a decision that will

(18:56):
have eternal ramifications and one.

Speaker 3 (18:58):
You will never forget.

Speaker 2 (18:59):
So stop war about things you can't control and start
focusing on the things that God has given you to
do now that actually matter.

Speaker 3 (19:05):
More than the thing that you're looking for.

Speaker 2 (19:08):
Listen, this generation that's you know, the majority of singles
would be in. I realize that boomers can understand this,
even as Gen xers can barely understand it. But you're
a generation that is characterized by a little four letter
acronym FOMO. Right, you know what it stands for, fear
of missing out. I'm gonna suggest you change that right

(19:30):
on your Facebook page.

Speaker 3 (19:31):
To just one letter. It's one letter change it s
f O FOX.

Speaker 2 (19:35):
So not like folks show but like fok So, fear
of squandering opportunity is how I would suggest you you
change that.

Speaker 3 (19:42):
You go from being a fomo person to a fox
So person because.

Speaker 2 (19:48):
God has given you a chapter of opportunity and it's
gonna be some of the best things He does in you,
and He's gonna use you in ways are gonna have
eternal ramification, whether it's for a season or your life.

Speaker 3 (19:58):
Go miss it. So, I declare you, folks so in
Jesus name.

Speaker 2 (20:01):
Okay, there I said it. Number three, Lean into your
forever family. Hey, friend, you.

Speaker 3 (20:06):
Need the church and the church needs you. You need
to get involved.

Speaker 2 (20:10):
You need to get to know people personally here, not
just of the singles by the way. You need to
get involved in people's families, invest in their children. We
have single people in this church who act as spiritual
big brothers and sisters or even parents to those children
in the church who've been deprived of fathers or mothers
or families. And we need many more because that's what
the church is is forever family. I'll just say on

(20:31):
a personal level, it's been a huge blessing in our family.
Singles that have gotten engaged with our family and played
mentor and big brother and big sister roles to our kids.

Speaker 3 (20:38):
Get involved in our student ministry.

Speaker 2 (20:40):
That's a great way to apply this because I can
tell you you need that community. Rebecca McLaughlin, who is
for a year many year singles, she's won my new
favorite authors. She says, you won't wither without sex, but
you will wither without friend and family connection.

Speaker 3 (20:54):
So lean into the church.

Speaker 2 (20:56):
By the way, let me just say to the church,
we got a responsibility in this too, and that is
to intentionally include the singles of the church in our families. First,
we need to start seeing singles as the treasures Paul
saw them as.

Speaker 3 (21:08):
Don't treat them like a project that you need to fix.

Speaker 2 (21:11):
But you should be aware that their particular calling, like
any calling, has its own special challenges, and you need
to recognize your challenges and invite them into your family
to join you in key moments, not just to come
over and babysit your kids or to help you move.

Speaker 3 (21:27):
All right, and all this God singles.

Speaker 2 (21:28):
Said, Amen, Okay, that's not the only thing. The role
that they have in your life. Invite them into key moments.
We have single friends, or the Greer family has single
friends from this church, that have gone on vacation with us,
some have done Thanksgiving with us. In fact, one of
them last Christmas spent Christmas Eve, spent the night at
our house, and woke up and open presents with us

(21:49):
on Christmas morning. Invite them to be a part of
that forever family. Lastly, number four, if you want to
get married and you believe that's what God has for you,
use this time.

Speaker 3 (22:00):
To build your identity in Jesus.

Speaker 2 (22:02):
Use this chapter right now, instead of it being on
the prow all the time, use it to become the
person that you're supposed to be.

Speaker 3 (22:08):
Instead of obsessing.

Speaker 2 (22:08):
About finding who is right for you, focus on becoming
the right person that you should be. Become the person
that the person you are looking for.

Speaker 3 (22:15):
Is looking for.

Speaker 2 (22:16):
Stop complaining to the person you're looking for it out there,
and you become the person that the person that.

Speaker 3 (22:19):
Look you're looking forward looking for.

Speaker 2 (22:22):
Because that's another way of Matthew six thirty three, focusing
on putting the Kingdom of God first and then letting
trusting God to supply that when he wants it. Don't
wait on a future spouse to give you an identity.
Don't wait on a future spouse to determine your values,
or where you're going or what you're called to determine
all of that. Now, figure out that identity in Christ
and where it's going today.

Speaker 1 (22:43):
Whether you're single or married, lean into your church community.
We all need each other. God's plan in singleness has
been our subject today from Pastor JD.

Speaker 3 (22:53):
Greer.

Speaker 1 (22:54):
If you missed any part of this message, or if
you'd like to catch up on the rest of our series,
you can always listen you of charge at Jdgreer dot com.
A little while ago, I got to sit down with
Pastor JD to ask him about a great resource that
we're sharing with our listeners this month. It's Pastor Kyle
Eidelman's book, One Day at a Time, a sixty day
challenge to see, serve, and celebrate the people around you.

(23:17):
Here's what he had to say.

Speaker 2 (23:18):
Kyle Idelman has become a good friend he's been at
our church, and not only is he an excellent Bible teacher,
he's just a very, very wise pastor. And this resource
that he has put together, One Day at a Time,
a sixty day challenge to see, serve and celebrate the
people around you, is like a It's like a toolkit
that will help you navigate difficult relationships, how you can

(23:39):
call out the strengths in people. You know, Molly, when
I think about the people that have had the biggest
impact in my life, it's those people that I felt
he really liked me, They loved me, and so I
have a lot of practical advice. And so I'm excited,
even though it's not written by me, maybe especially since
it's not written by me, to put this in your hands.

Speaker 3 (23:55):
And finally, a resource that JD. Greer Ministry's offers that
you can use, Molly.

Speaker 2 (24:00):
Finally, it's about time, hey take a look at Jdgreer
dot com. It is a resource that I think you'll
get a lot of enjoyment out of it.

Speaker 1 (24:08):
We'd be honored to receive your gift of thirty five
dollars or more in support of this ministry, and to
say thank you, we'll send you a copy of Pastor
Idelman's sixty day devotional called One Day at a Time,
a sixty day challenge to see, serve, and celebrate the
people around you. To give, simply call us at eight
sixty six three three five fifty two twenty. That's eight

(24:30):
six six three three five fifty two twenty, or you
can always give online at Jdgreer dot com. I'm Molly Vidovich.
Tomorrow we'll continue our study by looking at a hot
topic dating. You don't want to miss it, so we'll
see you right here Thursday for Summit Life with JD.

Speaker 2 (24:48):
Greer.

Speaker 1 (24:53):
Today's program was produced and sponsored by JD. Greer Ministries.
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