Embracing Collective Responsibility for Community Healing

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"Being brought into captivity. Yet, Daniel, in this prayer, identified himself as being one of those who had committed all of this sin, all of this rebellion against God. The sin of one actually ends up being the sin of all. That's really what we are seeing here in what Daniel is praying." [19:10]( | | )

"So if you're not a follower of Jesus, recognize, please, that this is a gift for you as well. This is a gift available to everyone. Nobody is too far gone. God is offering this for us all. All we have to do is be willing to completely follow Jesus." [29:12]( | | )

"Daniel, in our passage, was willing to identify with those who were sinful, who had sinned. He was willing to accept their punishment and plea for mercy on his people's behalf. And even King David, he responded in a very similar manner for his own people for, again, sins that he was not personally involved with." [30:13]( | | )

"And I was thinking about how unfair it was that I was sort of being grouped in amongst a bunch of people who I really didn't have any association with. I didn't think like people who had done racist things. I wasn't even alive. For a lot of the sin in our country's past, yet I seemed to be blamed for things that had happened way before me." [22:34]( | | )

"But during that time, God actually led me to this passage about the Gibeonites and King David in 2 Samuel 21. King David, again, was not responsible for any of the sins, any of the sins of King Saul. Yet King David was suffering for those sins. He made restitution for those sins. And God only finally relented, he lifted the famine because of the actions of David." [23:57]( | | )

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