Midweek 3 – 2020 LSB #728:1-3
Text – Exodus 14:13-14 And Moses said to the people, “Fear not, stand firm, and see the salvation of the Lord, which He will work for you today. For the Egyptians whom you see today, you shall never see again. The Lord will fight for you, and you have only to be silent.” STOP TRYING AND START TRUSTING Picture yourself on a Southwest Airlines flight. When the plane begins to taxi down the runway you begin flapping your arms. The flight attendant stops by, “What in the world are you doing?” You say, “I’m helping this plane get off the ground!” She says, “You really don’t have to do that.” You shoot back, “Yes I do! I’m committed to making this work!” She replies, “Trust me, you can just sit back and relax. This plane will take off without your help.” “No!” you protest, “I’ve got to help the pilot get this plane off the ground!” Finally, your arms become tired until they just can’t flap anymore. How smart is that? It’s time to stop trying and start trusting. That’s the truth of the day. Stop trying and start trusting. We’re in a series on the book of Exodus called Let My People Go! It’s a phrase that appears seven times in Exodus. Tonight in Exodus 14 finally, finally, Pharaoh let’s God’s people go! But then it dawns upon him that by allowing the Israelite slaves to escape, he has destroyed Egypt’s economy. The only logical thing to do is to go after the Israelites and bring them back! So the ancient world’s most powerful army is now in hot pursuit of Israel. What does God teach us through these exciting events in Exodus 14? Stop trying and start trusting. The dilemma – we’re surrounded! “Then the LORD said to Moses, ‘Tell the Israelites to turn back and encamp near Pi Hahiroth, between Migdol and the sea. They are to encamp by the sea, directly opposite Baal Zephon” (Exodus 14:1–2). This is one of the most alarming commands in the Bible! The Israelites have left Egypt and then God tells them to turn back! Are you kidding me? Freedom is out of Egypt and God is now telling His people to turn back to Egypt? Why does God do that? He wants Israel to stop trying and start trusting. You’ve been there, haven’t you? With your back against the wall; with your dreams crushed; your broken heart in your hand. We say, “God, it was going so well! What’s the deal? Why do I have to turn back?” You might be elected as president of Russia. You might discover a way to email pizza and become a billionaire. Pigs might fly. A kangaroo might swim. Men might surrender the remote control. None of it’s likely, but all of it’s possible. What is not possible is a problem-free life. Sometimes God is behind the problem! Sometimes God is the one who brings us to the end of our rope where we are stuck and trapped – just like Israel – with no way out. Why does He do that? Exodus 14:4 says, “But I will gain glory for myself.” God knows what He is doing – orchestrating our lives so that when we are delivered He gets the glory and we don’t! Pharaoh saw Moses and the Israelites pinned in by the wilderness and the sea, lost and confused, stuck and trapped. “Pharaoh took 600 of the best chariots, along with all the other chariots of Egypt, with officers over all of them” (Exodus 14:7). Chariots were like nuclear weapons in ancient Egypt. They were awesome. The Egyptian chariots are mobile strike forces for shooting arrows. Bombs away! In one picture, King Tut wears a blue crown of war; over him is the vulture and the cobra, the signs of Upper and Lower Egypt. As he rides in his chariot, his bow is stretched back, ready to strike. Pharaoh has 600 of these choice chariots. How many choice chariots does Israel have? Zero! Israel’s back is against the Red Sea. They’re facing certain destruction. There isn’t a thing they can do about it! That’s the dilemma. Can’t you just imagine Moses asking God, “Why is this happening?” The answer is – so the people stop trying and start trusting. Jesus knows all about this kind of dilemma! He knows all about dead ends. The path to the cross led Him before Caiaphas, the high priest. It led Him before Pilate, who sent Him to Herod, who sent Jesus back to Pilate. Christ’s path then led Him before soldiers who whipped, mocked and spit on Him. The path landed Him at a dead end called Calvary. Jesus knows all about dead ends. The decree – just stay calm. Moses says, “Don’t be afraid. Just stand still and watch the LORD rescue you today. The Egyptians you see today will never be seen again. The LORD Himself will fight for you. Just stay calm” (Exodus 14:13–14). Just stay calm! What a decree! It means that we can stop flapping our arms. We can stop helping God. We can sit back and let God do the heavy lifting. How so? “The LORD Himself will fight for you!” Imagine two cooking bowls. One contains fresh, clean water. The 2nd contains battery acid. Take an apple and cut it in half. Place half of the apple in the bowl of clean water. Place the other half in the bowl of battery acid. Leave each in its respective bowl for five minutes, and pull out the two halves. Which one will you eat? Our mind is the apple. God’s Word is good water. Problems are the battery acid. If you marinate your mind in your problems, they will eventually corrode your brain and corrupt your thoughts. But marinate your mind in God’s Word and Yahweh will preserve and refresh your mind. What is God’s Word for us today? “Just stay calm!” But we ask, “What if?” “What if I lose my job? What if my wife’s cancer returns? What if my boyfriend dumps me? What if one of my children is in an accident and is paralyzed or killed?” God’s decree calls us to replace “what if” with His Word, “Just stay calm.” The deliverance – in the morning. This is one of the greatest scenes in the Bible. If this scene is in your heart, it’s like having the key notes of the music scale. It’s amazing that, with just a few notes, all kinds of music can be played. So few notes, but you have to have the notes. Here are the notes! Moses lifts his staff. The Red Sea parts. Israelites walk through on dry ground. Pharaoh and his army follow. The Red Sea comes crashing down on them. And here is the song! No more bricks. No more whips. And no more of Pharaoh’s bag of tricks! And when did this happen? “In the morning Moses raised his hand over the sea, and the water rushed back into its usual place. The Egyptians tried to escape, but the LORD swept them into the sea” (Exodus 14:27). When did God save His people from their long night in Egypt? In the morning. When does Psalm 46:5 say God delivers? In the morning. When did Jesus rise? In the morning. When does God deliver us from the long nights of life? According to Lamentations 3:23, His mercies are new every morning. And what is the last name the Bible gives Jesus? The bright Morning Star. Psalm 30:5 tells us, “Weeping endures for a night, but joy comes in the morning.” Are you feeling stuck? Trapped? Pinned against the wall? Are you afraid that the depression will never lift? That the yelling will never stop? That the emptiness will never be filled? Are you wondering, “Will this gray sky ever brighten? This load ever lighten?” Do you feel predestined for pain, even asking, “Will I ever get out?” Exodus 14 announces that your battle is God’s battle. And get this – God has never lost a battle! God has never lost one single, solitary battle! Not with Pharaoh. Not with sin. Not with Satan. Not even with death. The outcome is inevitable. The victory is assured. The last chapter has already been written! It’s time to stop trying and start trusting. The plane will take off without our help. God has it all under control. We can stop flapping our arms! Moses put it this way, “Just stay calm.” Your peace and your rest are in the Lord. Amen. 2nd Sunday in Lent – A LSB #502
Text – John 3:6 That which is born of the flesh is flesh, & that which is born of the Spirit is spirit. BORN OF THE SPIRIT Pride is born of the flesh. Humility is born of the Spirit. Rudeness is born of the flesh. Kindness is born of the Spirit. Anxiety is born of the flesh. Peace is born of the Spirit. It’s our nature to think that if we employ the right tactics, if we provide enough education, if we just don’t single out bad behavior, then pride, rudeness & anxiety can be fixed or they’ll fade away. New Year’s resolutions are another symptom of the same type of thinking. If we employ the right tactics, get enough education, & refrain from being too critical about our faults, then, whatever our problems are they can be fixed or they’ll at least fade into the background. Even playing the lottery can fall into this type of thinking, because of the belief that money can fix everything. People get married because they believe that this one & only soulmate will make everything in their lives better, if not perfect. Because of what sin has done to us, everyone instinctively understands that we need improvement. What sin has done to us also gives the impression that we can improve ourselves if we just find the way. It’s a notion that’s hard to shake because it is not learned behavior. It is in fact part of our DNA as sinful creatures. The essence of our sinful nature is rebellion, & how rebellious can you be if you truly believe that you can’t get by on your own? The essence of rebellion is that the authorities that be are not getting it done. They aren’t doing right by me. They’re corrupt & looking out only for themselves. They deserve to be overthrown because I can do better. Rebelling against authority is the ultimate “self-help” program. At least, until you end up in a position of authority. That’s where Nicodemus was. He was part of the ruling council & now rebellion threatened the authority of the Sanhedrin. This upstart Rabbi was traveling around the country performing miracles, or signs as the Gospel of John always refers to them. In the mind of Nicodemus only God could perform such things, & yet this Rabbi’s teaching was not at all in conformity with the authorities. He was turning their religious teachings upside down. Instead of teaching that a person earned their way to heaven by living a good life in accordance with the law, this Jesus was teaching that heaven was a gift available to even the worst of sinners. It was a completely radical departure from everything they had practiced in Judaism for as long as anyone could remember. What was this Rabbi thinking? So Nicodemus goes to meet with Jesus. He seeks out His counsel in a polite & cordial way. And then Jesus tells him, “Truly, truly, I say to you, unless one is born from above he cannot see the kingdom of God.” Naturally, Nicodemus does not understand what Jesus is talking about. Many Christians today don’t understand either. They are being saved by God’s mercy & grace, not by their knowledge or understanding of Jesus’ teaching. After all, Jesus’ teaching is radically different than anything we could ever come up with on our own. And the answer to the dilemma that Nicodemus faced is in verse 6. Jesus tells him, “That which is born of the flesh is flesh, & that which is born of the Spirit is spirit.” Nicodemus, & by then the entire Jewish religion, was all about the flesh. There was no Spirit left. Yes, they needed to have a 2nd birth in order to actually be alive. They needed to be born of the Spirit, God’s Spirit. Today, we call that life the saintly nature. Entry into the reign of God comes not by way of human striving, or self-help programs. Neither does it come by keeping the law. It comes by Baptism if you practice it. It comes by hearing the Word of God if people don’t practice Baptism. In either case, it is only God that can give spiritual life that transforms into eternal life. If you’re not willing to submit to the authority of your Creator, then He will not force His life upon you. This doesn’t seem all that radical to those of us who believe, but to those who do not it is an extremely radical & offensive thought that there is no life without the Creator. Remember, rebellion cannot submit to authority. If you are willing to submit, it is the perfect answer, because those who believe & trust in Jesus know the depths of their failures & their complete inability to save themselves. They realize that their pride, rudeness & anxiety can never be upgraded or converted to humility, kindness & peace. That is what Jesus is teaching here in John chapter 3. John’s Gospel pulls us on toward Calvary as the Lord speaks of His own coming death, as the Son of Man will be lifted up so that whoever believes in Him may have eternal life. Salvation promised to Abraham & acquired by the suffering & death of God’s Son lifted up on the cross is given as a gift to be received by faith alone. Lent deepens in us the confidence of our Lord’s gift of redemption for the ungodly. The Collect of the Day sets our weakness “You see that of ourselves we have no strength” beside God’s power “By your mighty power defend us from all adversaries.” Our salvation cannot be out of our own resources. It is completely God’s work in Jesus, who does it gladly. Amen. The peace of God that surpasses all human understanding will guard your hearts & your minds in Christ Jesus. Amen. Midweek 2 – 2020 Here I Am Lord
Text – Exodus 3:2-4 The Messenger of Yahweh appeared to him in flames of fire from within a bush. He looked, & behold, the bush was burning, yet it was not consumed. And Moses said, “I will turn aside to see this great sight, why the bush is not burned.” When the Lord saw that he turned aside to see, God called to him out of the bush, “Moses, Moses!” And he said, “Here I am.” HOW GOD CHANGES US What do you want to change in your life? Is it a bad habit? A bad relationship? A bad attitude? A bad situation? A bad decision? What is it that you look at & say, “This just isn’t right; it’s got to change!”? We live in a society that offers instant change. We watch TV & change the channels just like this – click, click, click! We look at our iPhone & change the screen just like this – tap, tap, tap! We put food in our microwave & it’s ready to eat just like this – zap, zap, zap! Since we change channels & screens & food so fast it’s easy to think we should be able to change our lives with just a click, a tap, or a zap! Tonight, in this series on the book of Exodus, we consider how the Holy Spirit changes us. God used the same process with Moses. Note that word process. Change, godly change, is a process. Godly change takes time! Exodus 2 says that one day, when Moses was 40 years old, he saw an Egyptian beating an Israelite. What does Moses do? He kills the Egyptian! The next day Moses sees the same Israelite & thinks he’ll say, “Thank you Moses! You saved my life!” But he doesn’t! Instead the Israelite is angry. He asks Moses, “Will you kill me too?” The word is out! Pharaoh finds out! Moses knows he’s going to be taken out! He hightails it out of Egypt & ends up working for his father-in-law, Jethro, for 40 years. That’s where we pick up in Exodus 3:1, “Moses was tending the flock of Jethro his father-in-law.” For 40 years all Moses sees are sheep. For 40 years all Moses hears are sheep. For 40 years all Moses thinks about are sheep! Talk about being stuck in a rut! Sheep! Sheep! And more sheep! Moses has to be thinking, “This just isn’t right. It’s got to change!” That happens to us, too, doesn’t it? We get stuck in a rut. What is it for you? Are you overly critical of other people? Is your spending out of control? Have you lost your ambition to study the Bible, to live a life of integrity, to follow hard after Jesus? We say, “This just isn’t right. It’s got to change!” But how? Remember process! The process of change begins with God’s presence: “The Messenger of Yahweh appeared to him in flames of fire from within a bush” (Exodus 3:2). This is no ordinary Messenger. It’s the Son of God before He was born in Bethlehem! And it’s no ordinary fire. This is the fire of God! That fire appears when God calls Gideon & Amos. That fire appears when God calls the disciples on the Day of Pentecost. Jesus says that we are baptized with fire, with the fire of God! Why is He present in fire? Wherever there is fire you can bet something happens every single time. And what is that? Change! “Here I am!” is how Moses answers the bush (Exodus 3:4). The Hebrew word is Hinanee, meaning, “God, I’m at your service.” Hinanee is, “Take my life & let it be; consecrated Lord to thee.” Hinanee is, “Lord, I am ready to change!” “Then the LORD told [Moses], ‘I have certainly seen the oppression of my people in Egypt. I have heard their cries of distress because of their harsh slave drivers. Yes, I know their suffering. So I have come down to rescue them’” (Exodus 3:7–8). “I know their suffering.” God loves us right where we are in our suffering. “I have come down.” God loves us too much to leave us where we are. He comes down with fire – the power of His Word – even today, to fire us up with devotion & passion & love for Jesus! The process of change continues with God’s plan: “The cry of the Israelites has reached me, & I have seen the way the Egyptians are oppressing them. So now, go. I am sending you to Pharaoh to bring my people the Israelites out of Egypt” (Exodus 3:9–10). Moses at age 40 in Exodus 2? Ok! Moses at age 80 in Exodus 3? No way! Moses replies in Exodus 3:11: “Who am I, that I should go to Pharaoh & bring the Israelites out of Egypt?” God doesn’t say: “Moses, where’s your confidence? Moses, where’s your get up & go? Moses, don’t you know you can do anything if you just set your mind to it? Come on Moses – beat ‘em, bust ‘em, make that your custom!” God doesn’t say any of that. Why? Because, “Who am I?” is always the wrong question. When we want to change, “Who am I?” is dead wrong, every single time! And the right question? “God, who are you?” Who is this God? He’s the God who changes us through a process, asking us to live by faith. He says in Exodus 3:12, “And this will be the sign to you that it is I who have sent you: When you have brought the people out of Egypt, you [all] will worship God on this mountain.” “You all will worship God on this mountain.” Seriously! That is appalling! We don’t need a sign in the future to convince us of God’s plan. We need something right now! It’s then we need to remember that change is a process! One step at a time! God says, “You will see my plan unfold when you keep saying, ‘Hinanee! Here I am!’” God calls us to keep taking steps toward getting our finances straightened out, repairing that relationship, getting serious about the words we use, being humble or more loving. We’ll get to the mountain! It’s like picking up a piece of plywood that’s been lying on the ground awhile. You lift it & you see bugs running in every direction, maybe even snakes & lizards! What do we do? Throw the plywood down & run! Guess what, change often looks like that. Ugly & scary with all kinds of strange life forms – even snakes & lizards! We don’t want to deal with it so we run away & settle for a life of plain vanilla. “I’ll stick with the stupid, smelly sheep! Come weal, come woe, my status is quo!” Then comes God’s provision. Moses has four excuses why he won’t change; (1) “I don’t know your name” (Ex 3:13–22), so God gives Moses His name, “I AM.” Jesus is the great I AM. “The Bread of Life; the Light of the world; the resurrection & the life!”; (2) “Israel’s leaders won’t believe me” (Ex 4:1–9). God gives Moses two miracles; the rod that turns into a snake & a leprous hand that heals; (3) “I’m not a fluent speaker” (Ex 4:10–12). God gives him Aaron; (4) “Somebody else can do it better” (Ex 4:13–17). God says, “Moses, you are the man!” What excuses have you been using? “God, I’m too old. God, I’m too young. God, I’m too messed up. God, my train left the station. My ship sailed! God, it’s too late!” The voice from the bush is the voice of Yahweh’s Messenger – Jesus! Messiah says to us, “I love you! I shed my blood for you! I’m not finished with you. There’s work to do!” In the early 19th century, Napoleon Bonaparte was in the middle of a huge battle. His officers said, “If we don’t retreat now, we’ll be annihilated.” Napoleon called his bugler & ordered him, “Sound the retreat,” but the 14-year-old bugler began to cry. Napoleon commanded him again, “Sound the retreat!” The bugler replied, “I was never taught how to sound a retreat. I was only taught how to sound an advance.” “In that case,” Napoleon commanded, “Sound an advance!” The bugler sounded an advance, & history records that Napoleon won the battle. You may be calling on God to sound a retreat, but He only knows how to sound an advance! It’s called the fire of God! Yahweh is determined to change us through His presence, His plan, & His loving provision. Do you see it? It’s the fire of God! What shall we say? How about this? “Hinanee. Here I am.” Amen. I the Lord of sea & sky, I have heard my people’s cry. All who dwell in dark & sin, my hand will save. I who made the stars of night, I will make their darkness bright, who will bear my light to them? Whom shall I send? I the Lord of snow & rain, I have borne my people’s pain. I have wept for love of them, they turn away. I will break their hearts of stone, give them hearts for love alone I will speak my words to them. Whom shall I send? Amen. 1st Sunday in Lent – A LSB #561
Text – Romans 5:13 For sin indeed was in the world before the law was given, but sin is not counted where there is no law. WHERE THERE IS NO LAW There I was completely wasting, out of work and down all inside it’s so frustrating as I drift from town to town. Feel as though nobody cares if I live or die. So I might as well begin to put some action in my life. Breaking the law, breaking the law Breaking the law, breaking the law… So much for the golden future, I can’t even start I’ve had every promise broken, there’s anger in my heart You don’t know what it’s like, you don’t have a clue If you did you’d find yourselves doing the same thing too. Breaking the law, breaking the law Breaking the law, breaking the law…[1] In 2009, VH1 named that the 12th greatest hard rock song of all time. The lyrics describe someone who’s tired of everything that comes with an ordinary life. That life has become boring, which leads the person to take a chance and start breaking the law. Before the 1960’s, the people of our nation had a greater sense of personal respect for the law. Today, many people are just flat out angry. The news media puts it on the airwaves, but we see it in our daily lives too. Road rage, mass shootings, violent protests, or we kick the dog, yell at the children, and give the cold shoulder to our friends or spouse. And what we’re doing is essentially breaking the law. No, it’s not like exceeding the speed limit while driving your car, but when we act out against those who love us, we’re not following the instructions our Creator and heavenly Father gave for how to operate the life He’s blessed us with. It’s exactly like you saw in the children’s message. When you get a new-fangled gadget, like a solar powered flashlight, something you’ve never seen before, it’s helpful to read the instructions if you’re trying to use it. The manufacturer gives them to you to be helpful, not to take away your freedom. When you refuse to follow God’s instructions for life, it may feel as if you’re taking your life back. Breaking the law can feel invigorating as you tear free of the bonds that are limiting you. I’m sure, if a train could feel, that in the 1st few seconds of leaving the track there’d be a tremendous surge of energy as it breaks free of the constraining tracks. But you know what comes next, because you too have experienced the law of gravity. That train would come crashing back to earth in certain destruction. The law of sin works in a similar way. Refusing God’s instructions, or breaking the laws of God, can seem freeing and exhilarating at 1st, but then you also come crashing back to earth. The reading from Genesis 3 gives you and I a picture of that from the very 1st ever crashing back to earth: [The serpent] said to the woman, “Did God actually say, ‘You shall not eat of any tree in the garden’?” And the woman said to the serpent, “We may eat of the fruit of the trees in the garden, but God said, ‘You shall not eat of the fruit of the tree that is in the midst of the garden, neither shall you touch it, lest you die.’” But the serpent said to the woman, “You will not surely die. For God knows that when you eat of it your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God, knowing good and evil.” So when the woman saw that the tree was good for food, and that it was a delight to the eyes, and that the tree was to be desired to make one wise, she took of its fruit and ate, and she also gave some to her husband who was with her, and he ate. Then the eyes of both were opened, and they knew that they were naked. And they sewed fig leaves together and made themselves loincloths. And they heard the sound of the Lord God walking in the garden in the cool of the day, and the man and his wife hid themselves from the presence of the Lord God among the trees of the garden. (Genesis 3:1b-8 ESV) That’s a long selection to be reading again, but there’s a lot going on there in relatively few words. Satan asks if God actually gave instructions about one particular tree. Eve tells him that God did. Then repeats the instruction, except, comparing her words to those of God in chapter 2, she adds, “Neither shall you touch it.” Then the Great Deceiver says to Eve, “You shall not surely die.” He’s now twisting the essence of God’s instruction from that of a life-giving word to that of a limiting and restricting word. The Devil slanders the motive and the intent for which God gave Adam the instruction. Eve falls for it and Adam too. Then, the crash: “Then the eyes of both were opened, and they knew that they were naked. And they sewed fig leaves together and made themselves loincloths. And they heard the sound of the Lord God walking in the garden in the cool of the day, and the man and his wife hid themselves from the presence of the Lord God among the trees of the garden.” (Genesis 3:7-8 ESV) It probably doesn’t sound like much of a crash, certainly not like that of a ninety car train going off the tracks, but in those brief words we hear the very 1st symptoms of what turned out to be the corruption of the entire created universe. Adam had failed miserably in his role as head of the family and as head of the people of God. Each of us has followed in his footsteps of failure and rebellion. What is so notable however, is the response of the heavenly Creator. “But the Lord God called to the man and said to him, “where are you?’” God didn’t say, “Adam, what have you done?” Given that God surely knew where they were, this question has a much deeper intent. Certainly, God was reinforcing the reality of how his children had distanced themselves from God by trying to hide. Behind that word of rebuke, though, it seems that God’s question implies a yearning, an invitation that His children come back to Him. What makes this astounding is that this is the 1st first word spoken by Yahweh after His creative word, and, as such, sets the theme for all the rest of Holy Scripture, which is a recital of God’s desire to bring His children home. And if they do not come home, God will find ways to come into their world to bring them home. He will send patriarchs and matriarchs, prophets, judges, elders and in the fullness of time, His Son. So this 1st Sunday of Lent marks a step toward the supreme gift of God’s love for the world, the gift of Him who came “to seek and to save that which is lost.” People of the world would like to get rid of God’s law; even though they certainly have laws of their own that they think everyone should follow. St. Paul, in his letter to the church at Rome, is emphasizing that where the 1st Adam failed, the 2nd Adam Jesus came to completely replace him. The 2nd person of the Trinity came to die for our sins, and that is finished. Then He rose to life to begin the new creation in His own flesh and blood. As we are grafted into that tree by faith, we also are now part of the new creation. Clearly that isn’t perfectly complete yet, but we are on our way. You are a new creation in Christ Jesus, and it’s not just a slogan or a marketing ploy. It is a statement of fact. You and I can find rest in that fact. We have forgiveness, life and salvation because of Jesus & that same Jesus promises that nothing can snatch us out of His hand, nor out of the hand of His Father. The gracious gift of salvation attained by Jesus Christ far exceeds the terror and power of sin and death. What a glorious truth in which you and I exist! Yes, our heavenly Father and His Son have given us laws to follow. They are similar to the instructions for any new-fangled gadget you may buy. They are to help you use that gadget called your heart and body and soul to God’s glory and for the benefit of your neighbor. Yes, the Law certainly makes us uncomfortable, and even angry, by showing us our sin, but that is no reason to willingly break it. Only for this purpose does our Lord permit us to look into the depths of human depravity – that we rightly estimate the depth and greatness of His compassion and forgiveness. Amen. The peace of God that surpasses all human understanding will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus. Amen. [1] “Breaking The Law” is track #1 on the album British Steel, by the rock group Judas Priest. It was written by Rob Halford, K.K. Downing & Glenn Tipton. |
AuthorPastor Dean R. Poellet Archives
April 2024
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