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Transcript

Well good evening brethren to our continuation on the study on the Book of Revelation. We are going to cover quite a lot of material today. So as a matter of revision, some of the key events that we've seen is that the first four seals are false religion, wars, hunger and death. This is the stage at the moment we are under and and as we can see how things are happening, it's very very sad and very horrible happening now in the Ukraine. We really don't look forward to the sad days ahead. But we do know that God is merciful and if we are faithful as true Christians and we are counted worthy by Him, we will be protected. Part of the church will be protected during the soon coming Great Tribulation. The Great Tribulation is the fifth seal. Then the period of that influence will be reduced or cut short or minimized and the sign of that is the heavenly signs which is the sixth seal. Then we also saw that there is a time in which God seals a number of people. Those we saw are the ones that have repented during the Great Tribulation and then we get to the seventh seal which is the Day of the Lord. As we explained the seventh seal is actually running in parallel.

Mark himself, meanwhile, was walking down to Bracton College, and thinking of a very different matter. He did not notice at all the morning beauty of the little street that led him from the sandy hillside suburb where he and Jane lived down into the central and academic part of Edgestow.

Though I am Oxford bred and very fond of Cambridge, I think that Edgestow is more beautiful than either. For one thing it is so small. No maker of cars or sausages or marmalades has yet come to industrialise the country town which is the setting of the university, and the university itself is tiny. Apart from Bracton and from the nineteenth-century women's college beyond the railway, there are only two colleges; Northumberland which stands below Bracton on the river Wynd, and Duke's opposite the Abbey. Bracton takes no undergraduates. It was founded in 1300 for the support of ten learned men whose duties were to pray for the soul of Henry de Bracton and to study the laws of England. The number of Fellows has gradually increased to forty, of whom only six (apart from the Bacon Professor) now study Law and of whom none, perhaps, prays for the soul of Bracton. Mark Studdock was himself a Sociologist and had been elected to a fellowship in that subject five years ago. He was beginning to find his feet. If he had felt any doubt on that point (which he did not) it would have been laid to rest when he found himself meeting Curry just outside the post office, and seen how natural Curry found it that they should walk to College together and discuss the agenda for the meeting. Curry was the sub-warden of Bracton.

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