Even at 70

by DanWolgemuth on April 25, 2025

Somewhere, tucked inside the fog of distant childhood memories, is an unforgettable interaction with a man who himself stayed in the shadows. Graybill Wolgemuth was my father’s father—a man with persistently whining hearing aids, an unwelcoming beard, a posture of seriousness, and a famine of words.

He walked with God. Quietly. Stoically. Obediently. Joylessly.

There was a day, still indelibly etched on the childhood tablet of my life, when Graybill made a passing comment about how much he still had to learn about the God he esteemed.

The humility and vulnerability of that comment felt like a bullhorn to my soul. “Surely,” I thought as a young boy, “at my grandpa’s age there was nothing left for him to learn about God, and life, and virtually anything else.”

I have no context for this memory. No vivid recollection of the incident that invited such a transparent and uncharacteristic confession.

But the words landed. Not in a superficial way—but deeply. A placeholder for future reference.
Graybill Wolgemuth was a POW in the prison camp of suffocating legalism. He could not breathe deeply of grace because his spiritual oxygen supply was constrained by the fear of God’s temperamental and conditional love.

Perhaps this is what he was signaling when he commented on how much he had yet to learn. Perhaps he had just read the words of Jesus in John 21, when the Savior’s questions to Peter were not about obedience, or knowledge, or restraint, or compliance—but about love.
Perhaps the three questions directed toward Peter landed deeply on Graybill’s soul.

And perhaps it is the fact that those three probing, confirming questions of Jesus have landed on my own soul with unsettling impact that draws me back to my paternal grandfather. Perhaps it’s the fact that today, as I turn 70 years old, I am compelled to confess what Graybill once confessed: I, too, have much to learn about Jesus.

Not about biblical trivia, but about the life-propelling reality of His unencumbered love. There is more to know of His humility, His sacrifice, His mercy, His justice—and the transcendence and resilience of His love.

The classroom never closes. The Teacher is never absent.

“‘And in the last days it shall be, God declares,
that I will pour out my Spirit on all flesh,
and your sons and your daughters shall prophesy,
and your young men shall see visions,
and your old men shall dream dreams…’” —Acts 2:17 (ESV)

Old men dreaming dreams. Even at 70.

I am my grandfather’s grandson. Liberated from the prison that held him, but equally aware of my need for remedial education in the beauty of God’s lavish love.

Now—even now, especially now—I am a student of the majesty, beauty, and tenderness of Christ.

Even at 70.

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A Call to Remember. A Promise to Steward.

by DanWolgemuth on April 11, 2025

On April 16, 1978, in St. Louis, Bob Forsch pitched the first no-hitter of his major league career as a member of the St. Louis Cardinals—a 5-0 victory over the Philadelphia Phillies.

I know about this milestone because I was there. Or more precisely, Mary and I were there, bundled together in the bleak, drizzly cold of an early-spring afternoon.

The memory remains vivid for many reasons. Chief among them: Mary and I were on our way home from the Lake of the Ozarks, Missouri, to Fort Wayne, Indiana. Just eight days earlier, in Franklin, Michigan, we had exchanged our marriage vows. The day after our wedding we set off for the Ozarks for our week-long honeymoon.

It seemed only right—at least to me—that while on our way home we stop for a major league baseball game. Even in miserable weather, baseball called. And somehow, that no-hitter felt like a small sign of validation. A reward, maybe, for the spontaneous detour—despite the six-hour drive still ahead of us.

By the time we reached 1815 ½ High Street, it was late into the night. We’d passed the hours in our VW Rabbit with a stack of Chuck Mangione cassettes and the quiet excitement of newlyweds starting their life together.

We had just started to unpack when the phone rang.

It was late. Most of the Midwest was asleep. But not Mary’s father.

Don Cargo wasn’t interested in no-hitters.

Our arrival had been much later than expected, and that raised alarm. His daughter—though now married—was still his daughter. He had nurtured, protected, and loved her for nearly 22 years. Walking her down the aisle just days earlier hadn’t walked her out of his life.

After a short conversation with Mary, Don’s fears eased, but his call made something very clear to me.

The promise I made at the altar wasn’t just to Mary. It was to her parents, her family, her friends… and her God.

I was to thoughtfully, wisely, humbly, selflessly, and gently steward the relationship I now had as Mary’s husband. Don Cargo wanted to be sure I understood the seriousness of that commitment.

I never forgot the lesson.

Now, 47 years later, it remains etched in my heart. So much so that, after both of Mary’s parents had passed, I asked for the wedding band that Don Cargo had worn for over 60 years. I now wear it alongside the ring Mary placed on my finger on April 8.

Two gold bands that circle the promise I made to both Mary—and her parents.

I am a steward of a promise.
For life.

Two bands of gold remind me daily.

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Solspeil

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Follow Me

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Twenty-Three Years

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February 5, 2002 was the date that my father breathed his last earthly breath. Twenty-three years ago. That means that one third of my life has been lived without him. Lately, the weight of that time apart has felt heavier. None of our children’s spouses, none of our grandchildren, and none of the deeply meaningful […]

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A Legacy to Steward

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On a recent trip to Chicago to visit three of my siblings, I found myself invited to sift through a collection of family memorabilia—old photographs, reels of movie film, faded letters, and unexpected treasures. Included in the pile, two small booklets caught my attention. One, titled Genealogy of Solomon Sharpe, and the other, Their Legacy […]

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