A Maserati in Amish Country

by DanWolgemuth on April 26, 2024

Over the past 19 years, I have rented a lot of Alamo cars.

On Monday evening at Philadelphia International Airport, with an Alamo agent walking in the parking lot at my side, I got asked a question I’ve never been asked.

It started with this observation, “Sir, I know you rented a small SUV (which was my cheapest option), but we don’t have any of them in the lot. Would you be willing to take this Maserati?”

And yes, sitting about 30 feet from where I was standing, all alone in the parking lot, like me at a Middle School dance, was a beautiful, black Maserati Levante. In a moment of reconsideration, the Alamo agent retracted the offer and suggested that she should talk with her boss first. “We usually ask for a $1,000 deposit before we rent this car.”

I smiled and waited. Five minutes later she emerged from the office on the other side of the lot and simply gave me a thumbs up. I was all set.

Simply pushing the button to start the car exposed the reality that I’d never driven a car like this before. The engine roared, without even touching the accelerator.

For the next 90 minutes, I drove cautiously because of the unfamiliar roads, and the darkening sky. My return trip to PHL would afford me an opportunity to more aggressively engage the Italian automotive power that was at my disposal.

And so, Tuesday afternoon at 3pm, I started back to the rental car agency. The beautiful Pennsylvania hillside farms were breathtaking. Narrow, winding, two-lane roads would be a perfect “track” for my 400-horsepower friend. Or not…

Mile after mile of rural Lancaster County roads were littered with Amish buggies, and youngsters clad in black on bikes and scooters.

I glanced at the fields near me where horse-drawn farming rakes pulled freshly cut hay into rows. I watched as horse-drawn plows tugged disks across winter-hardened soil.

I was an alien. A foreigner. A guest in this county. And as such, I submitted. Not reluctantly, but in some fashion, reverently. Out of respect for a tradition and culture that I don’t understand. And as I did, I heard the Holy Spirit whisper… “Blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the earth.”

The meek. A Maserati following a horse and buggy. 400 horsepower, under control. Not because it can’t, but because it chooses not to.

Jesus. God Himself. Abused, lied about, mocked, tortured.

Under control. For our sake. For the sake of the lives in front of Him.

The most powerful force in the universe, meek. For us.

Indeed… a Maserati in Amish country.

A model to show us how to live.

Jesus, the Maserati of all Maserati’s, shows us how to love with grace, compassion and respect… even when we have more power than those around us. Perhaps, especially when we do.

In spite of how it looks and feels, it is not the powerful that will inherit the earth. And it’s also not the weak who will inherit the earth… but the meek. Power under the control of the Holy Spirit.

This was my Maserati driving lesson, at 15 MPH.

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Confession

by DanWolgemuth on April 19, 2024

I was on my feet on Saturday night at Colorado Community Church, when we repeated, in unison, the classic liturgy of confession. “I have sinned… in thought, word and deed.”

At the moment, I resisted the opportunity to specifically name what needed to be named. It was a general confession. A blanket admission. The kind of confession that none of us like to hear at a personal level… “If I’ve hurt you, or offended you in any way, I’m sorry.”

And yet, in God’s mercy, He has gently, but clearly pointed the spotlight of His holiness and love on a few key areas. He’s done this, most predominantly through some of the scripture reading I’ve gone through since Saturday night.

Specifically, I landed in James 1, verse 26. And I didn’t like it much…

If anyone thinks he is religious and does not bridle his tongue but deceives his heart, this person’s religion is worthless. (ESV)

At first, when I read this verse, my mind raced to a list of names that I rapidly assembled. Perhaps you’ve just followed a similar path. I’m guessing that if we compared lists, we’d have some overlap. Tongues out of control.

Others.

Then, on closer inspection, my list shorted, to me.

My unbridled tongue.

Not on public display, and most generally in more subtle ways, but a deceived heart that masks the depth of my own sin and pride.

Sometimes my renegade tongue shows up in sarcasm. At other times, it’s a witty statement about someone I consider an enemy. Still other times it’s in the front seat of my vehicle when I feel the personal affront of another reckless driver. And sometimes, it’s in the careless use of details surrounding a story I’m telling.

What I give my lips permission to speak, reveals the freedom I give my heart to judge. My lips don’t create a message, they reveal it. And at times, it’s not pretty.

Polite, maybe. Acceptable in the circles I’m in, maybe. But unbridled. Borderless and boundaryless thoughts and ideas. Tongues without constraint. Given permission through recklessly self-righteous justification.

“They deserve it.”
“They had it coming.”
“If I don’t say it, who will?”
“It improves the story, who cares if it’s not completely accurate.”

It is the apostle Paul who reminds us that we are not victims of our thoughts, of our language, or of our schemes. On the contrary, the Holy Spirit gives us the power to hold these thoughts captive…

We demolish arguments and every proud thing that is raised up against the knowledge of God, and we take every thought captive to obey Christ. (2 Corinthians 10:5, CSB)

We demolish.
We take every thought captive.

It’s time to stop making excuses for reckless words. It’s time to stop allowing our lips to violate what Christ commissions.

I confess. I repent. I commit. I claim.

Higher ground. Lips that speak what Jesus instructed. My heart first. My lips next.

Anyone else care to join me?

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It Started in 2017

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On August 21st, 2017 Mary and I stood in an open field on the east side of Denver peering at an open sky through appropriately darkened lenses. A solar eclipse was at approximately 65% throughout the Rockies, but that was clearly enough to capture our hearts, our imagination, and our plans for 2024. This was […]

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Another Anniversary, But Not Just Another…

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It was 46 years ago, in Franklin, Michigan, that I caught my first wedding glimpse of Mary Christine Cargo. My bride. If I pause, I can still see that image, feel those feelings, and experience those emotions. But a wedding is only the beginning. Cliché. Probably. But true. What happens after “I do” is what […]

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Lenten Reflection – Part 5

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“The look.” I remember it well. And likely more relevantly, I remember giving it. Words are superfluous. “The look” communicates disappointment, disapproval, distain… and perhaps worse. The outcome of “the look” varied, but seldom did it accomplish the intended purpose. I’m quite certain that Jesus had a look. It was a look that Peter received… […]

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Lenten Reflection – Part 4

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Blame. The currency of exchange in political transactions. Perhaps you’ve noticed. Vision takes a backseat to blame. Whether it’s political ads, stump speeches, opinion columns… or just the pervasive attitude of the day. But don’t be confused, blame is not an invention of cable news, or social media, or a two-party system. We can trace […]

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Lenten Reflection – Part 3

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One of the criminals who were hanged railed at him, saying, “Are you not the Christ? Save yourself and us!” But the other rebuked him, saying, “Do you not fear God, since you are under the same sentence of condemnation? …for we are receiving the due reward of our deeds; but this man has done […]

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Lenten Reflection – Part 2

March 4, 2024

Pilate addressed them once more, desiring to release Jesus, but they kept shouting, “Crucify, crucify him!” A third time he said to them, “Why? What evil has he done? I have found in him no guilt deserving death. I will therefore punish and release him.” But they were urgent, demanding with loud cries that he […]

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A Lenten Reflection – Part 1

February 23, 2024

Wednesday night I poured over the journal in front of me as I engaged for an hour at the “Biblical Stations of the Cross” at our church. Each Wednesday for four weeks. Fourteen stations. Fourteen reflections and passages of scripture. I’m not sure why this is something new to me. Something unexplored in my evangelical […]

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Grand Baking

February 9, 2024

In the fall of 2020 I took a Zoom bread baking class with my daughter, Alli. Our instructor was Sara Ward, from her austere kitchen at Hen Corner in West London. One class led to two, and then three… and then I was hooked. Now, I would consider bread baking my favorite hobby. I have […]

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