“Living the Lyrics”

by DanWolgemuth on May 1, 2026

1966.

Andraé Crouch.
“The Blood Will Never Lose Its Power.”

If you’re like me, the mere mention of this song sends the melody and lyrics racing through your mind. But like many songs we sing, the words can dance in our heads without fully landing. The seeds scatter but seldom take root.

Providentially—and with renewed conviction—this gospel classic has come to mind as I’ve been reading through the book of Acts. Jesus Himself said, “But you will receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you, and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem and in all Judea and Samaria, and to the end of the earth.”

Really? Did He intend this only for the disciples then, but not for us now?

Rhetorically, the answer comes back with an emphatic no. Power then. Power now.

In November 1980, my twin sister Debbie married Randy Birkey—a middle school connection rekindled in a wedding ceremony. Within 12 years, four children filled their home.

Fast forward to 2017: brokenness and disappointment. Divorce.

Separate lives. Debbie in a Chicago suburb. Randy in Madison, Wisconsin. Overlap where necessary—but only when necessary.

Then—yes, then—2022. At a men’s silent retreat through Christ Church Madison:
“I met Jesus in a powerful way and experienced a miraculous, spiritual transformation.”

Randy’s words. His experience. Connected to the church all his life, yet on the doorstep of 70, he encountered rebirth.

“Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation. The old has passed away; behold, the new has come. All this is from God, who through Christ reconciled us to Himself and gave us the ministry of reconciliation; that is, in Christ God was reconciling the world to Himself, not counting their trespasses against them, and entrusting to us the message of reconciliation.” (2 Corinthians 5:17)

New.

And yes, a multi-year journey toward reconciliation. Slowly. Cautiously. Kindly. Building bridges where a chasm once existed. Watering the roots of trust where doubt had grown a forest.

Conviction. Repentance. Kindness. Sacrifice. Selflessness. Warmth. Hope. Respect. Trust… then love.

The Blood Will Never Lose Its Power. On Saturday, May 2, 2026: marriage—again.

An unextinguishable beacon that splashes light into every corner of darkness.

Transformation is possible. Then. And now.

For a Jewish zealot in Acts 9.
And for adults in the waning years of life.

Power—
to become witnesses,
on the dusty pathways of Jesus,
and in the suburbs of Chicago and Madison.

“There was a wedding in Cana of Galilee, and Jesus was there…” (John 2)

Yes. Jesus was there.

In Galilee—and at Church of the Resurrection in Wheaton, Illinois, on May 2.

Transformation.

Andraé Crouch was right. It will never lose its power.

Never.

{ 0 comments }

“What’s your favorite app?”

by DanWolgemuth on April 17, 2026

I’ve been in several settings where this question sparks lively and helpful conversation.

But seriously… what is it?

For me, there’s a notable top five—but one stands head and shoulders above the rest.

Tucked inside my “Exercise” folder (with only a tangential link to exercise) is the Merlin Bird ID app. Developed and updated by the Cornell Lab, it holds a resounding 4.9 user rating—though I’d love to meet the person who didn’t give it a 5.

The mission of the app is simple: identify birds through photos or bird calls. While I started with the photo ID function, I quickly shifted to audio identification.

Some mornings, when I go out to fill my bird feeders, I stand on my deck with the app open and simply watch as it “listens” to my aviary neighbors welcoming the day. It brings a kind of delight comparable to a child watching Saturday morning cartoons. (Do they still do that?)

Bird calls are like identification fingerprints—something our Creator must have taken great joy in designing. Perhaps that’s why the app lives in my Exercise folder: on the many hikes we take, I’m quick to pull out my phone to capture unfamiliar sounds.

Yes, I love this app because it aligns a sound with an identity. What comes out of the beak tells the listener what’s at the core of the creature.

If that sounds familiar, it should…

The tongue of the wise makes knowledge appealing,
but the mouth of a fool belches out foolishness.
(Proverbs 15:2, NLT)

The heart of the godly thinks carefully before speaking;
the mouth of the wicked overflows with evil words.
(Proverbs 15:28)

The words that flow from our lips expose the character of our hearts. No Merlin app required.

Vocabulary doesn’t create identity—it reveals it.

A good person produces good things from the treasury of a good heart, and an evil person produces evil things from the treasury of an evil heart. What you say flows from what is in your heart. (Luke 6:45)

If you claim to be religious but don’t control your tongue, you are fooling yourself, and your religion is worthless. (James 1:26)

Long before the iPhone or Cornell Lab, God established an identification system—for all His creation, and especially for His prized possession: us.

The difference between my feathered friends and image-bearers is that we have the capacity to build up or destroy with the sounds we make.

Therefore, encourage one another and build each other up, just as in fact you are doing. (1 Thessalonians 5:11)

Like the song of birds, our words reveal—a heart exposed. Demolition or construction.

Steward them wisely. Evaluate them honestly.

{ 0 comments }

“The Pivot of all Pivots”

April 3, 2026

Words, like fashion trends, ebb and flow in popularity and usage. At times, this shift is driven by significant cultural or historical events. In 2020, the word pivot vaulted to the top of the charts on a global scale. A pandemic necessitated—and then turbocharged—the idea of massive change in direction. This was true in classrooms, […]

Read the full article →

“The Power of Imitation”

March 20, 2026

It was roughly five years ago when I stepped up to the granite-topped island in our kitchen, my daughter Alli at my side, and we Zoomed into my first-ever online class. Technology made the miles irrelevant, but the British accent of our instructor brought a kind of global clarity. Sara Ward—our primary teacher and owner […]

Read the full article →

“How would you define leadership?”

February 27, 2026

And with that, the podcast interview began. Jake Smith is a talented coach and consultant in the executive coaching arena, and his new podcast, Reframe Fix, is off and rolling. Graciously, Jake invited me to record an episode scheduled to air sometime in the future. His first question was direct and simple. As I’ve reflected […]

Read the full article →

Less Than One Percent

February 13, 2026

Once a year, Mary and I retrieve a couple of plastic tubs from our basement, both loaded with camping gear. We also pull out our tent, our cots, and our five-gallon water container. Then we load everything—along with meals and snacks—and head to a campsite that Chrissy, our family organizer, has reserved for us. The […]

Read the full article →

Not Even A Sparrow

January 23, 2026

Our flight landed late on January 10th at Denver International. Mary and I were returning from a trip we hadn’t planned—but one God had prepared for us. A journey that included long hours at the bedside of my brother Robert as he drew his last breath. This was not part of our 2026 plan. In […]

Read the full article →

From Wuhan to Bethlehem

December 24, 2025

In April of 2020, I wrote the following fragment. Because of its relevance to Christmas, I thought we would run it again. Yes… Christ came. And it changed everything. 6,900 miles. That’s how far it is from Wuhan, China, to Denver.6,900 miles from the genesis of a global disease—a genesis that will be the topic […]

Read the full article →

The Missing Ingredient

December 19, 2025

For over twenty years, Mary and I have lived in our two-story house on Davies Way in Aurora. That’s longer than we’ve ever lived anywhere. In addition to repainting rooms and replacing carpet, we’ve also gotten to know the neighbors around us—specifically, four families. Over the past three years, as my affection for baking has […]

Read the full article →

The Mark of Christmas

December 12, 2025

1 vein.2 arteries. This is what’s contained in an umbilical cord. One vein delivering oxygen and nutrients to the baby in the womb; two arteries carrying waste and low-oxygen blood away. Somewhere between week 4 and week 8 of pregnancy, the umbilical cord forms and begins its vital work. Then, for the remainder of the […]

Read the full article →