Chicken Enchiladas and So Much More

by DanWolgemuth on October 30, 2025

There were meals that reached “star status” when our kids were young—recipes that hit the spot time and again. And truthfully, those same dishes still top our family’s list of favorites.

Fast forward to Monday night. Mary, who volunteers on the “meal team” at Colorado Community Church, had a family to deliver dinner to.

There were plenty of options—quick and easy choices, adequate but unremarkable ideas.

But that’s not what Mary chose. She went with one of those tried-and-true favorites cherished by our children and now our grandchildren:

Chicken enchiladas, Spanish rice, and locally sourced tortilla chips.
(Just typing that makes me hungry!)

A 5 p.m. delivery meant I could provide transportation. So we packed up the meal, braved the terrible traffic and intermittent rain, and arrived at an apartment complex on the north side of Denver.

Mary slipped her volunteer name tag over her head, and together we walked through the rain to the door.

It took a while for Erica to answer, but when she did, she invited us inside. Behind her stood a teenage daughter holding tightly to the collar of a very large white dog. As we stepped into the small kitchen, the reality of the living conditions hit us like a wave—walls gouged and marred, dirt swept into a pile but still lingering, trash on the counters, dishes in the sink.

A small patch of counter space provided just enough room for the dinner Mary had made—our family favorite.

Mary gave a few simple instructions, and we were back out the door.

I confess—I was disoriented.

What we witnessed was both sobering and heartbreaking. It still is.

I find comfort in order, control, and stability. I carry a set of ready-made answers to life’s complex problems—answers that help me keep my distance from discomfort. But on Monday night, our meal delivery collided with my clichés.

As I continue to process and pray through what I saw, I’m struck by the lesson Mary quietly taught me. The message was sitting right there on the counter. Next to our freshly made meal was an empty Lean Cuisine box—a product of Nestlé, the global giant. In stark contrast sat Mary’s hand-crafted meal, prepared on our stove and in our oven. A family favorite, offered to a total stranger.

Jesus put it this way: “I was hungry, and you gave me food.”

That’s what Christ asks of us. We weren’t solving global hunger—we were simply widening the circle of our family table to include someone in need. That’s what Mary invited me into.

The call of Jesus is disorienting. Uncomfortable. Sobering. And into that uneasy space, He invites us to bring our best—our family favorites—for Him to use in showing His tender love and compassion.

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The Green Flash

by DanWolgemuth on October 24, 2025

Monday afternoon at 3:17 Central Time, Marshall Faith’s lungs waved the white flag of surrender, and with that, he crossed the threshold into eternity.

By any account, Marshall lived a full and rich life—96 years, to be exact. There are those individuals for whom a lifetime of years simply isn’t long enough. Marshall fits into this category.

I had heard a great deal about Marshall and Mona Faith from my parents. Their board service with Youth For Christ overlapped, and their lives intersected with warmth and respect. The beginning of my board term with Youth For Christ USA in 1996 provided Mary and me with a similar overlap, albeit with generational differences.

Our board service overlap was brief, but the embers of connection were rekindled when, in 2005, I became the President of YFC. This meant an annual face-to-face meeting, most frequently in Naples, Florida.

Marshall’s résumé, accomplishments, and accolades are profound and noteworthy. He was wise, direct, smart, thoughtful, kind, and generous. He valued the dignity and worth of every individual. He grew a regional Midwest agricultural business into a global power—and he did so while honoring, rewarding, and empowering his Scoular workforce.

Marshall and Mona also lived deeply philanthropic lives—advocating for the voiceless, amplifying the message of hope and transformation.

Exemplary on every level.

But my lasting and most compelling memory of Marshall Faith isn’t connected to a balance sheet or billions of dollars in gross revenue. It doesn’t have to do with generosity or empowerment. It has to do with what I witnessed each February when Mary and I visited Marshall and Mona in Naples.

Most of our visits to Naples revealed a fresh arrangement of flowers on a coffee table in their living area. Marshall often attributed this display of gratitude and affection to Valentine’s Day, but it seemed more transcendent than that.

In short, Marshall Faith loved, admired, respected, and reveled in his wife. He treasured her, even as he frequently affirmed her wisdom, strength, and kindness. He authentically delighted in a woman he had known since high school.

The tenure of their relationship never dampened Marshall’s commitment, warmth, delight, or affirmation—never exaggerated, never for show. His love was genuine. He cherished Mona deeply. And they seemed radiant together, in a timeless way.

On one noteworthy visit to Florida, Mary and I joined the Faiths for dinner along an expansive Gulf shore. Over dinner, as the sun was disappearing, Marshall announced that he and Mona always anticipated watching the sunset as they strained to see the “green flash” that mysteriously and rarely accompanies the event. We had never heard of such a thing, and as we expressed our unfamiliarity with this phenomenon, Marshall let us know that there were many skeptics in his life. He and Mona were not among them. They had been eyewitnesses.

So, on this perfectly clear late-winter night in Florida, Mary and I saw the flash—with Marshall and Mona. Never before. Never since. Indeed, something we will relish for a lifetime—something that was so perfectly shared with the Faiths.

In 2018, Mona preceded Marshall to glory. Certainly, Marshall never stopped living after his cherished Mona was gone… but unmistakably, the green flash was gone.

Marshall and Mona Faith. Reunited. Alive, like never before. Safe. Secure. And with all that they accomplished in life, nothing stands out more clearly than what they taught me—and many others—about how to love well. Faithfully. Tenderly. Respectfully. Fully.

Indeed, for all the “green-flash skeptics,” Mona and Marshall were our living example. On a February night in Florida… and for a lifetime.

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A Question before a Solution

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A Post for a Post

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God Knows

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Why am I discouraged? Why is my heart so sad? (Psalm 42:11) I’m a “glass half-full” kind of guy—an optimist to the core. But right now, my vocabulary is most accurately aligned with the Psalmist. I’m sad. At times, discouraged. That’s a really hard thing for an optimist to say. But it’s also a very […]

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“But Mostly It’s About…”

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I wrote this Fragment ten years ago… but it feels more relevant than ever in 2025. Desmond is now a freshman in high school. It was just about bedtime, but Desmond had a specific hankering for a little cereal to wrap up his day. He sat beside me and wrestled the elusive flakes onto his […]

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The Full Weight of Love

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In 1964, Stan Guillaume became my brother-in-law. For sixty-one years, he has been an important part of my life—wise, kind, committed to Christ, and a wonderful companion to my sister Ruth. Mary Gayle became my sister-in-law in August of 1977. It was a wedding in Ottawa, Canada, where she was from. Together, she and Sam […]

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Rage! Have you noticed?

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I made a bad left turn. I admit it. We had just finished a bike ride around a local reservoir with our ten-year-old grandson, Drew. Bikes were now loaded on the rack as we started our two mile drive back home. Halfway back, I turned onto a four-lane road with light traffic. What I misjudged, […]

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Deconstruction or Reverence

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On the south side of E-470 near Parker, Colorado, stands a once-impressive office complex. Given the location, I have driven by it many, many times over the past twenty years. Its architecture, location, and bold signage always caught my eye. But late last spring, I noticed heavy machinery gathered outside. Over the months that followed, […]

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Silos Full of Opportunity

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In just a couple of hours, a small apartment living room became a sanctuary. My 94-year-old aunt, Lois Dourte, shared vivid, heartfelt stories from her teenage years and early marriage to my Uncle Vic. She stacked stones of remembrance, and the rest of us listened in awe, soaking in the grit and warmth of this […]

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