God Knows

by DanWolgemuth on October 3, 2025

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 important thing for an optimist to say.

Faith in God is not an invitation into delusion. No—it’s a firm grounding in reality without despair.

Throughout my life, I have either ignored or overlooked the significance and importance of lament—of appropriately focused sadness. Aching because things are not as they should be doesn’t make me a pessimist or a fatalist. It doesn’t undermine my optimistic bent.

The Apostle Paul articulated this well in Romans 8:

For the creation eagerly waits with anticipation for God’s sons to be revealed. For the creation was subjected to futility—not willingly, but because of him who subjected it—in the hope that the creation itself will also be set free from the bondage to decay into the glorious freedom of God’s children. For we know that the whole creation has been groaning together with labor pains until now.
(Romans 8:19–22)

The whole of creation—groaning. Aching. Hurting. Lamenting.

Not because we don’t have a good God, but because we do have a good God.
Not because God has disappeared, but because we have chosen darkness instead of his light.

My sadness has roots. A legacy.

The book of Exodus gives story to this sadness: brickmaking by God’s chosen; hatred in a position of power.

Lament erupted.

…and the people of Israel groaned because of their slavery and cried out for help.
(Exodus 2:23a)

Desperation. Oppression. Hopelessness.

A plea. A prayer.

And God heard their groaning, and God remembered his covenant with Abraham, with Isaac, and with Jacob. God saw the people of Israel—and God knew.
(Exodus 2:24–25)

God heard.
God remembered.
God saw.
… and God knew.

Seldom does the resolution to our lament include a nicely shaped bow on top of our pain and sorrow. No—it comes unfailingly and faithfully, like it did for the enslaved Jews in Egypt.

Whatever you face. Wherever you are. In the middle of the sorrow or lament…

God hears.
God remembers.
God sees.
… and yes, God knows.

And that, my friends, is enough.

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“But Mostly It’s About…”

by DanWolgemuth on September 19, 2025

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 spoon while I poured through my notes and my Bible in preparation for a devotional I was giving.

At one point I looked at Desmond, and asked if he knew who the Bible was teaching us about. His five-year-old reflexes took over and without a moment of thought he said, “Jesus.” But then I could see the wheels turning. Curiosity, courage, and adventure overrode the reflex… and within a few seconds he amended his answer with, “But mostly it’s about Goliath.”

This from the boy that rids our house and his of bad-guys. This from the little warrior who aspires to various levels of superhero status. This from the boy who understands that Goliath is everywhere.

Yes, to Desmond, the story is mostly about Goliath… because it’s Goliath that launches David into courageous bravery. It’s Goliath that supplies the storyline for the ultimate come-from-behind underdog adventure. It’s Goliath that fertilizes the soil of boyhood dreams and biblical-sized victory.

Then David said to the Philistine, “You come to me with a sword and with a spear and with a javelin, but I come to you in the name of the LORD of hosts, the God of the armies of Israel, whom you have defied.” (1 Samuel 17:45)

Goliath finds his match with an underestimated shepherd boy. Evil taunts righteousness and loses. God empowers the humble.

Come to think of it, both of Desmond’s answers were right. Yes, the Bible is a fabulous and transparent story about Jesus, but it’s also about Goliath. Whether the evil is overt or subtle; whether the weapon of choice is a spear or arrogance… Jesus is our Goliath killer. In 1 Samuel 18 He delegates the stone hurling to David and today He equips us with the Armor of God.

“It’s about Jesus; but it’s mostly about Goliath.”

Evil met its match in an underestimated shepherd… and evil met its match in the Good Shepherd.

There is no other answer for evil.

Jesus… the ultimate Goliath slayer.

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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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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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In Season and Out

August 8, 2025

Palisade peaches. Rocky Ford cantaloupe. Olathe sweet corn. Summertime! For four to six weeks each year, something special happens at our local grocery store: Colorado peaches, melons, and corn. By late July, the anticipation crescendos—and suddenly, the reality is here. Stacked on display. For sale. Ready to savor. I grew up eating all three of […]

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An Empty Nest

August 1, 2025

Really. An empty nest. Throughout the month of July, we had a front-row seat to the entire process. The stage: a spruce tree just outside our bedroom window. The accommodation: a perfectly crafted nest of twigs, mud, and whatever else the robin could appropriately gather. First came a single, unmistakable blue egg. Then, a day […]

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A Stone of Remembrance – An Unforgettable Kiss

July 18, 2025

Whidbey Island, July 2012 This July—as with every July—Mary and I remember. Specifically, we remember July 2012, when Mary lost her balance while cycling on Whidbey Island, Washington. As she began to fall, she was struck by a passing pickup truck. The days that followed were intense. Life-altering in the truest sense. The reflection below […]

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Seismic Resilience

July 11, 2025

History has shaped what construction requires in states like California. Engineers call this seismic resilience. Earthquakes are inevitable. They have happened. They do happen. And they will happen. So the question is: what will we do to prepare for—and then survive—them? Talented and experienced technicians design and build with these objectives in mind. Notice: the […]

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