Friday, May 8, 2026

Precious Friendship

 

“Then the eyes of those who see will no longer be closed,
and the ears of those who hear will listen.”
—Isaiah 32:3

Here’s an apt reminder:

If we truly love someone, tell them often that we do. If we appreciate the joy that someone brings into our lives, acknowledge that often. If we feel gratitude for who someone is to us, don’t keep that to ourselves because we think it’s not “cool” to say it out loud.

Our decidedly evil American culture has convinced us that we should cavalierly take for granted far too many relationships. Yet, the reality is that each friendship is precious. We must determine to live our lives in such a way that we will have no regrets because we failed to tell someone how much he or she means to us.

We must understand that, as followers of the Lord Jesus Christ, we are loved by Him and He continually intercedes in our behalf with God our Father. This is the kind of love that Christ has for us. That is the kind of love—God’s agape love—that we must have for others. Part of loving others is telling them how much they mean to us. And, we should frequently tell our blessed Savior how much He means to us, as well.

 

 

Copyright © 2026 by Dean K. Wilson. All Rights Reserved.

 

Thursday, May 7, 2026

Evil Never Wins

 

For the eyes of the Lord are on the righteous …
—from 1 Peter 3:12

 

At 2:49 p.m. EST on April 15, 2013, two pressure cooker bombs exploded near the finish line of the Boston Marathon on Boylston Street, killing three people and injuring 264 others, many very seriously. The dead included Krystle Marie Campbell, 29, a restaurant manager from Medford, MA; Lu Lingzi, a Chinese national and Boston University graduate student from Shenyang, Liaoning, China; and Martin William Richard, an eight-year-old boy from the Dorchester neighborhood of Boston, MA.

Certain events that occur during the course of our lives merit our remembering them. This is one such event, for it represents the personification of evil. Nothing can justify the intentional taking of innocent human lives. That this bombing took place in response to a radical perversion of a particular religion makes it all the more tragic.

As believers in the life-transforming power of the risen and living Lord Jesus Christ, we understand that the question we should ask is not: “Why did this happen?” Rather, we should ask: “What can we learn from this terrible event?”

I suggest that one thing we can learn is that evil will never prevail. Said another way: evil will never win.

It is fitting that, as we mark another anniversary of this horrible event, it falls a mere eight days following Holy Week this year. How fitting, for the very death, burial, and resurrection of our Lord Jesus Christ set a marker in the sands of time. He conquered sin, and death, and evil. The bonds of Satan were broken at the foot of the cross. Death gave way to victory when Jesus rose from the grave.

As we continue celebrate our triumphant Lord and King each day, among other significant events, let us remember the destruction that evil caused in Boston thirteen years ago. But, let us also recognize that evil is an already-defeated foe. Evil will never win. The love, mercy, and grace of God will always prevail.

On the occasion of the first anniversary of this horrible bombing in Boston, I searched the internet and, to my amazement and to my somber delight, I discovered a poem written a few days after this terrible bombing by a woman who was obviously moved by this event. Imagine my surprise when I learned that the author of the poem was actually a high school classmate of mine.

Now, nearly 61 years have passed since we graduated from high school. During that time our paths had never crossed until that internet search reconnected us twleve years ago. It is really quite amazing how God can use events to reacquaint us with very special people from our distant pasts. Here then is the poem, which perfectly expresses the reality that comes out of a tragedy that occurred at 2:39 p.m., thirteen years ago:

Never Win
You will never win, but you try
For no bounds your ego knows
You take captives
But only those who allow
Because your power is a sham
An illusion, no depth, built on sand
Beauty drives you crazy
It must be marred and made ugly
For beauty and truth belong to your enemy
The one you want to be, but never can
You thrive on lies
Pain and cruelty your sidekicks
You need them, no strength of your own
Truth can’t be destroyed
But you twist and stretch
Making distortion and perversion
It is no use, you will never win
But you don't know
Devoid of wisdom, you keep trying
But you will never win.
—Jackie Nuzzo
Copyright © 2013. Used with Permission.
All Rights Reserved.

 

Let us daily remember that Christ has won the victory. Praise God that evil never wins!

 

 

Copyright © 2026 by Dean K. Wilson. All Rights Reserved.

 

Wednesday, May 6, 2026

A Conversation on a Plane

 

And this is love: that we walk in obedience to his commands.;
—2 John 1:6a


Not long ago, we celebrated Holy Week. I remembered a conversation I had on an airplane the week between Palm Sunday and Easter more than twenty-five years ago. It was an early morning Delta flight from Hartford to Atlanta. I sat quietly in my seat with my Bible open to the Psalms.

“Are you a Christian?” my seatmate asked?

“I am,” I replied.

“I’ve never understood what Christianity’s all about,” he continued. “What’s the main thing?”

As I pondered how to answer, I thought of a gospel song I had learned as a teen: “I Surrender All.” 1 I realized that this song describes what following Jesus is all about—surrendering my will to His will.

As this song played in my head, I had the privilege of very gently and tenderly sharing with my seatmate what following Christ meant to me. He asked a number of questions. I tried to carefully answer each one.

As we landed in Atlanta, he thanked me for sharing with him. Did he eventually become a Christian? I don’t know. But, I felt very honored and grateful that I had the opportunity to talk with him. I hope that I planted a seed in his heart and mind that God would water and bring to bud.

As we, each one, strive to remain faithful to the calling God has given us, may God grant each one of us a soul-enriching week, as we remember each day the sacrifice Christ made for us on the Cross.

_________________

 

Here’s a video of one of my long-time favorite groups, Max Mace and The Heritage Singers, with their rendition of this song. 2 I hope you enjoy it.

 

 

 

______________________
The classic hymn “I Surrender All,” written by Judson W. Van DeVenter and composed by Winfield S. Weeden in 1896, is in the Public Domain. Though this citation is noted to be in the Public Domain, in the case of someone claiming Copyright protection of this material, please note that, in each case, whenever citation of any Copyrighted material is made within a post on this blog, such citation is made strictly for Educational Fair Use illustration purposes only. All Rights Reserved by the original Copyright Holder.

The Heritage Singers’ version of “I Surrender All” is a performance of a hymn in the Public Domain, written in 1896 by Judson W. Van De Venter and Winfield S. Weeden. The specific 2002 audio recording by the Heritage Singers is copyrighted by Heritage Singers USA, Inc. (Gospel Heritage Foundation), P.O. Box 1358, Placerville, California, 95667, U.S.A. Please note that, in each case, whenever citation of any Copyrighted material is made within a post on this blog, such citation is made strictly for Educational Fair Use illustration purposes only. All Rights Reserved by the original Copyright Holder.

 

Copyright © 2026 by Dean K. Wilson. All Rights Reserved.

 

Tuesday, May 5, 2026

Embrace Our New Life!

 

The acts of the flesh are obvious: …
hatred, discord, jealousy, fits of rage,
selfish ambition, dissensions, factions
and envy; drunkenness, orgies, and the like.
I warn you, as I did before, that those who live
like this will not inherit the kingdom of God.
—from Galatians 5:19-21

Sometimes, hatred and negativity seem to prosper within certain families. It’s almost as if seeds of hatred and negativity have been passed down from great-grandparents to grandparents to parents to children. Have generations past sown seeds of disharmony and discord in us that flare up to cause breaks in our relationships with family and friends?

If so, we need to embrace the new life God gives us, in and through the Lord Jesus Christ. As the Apostle Paul reminded us in 2 Corinthians 5:17:

Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation; old things have passed away; behold, all things have become new.

If we have acknowledged that the Jesus Christ is our Savior and Lord, we must now embrace our new life. We must put aside our hurts and grudges. We must say “No!” to the discord that has separated us from friends and family. Instead, we must let the agape love of Christ flow out from us to touch the life of everyone who crosses our pathway.

Let us determine to turn our backs on those seeds of negativity that were sown in us so many generations ago. Instead, let us embrace our new life in Christ. Otherwise, we will never change what we continue to tolerate.

 

Copyright © 2026 by Dean K. Wilson. All Rights Reserved.

 

Monday, May 4, 2026

A Warning to the Church - Part 8

 

20But you, dear friends, build yourselves
up in your most holy faith and pray
in the Holy Spirit. 21Keep
yourselves in God’s love as you
wait for the mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ
to bring you to eternal life.

22Be merciful to those who doubt; 23snatch
others from the fire and save them; to
others show mercy, mixed with fear—hating
even the clothing stained by corrupted flesh.

24To him who is able to keep you from
falling and to present you before his
glorious presence without fault
and with great joy—25to the
only God our Savior be glory, majesty, power
and authority, through Jesus Christ our Lord,
before all ages, now and forevermore! Amen.
—The Book of Jude

We ended the last blog post wondering what to do if we discover that the kind of people Jude describes have wormed their way into the leadership of our churches and have set about pushing true believers out of leadership roles and out of the church. These evil people, who bring corruption to the church—that is the rupture of the core—diminish the effectiveness of the ministry of the church. They profoundly damage the people of that church, especially the young people. In fact, they do such damage to the young people of the church that the effect of their corruption lasts for at least two or three generations.

Faced with such an overwhelming challenge to the cause of Christ, the Apostle Jude hastens to end his short letter with clear instructions to the true believers, who want to turn this damage around and heal the wounds inflicted on the church. Specifically, Jude suggests the following:

  • Build yourselves up in the most holy faith. Take the steps necessary to increase our own faith. Spend time in God’s written Word. Implant the Truth of God’s written Word deep within our hearts and minds. Build a point of reference against which we can measure every action, to make certain it aligns with God’s revealed instructions.

  • Pray in the Holy Spirit. Such a prayer is not a weak, pleading, selfish prayer. This is warfare praying. This is pounding on the gates of heaven. This is significant time spent—both alone and with other believers—beseeching God to act decisively to protect the church, restore wounded believers, and uproot those with evil intent.

  • Keep yourself in God’s agape love. In some ways, this is one of the hardest instructions of all. In the midst of a soul-wrenching battle against the forces of evil, maintain a protective barrier around ourselves with God’s unfailing, undying love. This goes against every fiber of our natural beings. When we’re attacked, diminished, disrespected, and forced out, our natural inclination is to rise up in great anger and utterly destroy those who have wounded us. But, this is not God’s way. And, Jude reminds us that we must face our attackers wrapped in a protective cocoon of God’s agape love.

  • Wait for the mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ. Wait? Wow! But, we don’t want to wait! We want action, now! We want to overthrow our enemies. We want to haul them out into the streets and stone them. We want to beat them with the clubs of righteousness, until they scream for mercy, sob in asking for forgiveness, wail in repentance, leap to make restitution, and humbly beg for restoration. (Frankly, I can’t even write these words without laughing at our foolishness!)

    No! Instead, we must wait for the mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ. He, and He alone, will be the One to bring justice.

    So, we who have jumped to our feet and drawn our swords, must put those swords back in their scabbards and sit down. Now is not a time for such action. It is a time to wait for the mercies of the Lord to overtake those who have ruptured the core—those who have perpetrated evil in our midst.

    And, it may not happen in our lifetime here on earth. Some matters may never become settled this side of heaven. Some evil will not be overcome until Christ returns. We may step from this life into eternal life without ever seeing the resolution of the horrible deeds that have been done to us and to our churches.

  • Be merciful to those who doubt. Keep proclaiming the Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ, with love and with honesty. Make every effort to build up those who doubt or are weak. Stand in the gap for those who are not strong enough to stand for themselves. At every turn, give glory to God, by sharing with others the power that comes from the Holy Spirit.

  • Snatch others from the fire and save them. Remain watchful for those who have strayed too far from the fold. Go after them in God’s agape love, and gently restore those who have strayed away.

  • Show mercy, but don’t become corrupted by their sin. Stand firm on the Truth of God’s written Word. Extend mercy to those who do not deserve mercy. But, we must guard ourselves, so that we will not become stained by the evil that has driven them to sin.

  • Receive a closing benediction. Receive from God a blessing on our lives, and rest in the security of knowing that we belong to God through Christ.

This brings our examination of the Book of Jude to an close. I sincerely hope that the lessons of this short, but amazing, Book will remain with each one of us throughout the days, weeks, and months ahead.

 

Copyright © 2026 by Dean K. Wilson. All Rights Reserved.

 

Friday, May 1, 2026

A Warning to the Church - Part 7

 

17But, dear friends, remember what the
apostles of our Lord Jesus Christ
foretold. 18They said to you, “In the
last times there will be scoffers
who will follow their own ungodly
desires.” 19These are the people who
divide you, who follow mere natural
instincts and do not have the Spirit.
—from the Book of Jude

Over the course of previous six blog posts, I have examined the potent prose of the Apostle Jude, as he writes to the churches spread across Asia Minor—the land we know in the modern world as Turkey. Since Jude only wrote one letter that survived the canonical scrutiny, and since it is a relatively short letter, we need to carefully heed the warning Jude presents. He has become increasingly concerned as he hears of great strife in the church.

Jude has observed that solidly grounded orthodox believers have been pushed out of leadership positions by individuals who have wormed their way into the church. These newcomers have brought with them false doctrines and a spirit of divisiveness that strains credulity. The very leaders who had led the churches to accomplish significant Kingdom work have now been vilified, disrespected, and dismissed.

In today’s verses, Jude reminds the faithful that what has happened should not come as a surprise. In fact, the apostles predicted that scoffers who follow their own ungodly desires will divide the believers in a church. Jude urges the faithful to keep in mind that these divisive ones do not have the Holy Spirit. In other words, they are false believers. They do not really belong to Christ. They really are not brothers or sisters in the Lord.

“I’m sure glad nothing like that happens today,” you may opine.

Don’t kid yourself. The same kind of issues that Jude deals with in his short epistle face countless churches today. People have come in and taken positions of leadership with the aim of destroying the effectiveness of the ministry of the church.

In this series of blog posts, I have talked much about corruption in the church. Corruption, this rupturing of the core, renders the church ineffective. It diminishes the church’s ability to serve Christ and His Kingdom. It may take the church in a direction under the guise of a new and improved program of ministry. But, careful examination will disclose that instead of increasing effectiveness, the new and improved program has pushed the church spiritually backward, not forward.

We must take a look at our churches. Are our churches better off today than they were one year ago? Two years ago? Five years ago? If not, why not? Could it be that the new leadership in our churches has taken steps to rupture the core?

If we discover that leaders are rupturing the core, what do we do about it? Well the Apostle Jude has some suggestions. We’ll talk about those suggestions in the next blog post. And, as I have stated repeatedly in this series of blog posts, on the one hand, we must strive to push back against those who desire to rupture the core of the church. On the other hand, we must do so with hearts full of God’s love, with an awareness of our own inherent sinfulness, and with total reliance on the leading of the Holy Spirit. As I will frequently state during this series of blog posts, that represents quite a challenge.

 

Copyright © 2026 by Dean K. Wilson. All Rights Reserved.

 

Thursday, April 30, 2026

A Warning to the Church - Part 6

 

8In the very same way, these dreamers
pollute their own bodies, reject
authority and slander celestial beings.
9But even the archangel Michael, when
he was disputing with the devil about
the body of Moses, did not dare to
bring a slanderous accusation against
him, but said, “The Lord rebuke you!”
10Yet these people speak abusively against
whatever they do not understand; and
what things they do understand by
instinct, like unreasoning animals—
these are the very things that destroy them.

11Woe to them! They have taken the way
of Cain; they have rushed for profit
into Balaam’s error; they have
been destroyed in Korah’s rebellion.

12These people are blemishes at your love
feasts, eating with you without the
slightest qualm—shepherds who
feed only themselves. They are clouds
without rain, blown along by the wind;
autumn trees, without fruit and
uprooted—twice dead. 13They are
wild waves of the sea, foaming up their
shame; wandering stars, for whom blackest
darkness has been reserved forever.

14Enoch, the seventh from Adam, prophesied
about these people: “See, the Lord is
coming with thousands upon thousands of
his holy ones 15to judge everyone, and
to convict all the ungodly of all the
ungodly acts they have done in the
ungodly way, and of all the harsh words
ungodly sinners have spoken against him.”
16These people are grumblers and faultfinders;
they follow their own evil desires; they
boast about themselves and flatter others
for their own advantage.
—from the Book of Jude

As you read the Scripture verses at the beginning of this blog post, you can easily come to the conclusion that the Apostle Jude pulls no punches. He calls it like it is. Today, I continue this series of blog posts doing my best to unpack this short Book of Jude.

Word has reached Jude that the churches in Asia Minor—what today we call Turkey—have fallen victim to a common problem. Evil people have come into the church and, over time, ruptured the core of the church. They have taken steps to defame the long-term formal and informal leaders. They have told lies about the more spiritually sensitive believers. They have slowly, but surely, taken over the leadership of the church.

Then, they have brought in other outsiders and elevated them to significant positions of authority in the church. Thus, having seized the reins of control, they have systematically destroyed the effectiveness of the church, as a witness for the Gospel and as an earthly expression of the Kingdom of God. The church stands corrupted—its core has become ruptured. In this sad state of affairs, countless lives have been adversely affected.

Contemporaneous liturature of the time talks about the effect these actions had on the youngest members of the church—the children and youth. Many young people who had walked the “Christ-road” have now fallen away. They have seen their godly leaders replaced with ungodly ones. They have seen those who taught them the whole counsel of God replaced by ineffective strangers. The sense of close-knit family that they once had has now vanished, as the corruption within the church has spread to completion.

Into this utter morass of despair comes a strong letter from the half-brother of Jesus, the Apostle Jude. A son of Mary and Joseph, Jude has come to an understanding of the power of the risen Christ somewhat later in his life than you might have expected. It was initially very hard for Jude, his brother James, and his other brothers—Joseph and Simon—to understand that their older brother was not only the son of their mother Mary, He was the Son of the Living God.

But, having come to this reality, down through the years that follow, Jude has taken a significant leadership role. While his brother James became the principal leader of the church at Jerusalem, Jude has become a counselor to the leadership, has traveled widely visiting the fledgling churches, and has become a significant voice in encouraging the Christian spiritual formation of the new believers.

With such a significant role, you may wonder why we only have this short letter to remind us of the role Jude played at the inception of the church. Could it be that he was simply too busy doing the work of the Kingdom to write many letters? The very paucity of written words makes this short Book of Jude all the more powerful. He certainly doesn’t mince words. He has clearly and methodically defined the nature of those who have wormed their way into the church and, empowered by Satan, have set about rupturing the core of the church and destroying the effectiveness of the church.

How clever these false leaders were. They did not cause the church to cease to exist. Rather, they corrupted the church—ruptured its core—leaving it in place, but blunting its ability to do the work God had intended it to do for His own sake.

Do the words of Jude apply to us today? To discover whether or not they do, we must ask ourselves:

  • How effective is our church in serving God?

  • How truly dedicated are those who attend our church?

  • How faithful are these dear ones in attending the services of our church?

  • Do those who attend our church devote themselves to reading, studying, and meditating on God’s written Word?

  • How committed are those who attend our church to daily, fervent prayer for the mission of our church and for their fellow church attendees?

  • If we take a census of all the families in our church, do all the young people love Jesus and do they have an active part in the ministry of the church?

You see, among all of the above spiritual disciplines, when the young people in a church begin to fall away—shy away from church attendance, exhibit no interest in learning about Jesus, give no example of faith leading them through their daily lives—this offers one of the major signs that the core of the church has become ruptured. When a church loves Jesus and is fully committed to obediently serving Him, the young people in that church capture the vision of the Kingdom of God, alive and well, here on earth. They become excited and burst with enthusiasm—not enthusiasm for a program, nor for a personality leading a program, but enthusiasm for the things of the Lord that such a program or personality presents to them. Thus, the spiritual life of its young people provides a significant way of measuring the health of a church.

In my next blog post, I will endeavor to continue unpacking the words of the Apostle Jude. In the meantime, let’s determine to carefully examine our own lives and the lives of our churches. Has the core of our churches become ruptured? If so, what do we intend to do about it? If we don’t know what to do, the Apostle Jude will have some instruction for us.

As I have stated repeatedly in this series of blog posts, on the one hand, we must strive to push back against those who desire to rupture the core of the church. On the other hand, we must do so with hearts full of God’s love, with an awareness of our own inherent sinfulness, and with total reliance on the leading of the Holy Spirit. And, as I will frequently state during this series of blog posts, that represents quite a challenge.

 

Copyright © 2026 by Dean K. Wilson. All Rights Reserved.