Wednesday, March 25, 2026

Armor On

 

Put on the full armor of God …
—from Ephesians 6:11

One does not enter scary places without first putting on appropriate protective clothing. I learned that in the very first hour of training to be a fire fighter back in the fall of 1965. In the intervening 61 years, great advances have occurred in the design of protective clothing for fire fighters. When fire fighters enter a burning building today, they have the best protective clothing that science can provide.

In our spiritual lives, we begin each day by walking out into a world that is filled with evil. Every turn along the road of life potentially exposes us to danger from the enemy who desires to destroy us. We do well to remember that one does not enter scary places without first putting on appropriate protective clothing.

This is the same message that the Apostle Paul tried to communicate with the Christians worshipping at Ephesus. Notice Paul’s words found in Ephesians 6:11:

Put on the full armor of God so that you can take your stand against the devil’s schemes.

As we begin this new day, let’s make certain that we put on the full armor of God. We can fill our minds and hearts with God’s written Word. We can rely on the Holy Spirit, who dwells within us, to give us what we need to remain protected. And, we can resist falling into the trap of besetting sins that Satan often uses to hinder and injure us.

Fully equipped as soldiers of Christ, we can move out into the world ready to share the good news of the salvation that God has provided through His Son. And, we can bathe each other in much prayer, asking God to keep us safe as we endeavor to serve Him with all of our beings.

 

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

 

Tuesday, March 24, 2026

God Will Give Us Strength

 

Finally, be strong in the Lord …
—from Ephesians 6:10

Watching a true craftsman at work always proves instructive. I can remember visiting the shop of a cabinetmaker in my home town. My dad had trained as a journeyman carpenter and eventually hung up his tool belt in favor of selling appliances and later selling hotel and restaurant supplies. But, my dad always told me the best carpenters were the cabinetmakers.

As I watched this skilled craftsman work on what would become a fine piece of furniture, I saw him use tools that I had never seen before. These were specialized tools designed to make some intricate part of cabinetmaking proceed more efficiently and more smoothly. I also recognized that the way the cabinetmaker approached each task was the result of thousands of hours of working to perfect his craft.

On another occasion, I watched a journeyman plumber install some water piping. Again, I saw specialized tools that made the task easier and more efficient. But, I also again saw the level of skill that this plumber had acquired over thousands of hours of work.

In removing a particularly tight joint, the plumber changed up his normal pipe wrench for one much larger. I realized that he was using a principle of physics to gain greater leverage to break apart the joint that may have sat there untouched for thirty years or more. The larger wrench gave the plumber the leverage he needed to loosen the joint. He also made good use of the apprentice helper he had brought with him to the job. For there were certain task that one person could not do alone. Even this very skilled workman needed help—additional strength—to complete certain awkward tasks.

God has given us the ability to draw strength from Him, when we need help to complete the work He has given us to do on His behalf. This is exactly what the Apostle Paul had in mind when he wrote the words found in Ephesians 6:10:

Finally, be strong in the Lord and in his mighty power.

We who belong to God, through His precious Son, Jesus, do not need to rely solely on our own abilities and strength. We can fully trust God to give us His strength to complete whatever task He has called us to do.

As we begin this new day, let’s remember that we need not do God’s work by ourselves. He is willing to give us His eternal and almighty strength to finish whatever task we have begun. That should enable us to proceed without hesitation in doing His work in this needy world.

 

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

 

Monday, March 23, 2026

Live Carefully

 

Be very careful, then, how you live …
—from Ephesians 5:15

Do you obey warning signs? I am tempted to opine that you probably obey most warning signs unless you happen to have a Concrete-Random Mind Style, as described in the ground-breaking work by Professor and Phenomenologist, Anthony F. Gregorc, Ph.D. People with the Concrete-Random Mind Style tend to sincerely believe that rules do not apply to them. Rules, they believe, apply to lesser mortals—people who are not as intelligent, wise, or discerning as they are.

Fortunately, only a relatively small number of people in the overall population have the Concrete-Random Mind Style. The rest of us usually obey most warning signs. If we’re told that some piece of machinery is dangerous, we stay back and keep our distance. If we’re told that a chemical might easily catch fire, we keep sources of ignition well away from that chemical.

In the spiritual realm, our sin nature that we inherited from Adam—and which we have done a pretty good job of feeding by our own sinful behavior—keeps us from heeding certain warning signs that God places in our pathway. Most of these warnings come from God’s written Word, the Bible. One example is contained within the words of the Apostle Paul, found in Ephesians 5:15-16:

Be very careful, then, how you live—not as unwise but as wise, making the most of every opportunity, because the days are evil.

Here, Paul enjoins “Christ’s-ones”—Christians—to make a determination to live wisely, and by so doing, make the most of every opportunity that God may give us to represent Him to a needy and dying world. Our motivation comes forth when we recognize that the days in which we live are evil days.

The late Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. contributed many wonderful and profound words that have guided several generations of people toward a more harmonious relationship with each other. While some still cling to the idea that we are strongly divided along racial lines, we only have to look at our own lives to realize how far we have come over the course of the last 70 years. Nevertheless, we must realize that some have still bolstered the idea that people of non-Caucasian races are always and forever at a disadvantage. If that claim has any truth at all, it is based more on behavior than on race, more on socioeconomic class than on race, more on news media coverage than on race, more on a striving for political advantage than on race.

But, in my personal opinion, one of the statements of Dr. King that is often quoted does not fully ring true to the teachings of Scripture. This phrase comes from King’s use of a quotation developed by Unitarian minister and prominent American Transcendentalist, Theodore Parker, who first used the phrase in a series of ten sermons he published in 1853. In one of those sermons, Parker wrote:

“The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice.”

As a Universalist who believed in the ultimate full reconciliation between all humans and God, it is easy to understand why Parker might have made such an assertion. However, if one takes that phrase purely in the temporal sense—that is in the sense of the “here and now”—I would have to strongly disagree. Within the context of our present world, there are many situations where evil has prevailed and will continue to prevail, until Christ returns at the end of the age to bring true reconciliation to all creation, including all humankind.

For example, take the matter of income redistribution. Jesus said, as recorded in Matthew 26:11 and Mark 14:7:

“The poor you will always have with you …”

Now the context of this verse has to do with the way a woman chose to use her financial resources: whether to buy expensive perfume to anoint Jesus just prior to His suffering, death, and burial, or give that money to feed the poor. Nevertheless, the concept that Jesus emphasized has always proven true throughout all the pages of history. Some people will be rich, others will be poor, still others will be somewhere in the middle of the economic continuum. There will not come a day, no matter what schemes humans may try to devise, whereby everyone will have equal financial resources. Even within the context of Marxist Communism, without fail every application of that flawed theory has always produced a larger and ever-growing number of poor people and an ever-growing smaller number of very rich people, who retain control of the systems of production and justice within a nation so enslaved by that evil philosophy.

As followers of the Lord Jesus Christ, Dr. King’s quoted statement only has true application if it is viewed within the never-ending hourglass of eternity. Once Christ returns and the full reality of His Kingdom is realized—including the rewarding of His followers and the casting into utter darkness of all those who have failed to bend their knee in fealty to the Great King Jesus—will it be possible to achieve true and lasting justice.

As we begin another new day, let’s remember to follow this warning from the Apostle Paul and live wisely. That includes rejecting the foolish ideas with which our current society continually bombards us. We cannot, we must not, allow our evil culture to try to define what it means to be a follower of Jesus. Anytime someone outside the household of faith tries to tell us how Christians should think, live, and act, we should immediately and wholeheartedly reject such advice. After all, we have God’s blessed written Word to guide us. And, we have the guidance of the indwelling Holy Spirit. What more do we need to heed the genuine warnings and loving instructions that God has given us?

 

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

 

Friday, March 20, 2026

Chosen in Him

 

For he (God) chose us in him (Jesus) …
—from Ephesians 1:4

Do you like to be chosen? I imagine that you do. When you were in Elementary School and the teacher organized your class into two teams to play some game, did you stand there hoping that you would be chosen early in the process rather than become the last person picked? Or maybe, you hoped that you would be chosen to be on the same team as someone in the class whom you admired. Indeed! We all like to be chosen.

In our relationship with God, one of the most blessed elements is that He has chosen us before the foundation of the earth to belong to Himself. We cannot fully comprehend this fact because we know that there is nothing inherently worthy about us that would prompt God to choose us. We are stained by the sin nature of Adam and have compounded our natural sinfulness by committing all manner of sins on our own. Why would a holy God choose us?

But, the fact remains that God did choose us. And, in due season, God sent His blessed Holy Spirit to open our spiritual eyes to the fact that God had chosen us and had made provision for the forgiveness of our sins through the birth, life, suffering, death, resurrection, and ascension of His one and only Son, Jesus. Notice how the Apostle Paul affirms this truth, as he writes to the Christians gathered at Ephesus, found in Ephesians 1:4-5:

For he (God) chose us in him (Jesus) before the creation of the world to be holy and blameless in his sight. In love he predestined us to be adopted as his sons through Jesus Christ, in accordance with his pleasure and will.

This side of eternity, we will never understand why God chose us to belong to Himself. But, as we begin this new day, we can celebrate, with worship and praise, the reality that we are God’s chosen ones. In fact, God has grafted us into the line of His original chosen people, Israel, that we might become one flourishing blooming branch that testifies to God’s mercy, grace, and unfailing love.

 

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

 

Thursday, March 19, 2026

The Power to Witness

 

But you will receive power when
the Holy Spirit comes on you …
—from Acts 1:8

The testimony of someone who has experienced a particular event has great power to provide insight, information, and understanding. The best way to encourage someone to consider a thought or idea is to have a person who has benefitted from that thought or idea share how that thought or idea has impacted his or her life in a positive way.

But, even when something has had a profound influence on their sense of well-being, most people are very reluctant to tell others about what they’ve experienced. This naural shyness about witnessing to the truth of what has happened in one’s own life comes from a sense of maintaining personal privacy, or from a sense that a person does not want others to think ill of them because of what they have shared, or from a sense that one will not have adequate skill to creatively explain what a person has experienced.

The antidote to this innate shyness about witnessing is a special power given specifically for the purpose of overcoming that shyness. This is what Jesus was explaining to His disciples, as recorded by Dr. Luke in Acts 1:8:

But you will receive power when the Holy Spirit comes on you; and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, and in all Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth.

As we begin another new day, we should spend a moment thinking about the many wonderful ways our relationship with God has positively impacted our lives. Perhaps we should even make a list of all the things that have made our lives better since we responded to God’s call to come and follow Him.

With that list in hand, we should then ask God to open up opportunities for us to share how wonderful our lives have become since we accepted His gift of divine mercy, grace, and love. Then, as God brings people across the pathway of our lives, we should gently, tenderly, and with humility share with them the wonders and amazement that we have experienced from this God who loves us with His unfailing, undying love.

 

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

 

Wednesday, March 18, 2026

Power, Love, and Self-discipline

 

For God did not give us a spirit of timidity …
—from 2 Timothy 1:7

Have you ever done a self-assessment to determine the key qualities that make you who you are? I was fortunate that, as a double-major in Psychology and Writing at Houghton University in the mid-1960s, I had a most excellent professor who had previously spent many years in the Veterans Administration Hospital System. He insisted that Psychology majors take a wide variety of psychological instruments, participate in group therapy sessions, and learn as much about themselves as possible.

I learned early on that, though I had high intelligence, I had a very low self-esteem coupled with a strong level of perfectionism. I also learned that my painfully extreme social awkwardness came from the way my very low self-esteem and strong level of perfectionism had shaped the way I perceived other people, related to them, and the way I processed the information I receive when I am in a social setting.

I have always admired other people who seem to get along in life much more smoothly than I do. I am also keenly aware that God has gifted me in other areas of life that, in some ways, help me compensate for my extreme social awkwardness.

Now, imagine for a moment that, in His divine love for us, God sets out three qualities He desires to give to us, His dearly loved children. We actually don’t need to imagine this, because God does have three such wonderful qualities that the Apostle Paul has described, as found in 2 Timothy 1:7:

For God did not give us a spirit of timidity, but a spirit of power, of love, and of self-discipline.

A spirit of power, a spirit of love, and a spirit of self-discipline are all sterling qualities that God strongly desires to give to each of His dearly loved children. They come to us through the power of the indwelling Holy Spirit. They are given to us to enable us to serve God, as His ambassadors to this troubled and needy present world.

As this new day begins, let’s praise and thank God for these three great gifts. Then, let’s determine to use them to spread the good news of who God is and what He longs to do for each person who may cross the pathway of our lives. In so doing, we will find these qualities growing within us, just as Paul was urging his son-in-the-faith, Timothy, to experience these qualities growing within him.

 

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

 

Tuesday, March 17, 2026

Increasing and Overflowing Love

 

May the Lord make your love increase …
—from 1 Thessalonians 3:12

Can a person ever have too much love? I really don’t think so, do you? Most of us are at least a little bit “love deficient.” Even if we have those in our lives who love us, we still can really use the comfort that comes from every bit of love that flows our way. In just such a setting, the Apostle Paul wrote the following to the new Christians gathered at Thessalonica, as recorded in 1 Thessalonians 3:12:

May the Lord make your love increase and overflow for each other and for everyone else, just as ours does for you.

These words of blessing, from the Apostle Paul, apply to us today, as well. We are part of the enormous and great family of God. Thus, we are recipients of God’s overflowing and divine love. He has poured His agape love into us, so that we can, in turn, pour His love into others.

As we begin another new day, let’s make this a day when we will endeavor to let God’s love flow through us to touch the minds and hearts of the others around us.

 

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