The Mark of Christmas

by DanWolgemuth on 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 pregnancy, the cord simply does what it was designed to do—eight months or so of life-giving, life-sustaining support. But built into its purpose is a kind of planned obsolescence. Birth instantly ends the usefulness of this lifeline.

And once severed, a permanent mark remains at the center of every body—a reminder of our frailty and dependence from the very beginning. A “scar” with a legacy: our belly button. Our navel.

Good mother or bad, this physical feature reminds us that we saw the light of day because of the woman whose womb we occupied. Our oxygen, our nutrition, even our earliest defenses against disease came through her.

All of that is context. All of that biology sets the stage for this: Jesus, the Son of God; Jesus the Alpha and Omega; Jesus the Creator of the universe; Jesus the Light of the World; Jesus the all-powerful One…

Emptied.
Fragile.
Vulnerable.
Dependent.

Jesus… experiencing the very design He authored.
Jesus… cloaked in darkness.
Jesus… the Almighty now submitting to the rhythms of human life.
Jesus… a member of the Godhead moving through the stages of cranial development.
Jesus… with an umbilical cord, and then a navel. All to remind us of what He did—and how He chose to do it.

“And the Word became flesh and dwelt among us, and we have seen his glory, glory as of the only Son from the Father, full of grace and truth.” (John 1:14, ESV)

But before He dwelt among us, He dwelt within a teenage mother. Before He overcame death, He clung to life inside a womb. Before He showed us the way, He showed us His love and His sacrifice.

Perhaps no symbol more quietly but profoundly reveals the meaning of Christmas than the shared mark carried by all humanity.

Indeed, a navel tells the story.

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Once 13, now 18…

by DanWolgemuth on December 5, 2025

Malia. Our oldest grandchild. This week she turns 18. As I’ve reflected on this significant milestone,
I was drawn back to a post I wrote five years ago…

Saturday was a night of celebration. Malia, our oldest granddaughter, turned 13. A teenager. A beautiful young woman. Her own voice. Her own gifts. Malia.

So it wasn’t surprising that on a subsequent night, in the middle of my sleep, I awoke with Malia on my mind. But what hovered over my restless night were thoughts of another 13-year-old—Mary, the mother of Jesus.

Did Mary have a grandfather? If so, how did he respond when the news broke that his precious Mary was pregnant? And not just pregnant, but pregnant without being married.

Then the news… the step of faith. The outrageous assertion of a divine conception.

My mind spun in the middle of the night as I thought about Mary’s burden. Her profound and humble delight… but also the weight of her reality. Her scandal.

Family reeling. Heads turning.

And while this singular event in human history is worth pondering, it also invites personal reflection. Personal scrutiny.

In the midst of a sleepless night I was confronted with my own tendency to rush to judgment. When something unexpected or outside “my norm” happens, I race—full speed, track shoes on—to my own conclusion. To a verdict without evidence. A conclusion without facts. A determination without context.

I invite myself into sacred space. Space only to be occupied by the living Christ Himself.

“For the Father judges no one, but has given all judgment to the Son, that all may honor the Son, just as they honor the Father…” (John 5:22–23, ESV)

Jesus makes this abundantly and convictively clear in His most famous sermon:

“Judge not, that you be not judged. For with the judgment you pronounce you will be judged, and with the measure you use it will be measured to you.” (Matthew 7:1–2)

Mary not only carried the Son of God… she did so under the disdain-filled watch of ignorant observers. Those on a full sprint to judgment. Conclusions drawn; condemnation delivered.

In the waning hours of evening, I asked myself… would I have been a person of faith? Would I have believed the best? Would I have extended grace before picking up a stone of condemnation?

And today, in different yet similar circumstances, do I race to a conclusion without understanding?

That pregnant 13-year-old today. A baby certainly not immaculately conceived—yet do I presume to know? Do I shake my head in disgust? Without knowing a story. Without compassion. Without hope.

Or what about a group of young men, walking together, laughing together, a darker hue than me… do I presume to know? Do I rush to a place I’m not invited to occupy? Frankly, it begs the question: what would I have thought of the 12 disciples if they had walked past me on Main Street? Would I have seen them as called by God? As anointed? As world changers? Or… deadbeats. Unemployed. Lazy. Vagrants. Transients.

Malia ushered me into a place of conviction even as she ignited a deep measure of hope. I met the Holy Spirit in that place, and He didn’t leave me alone.

There is freedom in knowing that judging others is not in my job description. Wise living, yes. Discernment, always. But presuming to know the motives of others? Never.

Jesus. The righteous judge. Truth, yes. Grace, abundantly.

When Jesus calls—and He does—He often invites us into a place that others will not understand. That others will judge. That others will condemn.

Far be it from me to do the same…

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A Rolling Stop?

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Littered throughout my neighborhood are stop signs. In fact, just about 100 feet north of my driveway is one, and a quarter of a mile south is another—both of which I’ve passed hundreds of times over the last 20 years. While I understand that the octagonal sign says STOP, I seldom feel compelled to do […]

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This Can’t Go On…

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Words mattered. My mom made sure I understood that. Her children, including her youngest, were often more haphazard, flippant, or even mean with language. Periodically—and always timely—I would hear her offer some paraphrase of the American poet Will Carleton’s quote: “Thoughts unexpressed may sometimes fall back dead; but God Himself can’t kill them once they’re […]

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Veterans Day

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“Greater love has no one than this: that someone lay down his life for his friends.” John 15:13 Bruce Cargo was a young man when he walked into the jungles of Vietnam. Thousands of miles from his family in Port Huron, Michigan—surrounded by the confusion of war—Bruce carried the honor of his nation and the […]

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“You’re not the boss of me…”

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From time to time, as I am reading a passage of Scripture, a memory is triggered and I am instantly transported to a moment in time. Specifically, it was Exodus 40 that provided my ticket for a return trip to Franklin, Tennessee, in the late 1980s. We had moved to a quiet neighborhood in 1987 […]

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Chicken Enchiladas and So Much More

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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 […]

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The Green Flash

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 […]

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A Question before a Solution

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I had selected an Airbnb in Quebec City based on pictures, reviews, accessibility to noteworthy landmarks, and availability. What I hadn’t fully explored was the neighborhood in which our lovely apartment was located. It didn’t take long for us to realize that the property lived up to our expectations for comfort and style—and it also […]

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A Post for a Post

October 10, 2025

Often in this more reflective season of my life, I’m asked to recount some of the most difficult leadership moments during my time as President of Youth For Christ USA. That question isn’t hard to answer. I have a list—not a long one, but a list. Many of those moments revolve around being wrongly accused. […]

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