On a whim…

Life without whimsy is not much of a life at all; without it, a walk in the dark is no laughing matter.

February 1 Is Not a Sacrament. Every Moment Is.

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February 1, 2026

When I wrote the date this morning, the thought came uninvited: I made it.

A date without weight, really—only the first day of a month we agree to call new. Nothing turned. Nothing reset. Time itself remained unmoved.

Time, as I know it, is not a doorway. It is a point. A single place on a long—perhaps endless—line. Not the past, which memory keeps revisiting. Not the future, which imagination rehearses. Just this narrow location where I am allowed to stand.

Yesterday was a hard day.

That may be why the thought lingered. Not because the calendar advanced, but because I am still here. Still breathing. Still present at this point on the line.

I didn’t make it there.

I made it here.

And here is different.

February 1 is not a sacrament.

But this moment is.

Written by David Wilkerson

1 February 2026 at 10:43 am

Posted in grace, Time, Who knows?

The Velocity of Mercy

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I remember a reckoning.

It was the kind of afternoon that should have been filled with the sounds of play, but instead it was filled with the smell of gasoline and the realization of a terrible mistake. Several children had been playing—mixing fire and fuel. When I first heard the cries, my mind, seeking refuge in abstraction, thought, They really shouldn’t do that; people will think they are hurt.

But when I crossed the yard, the abstraction vanished.

I found a child smoldering. Small flames still flickered at his skin. I could see the white of his bone. He was entering shock, and in that clinical stillness I knew that shock—not the fire—would kill him if I didn’t anchor him to the world.

In that moment, I did not ask whose fault it was.

I did not wave a finger at a boy whose flesh was charred to lecture him on the dangers of fire.

I did not demand proof of his standing before deciding whether he deserved help.

I sat in the dirt. I looked him in the eye. And I asked him if he played baseball.

For fifteen minutes, we didn’t talk about fire. We talked about life on third base. We talked about the velocity of a well-hit ball. We talked about anything that would keep his heart beating until help arrived.

The Second Crime

I have been thinking about that boy lately as I watch our systems of enforcement—particularly when the law is applied with speed but without mercy.

I believe in the law. But I also believe a profound truth: justice without mercy is another kind of crime.

When families are left smoldering under the weight of systems they did not fully understand, or when individuals are crushed by rigid bureaucracy in the name of order, our first instinct must not be to wave a finger.

The Roman jurists had a name for this failure: Summum ius, summa iniuria—the extreme application of law that becomes the greatest injustice. The second crime is not the violation itself, but the refusal to see the human being burning in front of us.

The Call of the Witness

As an ordained minister, I find myself in a predicament. If I do not speak about this injustice, I am complicit. If I do speak, I know some who currently listen to me may choose to walk away.

But I remember the boy in the yard.

If I could sit in the dirt with a child who had broken the rules and choose his life over his guilt, how can I remain silent now?

Our job is not to stand over the suffering and demand to see their papers.

Our job is to sit in the dust, recognize the humanity being charred, and talk—steadily, patiently—about the velocity of a life worth saving.

Written by David Wilkerson

23 January 2026 at 3:04 pm

Posted in Who knows?

Clearing What Is Ours to Clear

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Each of us lives with plans and demands on our time. They arrive with urgency and insistence, persuading us that what is scheduled is what is necessary. Even faith can become another obligation—something to be managed rather than received.

But grace does not usually arrive on schedule.

What if interruption is not a failure of discipline but a threshold? What if some of what we think we “need” to do matters less than what love quietly places in front of us?

I have been shaped by women who lived with this kind of attentiveness—Beth, whose presence continues to instruct me, and Lucy, whose goodness is a daily constant. Neither acted in order to be seen. They did what was right because it was right. I have had to reckon with my own temptation—often hidden even from myself—to hope that such goodness might be noticed or returned. That hope belongs to me. Their faithfulness does not depend on it.

Recently, I suggested to a group of friends that we do something for someone who goes out of their way to help us. There was no response. I let it be. When I returned home, I noticed snow had not been cleared where my children park their cars. So I cleared them.

That was all.

No larger gesture followed. No unseen heroics. Just the work immediately before me.

Faith does not always look expansive. Sometimes it is bounded, ordinary, and quiet. It does not perform well. It does not multiply itself to prove a point.

Still, it counts.

Grace is not measured by how much we do, but by whether we are willing to do what is ours to do—without applause, without enlargement, without pretending it was more than it was.

Written by David Wilkerson

19 January 2026 at 8:01 am

Posted in Who knows?

God gives fire for light, not for ruin.

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Many of us are tired.
Not just busy—tired in the bones.

We have watched things we care about erode. We have seen people suffer needlessly. We have tried to speak, to help, to hold ground—and anger has found a home in us.

That doesn’t make you a bad person.
It makes you human.

Anger often begins as love that has nowhere to go.

But if you are feeling scorched inside—if rage has become your daily fuel—you are not failing morally. You are overburdened.

You were never meant to carry the weight of the world on anger alone.

You are still called to care.
You are still allowed to resist what harms.
But you are also allowed to rest from outrage.

Contempt feels powerful, but it is a thin power. It burns fast and leaves little behind. Love is slower. It requires breathing room. It needs light more than heat.

If all you can do right now is tend one small good thing—do that.
If all you can offer is restraint instead of rage—let that be enough for today.

Your vocation is not to be consumed.
Your presence matters too.

There is a fire that warms without destroying.
May you be given that fire again.

Written by David Wilkerson

3 January 2026 at 9:35 am

Posted in conviction, truth

Tagged with ,

It’s Been a Year

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It’s been a year.

Both of us were treated for cancer.
She also underwent a heart procedure.

And still—
we made it to the Azores.
We found rest for a while in Boothbay Harbor.

I began my first novel and am close to finishing it: 37 chapters, 147,500 words.
I started drafting two more.
The second is emerging quickly, with its hinge chapters complete.
The third is conceptually structured, waiting its turn.

I’m wrapping up a devotional guide for Lent.
I’ve been publishing small pieces—one or two most weeks.

My writing coach keeps urging me to slow down, reminding me that as cancer treatment continues, the emotional cost of writing increases.

She said:
Protecting your pace right now is the same as
resting between surgical cuts,
letting a bruise declare itself before touching it again.

Ignore this and you’ll still be productive—
but the book would begin extracting something from you it has no right to take.

So I’m learning to tell the truth about limits.
Not to stop.
Not to hurry.
But to refuse any work that asks for more than it is given.

Still here.
Still listening.
Still writing.

Written by David Wilkerson

31 December 2025 at 6:45 pm

Posted in Who knows?