The Gospel According to John (Perkins)

John Perkins was a pastor, author and civil rights leader in Mississippi

The voice of Calvary called his name
and John knew he was loved
in spite of the way his troubled life began.
His mom died when he was just seven months old.
Soon after, his father fled the scene
abandoning the boy.

Raised by his grandmother
and a community of sharecroppers,
John’s dreams for a promising future
grew on a Mississippi plantation.
But they were dashed at sixteen
when his brother Clyde
(a decorated war veteran)
was killed by a white cop.

Still the voice of Calvary kept calling his name.
Moving west, he sought a new start.
But he found the same old prejudices
he’d known in the south.

Yet that voice would not be silenced
as he married and became a father
although it was hard to hear during the Korean conflict.
In his young son Spencer’s invitation to Sunday School,
John began to hear the voice more clearly.

And through two radio preachers
by the name of MacArthur and McGee
(with whom John became acquainted),
the voice of Calvary was amplified.

The voice called John and his family
to return to Mississippi to mend and haul.
And in Mendenhall
he mended frayed relations between whites and blacks
and hauled away the debris of decades of mistrust.

In the midst of it all,
John not only continued to hear the voice
but he also found his voice.
His was a prophetic voice that spoke about
love and mercy,
justice and equality,
compassion and courage,
healing and hope
reconciliation and restoration.

And though John’s voice has been silenced,
the voice of Calvary continues to be heard
in the legacy he leaves.

Peace to his memory!

Lest We Forget

A memorial to concentration camp victims at Stroud’s Jewish Community Center

On this Holocaust Remembrance Day
we contemplate the memory
of those who perished in death camps
eight decades ago
simply because they were
documented descendants of
Abraham, Isaac and Jacob.

We ponder the priceless worth of souls
created in the image of God
as well as the price tag
of silent complicity and complacency
that continues to allow Evil
to rob the innocent of liberty and justice…
and life!

Let us take time today
to view the present
through the lens of the past
all the while focusing
on the sanctity of human life
even as we take time to remember
that those who fail to learn from history
are doomed to repeat it.


In addition to each week’s post on this website, Greg Asimakoupoulos offers daily video devotionals on his YouTube channel. Here is a sample video. If you are interested in receiving these devotionals Monday through Friday, you can subscribe on Greg’s channel.