No Room at the Inn

Luke 2:7

“And she gave birth to her firstborn, a Son. She wrapped Him in swaddling cloths and laid Him in a manger, because there was no room for them in the inn.”

There wasn’t a “No Vacancy” sign; just had a full house. It’s a scene we know well. We’ve all felt the sting of being the one put at the “kiddie table” or the one sleeping on the floor because the “important” guests took the beds. We understand what it’s like to feel overlooked.

But this? This is the King of Kings. You’d think the Creator of the stars would at least get a reserved suite. Yet, Luke tells us “There was no room for them in the inn.”

If a King pulled up, they would have found a room. But Jesus? He didn’t come with a motorcade; He came in a womb. He traded the throne of heaven for a feeding trough. He entered our world not with privilege, but with a birth in an animal’s crib.

The world was busy then, and it’s frantic now. Our schedules are packed, our minds are cluttered, and our hearts are often “at capacity.” But the invitation of the manger still lingers. Jesus doesn’t demand a palace; He just asks for a place.

Do you have room for Him today? Not just in your house, but in your priorities? He’s still coming, ready to occupy whatever space you’re willing to give Him.

I’m Lonnie Davis, and these are thoughts worth thinking.

When Faith Walks

Luke 2:5-6

“He went there to register with Mary, who was pledged to him in marriage and was expecting a child. While they were there, the time came for her Child to be born.”

Mary didn’t choose the ninety-mile walk from Nazareth to Bethlehem. Roman law chose it for her. She was “expecting a child,” a phrase that carries the weight of weary ankles and a lower back that never stops aching. Some say she rode on a donkey. The Bible doesn’t say, but not many expecting mothers want to ride a donkey for 90 miles!

We often think of faith as a mountain-top feeling, but Mary shows us that faith is frequently found in the gravel of the road. Her trust wasn’t a theory. It was the courageous choice to keep walking when the circumstances were inconvenient and the timing felt wrong.

Isn’t it just like God to hide His greatest wonders inside our most mundane obligations: a tax decree, a long commute, a civic duty? God uses the ordinary to position us exactly where we need to be. When life feels like a series of interruptions, look closer. Your daily grind might just be the very path God is using to fulfill His work in you.

Don’t miss the Divine in the details. Your Bethlehem is waiting.

Here is a prayer thought from today:

Lord, Open our eyes to see your hand moving through the mundane. Help us trust that even when we are just fulfilling obligations, you are in it with us. Remind us that no journey is wasted when you are the one leading the way.

I’m Lonnie Davis, and these are thoughts worth thinking.

It Begins!

Luke 1:30–31

“But the angel said to her, ‘Do not be afraid, Mary, for you have found favor with God. You will conceive and give birth to a Son, and you are to give Him the name Jesus.’”

To Mary, It felt like just another day. 

One second later, and life and the world had changed. Especially when the story is about Mary and Jesus. Mary’s story begins with impossibilities stacked like mountains before her. 

An angel appears—already enough to leave her trembling. Then comes the message: she, a virgin, will bear a child. Not just any child, but the Son of God. Add to that the news that her elderly relative Elizabeth is also expecting. It was more than any heart could take. Yet the angel’s words carried a promise: “For no word from God will ever fail.”

Mary could have argued. She could have doubted. She could have said, “This makes no sense.” She might have told the angel that she she had a fiancé, a Mom, aunts, other relatives, and neighbors who could not understand. 

Instead whispered, “Behold the handmaiden of the Lord. May it happen to me according to your word.” 

The simple faith of a teenage girl, became the doorway through which God entered our world.

What mountains loom before you today? God’s Word to Mary is His Word to you: no promise of His will ever fail. When God speaks, impossibility bows. And when we say, “May it be to me,” heaven moves.

I’m Lonnie Davis, and these are thoughts worth thinking.

First Christmas

Luke 2:7

“And she gave birth to her firstborn, a Son. She wrapped Him in swaddling cloths and laid Him in a manger, because there was no room for them in the inn.”

For four hundred years, heaven had been quiet. No prophets thundered. No fresh word from God. Just the echo of Malachi fading into the distance, leaving Israel waiting in the dark.

“Then, in a little town called Bethlehem—a town whose very name means ‘House of Bread’—Jesus, the Bread of Life, arrived. He came not in a palace, nor with the fanfare of trumpets, but in a stable, wrapped in rags and resting in a feeding trough. The eternal Word had come as a crying baby.”

We fuss over details, don’t we? Was it December 25th, January 6th, or later in March? Were there three wise men or thirty? Was there snow on the Bethlehem hills? None of that matters. What matters is this: He came.

The Savior who would one day feed five thousand with a boy’s lunch first needed a teenage girl to feed Him. On this night God spoke His loudest word of love in the language every heart understands: a baby’s cry.

I’m Lonnie Davis, and these are thoughts worth thinking.

Voices and Choices

Proverbs 11:14

“Where there is no guidance, a people fall, but in
an abundance of counselors there is safety.”

Wisdom doesn’t grow in the echo chamber of our own thoughts. It grows in the voices God places around us. Pride insists it needs no counsel, but humility knows better. True wisdom listens, not only to the right people, but ultimately to the right person.

Here’s the truth: You may know a thousand things, but sometimes the one who knows a single thing well can save you from a thousand mistakes.

Henry Ford understood this. When asked how he managed without knowing every fact, he replied, “I just push the button and call in the man who knows.” That wasn’t ignorance; it was wisdom. He recognized that progress doesn’t come from carrying every answer, but from knowing who to ask.

God designed life this way. We are not meant to walk alone. He surrounds us with godly voices, seasoned by Scripture and experience.

In the end, the question isn’t whether you know everything. The question is: do you know who to trust? Listen well, lean on the wise, and let God’s counsel guide you.

I’m Lonnie Davis, and these are thoughts worth thinking.  

No Excuses

John 6:21-22
“Another of His disciples requested, ‘Lord, first let me go and bury my father.’ But Jesus told him, ‘Follow Me, and let the dead bury their own dead.’”

Jesus said, “Let the dead bury their own dead.” Really? His words sound harsh to our ears. Yet His intent was not cruelty, it was clarity. The disciple’s request probably was not about attending a father’s funeral. Many scholars believe the father was still alive, perhaps aged or ill. The son was really saying, “Let me stay home until life feels easier, then I’ll follow You.” In other words, he offered an excuse, not a reason.

Jesus knew how easily excuses can delay obedience. We tell ourselves, “I’ll serve when the kids are grown… I’ll give when finances improve… I’ll worship when life slows down.” But excuses are the cobwebs that keep us from walking in freedom. Christ’s call is urgent, not because He is impatient, but because He knows the joy waiting on the other side of obedience.

Christ is not interested in your retirement plan; He’s interested in your current devotion. Don’t let your “I’ll do it laters” become the graves of what God wants to do right now. Leave the “dead” things—the excuses, the delays, the comfortable waiting games, and do the right thing now!

I’m Lonnie Davis, and these are thoughts worth thinking.

The Winds Obey!

Our reading for today is Matthew 8:27

The men were amazed and asked, “What kind of man is this? Even the winds and the sea obey Him!”

The disciples had seen Jesus heal the sick and touch the untouchable. They thought they knew Him. But when the storm raged and the boat rocked, they discovered a side of Him they had never imagined. With a word, the winds hushed. With a command, the waves stilled. And the men whispered in awe, “What kind of man is this?” 

Isn’t it striking? The sea obeyed Him instantly. The storm bowed before its Maker. Creation recognized its Creator, while people, those He came to save, often hesitate. We wrestle with obedience, delay surrender, and question His authority. Yet the winds don’t argue. The waves don’t resist. They simply yield.  

Fear had gripped the disciples moments before. Panic filled their hearts. But awe was born on the other side of fear. Worship replaced worry. That’s often how it works. When we face storms, we discover His power. When we tremble, we learn His strength.  

The longer you walk with Jesus, the more you realize: He is greater than you imagined. He is Lord of the storm, Master of the sea, and Savior of your soul.

I’m Lonnie Davis, and these are thoughts worth thinking.

Homeless Jesus

Matthew 8:20

Jesus replied, “Foxes have dens and birds of the air have nests, but the Son of Man has no place to lay His head.”

What a startling truth!

The Creator of the universe walked this earth without a permanent address. For thirty years He lived under Mary and Joseph’s roof. But when His ministry began, He left the comfort of home behind. From then on, His pillow might be a hillside, a borrowed bed, or even the wooden planks of a fishing boat.  

Why? Because His mission mattered more than His mattress. He came not to settle down, but to seek and save the lost. He knew that the true home was not here, but in heaven. Every night under the stars, every borrowed room, every restless journey whispered the same message: “Don’t cling too tightly to earth. It’s not the final stop.” 

We may never know the ache of homelessness firsthand. Yet Jesus reminds us that earthly security pales beside eternal belonging. Our hope is not in brick and mortar, but in the promise of a place prepared for us. A home where the lights never dim, the doors never close, and the welcome never ends.  

I’m Lonnie Davis, and these are thoughts worth thinking.

Are You Willing?

Two thousand years ago, a man with leprosy approached Jesus. The sight of him must have emptied the street. Lepers lived on the edge of town, on the edge of life. But this one came close. He knelt. And then he said something surprising: “Lord, if you are willing, you can make me clean.”

He basically said, “Jesus I know you can help, but will you?”

If you are willing? Strange words. Didn’t he know? Jesus is always willing.

Yet don’t we whisper the same doubt? A marriage frays, a child wanders, a diagnosis darkens the door and we suffer in silence. We carry the burden alone, convinced heaven is too busy or we’re too broken. In that moment, we’re living the leper’s question: “If you are willing…”

Friend, hear the rest of the story. Jesus reached out and touched the man. Touched him! Jesus touched the untouchable leper. “I am willing,” He said. “Be clean.” And immediately the leprosy left.

Two thousand years later, Jesus hasn’t changed. The same heart that moved toward a leper, moves toward you. Whatever weighs you down: fear, failure, addiction, grief, He is willing. One wise soul observed: until you’ve taken your problem to Jesus, you haven’t done all you can do.

What are you waiting for? He stands ready. Kneel. Speak. Trust His touch.

He is willing. Are you?

I’m Lonnie Davis, and these are thoughts worth thinking.

Learn to Trust

Our reading is Psalms 20:7

“Some trust in chariots and others in horses, but we trust in the name of the LORD our God.”

King David knew what it meant to face danger. He had battled lions and bears in the fields. He stood before a giant who towered above him. He had felt the weight of armies pressing against his kingdom. Yet in every conflict, he learned a steady truth. Weapons could help, but they could not save. So he wrote today’s verse. He understood where real strength comes trust in God.

Trust does not come easily for most of us. We like to feel in control. I remember sitting on a plane beside a woman who was quietly crying. The flight attendant knelt to reassure her and even suggested a pill. Through her tears the woman whispered, “I already have taking one.” Her fear was proof that trust cannot be swallowed. It has to be learned.

We place trust in so many things. A chair to hold us. A car to bring us home. A plane to lift us safely through the heavens. Yet sometimes we struggle to trust the One who made the heavens.

Scripture calls us to surrender our fears and lean into His promises. Trusting God brings a peace no pill can give.

I’m Lonnie Davis, and these are thoughts worth thinking.