Lord Willing!

James 4:15

Instead, you ought to say, “If the Lord is willing,
we will live and do this or that.”

We speak of “tomorrow” as if we own the deed to the sunrise. We map out our trips and mark our calendars with permanent ink, forgetting that we are but a mist that dances for a moment before the morning sun. The merchants of James’s day weren’t faulted for their industry, but for their pride. They acted as if they held the stopwatch of eternity.

Perhaps you’ve heard the old-timers say, “If the Lord is willing and the creek don’t rise.” We might chuckle at the phrasing, but there is a profound theology in that folk wisdom. 

It is not necessary to say those words out loud but Christians are well served to keep them in their hearts. Our plans are not ours alone. If the Lord is willing then these things may happen.

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

Prayer. Lord, help me to hold my plans loosely and Your hand tightly, trusting that Your will is my safest harbor.

What Matters!

James 1:11

“The sun rises with scorching heat and withers the plant; its flower falls and its beauty is lost. So too, the rich man will fade away in the midst of his pursuits.”

James gives us a picture we can see in a Texas summer. Morning flowers look bright, then the heat leans in, and by evening they are tired and fallen. Look at verse 11. Wealth can shine like that. It can be useful, beautiful, and even God-given, but it cannot promise tomorrow. I love how James does not just warn about money. He warns about misplaced trust. The rich man fades in the middle of his pursuits, not after he finishes them. That line searches the heart. We spend our days chasing what will not stay. James calls us to lift our eyes beyond the flower to the Gardener. In light of eternity, what matters most is not what we hold, but whether we belong to God when all fades away.

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

Prayer. Lord, teach me to hold earthly blessings lightly, seek what endures, and build my life on You alone each day.

No Excuses

James 1:13

“When tempted, no one should say, “God is tempting me.” For God cannot be tempted by evil, nor does He tempt anyone.”

Temptation loves the language of excuses. We fall, then look around for someone to blame. James closes that door. God is never the author of sin. He does not place bait before your soul and smile as you stumble. He is holy, pure, and good.

There is a difference between a test and a temptation. A teacher gives a test to reveal learning, not to cause failure. In the same way, God allows trials to show what is growing in us and what still needs work. The trap is not from Him.

So when temptation comes, do not ask, Why is God doing this to me? Ask, What desire in me is reaching for this? That question leads to honesty, and honesty is the path home.

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

Prayer. Lord, help me stop blaming others, trust Your goodness, face my desires honestly, and choose obedience when temptation calls loudly.

The Devil Runs Away!

James 4:7

“Submit yourselves, then, to God. Resist the devil, and he will flee from you.”

In these words James hands us both a command and a comfort. The command is surrender. “Submit yourselves, to God.” Before we fight, we bow. Before we stand against temptation, we kneel under the Father’s hand. 

The comfort is a promise: “and he will flee from you.” The devil is real, but he is not king. Temptation may arrive, but it does not have to rule. It can only win when you let it. When we lean on God instead of ourselves, the victory is certain. 

Submission is not weakness. It is the doorway to resistance. And resistance, rooted in trust, brings freedom. This is how believers live, not casually, but carefully, under God’s authority. His power is greater than any temptation we will face in this life.

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

Prayer. Lord, teach me to bow before You, and then stand against temptation, Help me  trust Your strength in every temptation today I face.

Hear AND Do

James 1:22

“Be doers of the word, and not hearers only. Otherwise, you are deceiving yourselves.”

Hearing God’s word is not the problem. Our ears hear the truth, but it’s our feet that hesitate. James calls us past hearing into obedience. He doesn’t say, “Think about doing,” but “Be doers.” Hearing without doing becomes a quiet trap, a gentle lie we tell ourselves. 

We can feel close to God simply because we listened, yet never let His voice reshape our choices. Real faith moves. It steps into forgiveness, kindness, and courage. 

Scripture was never meant to sit on a shelf of knowledge. It was meant to bend our will toward God’s heart. When His word takes root, it grows into action that reflects God in our behavior. 

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

Prayer:
Lord, help me respond to Your word with willing action, letting obedience shape my life and reveal genuine faith in You.

Faith With Deeds

James 2:14
“What good is it, my brothers, if someone claims to have faith, but has no deeds? Can such faith save him?”

James does not whisper this question. He sets it in front of us like a mirror. Faith is meant to do something. It is not a keepsake we store on a shelf. It is a living trust that moves our hands and feet. James says, “if someone claims,” reminding us that words can be spoken without being owned. Saving faith is not empty talk. It breathes. It acts.

Consider Peter. He boldly promised loyalty. He swore he would never fall. Yet when fear closed in, he denied the Lord. Afterward, the Bible tells us he went outside and wept bitterly. We understand him. His tears remind us to examine our own hearts. 

We should ask, “Is our faith alive and working today?”

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

Prayer: Lord, make my faith alive and active. Guard my heart from empty words.

Real Religion

James 1:27

Pure and undefiled religion before God our Father is this: to care for orphans and widows in their distress, and to keep oneself from being polluted by the world.

Real religion is not stitched onto a Sunday coat. It is worn in the time when no one is watching. James calls it pure religion, but you could just as easily call it real religion. It is more than correct doctrine resting in the mind. It is compassion rising from the heart.

Notice the phrase “before God.” Those words change everything. Applause does not matter. Visibility does not matter. Heaven sees.

Look at the example James gives. orphans and widows. They were the most vulnerable in the ancient world. They had no safety net, no steady voice. To care for them meant stepping into someone else’s distress. It is the Christian’s aim to help them.

Faith begins inside, but it refuses to stay there. It shows itself in what you are willing to do.

Prayer: Father, make my faith real, moving my heart toward the hurting and keeping my life pure before You.

Ask for Wisdom

1 Kings 3: 5, 

One night, the LORD appeared to Solomon in a dream,
and God said, “Ask, and I will give it to you!”

If you were Solomon, for what would you ask? Money? Health? Fame? 

When young Solomon stood before the Lord, he did not say, “Fix this problem.” He did not reach for riches. He did not grasp for long life. He opened his hands and asked for an understanding heart, the ability to discern, to see clearly, to judge rightly. And God was moved.

That is what wisdom does. It does not hand you a map for one road. It teaches you to read every road.

Not in a dream, but in the Bible, God promises: “If any of you lacks wisdom, let him ask of God, who gives to all liberally and without reproach, and it will be given to him.” (James 1:5)

James says simply, ask. God gives generously. Wisdom is not withheld from the humble heart. It is waiting and praying for it.

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

Prayer: Father, I don’t ask merely for answers today. Grant me wisdom to think, discern, and walk rightly before You.

Jesus’s Joseph

Colossians 3:23–24
“Whatever you do, work at it with your whole being, for the Lord and not for men… It is the Lord Christ you are serving.”

The Bible introduces Joseph as “a righteous man” in Matthew 1:19. Righteous does not mean famous. It means steady, obedient, willing to do what is right when no one is watching. God chose this carpenter from Nazareth to raise His Son. In Matthew 1, Joseph listens to the angel and obeys. In Matthew 2, he rises in the night to protect his family. In Luke 2, he searches anxiously for the twelve year old Jesus and returns home to live quietly in Nazareth.

After that, Joseph fades from the record. When Jesus hangs on the cross and entrusts Mary to John, it strongly suggests Joseph had already died. His assignment was complete.

He never preached a sermon. He never performed a miracle. Yet every board he shaped and every mile he walked was done for the Lord. Somewhere today a father works long hours, a mother prays unseen, a believer serves without recognition. Heaven notices.

Joseph’s life asks us a question. Are we content to live for an audience of One? God sees. That is enough.

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

Prayer: Lord, help me serve You faithfully in quiet places, content with Your approval alone.

God’s Shadow?

James 1:17

Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father of lights, with whom there is no variation or shadow due to change.

When James calls God the “Father of lights,” he’s pointing us to the one who hung the sun, moon, and stars. 

He’s the Source of all blessings. When we stand in the light of earth”s sun, we see shadows that stretch and fade. James is telling us that God, the Father of lights, doesn’t change. His goodness isn’t a mood; it’s His nature. 

You needn’t wonder which version of God you’ll get today. In a world of flickering promises, He is the steady, unmoving Source of every blessing. Because He is unchanging, you can always trust the Light. He never turns His back on the day or on you, His own beloved child.

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

Prayer: Father of lights, thank You that Your goodness is no mood. Help me trust Your steady, unchanging, perfect heart.