Sleep Well

Psalm 4:8
“I will lie down and sleep in peace, for You alone, O LORD, make me dwell in safety.”

Peace is not found in perfect circumstances. It is found in the presence of God. David says, “I will lie down and sleep in peace,” and that simple sentence feels like a child resting in a father’s arms. Sleep becomes an act of faith when we stop rehearsing tomorrow’s fears and place them in God’s hands. 

Look again at the words “You alone.” David knew that real safety does not come from locked doors, careful plans, money, or human strength. Those things may help, but they cannot quiet the soul. God gives more than protection. He gives calm assurance. He lets the heart breathe. 

At the end of the day, we can lay down our worries because the Lord is still awake, still near, and still holding us through the night.

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

Suggested Prayer: Father, help me rest in Your presence, trust Your care, and sleep in peace beneath Your faithful protection.

Then Worship

Matthew 5:23–24
“So if you are offering your gift at the altar and there remember that your brother has something against you, leave your gift there before the altar and go. First be reconciled to your brother, and then come and offer your gift.”

Sometimes the holiest thing you can do isn’t in a church pew, it’s in sometimes difficult, but honest conversation you’ve been avoiding. Jesus reminds us that worship isn’t just songs, prayers, or quiet moments of devotion. It’s also the courage to repair what’s been strained. 

When someone is hurt, God gently nudges us to take the first step, even if we weren’t the only one responsible for the fracture. That step may interrupt something good, but obedience often does. When we pause long enough to mend what’s been neglected, our hearts grow lighter, our relationships grow stronger, and our awareness of God’s presence becomes clearer and more alive.

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

Suggested Prayer: Lord, give me courage to take the first step, humility to seek peace, and a heart willing to restore what’s broken today.

And YET

Habakkuk 3:17-18 

“Though the fig tree does not bud and there are no grapes on the vines, though the olive crop fails and the fields produce no food, though there are no sheep in the pen and no cattle in the stalls, yet I will rejoice in the LORD; I will be joyful in God my Savior.”

One small word carries the weight of the whole passage – Yet. As in “Yet I will rejoice in the Lord.”  Everything before this word is loss. Everything after it is choice. Habakkuk does not wait for the harvest to return before he rejoices. He turns toward God in the middle of the loss and makes a decision — joy. Not because his feelings led him there, but because his faith did.

For the Believer, this is the crucial difference between happiness and  joy. Happiness needs something to be happy about. Joy only needs Someone to be anchored to. Habakkuk’s fields are bare, his pens are empty, his pantry holds nothing and yet,  yet he calls God his Savior. Not because anything has been saved in the natural, but because God Himself is the treasure. When everything is stripped away and joy still stands, the quiet argument of that life becomes undeniable: God is enough. Not God plus blessing, but because God alone is enough.

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

 Suggested Prayer: Lord, when my barns are empty and my heart is tempted toward despair, teach me to choose You as enough.

When God is Near

Years ago, at my brother’s house, a reckless driver came roaring down the street. With children in our neighborhood, I shouted for him to slow down. He heard me, spun his car around, and headed back my way. I stepped out to the street, ready for any conversation. A moment later, my 300‑pound, weight‑lifting brother joined me. The driver reached us… then kept right on going. I turned to my brother and said, “The coward wouldn’t even stop.” My brother looked at me and replied, “Would you have stopped if you saw the two of us standing here?”

That moment reminds me of today’s verse: Hebrews 13:5–6.
God has said: “Never will I leave you, never will I forsake you.”
So we say with confidence: “The Lord is my helper; I will not be afraid. What can man do to me?”

With God by your side, do what’s right and refuse to fear. You are not alone. As He promises, “Never will I leave you.”

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

Suggested Prayer: Lord, remind me today that You walk with me into every hard place.

My Tent

2 Corinthians 5:1

“Now we know that if the earthly tent we live in is dismantled, we have a building from God, an eternal house in heaven, not built by human hands.”

The author of Harry Potter once said,  “Death is but the next great adventure.” I love that quote, but Paul goes further.

Paul was a tentmaker by trade, so when he reached for a metaphor to describe the human body, he knew the subject. A tent is functional and necessary, but temporary. It is designed to come down. 

Paul writes with striking confidence. He said, if the earthly tent, our body,  is dismantled, we already have a building from God. One that is eternal and not built by human hands. Notice that Paul does not say we will receive but we have. The plan is already secured in Christ. Resurrection life is not a possibility awaiting God’s approval; it is a promise awaiting our arrival. 

We are pilgrims. The tent comes down, but we are never left without a home.

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

Suggested Prayer: Lord, when this tent grows weary, remind me that my eternal home is already secured and waiting. 

God Still Goes…

Joshua 1:9
“Have I not commanded you? Be strong and courageous. Do not be afraid; do not be discouraged, for the LORD your God will be with you wherever you go.”

This verse isn’t a blanket promise that everything we attempt will succeed. Joshua heard these words at a specific moment, for a specific mission God had given him. But even though the promise isn’t ours in the same way, the heart behind it still speaks to us. 

Here is what it says to us. God’s character hasn’t changed. He is still faithful. Still present. Still walking with His people. So when life feels uncertain or the path ahead looks intimidating, we can rest in this steady truth: we are never alone. God goes with us, not to guarantee our plans, but to guide our steps.

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

Suggested Prayer:
Lord, steady my heart with Your presence. Give me courage for today, confidence in Your nearness, and trust that You will guide me faithfully.

Don’t Give Up

Galatians 6:9
Let us not grow weary in well-doing, for in due time we will reap a harvest if we do not give up.

Paul understands tired hearts. He knows that doing good can drain us when the results are slow. A kind word may seem unnoticed. A prayer may feel unanswered. A gift may look too small. But good work is seed, and seed spends time in hidden places before it becomes a harvest. Look at the phrase, “in due time.” God is not late because we are waiting. He is working in the soil where we cannot see. 

The farmer does not quit because the field is quiet. He trusts the season. So keep loving, serving, praying, teaching, and giving. The harvest belongs to God, but being faithful is your work. Do not give up. Grace is growing beneath the ground even today.

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

Suggested Prayer:Father, strengthen my weary heart, help me keep doing good, and teach me to trust Your perfect harvest time.

Meet Mary Magadalene

John 20:1 — “Early on the first day of the week, while it was still dark, Mary Magdalene went to the tomb and saw that the stone had been removed from the entrance.”

Before the sun came up, before the city stirred, Mary was already moving toward a tomb. That tells you much about this woman.

When we first meet her, Jesus is casting seven demons out of her. Seven is the number of completeness. Whatever darkness she had walked in, it had her completely.

And then Jesus set her free.

She became a financial supporter of His ministry, stood at the cross when disciples fled, and became the first person to announce the resurrection.

God is not impressed by your past or intimidated by it. He simply calls your name.

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

Suggested Prayer: Lord, thank You for calling our name regardless of our past. May we, like Mary, recognize Your voice and follow. 

First, Know Him!

Exodus 3:6
“Then He said, ‘I am the God of your father, the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob.’ At this, Moses hid his face, for he was afraid to look at God.”

You may know how this story ends. Moses did as good said, even though he was afraid. Moses didn’t gain courage by staring at the burning bush. He gained it by seeing the God who stood behind the flame. Before God gave Moses a mission, He gave Moses a revelation of Himself. 

That’s still how God works with us. Strength doesn’t begin with strategy. It begins with seeing God clearly. When we slow down long enough to recognize His holiness, His faithfulness, and His presence, something shifts inside us. Fear gives way to reverence. Reverence gives birth to courage. And courage grows in the moments when we face God before facing anything else.

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

Suggested Prayer: Lord, help me see You clearly, honor You deeply, and find courage in Your presence before I face the challenges ahead.

God Sees Me

Genesis 16:13

“So Hagar gave this name to the LORD who had spoken to her: ‘You are the God who sees me,’ for she said, ‘Here I have seen the One who sees me!'”

She was alone in the wilderness — used, hurt, forgotten by people who should have protected her. No one was looking for her. No one came to check. And yet, in the emptiest place of her life, she discovered something that would carry her name through thousands of years of human history: God saw her. Not past her. Not around her. He saw her — her wound, her fear, her story. 

He already knew what had brought her to the desert before she said a word. But He asked anyway, because He wanted her to know she was worth the conversation. That is the God we serve. 

He does not miss the quietly suffering. He does not overlook the ones the world has set aside. Whatever wilderness you are sitting in today, whatever grief you carry that no one else knows — you are not invisible. The God who found Hagar in the desert has already found you.

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

Suggested Prayer: Father, in my wilderness moments, remind me that You see me completely and love me still.

No Shame!

Romans 1:16

I am not ashamed of the gospel, because it is the power of God for salvation to everyone who believes, first to the Jew, then to the Greek.

There is a difference between advice and power. Advice tells you what to do. Power actually does something. Paul had felt that difference personally. The gospel had not simply given him better information, it had changed him from the inside out. That is why he was not ashamed. 

Folks do not hide something that works. Our deepest need has never been a better set of instructions. It has always been rescue. The gospel is God reaching into a life that cannot fix itself and doing what only He can do. 

Stand in that. Be bold in that. The message you carry is not your opinion. It is the power of God.

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

 Suggested Prayer: Father, remind me daily that the gospel is Your power at work. Help me be bold and unashamed to share it.

Before You Criticize

Romans 1:8

First, I thank my God through Jesus Christ for all of you, because your faith is being proclaimed all over the world.

Before the apostle Paul offered any instruction, correction, or deep theological explanation to the Roman church, he simply paused to give thanks. He began with gratitude. This is a beautiful, quiet lesson for our own busy lives. We often rush to fix people, correct their mistakes, or offer our unsolicited advice before we stop to appreciate them? 

Paul did not just thank God for a few close friends; he thanked God for all of them. He looked past their different personalities and quirks, seeing one united family. 

Today, before you speak into the life of another, try pausing to thank God for them first. Gratitude changes everything.

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

Suggested Prayer: Lord, help me see others through Your eyes of grace. Teach me to lead with gratitude before I offer correction.

Enough to Start

John 9:11

“The man they call Jesus made some mud and anointed my eyes, and He told me to go to Siloam and wash. So I went and washed and received my sight.”

There is something beautiful about this man’s testimony. He did not have all the answers. He simply knew what had happened to him and that was enough. “I was blind. I went. I washed. I can see.” Faith begins not with a complete understanding of Jesus, but with a single, honest encounter. 

His knowledge of Jesus grew in stages. To him, Jesus was first a man, then a prophet, then the Son of God. That is how it works for most of us. We start with what we know. We follow the instruction we have been given. And somewhere between going and washing, his faith grew. No disability, whether physical, spiritual, or emotional, is permanent in the hands of God. He meets you where your understanding ends and carries you further than you imagined.

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

Suggested Prayer: Lord, help me trust what I know of You today, and lead me forward.

Mary at the Grave

John 20:15

“Tell me where you have put Him, and I will get Him.”

She came to the grave looking for Jesus. When he was gone, she told the gardener (really Jesus), “I’ll go get his body).

She had no plan. No help. No idea how she would carry a body on her own. But love doesn’t stop to do the math. Mary’s offer was impossible and she should have known it, but devotion does not calculate, it simply goes. There is something beautiful about faith that refuses to quit even when things seem impossible. 

She came to the tomb with nothing but a heart that would not stop reaching. God honors that kind of love. He meets the one who keeps showing up, keeps asking, keeps refusing to walk away empty-handed. You don’t need a plan. You need a heart that won’t stop moving toward Him.

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

Suggested Prayer: Lord, give me the love that doesn’t wait for a plan, but keeps reaching for You.

Bent but Not Forgotten

Luke 13:12

“When Jesus saw her, He called her over and said, ‘Woman, you are set free from your disability.'”

She didn’t raise her hand. She didn’t call out His name. She simply showed up — bent, broken, carrying eighteen years of silent suffering. And Jesus saw her.

That’s the part that is especially worth remembering. He saw her.

There are seasons when pain becomes so familiar that it feels permanent. A time when you stop expecting change. A time when you arrive at worship simply out of habit. But even then we must remember that nothing is too old, too heavy, or too broken for Jesus to reverse. 

Your long wait does not bore Him. Your chronic struggle does not overwhelm Him. He is not waiting for you to get His attention. You are not overlooked. You are not forgotten. You are seen.

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

Suggested Prayer: Lord, where I’ve stopped hoping, remind me that Your eyes have never left me.

Amazing Faith

Matthew 8:10 

When Jesus heard this, He marveled and said to those following Him, “Truly I say to you, I have not found such great faith with anyone in Israel.”

A Roman soldier had no business being there. He commanded a hundred men. He answered to Caesar. Yet here he stood, hat in hand, asking a Jew for help. No entitlement. No demands. Just quiet confidence in One he had never followed but somehow fully trusted. 

He didn’t need Jesus in the room. He just needed His word. Jesus stopped and marveled. Not at a lifetime of synagogue attendance or not at memorized scripture. He marveled at a soldier who simply believed Jesus could do what He said.

Faith doesn’t require a long history with God. Sometimes outsiders see clearly what insiders miss. The centurion understood authority. He recognized it standing in front of him. You don’t need perfect credentials to come to Jesus. You need what the soldier had: confidence that His word is enough.

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

Suggested Prayer: Lord, give me the centurion’s simple faith. Faith that Your word alone is enough.

Fault Finding

Luke 7:39
When the Pharisee who had invited Jesus saw this, he said to himself, “If this man were a prophet, He would know who this is and what kind of woman is touching Him, for she is a sinner!”

Jesus walks into places where hearts are closed, motives are mixed, and judgments hang in the air. He steps across the thresholds we build. In Simon’s home, He saw a woman the way grace always sees—through the lens of possibility, not shame.

Simon noticed her sin; Jesus noticed her need. We sometimes do the same, missing our own faults while pointing out someone else’s stains. Yet Jesus keeps coming close. He sits at our table, even when our welcome is half‑hearted. His love doesn’t wait for perfect motives. It simply arrives, offering the healing we didn’t know we needed.

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

Suggested Prayer: Lord, open my eyes to Your mercy, soften my pride, and help me welcome Your transforming love.

Life Met Death There

Luke 7:13
When the Lord saw her, He had compassion on her and said, “Do not weep.”

Two processions met at the gate that day. One followed Jesus. One followed a coffin. They were heading in opposite directions, and so were the kingdoms they represented. Death was winning on one side. Life was walking on the other. But then Jesus saw her. Not the crowd. Not the tragedy. Her. A widow stripped of everything: husband gone, son gone, future gone. In that culture, she had nothing left.

Nobody had asked Him to stop. Nobody flagged Him down. His heart moved first. That’s who He is. He still walks toward the brokenhearted before they find the words to call out to Him. He saw her. He stopped her. He spoke to her.

He does the same for you!

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

Suggested Prayer: Lord, when grief silences my voice, remind me that Your compassion moves toward me before I can even ask.

The Tax Man’s Call

Matthew 9:9
As Jesus went on from there, He saw a man named Matthew sitting at the tax booth. “Follow Me,” He told him, and Matthew got up and followed Him.

You also were not waiting in a quiet place when God called you. Neither was Matthew. He was knee-deep in ledgers, coins clicking, and customers grumbling. He was fully occupied in the life he knew. Jesus walked right past the synagogue to find him.

That tells you something. God is not looking for empty schedules. He is looking for willing hearts. The call came like a thunderclap in two words: Follow Me! It was not an invitation to consider. It was a command to obey. And here is the harder truth: Matthew could not follow without first leaving. The booth had to stay behind. Whatever holds you in place holds you back.

Jesus still walks past busy desks, cluttered lives, and comfortable routines. He is still speaking. The only question is whether you will answer.

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

Suggested Prayer: Lord, find me where I am, speak clearly into my busyness, and give me courage to rise and follow You.

How God Works

John 5:6
“When Jesus saw him lying there and learned that he had been in this condition for a long time, he asked him, ‘Do you want to get well?’”

In a place full of suffering, Jesus focused on one man. That’s who Jesus is. He is personal, intentional, and attentive. He doesn’t just see crowds; He sees you.

His question, “Do you want to get well?” goes deeper than the surface. It’s not just about physical healing, it’s about readiness. Healing requires a willing heart, one that’s open to change.

For years, the man placed his hope in the water. His breakthrough didn’t come from the method he trusted; it came from the voice of Jesus standing right next to him.

We also can fixate on how God will move, and miss the truth that He’s already here? For years the man placed his hope in how God should work and missed the truth that God is already here. Trust God. He knows what is best for us.

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

Prayer: Lord, shift my focus from the method to Your presence. Give me a willing heart that’s ready for true healing.