Sunday, June 28, 2026

The Portrait And The Person #RTTBROS #Nightlight

The Portrait And The Person #RTTBROS #Nightlight 

I had the privilege of preaching this past Sunday at Twin Falls Church of the Nazarene, and I want to share something with you that I think could change the way you read your Bible. We were in Hebrews chapter 4, and the big idea is this - the Bible is not the destination. It is the road. The written Word of God is like a letter from someone you love deeply. You read it slowly, you feel them in every word, and it is a precious thing. But the letter is not the person. It was made to point you to the Person. The Bible is the portrait. Jesus is the Person. And the whole point of the portrait is to make you want the Person so badly you cannot stay away from Him.

Now, Hebrews 4:12 tells us that the Word of God is quick and powerful and sharper than any two-edged sword. That word "quick" does not mean fast. It means alive. And here is what Pastor James helped me see when John opens his gospel and says "in the beginning was the Word," that is the same Greek word used right here in Hebrews. The written Word and the living Word are connected. And the sword of verse 12 belongs to a Person because verse 13 makes the shift from "it" to "Him." He sees everything. The thoughts, the intents, the fear underneath the anger, the wound underneath the performance. Nothing is managed or hidden before Him. And most people, when they hear that, want to get up and leave. But Hebrews does not stop there.

What the writer does next is one of the most beautiful pivots in all of Scripture. The terror of verse 13 is immediately answered by the mercy of verse 14. We have a great High Priest. Jesus did not study our weakness from a distance - He inhabited it. He moved into the full weight of human experience. In the 1800s there was a priest named Father Damien who went to a Hawaiian leper colony where people were sent to disappear. He dressed their wounds. He built their coffins. For years he was a whole man ministering to broken ones and there was always a gap. Then one morning he stood to preach and said two words he had never used before "We lepers." He had contracted the disease himself. That is a picture of Jesus. He said "we lepers" about you and me. And He carried it all the way through without giving in - which means He knows the weight of your temptation better than you do, because we tap out before we ever feel the full force of it. He carried it to the other side of victory, and now He is reaching back.

That brings us to verse 16, and I want you to hear this. In the Old Testament, the throne room of God was the most terrifying address in the universe. They tied a rope around the High Priest's ankle before he went behind the veil, in case the glory of God struck him down. Nobody got in uninvited. But now now the writer says "let us therefore come boldly." That throne has been given a new name. Grace. And you have been told to come not trembling, not performing, not with your life cleaned up first but boldly, with everything you are carrying right there in your hands. Some of you have been carrying something for a long time that you have never told anyone. He already sees it. And His response to everything He sees in you is not to turn away. His response is come. Come right now. The portrait points you to the Person, and the Person is still saying the same thing He has always said to weary people who are one step from giving up - come and find mercy for what is past, and grace for what is coming.

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Thursday, June 25, 2026

Living for the Eternal #RTTBROS #NIGHTLIGHT #AMERICA250 USA250 #NATION250

Living for the Eternal #RTTBROS #NIGHTLIGHT #AMERICA250 USA250 #NATION250
 Living for the Eternal
“...for the things which are seen are temporal; but the things which are not seen are eternal.”
 2 Corinthians 4:18

 THE STORY
The final hours of Alexander Hamilton’s life were fought not on a battlefield or a political floor, but in the quiet chambers of his own soul. Following his fatal duel with Aaron Burr at Weehawken, New Jersey, on July 11th, 1804, Hamilton was carried across the Hudson River to the home of a friend in Manhattan, where he lingered in agony for thirty-six hours.
As the end drew near, the brilliant, combative architect of the American financial system completely lost interest in the temporal political battles that had consumed his adult life. He called for the Reverend Benjamin Moore, the Episcopal Bishop of New York, to administer Holy Communion.
Hamilton drifted from the faith that had formed him and spent years living at a distance from the Father who saw him all along. And in his final hours, he turned toward home. The Father ran.
The founding era was full of imperfect men. So is every era. What this story offers us, on the 250th anniversary of the nation Hamilton helped build, is the reminder that the God of the founding is the God of the last hour, still running toward those who turn toward home.
 THE REFLECTION
Our daily routines are so often bound by the temporal—the tasks, the schedules, and the urgent demands of the visible world. Yet, true legacy is built when we look past the immediate and anchor our choices in what lasts beyond this life.
Like Hamilton in his final hours, we are reminded that worldly achievements fade, but our relationship with the Father and the spiritual stewardship of our days endure eternally. When we align our daily selections with Kingdom values, the frantic pace of the temporal yields to the steady peace of the eternal.
THE PATRIOT’S PRAYER
*Father, You are the God who runs. You do not wait for us to arrive clean and rehearsed and proven. You run while we are still a great way off, and we are so grateful for that. May no one who reads these words delay the turning. There is no distance too great for Your love to cover. Adjust our eyes to eternity today, Lord. Let our daily works reflect Your Kingdom, and help us to value what lasts beyond this life. In the name of Jesus Christ, who made the way home, Amen.*
PRAY IT FORWARD
Is there someone in your life who has drifted far from the Father? Pray for them today with the confidence of Luke 15, that the Father is already watching, already running, already ready to receive them. Ask God how your choices today can reflect eternal values rather than just temporal urgencies.


Tuesday, June 23, 2026

The Warning We Have Forgotten #RTTBROS #NIGHTLIGHT #USA250 #America250 #Nation250

The Warning We Have Forgotten
 #RTTBROS #NIGHTLIGHT #USA250  
#America250 #Nation250
The Warning We Have Forgotten
"Therefore whosoever heareth these sayings of mine, and doeth them, I will liken him unto a wise man, which built his house upon a rock."
— Matthew 7:24
THE STORY
Washington knew it would happen. He said so publicly, and then spent the rest of his life watching it begin.
His Farewell Address, delivered in September 1796, is one of the greatest documents in American history and one of the least read. His warning was specific and urgent: "Of all the dispositions and habits which lead to political prosperity, religion and morality are indispensable supports." Not helpful additions. Indispensable supports.
He went further: "In vain would that man claim the tribute of Patriotism, who should labour to subvert these great Pillars of human happiness." A man who works to remove religion and morality from public life, Washington said, has no business calling himself a patriot.
He warned against excessive partisanship, foreign entanglements, and the accumulation of national debt. He named the temptations that would always threaten the republic and warned against them with the plainness of a man who had nothing left to gain and only the truth left to give. He was ignored on nearly every point. Promptly and comprehensively.
THE REFLECTION
There is something almost unbearably poignant about a great man's farewell wisdom being set aside by the very people he served. Washington had earned the right to be heard. And the warning he left was grounded not in political theory but in lived conviction: without God, republics fall.
Matthew 7:24 is the conclusion of the Sermon on the Mount. The wise man builds on rock. The foolish man builds on sand. The difference between them is not intelligence or resources. It is whether they have heard Christ's words and done them.
Washington was applying the same principle to a nation. Build on religion and morality and the storms will come and the house will stand. Remove those pillars and build on human cleverness, and the end is predictable.
We have had two hundred and fifty years to test Washington's thesis. Every generation that has honored the pillars has prospered. Every generation that has subverted them has suffered. The warning was left for us. We still have time to hear it.
THE PATRIOT'S PRAYER
Lord, we confess that we have been among the generations that neglected the warning of the wise. We have allowed the pillars to be weakened, in our public life, in our schools, in our homes. We repent of the neglect and ask You to help us rebuild. Let this anniversary be not merely a celebration but a rededication, a return to the rock on which this nation was founded. In Jesus' name, Amen.
PRAY IT FORWARD
What one thing can you do this week, in your home, your church, or your community, to strengthen the pillars of religion and morality that Washington called indispensable? Ask God to show you, and do it.

Monday, June 22, 2026

The Cost of the Signature #RTTBROS #NIGHTLIGHT #USA250 #NATION250 #AMERICA250

The Cost of the Signature
 #RTTBROS #NIGHTLIGHT #USA250  
The Cost of the Signature
"For which of you, intending to build a tower, sitteth not down first, and counteth the cost?"
— Luke 14:28
THE STORY
They knew what they were signing.
The fifty-six men who placed their names on the Declaration of Independence were not acting on impulse. They were committing, in the plainest terms imaginable, an act of treason against the British Crown. The document itself acknowledged it — that to secure the rights they were declaring, they were pledging to each other "our lives, our fortunes, and our sacred honor."
Those were not empty words.
Nine of the fifty-six died as a result of the war. Five were captured and imprisoned by the British and treated brutally. Twelve had their homes ransacked or burned. Two lost sons in the conflict. One had his wife imprisoned until she died. Richard Stockton of New Jersey was subjected to conditions so harsh that his health never recovered. He died before the war ended, having watched his estate plundered and his papers burned.
Carter Braxton of Virginia, a wealthy planter, saw his ships seized by the British Navy and his fortune wiped out. He died in poverty.
Francis Lewis of New York had his home destroyed and his wife taken prisoner. She was held in brutal conditions for months, never fully recovered her health, and died in 1779.
They counted the cost. They signed anyway. And many of them paid exactly the price they had agreed to pay.
THE REFLECTION
Luke 14:28 is a verse about discipleship, not patriotism. Jesus uses the image of a man building a tower, the foolishness of beginning a project without calculating whether you have the resources to finish it. The point is not that the cost should discourage us. The point is that we should count it honestly before we commit, and then, having committed, be prepared to pay it.
The signers counted the cost. What they could not have counted was what their sacrifice would produce, a nation that two hundred and fifty years later still stands as the longest-running experiment in constitutional self-government in human history.
That is what sacrifices made in the right cause tend to produce. Not always visible results. Not always gratitude. Not always survival. But something that outlasts the sacrifice itself.
We owe these men more than a holiday. We owe them the same honest reckoning they made: the counting of what faithfulness to this inheritance will cost us, and the willingness to pay it. The freedoms we enjoy were not free. They were signed for with blood and honor and the quiet death of men whose names we have largely forgotten.
Remember them today. And count your own cost.

Friday, June 19, 2026

"The Author of the First Amendment," #RTTBROS #NIGHTLIGHT #USA250 #AMERICA250 #NATION250



"The Author of the First Amendment,"
 #RTTBROS #NIGHTLIGHT #USA250  
The Author of the First Amendment

"All scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness: that the man of God may be perfect, throughly furnished unto all good works."
— 2 Timothy 3:16-17

The Story

Almost nobody remembers who actually wrote the First Amendment.

James Madison proposed it. The House and Senate debated it. But the man who crafted the final wording was Fisher Ames of Massachusetts.

Fisher Ames was a congressman, a lawyer, and a man of strong Christian conviction. And he believed, with a certainty that would astonish modern interpreters of the First Amendment, that the Bible should be the foundational textbook of American education.

"Why should not the Bible regain the place it once held as a school book?" he wrote. "Its morals are pure, its examples captivating and noble." The Amendment he helped write was intended to prevent the establishment of a national denomination, not to make America religiously neutral. The author of the First Amendment wanted the Bible in every schoolroom in America.

The Reflection

The distance between what Fisher Ames intended and what the First Amendment has been interpreted to require in our own day is a measure of how far we have traveled from the founding.

The men who wrote the Constitution were not trying to build a secular republic. They were trying to prevent the entanglement of state power with a specific ecclesiastical institution. That is a very different thing from removing faith from public life.

2 Timothy 3:16-17 was not a disputed text for the founders. It was a settled conviction. Scripture was profitable, practically useful, for building the kind of citizens a free republic required.

When we removed the Book, we removed the foundation. The First Amendment protects the right to preach the gospel. The man who wrote it hoped we would.

The Patriot's Prayer

Lord, Your Word is profitable for this nation as much as for our souls. We confess that we have allowed Scripture to be driven from the places where it once shaped the minds of a free people. Restore a love for Your Word in the homes, schools, and hearts of this nation. Begin with us. May our own reverence for Scripture be so deep that those who watch our lives cannot miss it. In Jesus' name, Amen.

Pray It Forward

How deeply is Scripture embedded in your daily life, not just in devotional minutes, but in your decisions, your conversations, your parenting? Ask God to show you where the Book needs more room.

.


The Chief Justice’s Open Bible #RTTBROS #NIGHTLIGHT #USA250 #AMERICA250 #NATION250

The Chief Justice’s Open Bible
 #RTTBROS #NIGHTLIGHT #USA250 #AMERICA250 #NATION250
The Chief Justice’s Open Bible
“"Thy word is a lamp unto my feet, and a light unto my path.”
— Psalm 119:105
THE STORY
John Jay is one of the most important and most forgotten men of the founding era.
He co-authored the Federalist Papers alongside Hamilton and Madison. He served as the first Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court, appointed by Washington himself. He was a diplomat, a governor, a statesman of the first rank. And he was, without qualification or apology, a committed Christian who made no separation between his public life and his personal faith.
Providence has given to our people the choice of their rulers," Jay declared, "and it is the duty, as well as the privilege and interest of our Christian nation to select and prefer Christians for their rulers.
Jay served as president of the American Bible Society. He believed that the Bible was the best of all books, for it is the word of God and teaches us the way to be happy in this world and in the next. The first Chief Justice of the United States spent his final years distributing Bibles.


THE REFLECTION
There is a tendency in our time to divide the founding era between religious founders and secular founders. John Jay will not cooperate with that narrative.
Here was a man at the absolute center of America's legal and political founding, the first interpreter of the Constitution, and he believed that the Bible was the foundational text for human happiness. He said it publicly, repeatedly, without embarrassment.
What he models for us is something rarer than political savvy: the integration of faith and public life without apology. He did not have a public faith and a private faith. He had one faith, and he carried it everywhere.
Psalm 119:105 was not a decorative verse for John Jay. It was an operating principle. The Word of God was the lamp by which he navigated the most consequential legal questions of the new nation.


THE PATRIOT’S PRAYER
Lord, we thank You for men who carried Your Word into every room, the courtroom, the congress, the cabinet, without shame and without compartmentalization. Forgive us for the faith we have kept private when it should have been public. Let Your Word be a lamp to our feet in every room we enter today, not just the sacred ones. In Jesus' name, Amen.


PRAY IT FORWARD: Is there a room in your life, a workplace, a relationship, a role you occupy, where you have left your faith at the door? Ask God for the courage to carry it in.

Tuesday, June 16, 2026

The Preacher Behind the Constitution #RTTBROS #NIGHTLIGHT #USA250 #AMERICA250 #NATION250

The Preacher Behind the Constitution
 #RTTBROS #NIGHTLIGHT #USA250 #AMERICA250 #NATION250
The Preacher Behind the Constitution
“"The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked: who can know it?”
— Jeremiah 17:9
THE STORY
James Madison arrived at the Constitutional Convention with a plan.
He had spent the winter of 1786 to 1787 reading every book he could find on the history of governments. He studied them as a diagnostician, trying to understand why human governments so reliably collapse into tyranny or anarchy.
His conclusion was thoroughly biblical: the problem is human nature. People in power abuse it. Majorities oppress minorities. Madison's genius was in designing a system that took human sin seriously as a structural assumption. Checks and balances. Separation of powers. Federalism. Each element of the Constitution reflects a deep suspicion of concentrated human authority.
Madison had learned this from a Presbyterian minister. John Witherspoon, the only clergyman to sign the Declaration of Independence, was president of the College of New Jersey when Madison was a student. The Father of the Constitution was, in a real sense, the student of a preacher.


THE REFLECTION
Jeremiah 17:9 is not a comfortable verse. The heart is deceitful above all things. Desperately wicked. This is the anthropology of Scripture, which takes the Fall seriously.
Madison took it seriously. His Constitution was built for fallen people living in a fallen world, which is exactly why it has lasted longer than any comparable governing document in history. It does not assume the best about human nature. It builds in safeguards for the worst.
The irony is beautiful: the most successful secular governing document in human history works precisely because it was designed around a profoundly biblical understanding of human nature.
We live in an age that has recovered the Enlightenment's optimism about human nature, the belief that people given enough education will reliably choose good. History has not been kind to that view. Scripture has always been honest about it.


THE PATRIOT’S PRAYER
Lord, You know the heart better than we know ourselves, and we are grateful that You do not leave us to our own devices. We thank You for the wisdom You gave to the framers of this Constitution, wisdom that looked honestly at human nature and built accordingly. Forgive us for the ways we have trusted in our own goodness rather than Your grace. In Jesus' name, Amen.


PRAY IT FORWARD: Ask God today to show you an area of your own heart where you have been trusting in your own goodness rather than His grace, and receive His honest assessment with humility.