Thursday, April 30, 2026

Nobody Noticed #RTTBROS #Nightlight

Nobody Noticed #RTTBROS #Nightlight

"For who hath despised the day of small things?" — Zechariah 4:10
On May 14, 1804, thirty-three men quietly pushed off from a muddy riverbank in Illinois and started paddling west. No crowd gathered to watch. No newspaper covered it. No one gave a speech. Meriwether Lewis and William Clark simply looked at each other, gave the order, and the Corps of Discovery slipped into the current of the Missouri River without a single person calling it historic.
Nobody noticed. And yet that quiet, unremarkable morning launched one of the greatest journeys of exploration in American history, opening up an entire continent and changing the course of a nation.
I think about that a lot, especially in my work as a chaplain. I sit with people at the end of their lives, and I hear the same thing over and over. The moments they thought would matter most often didn't, and the moments nobody noticed, a kind word to a struggling child, a prayer said alone in a dark room, a quiet decision to keep going when quitting felt easier, those turned out to be the ones that changed everything.
That's the heart of what Zechariah 4:10 is asking us. "Who hath despised the day of small things?" The answer, if we're honest, is most of us. We're waiting for the dramatic moment, the clear sign, the burning bush. And all the while God is working in the Tuesday mornings nobody writes about.
Here's what I've learned, and I am too soon old and too late smart on this one: most of the great things God does in a life start so small that the person living it doesn't even recognize it as a beginning. The conversation that plants a seed. The scripture that quietly takes root. The small step of obedience that sets a whole new direction in motion.
Friend, your Lewis and Clark moment may have already started. You may already be in the river and not know it yet. Don't despise the day of small things. Because history is just HIS story, and He has a way of making the unnoticed moments the ones that matter most.
Let's pray: Lord, forgive us for waiting on the dramatic while You're working in the daily. Help us to be faithful in the small, quiet, unnoticed moments, trusting that You are doing something in us and through us that is far greater than we can see right now. In Jesus' name, Amen.
#BibleWisdomDaily #ChristianWisdom #PracticalBiblicalWisdom #FaithfulInSmallThings #DailyDevotion #ScripturalWisdom #TrustGod #RTTBROS #Nightlight
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SHOW NOTES
Episode Title: Nobody Noticed | Nightlight with RTTBROS
Episode Description: On May 14, 1804, the most important journey in American exploration began without a single person calling it historic. Tonight on Nightlight we pull that story alongside Zechariah 4:10 and ask a question that practical biblical wisdom has been asking for centuries: what if God is already doing something significant in your life right now, and you just don't recognize it as a beginning yet? This is bible wisdom daily for anyone who's been waiting on the dramatic while God is working in the daily.
Scripture: Zechariah 4:10
Full Transcript: see above
Reflection Questions:
What small, quiet act of faithfulness have you been undervaluing because it doesn't feel significant enough?
Looking back on your life, can you identify a moment that seemed unremarkable at the time but turned out to be a turning point God was orchestrating?
What would it look like for you to show up faithfully in the small things this week, trusting God with the outcome you can't yet see?
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Wednesday, April 29, 2026

The Seventh Look #RTTBROS #Nightlight




The Seventh Look #RTTBROS #Nightlight

"Elijah was a man subject to like passions as we are, and he prayed earnestly...and he prayed again, and the heaven gave rain, and the earth brought forth her fruit." — James 5:17-18

There's something in this passage I've never been able to shake loose from my heart.

James makes the point that Elijah was no superhero. He was a man of "like passions," which means he got tired, got discouraged, got scared, just like you and me. And yet, this ordinary man with an extraordinary God prayed and shut up the heavens for three and a half years.

The part that really grabs me is found in 1 Kings 18, up on Mount Carmel, after the fire had already fallen and the people had cried "The LORD, he is God!" Elijah cast himself down on the earth, put his face between his knees, and prayed for rain. Then he sent his servant to look toward the sea. The servant came back, "There is nothing." Six times, nothing. Not a cloud. Not a wisp.

Here's where it gets personal. Most of us give up somewhere between look one and look six. I'm too soon old and too late smart on this one, because I've walked away from more than a few altars before the seventh look.

But Elijah kept his face in the dirt and kept praying. On the seventh look, the servant saw a cloud the size of a man's hand. That was enough. Before long, "the heaven was black with clouds and wind, and there was a great rain."

Friend, maybe you're on look number four today. The sky still looks empty. The answer hasn't come. The prodigal hasn't come home. The door is still closed.

Don't stop. History is just HIS story, and yours isn't finished being written.

Persistent prayer isn't a lack of faith when the answer is delayed. It IS the faith. Keep your face between your knees. The cloud is coming, and it starts small.

Let's pray: Father, give us the faith of Elijah, not just to ask once, but to keep asking, keep watching, and keep believing even when the sky looks empty. In Jesus' name, Amen.

#Prayer #Faith #Elijah #PersistentPrayer #BibleWisdomDaily #ChristianWisdom #PracticalBiblicalWisdom #RTTBROS #Nightlight

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Show Notes

Episode Title: The Seventh Look, Nightlight with RTTBROS

Episode Description: When Elijah prayed for rain on Mount Carmel, the sky stayed empty six times before the answer came. In this episode, Gene walks through that powerful story and delivers practical biblical wisdom for anyone who is tempted to stop praying before the seventh look. If your prayer feels like it's hitting the ceiling, this word is for you.

Scripture: James 5:17-18; 1 Kings 18:41-45

Transcript: (insert above)

Reflection Questions:
1. Is there a prayer you have stopped sending your "servant to look" on, because the answer seemed too delayed? What would it look like to return to that prayer with renewed persistence?
2. Elijah prayed privately and persistently after a very public victory. How do you maintain passionate prayer when no one is watching and nothing visible is happening?
3. James says Elijah was a man "of like passions." How does knowing that this great man of prayer was ordinary like you change how you approach your own prayer life?

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Monday, April 27, 2026

Who Are You #RTTBROS #Nightlight

Who Are You? #RTTBROS #Nightlight
You Are Not Your Diagnosis
(On identity and mental health, drawing on Tim Clinton and the Soul Care Bible's core message)
You Are Not Your Diagnosis 

"For I am persuaded, that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor powers, nor things present, nor things to come, nor height, nor depth, nor any other creature, shall be able to separate us from the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus our Lord." — Romans 8:38-39
I want to talk to you tonight about something that I see happen to people, good people, people of faith, people I care about deeply. They receive a diagnosis. Depression. Anxiety disorder. PTSD. Bipolar disorder. And slowly, almost without realizing it, that diagnosis becomes their identity. They stop being themselves and start being their condition.
Tim Clinton, who served as the executive editor of the Soul Care Bible and as president of the American Association of Christian Counselors, has built much of his life's work around one central conviction: that God cares for the whole person, and that no matter what someone is walking through, the message of the gospel is that their identity is secure in Christ.
Now, I want to be careful here, because I'm not saying diagnoses aren't real. I've been a chaplain long enough to know they are very real. I'm not suggesting anyone stop taking their medication or avoid professional help. Please don't hear that. What I am saying is something different.
Your diagnosis describes something you are experiencing. It does not define who you are.
You are a child of God. You are someone Jesus thought was worth dying for. You are someone the Holy Spirit has taken up residence in, if you know Christ. And Paul's magnificent declaration in Romans 8 doesn't have a footnote that says "except for people with mental health struggles." Nothing, absolutely nothing, separates you from the love of God in Christ Jesus.
I'm too soon old and too late smart, but one of the things I've come to believe with everything in me is this: the enemy loves nothing more than to take your hardest season and convince you it's your permanent address. It isn't. You are passing through. And the One who walks with you through it knows every step of the path, because history is just HIS story, and your chapter is not finished yet.
You are not your diagnosis. You are His.
Let's pray: Father, speak identity over the weary hearts listening tonight. Remind us that our worth was settled at the cross, not in a doctor's office. You love us completely, in our struggles and through them. In Jesus' name, Amen.
#Identity #MentalHealth #SoulCare #YouAreHis #Faith #ChristianLiving #RTTBROS #Nightlight
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Saturday, April 25, 2026

Silencing the Accuser #RTTBROS #Nightlight


Silencing the Accuser #RTTBROS #Nightlight
"Neither give place to the devil." — Ephesians 4:27

I came across something recently that stopped me cold. A woman on a Christian video channel called Praise & Pastries with Amber Mercad. She was sharing something most of us have felt but rarely say out loud, the voice that whispers doubt into your ear at the worst possible moment.

You know the one. It starts quiet, almost reasonable. Look at you. You really think you're forgiven? Shouldn't it be easier to obey? Maybe you're not even saved at all.

That's the accuser, and he is very good at his job.

But here's what made this moment so powerful. She didn't fall apart. She didn't argue with the voice. She did what the Word tells us to do, she opened her mouth and spoke truth right back at it. She said, "No weapon formed against me shall prosper, and every tongue that rises against me in judgment, I shall condemn. I rebuke every lie being whispered by the accuser of the brethren. He is a liar, the father of lies, and there is no truth in him. But I am a child of God."

And she kept going. "I am saved by grace through faith alone. I am forgiven. I have been redeemed by the blood of Jesus. My life is hidden with Christ in God. He who has begun a good work in me will complete it until the day of His return."

Friend, I'm too soon old and too late smart, but I'll tell you this much: one of the enemy's oldest tricks is to make you doubt what God has already settled. He has no new material. Just the same tired lies dressed up in your own voice.

The answer isn't to argue theology with the devil. The answer is exactly what this young woman did. Speak the Word. Out loud. With conviction. Because he cannot stand in the presence of truth.

"Submit yourselves therefore to God. Resist the devil, and he will flee from you." (James 4:7) That's not a suggestion. That's a promise.

Your identity isn't up for debate. If you are in Christ, you are hidden with Christ in God (Colossians 3:3). That's settled ground. Stand on it.

Let's pray: Father, when the accuser comes whispering, help us open our mouths and speak Your truth louder than his lies. Remind us who we are in You, not because of what we've done, but because of what Your Son has done. In Jesus' name, Amen.

#SpiritualWarfare #IdentityInChrist #ChristianWisdom #BiblicalWisdom #DailyDevotion #PracticalBiblicalWisdom #BibleWisdomDaily #RTTBROS #Nightlight

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Show Notes

Episode Title: Silencing the Accuser, Nightlight with RTTBROS

Episode Description: When the enemy whispers doubt into your ear, the answer isn't silence. This devotion draws from a powerful moment shared on Praise and Pastries, where a woman of faith pushed back against the accuser with the Word of God and won. If you've ever questioned your salvation or felt the weight of condemnation, this episode is for you. Biblical wisdom teaching reminds us that our identity in Christ is settled ground, not up for debate.

Scripture: Ephesians 4:27, James 4:7, Colossians 3:3

Full Transcript: [above]

Reflection Questions:
1. What lies does the accuser most frequently whisper to you, and what specific scripture could you speak back to silence them?
2. What does it mean to you personally that your life is "hidden with Christ in God"?
3. How does speaking the Word aloud, rather than just thinking it, change the way you resist doubt and condemnation?

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Tuesday, April 21, 2026

Joni's Secret #RTTBROS #Nightlight

Joni's Secret #RTTBROS #Nightlight
(Biographical, based on Joni Eareckson Tada's contributions to the Soul Care Bible and her life story)
 
"My grace is sufficient for thee: for my strength is made perfect in weakness." — 2 Corinthians 12:9
In the summer of 1967, a seventeen-year-old girl dove into the Chesapeake Bay and in an instant, her life changed forever. The water was shallower than she knew. She hit the bottom and came up paralyzed from the shoulders down. Her name was Joni Eareckson, and what happened in the years that followed is one of the most remarkable stories in modern Christian history.
Now, I could tell you the triumphant version, the one where she becomes a celebrated author, artist, and speaker, and all of that is absolutely true. But I want to tell you the part that doesn't always make the highlight reel. Because Joni has been remarkably honest about it.
In the early years, she went through profound depression. She begged friends to help her die. She wrestled with God in a way that was raw and desperate and real. She has written about lying in her hospital bed, unable to move, and thinking that the God she had grown up believing in must have abandoned her.
And then, slowly, something shifted. Not the circumstances. She is still in that wheelchair today, more than fifty years later. What shifted was what Joni describes as learning to receive grace. Not just believe in it theologically, but actually receive it, moment by moment, as the only thing sufficient for what she was carrying.
She became one of the contributors to the Soul Care Bible precisely because of what she walked through, because she knows firsthand what it means to need soul care. And she has said that her disability, the very thing she once begged God to remove, became the thing through which she found God most deeply.
That doesn't mean suffering is good. It means God is. There is a difference.
Paul wrote, "My grace is sufficient for thee: for my strength is made perfect in weakness." Joni's life is living proof that this is not just poetry. It is a promise with skin on it.
If you are struggling tonight with something that has not changed despite your prayers, I want to offer you Joni's secret: God's sufficiency is not measured against your strength. It's measured against your weakness. And it is always enough.
Let's pray: Lord, we thank You for the witness of lives like Joni's. For the testimony that Your grace holds when nothing else does. Meet each person tonight in their weakness, and let Your strength be made perfect there. In Jesus' name, Amen.
#SoulCare #MentalHealth #JoniEarecksonTada #Grace #ChristianLiving #HopeInSuffering #RTTBROS #Nightlight
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Monday, April 20, 2026

The Prophet Under the Juniper Tree #Nightlight #RTTBROS #Depression #Sadness #Prayer

The Prophet Under the Juniper Tree #Nightlight #RTTBROS #Depression #Sadness #Prayer
(On depression, drawing on Charles Swindoll's pastoral insight and the Soul Care Bible)

"But he himself went a day's journey into the wilderness, and came and sat down under a juniper tree: and he requested for himself that he might die." — 1 Kings 19:4
If you had to pick the last person you'd expect to find collapsed under a tree, begging God to let him die, I think most of us would put Elijah pretty near the top of the list. This was the man who had just called down fire from heaven on Mount Carmel. He had faced down 450 prophets of Baal and won. And then Jezebel sent him one threatening message, and he ran for his life and fell apart completely.
I used to read that passage and think, well, that's odd. But the longer I've done this work, the longer I've sat with people in dark seasons, the more I think it's one of the most honest, most human passages in all of Scripture.
Charles Swindoll, one of the great pastor-teachers whose wisdom is woven through the Soul Care Bible, has pointed out something important about how God responded to Elijah in that moment. He didn't rebuke him. He didn't lecture him about his lack of faith. He didn't send a preacher. He sent an angel. And the angel's first ministry to this broken, suicidal prophet was not a sermon. It was a meal and a nap.
"Arise and eat," the angel said. "The journey is too great for thee" (1 Kings 19:5, 7).
God acknowledged that Elijah was physically and emotionally depleted, and He met that need first. Sleep. Food. Gentle care. Before the still small voice came. Before the recommissioning. Before any of that, God tended to the body and the soul of His exhausted servant.
If you are in a season of depression tonight, I need you to hear this. God is not disappointed in you. He knows the journey has been too great. He is not standing over you with His arms crossed. He is kneeling down beside that juniper tree with provision and presence.
And this, too: if someone you love is under their own juniper tree right now, don't lead with theology. Lead with a meal and a presence. Sometimes the most spiritual thing you can do is show up, sit down, and say, "You don't have to explain yourself. I'm just here."
Depression is real. It is not a character flaw. And the same God who restored Elijah, who sent him back out to finish the work, is able to restore the most exhausted soul among us.
Let's pray: Father, thank You for the honesty of Your Word. Thank You for showing us a broken prophet and a gentle God. For everyone listening tonight who is under their juniper tree, come near. You know exactly what they need. Amen.
#Depression #MentalHealth #SoulCare #Hope #Elijah #ChristianLiving #RTTBROS #Nightlight
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Saturday, April 18, 2026

When the Music Stopped #RTTBROS #Nightlight


Episode Title: When the Music Stopped 
Nightlight with RTTBROS

Tonight on Nightlight, we look at the life of Ira Sankey, the great gospel singer who couldn't see what God was doing until everything fell apart. If you've ever been in a season where nothing made sense and the path forward was hidden, this practical biblical wisdom from Proverbs 3 is for you. We dig into what it really means to trust God with your whole heart, and why leaning on your own understanding has a ceiling that God's wisdom never hits. This is bible wisdom daily for anyone who needs a reminder that God hasn't lost the plot on your story.
Scripture: Proverbs 3:5-6

Full Transcript:
On April 9, 1865, a Confederate soldier named Ira Sankey was sitting in a prison camp wondering if his life was over. The war was ending, the cause was lost, and everything he thought his future would look like had crumbled. He had no idea that within just a few years, he would become the most famous gospel singer in the world, traveling alongside D.L. Moody, leading thousands to Christ in revival meetings across America and England. Ira Sankey's greatest chapter hadn't ended. It hadn't even started yet.
I think about that a lot when I'm sitting with people at the end of their lives. I've had more bedside conversations than I can count with folks who look back on the hardest, most confusing seasons of their lives and say the same thing, almost word for word: "I couldn't see it then, but God knew exactly what He was doing."
That's the heart of Proverbs 3:5-6. "Lean not unto thine own understanding." Now, that's not telling us to check our brains at the door. It's telling us that our understanding has a ceiling and God's doesn't. We see the chapter we're in. He sees the whole book.
Here's what I've learned, and I am too soon old and too late smart on this one: the moments that felt like dead ends were often the moments God was setting up something I never could have arranged for myself. The detour was the destination in disguise.
Maybe today you're in one of those confusing chapters. The music has stopped and you can't figure out why. Friend, acknowledge Him in that. Bring Him your confusion, your fear, your "I don't understand this, Lord." That's not weak faith. That's exactly the kind of honest trust Proverbs is talking about.
Because history is just HIS story, and He hasn't lost the plot on yours.
Let's pray: Lord, today we choose to trust what we cannot yet see. Thank You that Your understanding has no ceiling and Your paths are always good. Direct us, even through the confusion. In Jesus' name, Amen.
Reflection Questions:
What situation in your life right now are you trying to figure out on your own instead of bringing to God?
Can you look back on a past "dead end" that turned out to be a detour God was using? What did that teach you about His faithfulness?
What would it look like practically for you to "acknowledge Him" in the middle of your current confusion?
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#BiblicalWisdom #ChristianWisdom #TrustGod #PracticalBiblicalWisdom #DailyDevotion #ScripturalWisdom #Faith #RTTBROS #Nightlight
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