Wednesday, March 18, 2026

Closed Mouth, Open Sky #RTTBROS

A Closed Mouth and an Open Sky #RTTBROS #Nightlight

"Even a fool, when he holdeth his peace, is counted wise: and he that shutteth his lips is esteemed a man of understanding." — Proverbs 17:28
You know, Aesop told a story a long, long time ago that I just can't shake. There was a turtle who lived on a quiet pond, and his best friends were a couple of ducks. Every time those ducks came home, they'd tell him about the world out there, the rolling hills, the rivers, the glorious treetops, and old turtle would just sit there on his log, green with envy. He wanted to see what they saw.
Well, one day those kind-hearted ducks came up with a plan. They found a sturdy stick, each duck took one end in their beak, and they told the turtle, "Grab the middle with your mouth, hold on tight, and we'll show you the world. But whatever you do, don't let go, and don't say a word."
Up they went. And friend, the turtle saw it all. The patchwork fields below, the shimmer of rivers, the trees dressed in their finest. It was everything he'd ever wanted.
Then a crow flew alongside and hollered, "Well, I never! Surely this must be the king of all turtles!"
And the turtle, swelling with pride, opened his mouth to say, "Why, certainly!" And that was that.
A closed mouth gathers no foot, as they say. And Solomon, who was a good bit wiser than Aesop, put it this way: "Even a fool, when he holdeth his peace, is counted wise: and he that shutteth his lips is esteemed a man of understanding" (Proverbs 17:28).
I'm too soon old and too late smart on this one, I'll tell you that. I've talked when I should have listened. I've filled silence that God meant to be kept. Pride has a way of opening our mouth at exactly the wrong moment, and what we gain from letting loose is rarely worth what we lose.
Here's the thing about that turtle. He was doing just fine. He was soaring. All he had to do was hold on and enjoy the ride. But he couldn't let someone else have the last word.
Can you relate? I sure can.
So today, let me ask you this: is there a conversation, a comment, a comeback you need to just let go? Sometimes wisdom isn't in what you say. Sometimes it's in knowing when to stay quiet and keep holding on.
Let's pray. Lord, bridle my tongue today. Remind me that silence is often the wisest sermon I can preach. Help me hold on to what matters and let go of my need to have the last word. In Jesus' name, Amen.
#Wisdom #TamingTheTongue #Proverbs #ChristianLiving #Faith #DailyDevotion #BiblicalWisdom #RTTBROS #Nightlight
Be sure to Like, Share, Follow and subscribe, it helps get the word out.
https://linktr.ee/rttbros

Tuesday, March 17, 2026

A Wartime Walkie-Talkie #RTTBROS #Nightlight

A Wartime Walkie-Talkie #RTTBROS #Nightlight

"Praying always with all prayer and supplication in the Spirit, and watching thereunto with all perseverance and supplication for all saints." — Ephesians 6:18
You know, John Piper said something years ago that I haven't been able to shake loose. He said that prayer is a wartime walkie-talkie, not a domestic intercom to ring up the butler and ask for another pillow. When I first heard that, it stopped me cold. Because if I'm honest, I have to admit that a whole lot of my praying has looked a lot more like the intercom than the walkie-talkie.
Think about that image for a minute. A walkie-talkie on the battlefield is urgent. It's essential. A soldier doesn't pick up that radio and say, "Hey, while you've got a minute, could you make things a little more comfortable back here?" No. He keys that mic because he's in a fight, because the situation is serious, because he needs firepower and he needs it now. There's no casual tone on a battlefield radio. There's urgency. There's purpose.
But so many of us, and I include myself here, because I'm too soon old and too late smart on this one, we've wandered away from that battlefield mentality. We treat prayer like a nice spiritual habit, something we do before meals and at bedtime. A gentle, civilized little routine. And then we wonder why our prayers feel thin, why heaven seems quiet, why nothing seems to be happening.
Here's the thing. Paul didn't write Ephesians 6:18 from a comfortable study. He wrote it as a prisoner, in a real spiritual battle, surrounded by the full armor of God language, describing a real enemy. And right in the middle of all that armor, right after the sword of the Spirit, he says, "Praying always." Not "praying occasionally when things get rough." Always. Urgently. With all perseverance.
The reason prayer malfunctions for so many of us is that we've forgotten we're at war. We've gotten comfortable. We've pulled back from the front lines, and we're trying to use a battlefield radio to order room service.
Friend, history is just HIS story, and right now you have a role in it. You are on assignment. You have been given direct access to the General's headquarters. Use it. Pick up that walkie-talkie today, not to ask for more comfort, but to ask for strength, for wisdom, for the lost souls around you, for His kingdom to advance in this dark old world.
That's what prayer was made for.
Let's pray: Father, forgive us for treating prayer like a convenience and not a lifeline. We are in a battle whether we feel it or not. Tune our hearts to Your frequency today, and make our prayers urgent, faithful, and kingdom-focused. In Jesus' name, Amen.
#Prayer #SpiritualWarfare #ChristianLiving #DailyDevotion #Faith #BiblicalWisdom #EphesiansArmor #RTTBROS #Nightlight

Monday, March 16, 2026

Savior and Healer #RTTBROS #Nightlight

Two Doors, One Savior #RTTBROS #Nightlight

"Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest." — Matthew 11:28
John Eldredge said something that stopped me cold when I first read it. He said, "You can't repent your way out of brokenness, and you can't heal your way out of sin."
Now sit with that for just a moment, because that's a profound observation.
We live in a world that has divided itself into two camps, and honestly, the church has sometimes followed right along. On one side you've got the therapeutic culture, the counselors and the healing retreats and the inner child work, all telling us that what we really need is to understand our wounds and process our pain. On the other side, you've got the repentance-first crowd, and I've spent time in that camp myself, telling people that if they'd just straighten up and get right with God, everything would fall into place.
And here's the thing, both of those things matter. Repentance is real and necessary. Healing is real and necessary. But Eldredge is pointing out something we miss when we run to just one of those doors and slam the other one shut.
A broken person who is genuinely trying to repent their way to wholeness will find themselves on a treadmill of self-condemnation, because repentance deals with sin, not wounds. And a sinful person who is trying to heal their way into right standing with God will find themselves on a different treadmill entirely, because therapy, as good as it can be, cannot atone for sin. That's not its job.
What both the broken and the sinful need is the same thing. They need Jesus. All the way Jesus. Not a partial Jesus who only forgives, or a partial Jesus who only comforts. The whole Jesus, who said, "Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest" (Matthew 11:28). He didn't say come to me if you're a sinner. He didn't say come to me if you're wounded. He said come to me if you are weary, and I will give you rest.
I'm too soon old and too late smart, but I've learned this much sitting at bedsides and in hospital rooms and in conversations with people at the end of their rope: Jesus is both the Healer and the Savior, and He never runs out of either.
So whatever door you've been standing in front of today, whether you feel the weight of your sin or the weight of your wounds, or maybe both at once, He's the answer on the other side of both of them.
Let's pray: Lord Jesus, You are the one who forgives and the one who restores. Remind us today that we don't have to choose between coming to You as sinners or coming to You as sufferers. You receive us as we are and make us what we could never make ourselves. In Your name we pray, Amen.
#Faith #Healing #Repentance #ChristianLiving #DailyDevotion #TrustGod #BiblicalWisdom #SpiritualGrowth #RTTBROS #Nightlight
Be sure to Like, Share, Follow and subscribe, it helps get the word out.
https://linktr.ee/rttbros

Thursday, March 12, 2026

The Art of Letting Go #RTTBROS #nightlight #Contentment #Circumstances #Problems


The Art of Letting Go #RTTBROS #Nightlight
"I have learned, in whatsoever state I am, therewith to be content." — Philippians 4:11

You know, there was a man born into slavery around 50 AD, a man who had every reason in the world to be bitter and broken. His name was Epictetus, and his owner once twisted his leg to the point of breaking it, just to demonstrate his power over him. Epictetus simply looked up and said calmly, "You are going to break it." And when it snapped, he said, "Did I not tell you?" Now here's what's remarkable about that story. Out of that broken, enslaved life came one of the most powerful ideas in all of human philosophy: some things are up to us, and some things are not. And wisdom, he said, is knowing the difference.

That is a profound truth. But here's what I find fascinating. About a generation before Epictetus ever said that, the Apostle Paul was writing something even deeper from his own prison cell. He said, "I have learned, in whatsoever state I am, therewith to be content." Did you catch that word? Learned. Paul didn't say this came naturally. He didn't say God zapped him with a contentment ray. He said he learned it, the same way you learn anything, through practice, through failure, through getting back up and trying again.

Here's the difference between Paul and the Stoics, and it matters. Epictetus said, focus only on what you can control, your thoughts, your responses, your choices, and let everything else go. Good advice, as far as it goes. But Paul goes further. Paul says, I can do all things through Christ which strengtheneth me (Philippians 4:13). He's not just gritting his teeth and white-knuckling his way through hard circumstances. He's drawing on a strength that isn't his own.

So what are you gripping so tightly today that it's draining the life right out of you? The job situation you can't fix, the relationship you can't control, the diagnosis that blindsided you? You and I can't change most of what worries us. But we can, like Paul, practice surrendering it to the One who holds all things in His hands. That's not weakness. That's the deepest kind of wisdom there is.

Let's pray: Lord, teach us what Paul learned, that real peace doesn't come from controlling our circumstances, but from trusting You in the middle of them. Help us release what we were never meant to carry. In Jesus' name, Amen.

#Faith #Contentment #ChristianLiving #DailyDevotion #TrustGod #BiblicalWisdom #SpiritualGrowth #RTTBROS #Nightlight

Be sure to Like, Share, Follow and subscribe, it helps get the word out.
https://linktr.ee/rttbros

Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Water From the Rock #RTTBROS #Nightlight

Water From the Rock #RTTBROS #Nightlight

"Trust in the LORD with all thine heart; and lean not unto thine own understanding. In all thy ways acknowledge him, and he shall direct thy paths." — Proverbs 3:5-6
I want to tell you about a man who dug a well on a tropical island while his neighbors thought he had lost his mind. And when the water came up, they concluded he must be a god.
His name was John G. Paton, and when he arrived on the island of Aniwa in the South Pacific in the 1860s, the people there were cannibals. Literally. And everybody back home in Scotland knew it. When Paton announced he was going as a missionary to the New Hebrides islands, a well-meaning church elder grabbed him by the arm and said, "The cannibals! You will be eaten by cannibals!" Paton looked at the man calmly and replied that his body would be eaten by worms in the grave soon enough anyway, and it made little difference whether it was worms or cannibals, as long as he was found faithful to Christ.
That is a man who had settled something on the inside.
Now, Aniwa had no fresh water. The islanders depended entirely on rain, and they were skeptical that anything useful could possibly come from the ground beneath their feet. Paton told them he was going to dig a well and find fresh water. They thought he was either deluded or dangerous. He dug down, and down, and down in the tropical heat, day after day. And then one morning, fresh water bubbled up from the coral ground of that island, something that had never happened in living memory.
The people of Aniwa stood there with their mouths open. They called it a miracle. And through that well, a door swung open for the gospel that changed the entire island. Within fifteen years, the whole of Aniwa had come to faith in Jesus Christ. Paton later wrote, with tears, that he had claimed Aniwa for Jesus, and that Aniwa now worshipped at the Savior's feet.
History is just HIS story.
Here is what I have had to learn over these many years. God will sometimes ask you to dig where nobody thinks there is any water. To trust Him in a direction that looks foolish to everyone watching. That is not the absence of wisdom. That is Proverbs 3:5 with a shovel in its hands, "Trust in the LORD with all thine heart; and lean not unto thine own understanding."
What is God asking you to dig into today, that looks impossible to everyone around you? Maybe it is time to pick up your shovel.
Let's pray: Father, give us the courage of men and women like John Paton, who trusted You past the point where their own understanding ran out. When You call us to dig, help us dig. In Jesus' name, Amen.
#Faith #Missions #TrustGod #ChristianLiving #DailyDevotion #Perseverance #BiblicalWisdom #RTTBROS #Nightlight
Be sure to Like, Share, Follow and subscribe, it helps get the word out.
https://linktr.ee/rttbros

Monday, March 9, 2026

Covered in Prayer #RTTBROS #Nightlight #parenting #Legacy #blessing

Covered in Prayer #RTTBROS #Nightlight

"Be careful for nothing; but in every thing by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known unto God." — Philippians 4:6

You know, one of the greatest gifts a parent or grandparent can give a child has nothing to do with money or education or even good advice. It's the gift of being prayed over. Covered. There's an old image in Scripture of a parent spreading their wings of intercession over their family, and I think we've lost some of that in our busy, distracted world.

I want to share a simple framework that can transform your family prayer life. It spells COVER, and once it gets into your bones, you'll wonder how you ever prayed without it.

The C is for Character. You pray that God shapes who your people are on the inside, not just what they do. That's where everything starts.

The O is for Others. You lift the people in their lives, their friends, their teachers, their influences, because nobody walks through this world alone.

The V is for Vision. You pray that God gives them a clear sense of purpose and direction, that they would know why He put them here.

The E is for Every Danger. Seen and unseen. Physical, spiritual, emotional. You're asking God to hedge them in, because we can't be everywhere, but He is.

And the R is for their Relationship with God. That's the whole ballgame right there. Everything else flows from that one.

COVER. It doesn't have to be long or eloquent. Too soon old and too late smart, I spent years thinking I had to have just the right words. What matters is that you show up and pray them.
Let's pray: Father, we cover the ones we love today. Shape their character, guard their friendships, give them vision, protect them from every danger, and above all, draw them close to You. In Jesus' name, Amen.

#Prayer #FamilyPrayer #ChristianLiving #DailyDevotion #PrayerLife #RTTBROS #Nightlight

Be sure to Like, Share, Follow and subscribe, it helps get the word out.
https://linktr.ee/rttbros


Thursday, March 5, 2026

Words That Outlast #RTTBROS#Heart #Nightlight #blessing #parenting

Words That Outlasted Empires #RTTBROS #Nightlight
"The LORD bless thee, and keep thee: The LORD make his face shine upon thee, and be gracious unto thee: The LORD lift up his countenance upon thee, and give thee peace."— Numbers 6:24-26

You know, sometimes God does something so remarkable that it just stops you in your tracks and makes you shake your head in wonder.

Back in 1979, an archaeologist named Gabriel Barkay was excavating a series of ancient burial caves just southwest of Jerusalem. His team figured the tombs had been picked clean by looters centuries before, and honestly, they weren't expecting much. But then a thirteen-year-old volunteer started poking around the floor of one of those caves with a stick, and that stick found a crack, and that crack led to a hidden chamber that every looter for a thousand years had walked right past without knowing it was there.

Inside that little hidden room, tucked away like a secret God had been keeping, were two tiny silver scrolls, rolled up so small they looked like cigarette butts. They were so fragile it took the Israel Museum three full years just to figure out how to unroll them without turning them to dust.

And when they finally opened those scrolls, they found words. Words scratched into ancient silver in a script 2,600 years old. Words from the time of the prophet Jeremiah and the First Temple. The oldest known portion of the Bible ever discovered. And do you know what those words were? The Priestly Blessing from Numbers chapter six: 

"The LORD bless thee, and keep thee."

Friend, that blessing was being spoken over God's people before the Babylonians came. Before Rome rose and fell. Before the Middle Ages, before the Reformation, before two World Wars. And it is still true this very moment.

Here's what hit me about this. Those scrolls were worn as amulets, meant to carry the blessing of God with them wherever they went, even into death. And isn't that exactly what God's Word does? It goes with us into every dark place, every uncertain cave, every moment when the world feels like it has been picked clean and there's nothing left.

History is just HIS story, and He has been speaking this blessing over His children for a very long time.

"The LORD bless thee, and keep thee." He hasn't stopped saying it. He's saying it over you today.

Let's pray: Father, thank You that Your Word has outlasted every empire and every enemy. Thank You that the same blessing You spoke over Your people 2,600 years ago still covers us today. Help us to rest in the fact that You are keeping us, right now, today. In Jesus' name, Amen.

#Faith #BibleHistory #GodsWord #Archaeology #DailyDevotion #ChristianLiving #RTTBROS #Nightlight

Be sure to Like, Share, Follow and subscribe, it helps get the word out.
https://linktr.ee/rttbros