Lesallan | November 21, 2025

Being Generous with Your Life

Jesus’ words, “And whosoever shall compel thee to go a mile, go with him twain.” (Matthew 5:41, King James Bible, 2025), land in a particular historical moment: under Roman occupation, a soldier could compel a civilian to carry a pack for a mile. Jesus flips that coercion into an opportunity for radical generosity—choosing to give more than what’s demanded as an act of freedom and witness (Matthew 5:41, King James Bible, 2025).

Why this Matters Today

Paul’s call to “Do everything without complaining and arguing… Live clean, innocent lives… shining like bright lights” (Philippians 2:14-15, King James Bible, 2025) helps us see the aim: our conduct becomes testimony. When Christians refuse to be defined by grumbling and cynicism, they stand out not by condemnation but by a steady, winsome integrity that draws attention to God’s work (Philippians 2:14-15, King James Bible, 2025).

What Going the Extra Mile Looks Like Now

  • Choose small, consistent acts of generosity rather than waiting for grand moments (Matthew 5:41, King James Bible, 2025).
  • When faced with inconvenience or pressure, respond with grace that surprises and disarms (Matthew 5:41, King James Bible, 2025).
  • Stop the complaint loop: practice public gratitude and praise so your life points others to hope (Philippians 2:14-15, King James Bible, 2025).
  • Build spiritual disciplines—prayer, Sabbath, simple fasting—to strengthen your capacity to give freely without burning out (Philippians 2:14-15, King James Bible, 2025).

A Personal Word For Campus Ministry

In working with students, “the extra mile” often looks boring at first: staying an extra hour to listen, mentoring without immediate payoff, showing up when it’s easier to be absent. Over time, those small fidelities form a culture where dignity and belonging are learned, not just taught (Matthew 5:41; Philippians 2:14-15, King James Bible, 2025).

When I catch myself slipping into complaint—about systems, schedules, or technology—I pick one concrete, generous act that day. That small choice usually breaks the habit and redirects energy into service that reflects Christ’s humility and light (Philippians 2:14-15, King James Bible, 2025).

A Short Pastoral Challenge

This week, identify one ordinary annoyance you expect to face and plan a generous response now. Examples: offering to help a busy colleague, listening thoroughly to a student who needs space to talk, or extending unexpected mercy to someone difficult. Journal what changes in your heart and relationships when you choose the extra mile over complaint (Matthew 5:41; Philippians 2:14-15, King James Bible, 2025).

Closing invitation

To be generous with our lives is to embody the Gospel in everyday rhythms. Let Jesus’ example and Paul’s counsel reframe inconvenience as invitation, complaint as an opportunity for praise, and ordinary moments as the place where God’s light is most visible (Matthew 5:41; Philippians 2:14-15, King James Bible, 2025). For those forming students and serving communities, these practices are the practical work of shaping a culture of humility, dignity, and love (Bostron, L., The Christian Thing, 2025).

Grace and Peace,

Lesallan

References:

King James Bible. (2025). OFFICIAL KING JAMES BIBLE ONLINE: AUTHORIZED KING JAMES VERSION (KJV). Kingjamesbibleonline.org. https://www.kingjamesbibleonline.org/

Bostron, L. (2025). The Christian Thing. Thechristianthing.com. https://thechristianthing.com/

The Christian Thing. (2025). Home page. https://www.thechristianthing.com/


Lesallan

Lesallan Bostron is a Christian leader, writer, and practitioner committed to incarnational ministry and cross‑cultural partnership. He holds a Bachelor of Arts in Christian Leadership and combines academic study with hands‑on experience in community engagement, discipleship, and mission strategy. Lesallan’s work emphasizes culturally sensitive approaches that prioritize local leadership, long‑term sustainability, and spiritual formation. His vocational journey includes service in the Air Force, experience in sales, and practical stewardship of rural life, including horse care and farm work. These varied roles have shaped his pastoral instincts, resilience, and capacity to work across social and cultural boundaries. Lesallan brings this practical wisdom into classroom settings, short‑term mission planning, and curriculum design, always centering humility, listening, and mutual accountability. Lesallan’s research and writing focus on rethinking mission from models of exportation to models of partnership. He draws on historical examples, contemporary missiological scholarship, and lived practice to advocate for pre‑departure listening, capacity transfer, and reparative accountability. His devotional writing and teaching aim to bridge academic insight and spiritual formation, helping churches and practitioners translate theology into ethical, effective ministry. Available for speaking, teaching, and collaborative projects, Lesallan seeks partnerships that honor local agency and cultivate sustainable discipleship. He lives in Wisconsin and welcomes conversation with pastors, mission leaders, and educators who are committed to faithful, contextually wise engagement.