Lesallan | November 24, 2025

Monday’s Devotion — November 24, 2025

Scripture

Because of the loving devotion of the LORD we are not consumed, for His mercies never fail. They are new every morning; great is Your faithfulness!

Lamentations 3:22–23 (ESV)


Reflection

Monday mornings can feel heavy: unfinished tasks, lingering worries, the weight of yesterday’s mistakes. This verse reminds us that nothing we face can finally undo us because God’s devotion holds us steady. His mercies are not a one-time rescue but a daily renewal—fresh, patient, and present the moment we open our eyes. When the world tells us we must perform to be accepted, this promise says we are already held by a love that never runs out.

Think of mercy like morning light: it arrives whether or not we notice it, and it reveals what we need to see—softening hard edges, warming cold places, and giving us a new start. Let that truth shape how you begin this week: not by striving to prove worth, but by receiving grace and letting it reorder your priorities.


Personal Application

  • Start small: Before checking your phone, breathe and name one mercy you see—coffee, a warm bed, a friend’s voice.
  • Reframe failure: When you stumble, say aloud, “His mercies never fail,” and let that truth loosen shame.
  • Extend mercy: Offer patience or a kind word to someone who seems worn; practicing mercy helps you live it.

Prayer

Lord, thank You for a love that never runs out. Meet me in the ordinary moments of this Monday morning. Remind me that Your mercies are new, that my mistakes do not define me, and that Your faithfulness is my steady ground. Help me to receive Your grace and to pass it on to others today. Amen.


A Simple Step for Today

Write “His mercies never fail” on a sticky note and place it where you’ll see it mid-morning—let it interrupt worry and re-center your heart.

Peace and Grace,

Lesallan

References:

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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.