A person sits at a wooden table in warm candlelight, hands clasped in prayer over an open Bible. A rosary, notebook with a pen, cup, small framed picture, and a wooden cross rest on the table. Soft lights glow in the background, and the text “When I Need Jesus” appears at the top.

Friday Devotional – May 22, 2026

There are days when the road feels long and the next step is heavy. If you’re like me, Lesallan, you’ve learned that perseverance isn’t a single heroic moment but a steady, faithful choosing to keep going—sometimes with trembling hands, sometimes with quiet resolve. Today I want to share what helps me and others move through the changing seasons of life with hope and grit.

Reflection on Perseverance

Perseverance is patient faith in action. It looks like showing up when the outcome is uncertain, staying kind when you’re exhausted, and trusting that small, faithful choices add up. Seasons change—joy, loss, waiting, growth—and perseverance is the thread that ties them together. It doesn’t erase pain; it gives us a way to carry it without being crushed.

Stories That Encourage

A neighbor who kept planting. I remember a friend who lost a job and, for months, planted a small garden while applying for work. The garden didn’t fix everything, but the daily tending kept hope alive and eventually led to a new rhythm and new opportunities.

A parent who learned to rest. Another person I know discovered that perseverance sometimes means saying no and resting so you can return stronger. That kind of courage—choosing rest as resistance to burnout—was as powerful as any long march.

These stories remind me that perseverance wears many faces: stubbornness, surrender, patience, and wise retreat.

Practical Ways We Keep Going

  • Start small and steady. Break big burdens into tiny, doable steps and celebrate each one.
  • Anchor in routine. Simple rhythms—prayer, a walk, a cup of tea—become lifelines.
  • Name the season. Saying aloud, “This is a season of waiting,” gives it shape and reduces shame.
  • Share the load. Let trusted people know what you’re carrying; community multiplies strength.
  • Practice gratitude in fragments. Find one small thing each day to give thanks for; it rewires the heart.
  • Allow rest as strategy. Rest is not failure; it’s preparation for the next step.

A Short Prayer

Lord, grant us steady feet and soft hearts. Help us to keep going when the path is unclear, to rest when we are spent, and to lean on one another when we cannot stand alone. Teach us the quiet courage of small, faithful acts. Amen.

A Blessing for the Journey

May you be given patience for the waiting, clarity for the next step, and companions who will walk with you. When the season changes, you may look back and see how every small choice of faith brought you closer to the life you were being shaped for.

With warmth and encouragement,
~Lesallan ✝️✝️✝️

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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.

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