Series Title: Published by Lesallan | August 4, 2025

Walking with the Son: A Journey Through Solitude, Identity, and Redemption

Post 1: Jesus Walked Alone

Solitude as Divine Assignment 

Focus: Jesus’ lone journey and the paradox of the Trinity 

Key Texts: John 14:6; Hebrews 13:8 

Citations: Lesallan (2025); The Christian Thing

Post 2: Bound But Not Broken

Theme: The thousand-year binding of Satan as a metaphor for restrained evil and the patience of God 

Focus: Revelation 20 and the spiritual reality of delayed justice 

Key Texts: Revelation 20:1–3; Romans 8:22–25 

Citations: Lesallan (2025); The Christian Thing

Post 3: The Return of the Son

Theme: Hope in eschatology and the coming reign of Christ 

Focus: The second coming as assurance, not fear 

Key Texts: Matthew 24:30–31; Titus 2:13 

Citations: Lesallan (2025); The Christian

Post 4: I Know Who I Am

Theme: The believer’s identity rooted in divine consistency 

Focus: Reflecting Christ’s unchanging nature in personal formation 

Key Texts: Colossians 3:3; 2 Corinthians 5:17 

Citations: Lesallan (2025); The Christian Thing

Post 5: The Walk Continues

Theme: Discipleship as daily partnership with the risen Son 

Focus: How to walk “alone” yet never apart from God 

Key Texts: Micah 6:8; Galatians 2:20 

Citations: Lesallan (2025); The Christian Thing

Blessings,

Lesallan


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.