Let’s get honest.
If we were building a movement to change the world, we wouldn’t start in Galilee. We’d go to the cities with cultural gravity—New York, London, Nairobi, São Paulo. We’d look for pedigree, polish, and platform.
But Jesus? “The people dwelling in darkness have seen a great light…” — Matthew 4:16 (ESV)
He begins with a place nobody would choose. Backwater. Out-of-the-way. Overlooked. And that’s not a throwaway detail—it’s the point.
The Kingdom of God doesn’t rise from the top. It breaks out from the margins.
And that has everything to do with how we lead in the marketplace.
Stop Reaching for the Corner Office
We’ve baptized ambition and called it Kingdom vision. Let’s name it. We chase titles. We chase influence. We chase the next big networking connection like it’s evangelism. We say it’s about Jesus, but if you squint, it looks a whole lot like worldly success—just with a Bible verse in the footer and a mission statement about integrity.
That’s not how Jesus moved.
He didn’t network His way into influence. He picked nobodies—fishermen, tax collectors, women with wrecked reputations. And the only crowd He ran after? The one nobody else wanted.
You think leadership is about visibility? Jesus says it’s about proximity to the forgotten.
So here’s the question: In your Monday-through-Friday life, who’s in your blind spot?
Flip the Strategy: From ROI to Faithfulness
Marketplace culture teaches us to invest in what delivers return—high-capacity team members, strategic clients, key decision-makers. But Jesus walks right past the C-suite and pulls up a chair next to the overlooked.
What if the most Christ-exalting thing you did this week wasn’t running the meeting, nailing the pitch, or crushing your metrics—but learning the name of the janitor?
What if the holiest moment in your whole week didn’t happen under stage lights, but in a hallway conversation with someone the world never sees?
Case in Point: Design for People, Not Prestige
Eric Yuan didn’t set out to make headlines. He wasn’t chasing investors or building a brand. He just saw a need—his people couldn’t connect—and he went to work.
Small team. Simple vision. No hype. No spotlight. Just quiet, faithful work to serve people, no one else was thinking about.
And then—COVID hit. And, Zoom, the tool built in obscurity, became the platform the whole world leaned on.
Now flip that. Gospel-side up.
What if Kingdom leadership isn’t about climbing higher, but stooping lower? What if real influence isn’t measured by your reach, but by your obedience to serve those no one else is looking at?
Because God sees the people in the back row. He sees them. He loves them.
And He has placed you—right where you are—to bring His light to them.
Kingdom leadership doesn’t carry titles. It carries the towel.
It bends low. It moves toward the margins. It chooses faithfulness in the shadows over applause in the spotlight. Because in the Kingdom of Jesus, the back row isn’t a footnote.
It’s holy ground.
The Breakroom
Let’s just be straight. The people most ready to receive the hope of Jesus in your workplace? They’re not just in the boardroom strategizing KPIs. They’re in the breakroom reheating leftovers. They’re the admin who keeps everything moving but never gets credit. They’re the warehouse crew you’ve never met. They’re the Uber Eats guy you barely looked at before tapping “tip.”
We walk past them. We schedule around them. We overlook them.
But Jesus never did.
He saw every person. He called them by name. He touched the leper. Sat with the outcast. Wept with the broken.
And then—He turned to us and said, “Go and do likewise.”
The Gospel doesn’t skip people. And if we’re serious about following Jesus, neither can we.
So Go
Flood your workplace with the light of Christ. Love like it matters. Lead like you’ve been sent. Speak His name—not just in moments that make headlines, but in the quiet places.
Because God plants eternal things where the world isn’t watching. He builds movements in the margins.
He changes the world—from the back row.




