Last month, we set out to answer a question: “What exactly is a godly leader?” We saw that in Scripture, leadership is stewardship, and authority exists to serve, not to control.
Godly leadership in business shows up in seven clear traits. Each one is rooted in Scripture and seen in the lives of biblical leaders. So far, we covered integrity, humility, justice, courage, wisdom, and grace. Today we explore the final one.
7. Generational Thinking and Legacy
“A good person leaves an inheritance for their children’s children.” (Proverbs 13:22)
Godly leaders plan for the future, not just the next quarter.
Moses led Israel for decades towards a land he would never enter (Deuteronomy 34:4). He didn’t cling to power. He prepared Joshua to finish what he started. (Deuteronomy 31)
In business, this means focusing on long-term health, not short-term profits. You build organizations that can thrive beyond you. You invest in culture, systems, and people, even when it takes time to see results. You raise up new leaders and create lasting value instead of just taking it.
Someone might ask: “I know leaders who show these traits but are not Christians.” No doubt, they are good leaders. Good character does exist outside the faith.
But godly leadership comes from a relationship with God through Jesus. It grows out of the Holy Spirit working in us (Galatians 5:22-23). It means following Christ, submitting to God’s authority, and leading as stewards who will one day give an account.
After defining what godly leadership is, it is also important to clarify what it is not.
- Godly leadership does not use Scripture to shut down disagreement, avoid accountability, or manipulate people.
- It is not presenting your preferences as God’s commands.
- It is not harsh or controlling. Jesus contrasted His way with rulers who “lord over” others (Mark 10:42-43).
- It is not a religious performance. A Bible on your desk means nothing if your actions don’t match God’s values. Jesus saved His harshest words for leaders who looked spiritual in public but were corrupt in private (Matthew 23).
- And it does not avoid conflict. Jesus faced injustice, hypocrisy, and exploitation head-on. Sometimes it means having tough conversations.
The world has seen enough leaders who talk about Jesus while behaving like everyone else.
What it needs are leaders who actually follow Him in how they run companies, handle power, and treat people.
This kind of leadership is countercultural. It will cost you. You may lose deals, grow more slowly, face criticism, or be misunderstood because you refuse to compromise.
But you will also build something lasting. You will create organizations where people flourish. You will earn trust that cannot be bought. You will sleep well knowing your success did not come at others’ expense. And one day, you will hear, “Well done, good and faithful servant.”
The world is watching. More importantly, God is watching.
So, lead in a way that honors both your calling and your Creator. Lead like Christ.
What a wonderful series. Thank you so much Mun-Wai 🙏