Part 5 of the “Towel-Bearers: Redefining Leadership” Series

There’s no spotlight.
No applause.
No thank-you note.
No social media post shouting you out.
You vacuumed the church hallway.
Held the crying baby in the nursery.
Prayed for someone who never knew.
Texted the hurting at 2 a.m.
Showed up again. And again. And again.
And not a soul noticed.
But heaven did.
The World Cheers the Loudest Voices. The Kingdom Honors the Faithful Ones.
You won’t trend for folding chairs.
You won’t get likes for discipling one kid at a time.
No one will interview you for spending 10 years loving a community that barely responds.
But this is what Kingdom greatness actually looks like.
Jesus didn’t praise the Pharisees for their platforms.
He praised a widow for her two coins.
He honored a woman who poured perfume on His feet.
No PR team. No followers. No fame.
Just faithfulness.
Why Obscurity Might Be Your Greatest Gift
1. Obscurity Starves the Ego
When no one’s watching, there’s no performance to maintain.
No masks. No hype. No pressure.
It’s just you and Jesus.
And that’s where real leadership is forged.
The spotlight can inflate your pride.
Obscurity? That’s where the roots grow deep.
2. God Sees What Nobody Else Does
Hebrews 6:10 (ESV): “For God is not unjust so as to overlook your work and the love that you have shown for his name in serving the saints, as you still do.”
You’re not overlooked.
You’re not forgotten.
You’re not wasting your time.
The God who counts the hairs on your head counts every act of hidden faithfulness too.
3. Your Reward Is Coming—And It’s Better Than Applause
Let the world have their claps. You’re waiting for the well done.
Matthew 6:4 (ESV): “And your Father who sees in secret will reward you.”
One day, Jesus will look you in the eyes—not the crowd, not your peers—you—and say, “Well done, good and faithful servant.”
No mic drop. No stage. Just resting in His glory.
So Keep Going, Towel-Bearer
If you’re tired of doing good and getting silence in return—don’t quit.
If you’re wondering if it’s worth it when no one seems to notice—keep showing up.
You’re not serving for a standing ovation.
You’re serving the One who knelt low and washed feet.
That’s where the joy is.
Not in being seen—but in being His.
Coming up in Part 6 of the Towel-Bearers series:
“Don’t Drop the Towel: What to Do When You Want to Quit” — because leadership is heavy, but grace is stronger.
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