In leadership -whether in business, ministry, or family – the greatest strength doesn’t come from strategy, skill, or structure. It comes from prayer.
Paul understood this. In his letter to the Ephesians (Ephesians 1:15–23), he didn’t just coach or correct the church- he prayed for them. His words model a kind of leadership that begins in gratitude, matures through intercession, and thrives by divine revelation.
1. Leadership That Praises God First
Paul wrote, “I do not cease to give thanks for you, remembering you in my prayers.” (vv. 16)
Every leader has a choice – to start with problems or to start with praise. Paul chose praise. He thanked God for their faith and for their love toward one another.
In a world obsessed with performance metrics and results, Paul reminds us that real leadership recognizes what God is already doing in people’s lives. Gratitude builds trust. It shifts our focus from what’s lacking to what’s lasting.
When was the last time you paused to thank God for the people on your team, your staff, or your family?
Leadership principle: Thanksgiving strengthens relationships and fuels unity.
2. Leadership That Prays for Revelation, Not Just Results
Paul didn’t pray for better facilities, higher attendance, or easier circumstances. He prayed for wisdom, revelation, and understanding.
He prayed, “that the God of our Lord Jesus Christ… may give you the Spirit of wisdom and revelation in the knowledge of Him, having the eyes of your hearts enlightened.” (vv. 17–18)
The greatest prayer we can pray for those we lead is that they see.
That they see who Christ is.
That they see who they are in Him.
That they see the power that’s already available through Him.
Leadership often tempts us to fix, to teach, to act. But sometimes, our most powerful move is to intercede – that their eyes may be opened by the Spirit, not persuaded by our words.
Leadership principle: Illumination produces transformation.
3. Leadership That Recognizes the Power Behind the Mission
Paul lists four demonstrations of God’s power:
The Father raised Christ from the dead.
The Father seated Him in authority.
The Father placed all things under His feet.
The Father gave Him as the Head of the Church.
This isn’t just theology- it’s leadership alignment. Christ’s authority is total. His victory is complete. And when we lead under His Lordship, His power works through us.
Too often, leaders burn out trying to carry what Christ has already conquered. Paul reminds us- the same power that raised Jesus from the dead is at work in us who believe. (v. 19)
Leadership principle: We lead from victory, not for victory.
Faith Connection
As leaders, we are not CEOs of our own destiny; we are stewards of God’s calling. Paul’s prayer invites us to lead prayerfully – to depend on divine revelation more than human reason.
Jesus Himself modeled this. Before choosing His disciples, He prayed all night (Luke 6:12). Before facing the cross, He prayed for strength (Luke 22:42). Prayer wasn’t His backup plan – it was His leadership plan.
Application: Three Ways to Lead with a Bountiful Prayer Life
1. Start every meeting or decision with gratitude.
Name what God has already done. Celebrate progress before planning change.
2. Intercede for those you lead.
Don’t just manage people -shepherd them. Ask God to open their eyes to their hope, value, and calling.
3. Rely on resurrection power.
Remember that Christ’s victory secures your confidence. Lead boldly, but rest humbly in His strength.
Paul’s prayer to the Ephesians is still a call to leaders today: to know Christ more deeply, to see His power more clearly, and to lead His people more faithfully.
Because leadership that begins in prayer doesn’t just change others—it transforms us.
That’s a Wrap.
If this message encouraged you, share it with another leader who needs a reminder that prayer isn’t a last resort – it’s the first step toward powerful, faith-driven leadership.






