The most dangerous leadership failure doesn’t start with a scandal. It starts with success — and a leader who quietly stopped being curious.
Episode Summary
Humble leaders consistently out-perform arrogant ones over time — not because the market rewards virtue, but because humble leaders have better information. They hear things arrogant leaders don’t. They course-correct faster. They build cultures where truth travels freely, which means their organizations operate closer to reality than the competition. That’s a durable edge — and it’s what Scripture has been pointing to all along.
This episode tackles humility as a leadership discipline, not a personality trait. You’ll get a sharp biblical definition from three very different passages — Proverbs, James, and Micah — and see how the principle plays out in two contrasting leaders facing the same industry disruption. You’ll walk away with two specific practices that will change the quality of information flowing to you this week.
What You’ll Learn
Scripture References
Proverbs 11:2 — When pride comes, then comes disgrace; with the humble is wisdom
James 4:6 — God opposes the proud but gives grace to the humble
Micah 6:8 — Do justice, love kindness, and walk humbly with your God
Key Quote
“Raymond thought he had a loyal team. He had a careful one. And when the disruption hit, he was the last person in the building to know.”
Timestamps
0:00 — Hook and Introduction
1:48 — Why This Matters in Business
4:15 — What Scripture Says
8:45 — Illustration
12:32 — Application
15:04 — Encouragement and Prayer
Call to Action
Think about the last time someone on your team gave you genuinely unfiltered bad news — then listen to this episode. And if you know a leader who’s been running hard on their own confidence for a few years, this is the one to send them.