
Nehemiah’s story in the Bible is good news for anyone who questions whether they have what it takes to be a leader.
Nehemiah wasn’t a priest. He wasn’t a prophet. He wasn’t a builder. He was a cupbearer to a pagan king (Nehemiah 1:11). And God used him to rebuild what an entire nation had given up on.
In Nehemiah 1:1–4, he gets a report that Jerusalem is still a mess. The people are in “great trouble and disgrace” (Nehemiah 1:3 NIV). The wall is broken down. The gates are burned.
Before Nehemiah ever builds anything, you see the kind of man he is. And that’s always where God starts—with the heart before the work.
Here are three qualities God looks for in leaders he uses. The best part? You can choose to practice and grow in these qualities.
1) Develop sensitivity to what breaks God’s heart.
When Nehemiah hears the report about Jerusalem, he doesn’t shrug. He sits down and weeps. He mourns, fasts, and prays (Nehemiah 1:4). Leaders don’t become leaders because they want a platform. They become leaders because they can’t ignore what God has put in front of them.
In ministry, it’s easy to get insulated. You can spend your week putting out fires, managing budgets, and planning Sundays, and slowly lose touch with what people are actually carrying.
But God often begins his leadership assignments with a burden.
Pastor, what situation makes you stop and say, “This isn’t how it’s supposed to be”? That may be the beginning of God’s call.
God uses leaders who care about what God cares about.
2) Build a reputation for dependability.
Nehemiah is trusted by the king. That’s why he’s in the role he’s in. A cupbearer had to be loyal, discreet, and reliable. The king trusts him with his safety and with his confidence.
And God often prepares leaders through ordinary faithfulness long before the “big assignment” shows up. God doesn’t hand responsibility to good intentions; he entrusts it to proven faithfulness.
Jesus said, “Whoever can be trusted with very little can also be trusted with much” (Luke 16:10 NIV).
Before God hands you a larger burden, he watches what you do with the burden you already have.
Dependability isn’t flashy, but it’s foundational:
Do you keep your word?
Do you show up when it’s hard?
Do you finish what you start?
Do people experience you as steady?
You don’t need a bigger title to become more trustworthy. You need deeper integrity.
3) Make yourself available when God calls.
Nehemiah’s assignment was not convenient. Jerusalem was between 800 and 1,000 miles away. The job was dangerous. The politics were complicated. Opposition was real. Yet when the moment came, Nehemiah was willing to go.
Here’s a leadership truth we don’t love, but it’s still true: God can do more with willingness than with raw talent.
God is not mainly looking for ability. He’s looking for credibility, dependability, and availability.
Availability is a choice.
It’s the simple, costly prayer: “Here am I. Send me.”
And it raises honest questions:
Am I available to do something outside my comfort zone?
Am I available to serve in a way that won’t earn applause?
Am I available even if it disrupts my plans?
Pastor, you don’t have to see every step to say yes to God.
Nehemiah didn’t start with a construction plan. He started with a burden, a prayer life, and a willing heart.
The kind of leader God uses is not the most talented person in the room. It’s the person who is sensitive to real need, dependable in character, and available when God says go.