What does the Bible actually teach about leadership? Not motivational borrowing of a verse to support a modern leadership theory, but a real pattern, repeated across very different lives, of how God calls and shapes the people He puts in charge of others.
This page is a starting point for exploring that pattern using two detailed case studies — Moses and Jeremiah — examined not as inspirational anecdotes but as full character studies, failures included.
The Pattern Behind Every Case File in This Series
Every leader examined on this site is studied through the same three markers:
- The Calling — where the leader starts, often unlikely, unwilling, or unqualified by any normal standard.
- The Testing — the wilderness, the opposition, the years of preparation nobody wanted, where character is actually formed.
- The Fruit — what the leader became, and the specific, transferable qualities today’s leaders can develop the same way.
Two case files currently make up this series:
- Leadership Lessons from Moses — a reluctant deliverer, shaped over forty years in the wilderness before he ever confronted Pharaoh.
- Leadership Lessons from Jeremiah — a young prophet who preached faithfully for forty years without ever seeing his message succeed.
Why Study Old Testament Leaders Specifically?
Scripture doesn’t flatten its leaders into role models. Moses lost his temper and disqualified himself from the Promised Land after decades of faithful service. Jeremiah told God directly that he felt deceived by his own calling. That honesty is exactly what makes these case studies useful — they’re complete character studies, not curated highlight reels.
Frequently Asked Questions About Biblical Leadership
What does the Bible say about being a leader?
Scripture consistently portrays leadership as something God develops in people over time, often through seasons of testing that don’t feel like preparation while they’re happening. Rather than natural talent or ambition, the Bible’s leaders are repeatedly shown as reluctant, flawed people whose usefulness came from obedience and dependence on God rather than personal qualification.
What are examples of servant leadership in the Bible?
Moses is a clear example — described in Numbers 12:3 as “very meek, above all the men which were upon the face of the earth,” a strength built through decades of testing rather than a natural trait. Jeremiah is another: he continued serving a people who rejected and persecuted him, without ever seeking personal vindication or reward for his faithfulness.
How do you study biblical leadership for a small group?
Both case files in this series are written for either individual reflection or group study, with discussion questions at the end of every chapter. Free sample chapters and full discussion guides are available for both Moses and Jeremiah — see the case file pages linked above for details.