Leadership

Your ordinary work can have extraordinary purpose

Goh Hong Yi // February 2, 2026, 2:44 pm

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"David’s story reminds us that no work done faithfully is ever wasted. The world may overlook our labour, but God never does," writes Goh Hong Yi. Photo by Mahmut Yilmaz on Pexels.

In every season of life, we wrestle with questions of meaning, purpose and significance in our work.

Whether our roles are visible or unseen, celebrated or overlooked, Scripture reminds us that God cares deeply about how we live and labour each day.

The story of David offers a powerful reminder that, in God’s eyes, faithfulness in your daily vocation matters – even in the humblest of roles.

Never insignificant to God

David’s story begins not in a palace, but in the fields as a shepherd, a job that in ancient Israel was often overlooked and considered lower in status.

When the prophet Samuel came to anoint the next king, David’s own father, Jesse, did not even think to present him, and only brought forward his older sons (1 Samuel 16:1–13).

Yet God saw what man overlooked. 1 Samuel 16:7 says: “The Lord does not look at the things people look at. People look at the outward appearance, but the Lord looks at the heart.”

To God, David’s shepherding was far from insignificant. It was a training ground for his future.

Preparation in obscurity

This would become more evident later, when David volunteered to fight Goliath.

David’s confidence against the giant did not come from nowhere.

What others saw as a lowly job, God used to shape a king.

In 1 Samuel 17:36, he declared: “Your servant has killed both the lion and the bear; this uncircumcised Philistine will be like one of them.”

Notice his perspective: Goliath was just another predator threatening the flock. A standing bear was roughly the size of the giant, meaning David had already faced similar threats as a shepherd. 

His skill with a sling was not luck. It had been honed through faithful, unseen labour. He took five stones, but only needed one (1 Samuel 17:40–50). Why? Because God had already prepared him in the ordinary work of shepherding.

David’s time as a shepherd also cultivated other gifts that God would use. For example, his musical skill, developed in solitude, later soothed King Saul’s tormented spirit (1 Samuel 16:23).

What began as a simple act of tending sheep became a divine appointment.

What others saw as a lowly job, God used to shape a king.

Stay faithful

Many today labour in jobs deemed unimportant – cleaning, serving, administrating or working quietly behind the scenes.

Yet if David’s life teaches us anything, it is that God often uses ordinary work to prepare us for extraordinary purposes. What may seem routine or insignificant to others can be sacred ground in God’s hands.

What may seem routine or insignificant to others can be sacred ground in God’s hands.

David’s story reminds us that no work done faithfully is ever wasted. The world may overlook our labour, but God never does.

In Colossians 3:23, Scripture encourages us: “Whatever you do, work at it with all your heart, as working for the Lord, not for human masters.”

Wherever you are today – the office, the home or the marketplace – know that the God who saw David in obscurity sees you too.

Your labour is not forgotten. And in His time, He will honour the faithful.


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About the author

Goh Hong Yi

Goh Hong Yi is an organisational psychologist and executive coach who enjoys exploring the intersection of faith and work, where performance meets purpose. He is always seeking to discern what God is doing in the world and ready to play his part.