When you hear names like Martin Luther King Jr., Marie Curie, Leonardo da Vinci, or Bill Gates, what do you think of?
Probably that they’re great world-changers, right? Or maybe that they were destined for greatness.
Both things are true. But none of them started there.
Dr. King began with sermons in a small church.
Marie Curie spent years failing in the lab before she discovered something groundbreaking.
Da Vinci filled notebook after notebook with sketches before painting a masterpiece.
Bill Gates started as a student in his dorm room, writing code no one else cared about.
And that’s where most of us underestimate ourselves. We look at big goals, and we get overwhelmed. We want instant results.
But change doesn’t usually come in an instant. It comes in a rhythm.
The Bible reminds us in Luke 16:10: “Whoever can be trusted with very little can also be trusted with much.”
That five minutes of prayer when you feel too busy.
That daily choice to speak with kindness instead of anger.
That extra effort at work when no one’s watching.
These don’t feel world-changing in the moment. But string them together, day after day, and they build a life of integrity, influence, and impact.
So, stop underestimating the little things you do today. Don’t get discouraged if the results aren’t instant.
The world’s greatest breakthroughs didn’t begin with applause. They began in obscurity, with small actions repeated over time.
Keep showing up.
Keep being faithful.
Keep taking those small steps.
Because one day, you’ll look back and realize those tiny daily actions became the foundation for something much bigger than you ever imagined.