Editor’s Note: This article is adapted from a vesper worship sermon delivered today by Pastor Jomar Compuesto during the opening night of the Central Visayas Conference (CVC) ASI Ad Pro Summit 2026.
If you ask the world, the answers come back in a familiar chorus: wealth and financial success, power and authority, fame, achievement, or raw talent. We measure greatness by what a person accumulates, commands, or captures in the spotlight. But God operates on a completely different economy. The true measure of greatness isn’t found in what we gather, but in what we set in motion.
The answer to this question lies tucked away in the ancient story of the prophet Elisha and a remarkable woman who crossed his path. In 2 Kings 4:8-10, the Bible records: “And it fell on a day that Elisha passed to Shunem where there was a great woman…”
When scripture calls her “great,” it isn’t using the world’s vocabulary. The original context points to an admirable, honorable, and deeply influential person. God did not preserve her story across thousands of years because she had a large bank account or high social standing. She was immortalized because she recognized the value of God’s work and had the courage to act on it. By looking at her life, we can discover the three defining markers of true greatness.
1. Great People Recognize the Value of God’s Work.
What you recognize determines what you support. If you look at a ministry, a church, or a mission project and only see an organization, your support will be minimal. But if you recognize the Lord’s heartbeat in it, your entire perspective shifts.
“Behold now, I perceive that this man is a holy man of God…” — 2 Kings 4:9
The Shunammite woman saw more than a traveler; she recognized a sacred calling. The more deeply you understand God’s work, the greater your investment. Greatness begins with the ability to see beyond appearances and focus on what has eternal value.
2. Great People Move From Observation to Action
It is one thing to admire a mission; it is another thing entirely to join it. Many people appreciate God’s work from a safe distance, but very few step over the line to take part. The Shunammite woman refused to be a mere spectator. Once she perceived Elisha’s calling, she uttered a statement of pure initiative: “Let us make a little chamber, I pray thee, on the wall…”
She didn’t wait to be asked, nor did she wait for a committee to convene. She saw a need—a tired servant of God who required a place to rest—and she built a solution. While many in our world today understand the mission, only a few choose to invest in it. Many are quick to praise the work, yet so few actually put their hands to the plow. True greatness lies in the transition between watching and doing. It is the willingness to say, “I see what God is doing, and I am going to build a room for it.”
3. Great People Give Without Seeking Recognition
The world often gives with the expectation of recognition or reward. In contrast, greatness flourishes in quiet, unrecognized acts of service.
As author Ellen White beautifully noted:
“Those who deny self to do others good are the happiest people.”
The happiest people on this planet are not those who accumulate the most, but those who dedicate the most. The happiest people are not those who receive, but rather those who give.
The Ultimate Question for Our Time
We are living in the closing hours of Earth’s history. As Seventh-day Adventists, we carry a distinct and urgent calling: the Three Angels’ Messages must reach every nation, tribe, language, and people. This is not a casual suggestion; it is a rescue mission.
God has blessed so many of us today. He has expanded our businesses, elevated our professions, widened our influence, opened unique opportunities, and poured out material resources. But those blessings were never meant to end with us; they were meant to flow through us. Every blessing we receive demands that we look closely at our lives and ask how these resources will build a chamber for the people of God, advance evangelism in the unreached corners, support the Bible workers on the front lines, and strengthen the global mission to finish God’s work.
When the history of this world is wrapped up, the greatest accomplishment of your life will not be the net worth you accumulated or the titles you chased.
Ellen White, in her book “Counsels on Stewardship,” p. 40, says, “The means in the hands of our people should be constantly employed in doing good. Means are to be used in blessing humanity and in bringing souls to the truth.“
The greatest accomplishment will not be how many blessings we have accumulated, but how many souls are in heaven because we used our blessings for God’s mission.
Don’t just be successful. Be truly great. Find your mission, build your chamber, and help finish the work.
Lyn Lucero ⎸ ECPUC Communication Department