The first time I ever wrote and submitted a story to a major newspaper, I almost did not recognize it when it was published. I think the editor took pity on me, because they ended up heavily editing my work themselves just to get it ready for print.
That experience of learning, relearning, and unlearning showed me that there is always more to understand in any field, and no one can truly claim to have mastered it. Knowledge evolves, and the wise understand that they must evolve with it, too.
I share the following story in the hope that it will embody the principles we are exploring, speak to us, and offer even more.
Faithful Stewardship
Having just completed trainings by Far East Broadcasting Company International Leadership Academy in Nairobi, Kenya, and Siem Reap, Cambodia, Michael “Ka El” Garcia, producer at 702 DZAS – FEBC RadyoTV, shared that the most profound lesson was that leadership is stewardship. Beyond skills, the training emphasized character, humility, and a willingness to serve God’s purpose.
Working in digital media and programming came with constant pressures, but the training reminded him he did not need to be perfect, only faithful. It taught him to lead through influence rather than position, to serve faithfully in unseen tasks, and to mentor others with patience, keeping the focus on people, not just production.
“Moving forward, I saw myself leading with more listening and empowering, creating an environment where our team felt valued, supported, and aligned with God’s purpose,” said Ka El Garcia.
Eternal Impact
One of the clearest lessons from the training was that media is ministry. Every frame, caption, livestream, and radio program can reach hearts.
Being involved in live production, digital content, scriptwriting, hosting, and social engagement made Ka El realize that even small tasks could have an eternal impact. Every program was a privilege to steward, whether on radio, online platforms, or through digital storytelling.
The training clarified his “why.” Every piece of content created, program guided, and audience engaged advanced the gospel in timely and relevant ways, especially for the youth.
Compassionate Mission
This insight prompted greater intentionality in crafting spiels, managing programs, building online conversations, and mentoring younger teammates. The training also expanded his perspective on human capital, showing him that leaders must invest in people as much as in their craft.
The training equipped Ka El to foster collaboration, support teams holistically, adapt to digital trends, improve workflows, and intentionally develop younger leaders. He felt better prepared to build a more agile, digitally ready, and Christ-centered media ministry, contributing not just as a worker but as a leader who invests in people.
Ka El’s experience underscores that leadership is more than managing tasks for media practitioners. It is stewardship, faithfulness, purpose, compassion, and equipping others. In a fast-changing media landscape, investing in people and aligning work with a higher purpose transforms both organizations and the audiences they serve.

