By Jason Vuu on Sunday, 16 March 2025
Category: Entrepreneurship & Ethical Business

Building a Business with Jesus as the CEO

Introduction: Business as a Vocation, Not Just a Venture

In today’s competitive world, running a business often revolves around profit, productivity, and power. But as a Catholic entrepreneur and father, I’ve discovered a deeper and more fulfilling way to lead: letting Jesus Christ be the CEO of my business.

This isn’t just a metaphor. It’s a daily decision to align every strategy, every relationship, and every outcome with the will of God. When Jesus is at the helm, business becomes a mission field, success becomes sanctified, and work becomes worship.


1. Surrendering Control: The First Act of Leadership

Every business needs a vision, but as Christians, that vision must be rooted in God’s purpose, not just our own plans.

Before every major decision, I ask:

This mindset requires humility. It means surrendering the illusion of control and asking Christ to guide the mission.

“Commit your work to the Lord, and your plans will be established.” — Proverbs 16:3


2. Business Rooted in Prayer and Discernment

Just as a household must be built on prayer, so too must a business. Every day, I invite Jesus into the boardroom—through:

This doesn't just bring peace. It also brings clarity, creativity, and conviction. When God speaks, I listen—and my business reaps the spiritual and strategic benefits.


3. Defining Success by the Fruit, Not Just the Numbers

With Jesus as CEO, success is redefined. It’s not just about revenue or reach. It’s about:

Numbers matter—but the fruit of the Spirit matters more: love, patience, kindness, faithfulness. That’s the metric I aim to be judged by.

“You will know them by their fruits.” — Matthew 7:16


4. Creating a Culture of Virtue

Jesus-centered leadership transforms company culture. When Christ is at the center, virtues like honesty, humility, diligence, and mercy become the norm.

In practice, this looks like:

We can’t force faith—but we can lead by example and build a culture where Christ is honored and people flourish.


5. Servant Leadership: Modeling Christ’s Example

Jesus said, “Whoever wants to be first must be the servant of all.” (Mark 9:35)

In business, this means:

Whether I’m working with contractors, clients, or collaborators, I remind myself: I am here to serve—not just to succeed.


6. Integrating Faith into the Workflow

Some people separate faith and work. But when Jesus is CEO, every aspect of business becomes part of your spiritual life.

I integrate faith into:

Even systems and automation can reflect God’s order, clarity, and purpose when done with intention.


7. Trusting God in the Unknown

Entrepreneurship always involves risk. But with Jesus leading, fear is replaced by faithful obedience.

When things don’t go as planned, I:

I’ve found that setbacks are often setups for greater alignment with God’s plan. When He prunes, it’s to bear more fruit.

“Be still and know that I am God.” — Psalm 46:10


8. Evangelizing Through Excellence

When a business reflects Christ, it becomes a light to the world. Not through overt preaching, but through:

Clients often ask what makes our business different. That’s my chance to give witness—not to my own skills, but to the God who makes it all possible.

“Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works and glorify your Father in heaven.” — Matthew 5:16


9. Resting in the Sacred: The Sabbath and Beyond

Work is holy—but rest is too. Jesus Himself withdrew to pray and observed the Sabbath. So should we.

In our home and business:

Productivity without peace is unsustainable. True fruitfulness comes from abiding in Christ—not hustling endlessly.


10. Remembering the Ultimate Mission

At the end of the day, every business exists for a higher purpose: to glorify God and bring souls to heaven.

Success isn’t about applause. It’s about obedience.

Profit isn’t the finish line. Holiness is.

When Jesus is your CEO:

And you’ll hear the words that truly matter: “Well done, good and faithful servant.”


Final Thoughts: Build with Christ or Build in Vain

Building a business with Jesus as CEO isn’t just a pious idea. It’s a practical framework for peace, purpose, and performance.

Let Christ:

Because when Jesus leads, everything changes—from the bottom line to the eternal impact.

“Unless the Lord builds the house, they labor in vain who build it.” — Psalm 127:1

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