All posts by O. J. Toks

About O. J. Toks

O. J. Toks is a husband, son, brother, minister, speaker, Christian Inspirational Hip Hop Artist, Producer and author of Rejected for a Purpose: How God Uses Rejection to Help You Find and Fulfill Your Destiny. He has written for Essence Magazine, been a guest on 89.3 KSBJ, and is the president and founder of O. J. Toks Ministries, which presents While You Are Single, an online ministry for Single Adults. He loves to play soccer, listen and dance to music, and watch movies. His mission is to inform and inspire people to find and fulfill God's purpose in every aspect of their lives.

Fatal Attraction Part 4

Having learned of lust thus far, how can we overcome lust? I believe the underlying principle for us to overcome it, is revealed in a native Cherokee Indian story. A boy went to his grandfather and told him that he is always angry. The grandfather told the boy that sometimes he is angry and upset, and sometimes he is happy. The grandfather went on to say that sometimes he feels like there are two wolves in his heart. One is always angry, gives in to fear, and always wants to fight. The other is always happy, peaceful, loving and just wants to make friends. And both wolves are always battling in his heart. The boy asked his grandfather which of the wolves wins the fight. The grandfather said, “The one I feed.”

There is a war going on in us between our flesh and our spirit. The one you feed determines who wins the fight. If you feed your flesh, lust will control you. If you feed your spirit, you will control lust. The following scriptures validate this:

For he who sows to his flesh will of the flesh reap corruption, but he who sows to the Spirit will of the Spirit reap everlasting life (Galatians 6:8 NKJV).

If you sow to your flesh you will stimulate your lusts and they will corrupt you. If you sow to your spirit you will live the God-kind of life. You will experience the lifestyle God has for you and benefit from the privileges that come with living the Zoe—the God-kind of life.

I say then: Walk in the Spirit, and you shall not fulfill the lust of the flesh (Galatians 5:16 NKJV).

So I say, let the Holy Spirit guide your lives. Then you won’t be doing what your sinful nature craves (NLT).

But I say, walk and live [habitually] in the [Holy] Spirit [responsive to and controlled and guided by the Spirit]; then you will certainly not gratify the cravings and desires of the flesh (of human nature without God)( AMP).

In order to feed your spirit and starve your flesh, you have to position yourself with people and in places that lift up your spirit. And this will be accomplished when you let the Holy Spirit lead you. Furthermore, feeding yourself with God’s Word will enhance and motivate your spirit. When this happens, the Spirit of God through the Word of God will instruct you to avoid or leave Gaza.

In other words avoid people and places that stimulate your flesh. Unplug the power supply to your flesh. Stay away from people that influence you in the wrong direction. Stay away from places that instigate you to yield to your lusts.

Stay away from every kind of evil (1 Thessalonians 5:22 NLT).

Avoid every kind of evil (NIV).

Abstain from every form of evil (NKJV).

To avoid simply means to create a void. Therefore when you avoid something, someone, or someplace, you create a void between you and the thing, person or place. However, that void needs to be filled with God’s Word. If not, the void will be filled with the old junk and you will be back in the same lusts you were before, and even worse off.

Watch and pray, lest you enter into temptation. The spirit indeed is willing, but the flesh is weak.” (Matthew 26:41 NKJV)

…Stay alert; be in prayer so you don’t wander into temptation without even knowing you’re in danger. There is a part of you that is eager, ready for anything in God. But there’s another part that’s as lazy as an old dog sleeping by the fire.”(MSG)

Prayer helps us avoid entering temptation. If we don’t pray, we will be susceptible to entering temptation. We will be vulnerable to going to Gaza. Dr. Joyce Meyer once said, “Temptation may come to you, but don’t go to it.”

Maybe you are already in Gaza. Maybe you are already in an environment and with a person that arouses your lusts. In this case you have to flee from that environment. Take off!

Run from anything that stimulates youthful lusts. Instead, pursue righteous living, faithfulness, love, and peace. Enjoy the companionship of those who call on the Lord with pure hearts (2 Timothy 2:22 NLT).

Flee the evil desires of youth, and pursue righteousness, faith, love and peace, along with those who call on the Lord out of a pure heart (NIV).

That scripture highlights a vital process that God uses to deliver us from ungodly situations. There are two parts to this process. God delivers us from, and delivers us to. Unfortunately, someone might allow God to deliver him or her from something or someone, but not allow God to deliver him or her to something or someone else better for us. God delivers us from darkness and delivers us to light.

For he has rescued us from the kingdom of darkness and transferred us into the Kingdom of his dear Son, (Colossians 1:13 NLT)

He delivers us from lust and delivers us to righteousness, faith, love and peace, and to people who live for God. If we don’t allow God to do the second part of the deliverance process, it will be a matter of time for us to back-track into the things that He delivered us from.

When we feed our spirits by feeding ourselves with God’s Word, being led by the Holy Spirit, avoiding or cutting ourselves off from the wrong things, wrong people, and wrong places, then we can bear the fruit below.

But the Holy Spirit produces this kind of fruit in our lives: love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control. There is no law against these things! (Galatians 5:22-23 NLT)

If you noticed, part of the fruit above is self-control. Feeding your spirit will give you control over your lusts. You can’t stop your flesh from having lusts because they are part of your human nature, however you can control your lusts. And once again, controlling yourself by feeding your spirit with God’s Word, obeying the Holy Spirit, praying, and avoiding all evil will help you overcome lust.

Fatal Attraction Part 3

Just like the rulers of the Philistines employed Delilah to weaken Samson, the devil employs lust to weaken the church or a Christian. He employs lust to entice us and expose our weaknesses by drawing us away from our strengths, so that the he can overpower us, bind us, and afflict us. The Philistine leaders paid money to Delilah to deceive Samson. Similarly lust is affiliated with money. That’s why the love, or better still, the lust of money, not money, is the root of all evil (1 Timothy 6:10).

Lust is controlled by money. Love controls money. Lust uses money as a tool to bind you. Love uses money as a tool to set you free.

Then she said to him, “How can you say, ‘I love you,’ when your heart is not with me? You have mocked me these three times, and have not told me where your great strength lies.” And it came to pass, when she pestered him daily with her words and pressed him, so that his soul was vexed to death, that he told her all his heart, and said to her, “No razor has ever come upon my head, for I have been a Nazirite to God from my mother’s womb. If I am shaven, then my strength will leave me, and I shall become weak, and be like any other man.” When Delilah saw that he had told her all his heart, she sent and called for the lords of the Philistines, saying, “Come up once more, for he has told me all his heart.” So the Lords of the Philistines came up to her and brought the money in their hand (Judges 16:15-18 NKJV).

Did you notice the back and forth between Delilah and Samson (Judges 16:1-18)? That’s how lust is with us too. We may go back and forth in fighting against the lusts of our flesh, and if we’re like Samson we’ll eventually give up and give in to our fleshly desires. And this will be fatal. Samson was with the wrong person and in the wrong place. He was at a disadvantage. We can’t continue hanging out with the wrong friends and going to environments where there are strong temptations that stimulate our lusts, and not expect to succumb to our desires.

Jesus said we should pray not to enter into temptation. Some of us are willing to do right but our flesh is weak. You might be willing to live right, but you can’t continue going to the wrong environment and hanging out with the wrong people without entering temptation. Our flesh is weak, thanks to its lusts. Samson succumbed and he was weakened.

Delilah or Lust pestered him, pressured him, and pressed him. It manipulated him. That’s the same thing lust does to you and I. Our lusts pester, pressure, depress and manipulate us. They make us feel guilty. It messes with our minds and causes us to give up what is important to us. Some have lost their virtue, dignity and credibility because of lust.

Lust is aggressive. Love is submissive. Lust is desperate. Love is temperate. Lust makes you feel guilty. Love makes you free. Lust manipulates. Love motivates. Lust takes advantage of you. Love gives you the advantage. Lust takes. Love gives.

Then she lulled him to sleep on her knees, and called for a man and had him shave off the seven locks of his head. Then she began to torment him, and his strength left him (Judges 16:19 NKJV).

Lust lulls you to sleep. When we are under the spell of lust, we become desensitized to what is happening to us. We gradually go in a downward spiral. By the time we discover what is happening to us we are rock bottom. Sometimes when people start out indulging in their lusts they are still able to function normally. But there comes a point where their lusts have taken so much control over them that they are not able to do business as usual. In Samson’s case he thought that he could just jump up like he did at other times and break himself free; but, he was given a rude awakening. Lust had stolen his strength.

And she said, “The Philistines are upon you, Samson!” So he awoke from his sleep, and said, “I will go out as before, at other times, and shake myself free!” But he did not know that the LORD had departed from him (Judges 16:20 NKJV).

Lust also torments us. Since fear torments and faith works in love, it’s safe to conclude that fear works in lust. Love energizes faith. Lust energizes fear. Perfect love casts out fear, but lust invites fear. Love is not blind. Lust is. See what it did to Samson. It led to his blindness. Lust blinds you and binds you.

Then the Philistines took him and put out his eyes, and brought him to Gaza. They bound him with bronze fetters, and he became a grinder in the prison (Judges 16:21 NKJV).

 Notice where Samson ended up? He ended up in Gaza, in bondage, grinding. I believe Gaza was a turning point in his downward spiral.

However, the hair of his head began to grow again after it had been shaven (Judges 16:22 NKJV).

And he judged Israel twenty years in the days of the Philistines (Judges 15:20 NKJV). 

So it happened, when their hearts were merry, that they said, “Call for Samson, that he may perform for us.” So they called for Samson from the prison, and he performed for them. And they stationed him between the pillars. Then Samson said to the lad who held him by the hand, “Let me feel the pillars which support the temple, so that I can lean on them.”

Now the temple was full of men and women. All the lords of the Philistines were there—about three thousand men and women on the roof watching while Samson performed. Then Samson called to the LORD, saying, “O Lord GOD, remember me, I pray! Strengthen me, I pray, just this once, O God, that I may with one blow take vengeance on the Philistines for my two eyes!” And Samson took hold of the two middle pillars which supported the temple, and he braced himself against them, one on his right and the other on his left.  

Then Samson said, “Let me die with the Philistines!” And he pushed with all his might, and the temple fell on the lords and all the people who were in it. So the dead that he killed at his death were more than he had killed in his life.  And his brothers and all his father’s household came down and took him, and brought him up and buried him between Zorah and Eshtaol in the tomb of his father Manoah. He had judged Israel twenty years (Judges 16:25-32 NKJV).

Notice that Samson was judging Israel for 20 years before he met Delilah. After he met her, and died, he judged Israel for 20 years. In essence, he was doing fine until he met Delilah, and his ministry ended up abruptly. Lust will cut your life and ministry short. Lust can cause you to lose your marriage, relationship, business, scholarship or job abruptly! Just like that. You might have been doing well for a while and then all of a sudden the bottom falls out. That’s what lust can do to us. It did for Samson. He led Israel for 20 years. He hooked up with Delilah, and his ministry, leadership and tenure in office ended shortly after.

Perhaps you’re familiar with a part that I skipped in the story. His hair began to grow back. He prayed to God to give him strength. He asked a lad to place his hands on two pillars while people were watching him entertain them. And he pushed the pillars and brought the building down to kill everyone, including himself. In his prayer, he asked God to let him die with the people. I don’t believe God answered him because the Bible did not mention anything about God responding to him.

Notwithstanding, his strength was connected to his hair; and the Bible clearly revealed that his hair was growing back. The last point, however, that I want to make about lust is that it’s suicidal. Samson killed others and killed himself. Lust can lead to suicide. Violence, jealousy, dissension (strong disagreements) are also lusts of the flesh.

Fatal Attraction Part 2

How God Uses Rejection to Help You Find and Fulfill Your DestinyDavid is another example of someone who got high on LSD; Lust, Sin and Death. When kings were at war I believe lust drew him away from the battlefield to the rooftop of his house, to indulge in watching Bathsheba taking her bath. That lust led him to sin with her by committing adultery. That then led to the death of her husband, which took place when David connived with the leader of his troops to place her husband, Uriah, in the area where the battle was heated. It also led to the death of the child conceived through the adultery, since David was judged for his transgression (2 Samuel 11).

The parable of the sower is another example of lust at work. The story is narrated in Mark 4. Jesus said a sower went out to sow some seeds, which represent God’s word. Some fell by the way side, and birds came and ate them up. Some fell on stony ground, and came up quickly. But because they were not deeply rooted, when the sun came up they were scorched and yielded no fruit. Some fell among thorns and were choked by the thorns. Some fell on good ground and yielded fruit, some 30, some 60, and some 100 fold.

I’ll like us to focus on the third ground; the one with thorns. Mark’s version of the story describes the thorns as the deceitfulness of riches and the desire for other things. They choke the word. I believe those desires are lusts. The lusts for other things drew the recipient of the seed from God’s seed or Word, and it choked the life out of the word, and it did not bear fruit. There was death. Lust, sin, death.

And the ones sown among the thorns are others who hear the Word; Then the cares and anxieties of the world and distractions of the age, and the pleasure and delight and false glamour and deceitfulness of riches, and the craving and passionate desire for other things creep in and choke and suffocate the Word, and it becomes fruitless (Mark 4:18-19 AMP).

A great story that gives us a picture of what the fatal attraction of lust can do to us is the story of Samson and Delilah. Their story is awesome in demonstrating lust because Young’s concordance translates the meaning of Delilah as languishing. Strong’s translates the meaning of Delilah as lustful. One might ask “why the difference?” Well, to languish means to pine away with longing or desire. It also means to become weak or feeble.

Lust makes you pine away with longing or desire. It makes you weak or feeble just like a drug addict or alcoholic is weakened, or loses their passion for life. A prisoner is languishing in prison when the individual emaciates and loses their passion for life. That is what lust does to you and I. That’s why I believe Strong’s simply described Delilah as lustful. With this in mind, let’s look at their story.

One day Samson went to the Philistine town of Gaza and spent the night with a prostitute (Judges 16:1 NLT).

Being under the control of lust usually doesn’t happen overnight. It’s a gradual process. Usually two factors contribute to us getting into the stronghold of lust. They are a person and a place. Either you go to a person who takes you to that place, or a place takes you to that person. By person, I mean someone that will influence you. By a place, I mean an environment. Usually a person will take you to an environment where your lust is stimulated, or you go to an environment and meet someone who can cause you to yield to your lust.

That person could be a friend or an acquaintance. That place could be a bar, club, dorm room, someone’s apartment or some other environment. That place could be a room and that person could be an individual on the flat screen or x rated magazine. In other words someone in a seductive or pornographic display.

In Samson’s case he went to Gaza where he met a prostitute. Gaza means strong place. Sometimes when we are in a “Gaza,” a strong place, we fall prey to strong holds. In Gaza, the place, he meets a prostitute, the person, and fulfilled his lust. This led him to more lust:

Afterward it happened that he loved a woman in the Valley of Sorek, whose name was Delilah. And the Lords of the Philistines came up to her and said, “Entice him, and find out where his great strength lies, and by what means we may overpower him, that we may bind him to afflict him; and every one of us will give you eleven hundred pieces of silver.” So Delilah said to Samson, “Please tell me where your great strength lies, and with what you may be bound to afflict you.” (Judges 16:4-6 NKJV)

So Samson ends up loving Delilah or having a desire for “lustful”; or someone that will make him weak or languish since Delilah means lustful or languishing. Delilah asked Samson where his strength lay and how he could be bound. She asked him upfront what could be done to him to put him in bondage. Similarly, when we indulge in things that we know can put us in bondage, then we can know that we are under the influence of lust. Lust pretty much tells you it’s going to harm you. When we give in to desires that we know ahead of time that are not good for us, then we know we are under the influence of lust.

Notice that the Lord’s of the Philistines bribed Delilah to discover Samson’s strength so that they could put him in bondage. In the Old Testament, the Philistines were the enemies of the Israelites. Goliath was a Philistine that was killed by David, the Israelite. The Philistines are symbolic of the enemy, and the Israelites are symbolic of the church. The Lords or rulers of the Philistines are symbolic of principalities, powers, spiritual wickedness, and rulers of the darkness of this age; all of which are under the power of the main enemy, the devil (Ephesians 6:10-13).

Fatal Attraction Part 1

How God Uses Rejection to Help You Find and Fulfill Your DestinyWhat is a fatal attraction? To understand this I looked up the words “fatal” and “attraction.” I discovered that something is fatal when it is deadly or capable of causing death, destruction, misfortune, ruin or failure. I also learned that an attraction is a person or thing that draws, attracts, allures or entices. It is also a characteristic or quality that provides pleasure.

Therefore when we combine the two words, a fatal attraction is a person or thing that draws, attracts, allures, entices and is deadly. A fatal attraction is a characteristic or quality that provides pleasure and is capable of causing death, destruction, misfortune, ruin or failure.

A number of things can fit the description of a fatal attraction. But the number one thing that comes to mind that accurately depicts a fatal attraction is lust. Lust is a passionate or overwhelming desire or craving. The Greek word translated as lust in the Bible is epithumia. Young’s concordance describes epithumia as over desire, Strong’s describes this as a longing; especially for something that is forbidden. It also describes it as an evil desire.

But every person is tempted when he is drawn away, enticed and baited by his own evil desire (lust, passions). Then the evil desire, when it has conceived, gives birth to sin, and sin, when it is fully matured, brings forth death (James 1:14-15 AMP).

The scripture above shows us at least two things:

1. We all have lusts. It’s in our eyes and our flesh (1 John 2:16).

For the desires of the flesh are opposed to the [Holy] Spirit, and the [desires of the] Spirit are opposed to the flesh (godless human nature); for these are antagonistic to each other [continually withstanding and in conflict with each other], so that you are not free but are prevented from doing what you desire to do (Galatians 5:17 AMP).

When you follow the desires of your sinful nature, the results are very clear: sexual immorality, impurity, lustful pleasures, idolatry, sorcery, hostility, quarreling, jealousy, outbursts of anger, selfish ambition, dissension, division, envy, drunkenness, wild parties, and other sins like these. Let me tell you again, as I have before, that anyone living that sort of life will not inherit the Kingdom of God (Galatians 5:19-21 NLT).

More often than not, when people think of lust they think of the big three: sex, alcohol and drugs. But lust includes a whole lot more than them. As the scriptures above reveal, idolatry (worshipping of idols, whether things or people), quarrelling, hostility, uncontrolled anger, wild parties, selfish ambitions, lust for power, recognition or attention are all lusts of the flesh.

2. Lust progresses in three stages. Apparently we lust in three stages, which I’ll like to call LSD (Lust, Sin, Death):

a. Lust draws us away and entices us.

Because we have lusts in our flesh, we are going to be drawn to something or someone. That thing or person that we are drawn to may or may not be good for us. Notwithstanding, the lusts in our flesh will cause us to be drawn. There is nothing wrong with this; and there is nothing you can do about the lusts that are part of our human nature.

Even so, it’s one thing to be drawn; it’s another thing to be drawn away. This is where we get in trouble; when we are drawn away. If we don’t exercise proper self control we will be drawn away. We are tempted and enticed when we are drawn away from God’s will, God’s Word, our responsibilities, our purpose or from what is right. If we don’t control ourselves, ourselves (lust in us) will control us and lead us to the next stage—sin.

b. It conceives and gives birth to sin.

Sin goes through its own progression and then leads to death.

c. Sin when it has fully grown gives birth to death.

I’ve learned that death is a systematic breakdown of an organism or organization until it ceases to exist. More often than not we think of death as someone suddenly dying or collapsing to death. This is actually the end of death. True death is systematic and gradual. We can see this in Adam and Eve.

They yielded to the lust of their flesh and it gave birth to sin, which gave birth to the death of mankind. The minute we are born we begin to die. In Adam’s time, people were dying at around 900 years plus. Now people are dying naturally around 70 to 90. Furthermore, Adam and Eve’s story gives us a glimpse of the LSD process. Satan exploited the lust of Eve’s eyes and her flesh to eat the fruit from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. Before Eve ate the fruit she looked at the tree and saw that it was desirable to make one wise, then she ate (Genesis 3:1-6).

When the woman saw that the fruit of the tree was good for food and pleasing to the eye, and also desirable for gaining wisdom, she took some and ate it. She also gave some to her husband, who was with her, and he ate it (Genesis 3:6 NIV).

By eating she sinned; so did her husband. Then they died. They didn’t collapse immediately, but we see that death was imminent spiritually, and gradual physically. Their lusts led to their sin, which led to their death. Satan used lust to draw Adam and Eve away from the tree of life so that they could eat from the forbidden tree. Similarly he uses lust to draw us away from our Tree of Life, Jesus, to lead us to sin, then to our deaths or separations; whether of our marriages, businesses, relationships or purposes.

Put on Your Running Shoes

How God Uses Rejection to Help You Find and Fulfill Your DestinyDoes the name, Phil Knight, ring a bell? I must admit, I didn’t know who he was until I saw him in a recent interview. During this interview he disclosed that up to the time he was 14 years old he was sure of becoming a big league baseball player. But his plans came to a crashing halt when he was cut from his high school baseball team.

Consequently, he ventured into track. This led him to the University of Oregon where he ran track for their legendary coach, Bill Bowerman. Their coach and athlete relationship evolved into a business partner relationship. Phil started importing shoes from Japan to help improve the way athletes run. In 1964 Phil and Bill started their company, which was formerly named Blue Ribbon Sports. In 1972 they began making their own shoes.[1]

While you might not know who Phil and Bill are, chances are that the current name of their company will not only ring a bell in your ears, but also ring loud like the sound of a gong or chimes of the clock of a cathedral. They are the cofounders of Nike. But how did they get to this point? What was the turning point that led Phil Knight to co-found a company that currently has 36000 employees globally, 7000 employees in Beaverton, Oregon, and a 2010 reported revenue of $19 billion?[2]

I suspect that hard work and best business practices were involved in their success. Notwithstanding, my focus is on what happened to Phil Knight as a teenager. He was rejected! He was cut from his high school baseball team. That rejection became his redirection. That was his turning point. Getting turned down from one sport turned him on to become a person considered the most powerful man in all sports.

Likewise, God uses rejection for a purpose; to redirect you to your purpose. When we are heading in the wrong direction, God utilizes rejection as the detour to reroute us in the right direction. Phil Knight did not let the rebuff from high school baseball slow him down; rather, he put on his running shoes and bolted in another direction. What initially looked like his rude awakening turned out to be his great awakening.

The rejection not only led him to be a successful businessman, it also led him to a legendary coach, mentor, friend and business partner. This is akin to how God uses rejection for you and me. He uses it to get us from the wrong people and wrong plans (often our plans) to the right people and right plans. His plans for our lives. Being rejected is not the end of your life; it’s just a means to an end for your life. And that end is your destiny.

If you get rejected, I encourage you to take a note from Phil knight’s response to being dismissed from his high school’s baseball team. Don’t cave in. Don’t despair. Don’t wallow in self pity asking questions like, “What’s wrong with me?” Ask the question, “What’s right for me?” And to answer this question, put on your “running shoes” and pursue other opportunities awaiting you.

You’ll never know what they are, who they are, or who he or she is until you get up from the floor adjacent to that closed and bolted door wired with an ADT alarm system, and move on with your life. People may tell you that you can’t be it, you can’t have it, or you can’t do it. But through Christ you can do all things. God will use their rejection to redirect you and help you realize that you can just do it; the right “it” for your life.


[1]Oprah, “Nike’s Phil Knight,” http://www.oprah.com/oprahshow/Nikes-Phil-Knight/1 (accessed April 27, 2011).

[2]Nike, http://www.nikebiz.com/company_overview/facts.html (accessed April 27, 2011).

Who Moved My Cheesecake?

How God Uses Rejection to Help You Find and Fulfill Your DestinyI eagerly awaited dessert, which were assortments of cheesecakes, after I devoured the main course of a banquet I attended not too long ago. Despite the variety of cheesecakes, I was disappointed that I was served a plain old-fashioned cheesecake topped with a dab of caramel. I secretly coveted the chocolate flavored cheesecake that was flirting with the imagination of my taste buds, posing on the saucer placed before the lady sitting beside me. I wished they had given me her cheesecake; but I kept the thought to myself. However, the lady sitting beside me didn’t keep her thoughts to herself.

To my surprise and delight, she asked me if I wouldn’t mind switching cheesecakes with her. I gladly gave her my boring cheesecake and received her chocolate flavored cheesecake with open mouth…oops, I mean, with open arms. I was elated; not just because I received the dessert I desired, but because a truth I had learned about rejection was reinforced. We are like the cheesecakes. Someone may not want you, but someone else does.

As unappealing as the cheesecake originally placed before me was to me, the lady beside me desired it in the expense of the one that she was served. She rejected the chocolate flavored cheesecake in favor of the cheesecake with a hint of caramel. The dessert I refused ended up with her, and the one she refused ended up with me. We were both happy and fulfilled; and so were the cheesecakes per se. It was a win-win for us and the cheesecakes.

Likewise, as unappealing as you might be to someone, there is someone else praying to have you in his or her life. Make no mistake about it, one company may not want you, but there is another that craves your services. Your team might not value what you bring to the table, but there is another that will deem your talents invaluable.

Rejection is a vehicle that drives you from someone who thinks that you’re useless to someone else who perceives your usefulness. It’s a bridge that takes you from people who treat you as worthless to others who’ll see you as worthwhile. Being rejected is not the end of your life; it’s just a means to an end for your life. That end is your destiny. Despite this truth, instead of allowing rejection to help them reach this end, too many people get upended by it.

How you respond to rejection will determine if it’s an asset or a liability. Responding the right way to being overlooked will help you reach your end; your destiny. Responding the wrong way will destine you to be ended; offended, dejected and depressed, just to mention a few. The first step to dealing with rejection and getting a great deal out of it is by forgiving the person that rejected you, and understanding that God uses rejection for your benefit and not for your detriment.

What was meant to harm you, God uses to arm you. What was meant for evil, God uses for your good. Armed with this knowledge, have faith that God is closing that door to redirect you to a better door; one that leads you to your destiny. And if you are like that chocolate flavored cheesecake, that destiny is my gut. The next time someone turns you down, simply respond by saying “cheese.” In other words, smile, as you know that God is using the rejection to stir you to another person, another project, or another place better for you.

Rejected for a Purpose Part 5

How God Uses Rejection to Help You Find and Fulfill Your DestinyFor the past few weeks I have been discussing how God uses rejection as a vehicle to help us find and fulfill our destinies. From biblical times to the 21st century, the list is endless of individuals who, through rejection fulfilled their dreams, achieved unprecedented success and made history. Take for instance Mary McLeod Bethune. After graduating from the Moody Bible Institute, her desire was to be a missionary in Africa. However, she was informed that African Americans were disallowed from holding such positions.

Consequently, Bethune became an educator. She was an instructor for a few years and in October of 1904, after seeing a need for the education of African American girls she established the Daytona Literary and Industrial School for Training Negro Girls. In 1923, this school later merged with Cookman Institute of Jacksonville, Florida; a school for boys. Today the merged school is known as the Bethune-Cookman University. Who would have thought that being denied the opportunity to be a missionary in Africa would have redirected Bethune to be a school pioneer and college president in 1942, where she was the trustee until she passed in 1955?

Bethune went on to achieve a litany of other noteworthy and groundbreaking accomplishments; one of which was being appointed by President Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1945, as special adviser of minority affairs and director of African American affairs in the National Youth Administration.[1]

William Kamkwamba is another prime example of someone who was projected to success through rejection. Born in Malawi, at fourteen years old a famine struck his homeland, and caused widespread death and devastation, so much so that his father could no longer afford to pay his school tuition. Consequently he had to drop out. In essence, his inability to pay his school fees forced him to be a school reject.

Notwithstanding, Kamkwamba refused to let this setback impede his education. He began to visit a local library where he found a worn-out British Science book. Barely able to speak English, he used this book to teach himself elementary physics mainly by studying diagrams and photos. Another book, the cover of which he saw the picture of a windmill, inspired him to build himself a windmill. Despite the daunting task of building a windmill, and being ridiculed and called crazy by his people, Kamkwamba was determined to fulfill his dream.

He searched scrap yards and found junk like old tractor fans, shock absorbers, plastic pipe, and bicycle parts. These parts became the components of the machine he needed to generate electricity and water his father’s farm. These parts were rejects; scrap tossed away by others. He embraced other people’s trash as his treasure. He worked on his improvisations, and with his first machine generated 12 volts of electricity that powered 4 lights. Another machine he built irrigated a family farm.

This genius, once ridiculed by some in Malawi became revered by others around the world. His exploits caused the world to take notice and have him travel around to share his remarkable story, which is chronicled in the book he co-wrote with Bryan Mealer, The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind.[2]

The remarkable story of Joseph in the Bible puts a stamp on how rejection is a catalyst for success. It was very significant that he was stripped twice prior to assuming his leadership role in Egypt. The way an individual was dressed, especially in the Old Testament was very telling. How a person was dressed signified the individual’s calling. Priests dressed a certain way to show that they were priests. Kings dressed a certain way to show that they were kings. Prophets dressed a certain way to show that they were prophets.

When we are not properly “dressed,” God uses rejection to undress us from who we are not in order to dress us into who we are. Is it any wonder that Joseph’s brothers stripped him of the special coat his father made for him (Genesis 37:23)? In a sense the coat signified that he was the apple of his father’s eye. Even so, that was not his calling in his heavenly father’s eye. Hence the necessity for him to go through the rejection from his brothers, which stripped him of the attire. Their rejection further facilitated his movement to the environment where he was to fulfill his call.

Joseph ends up in Potiphar’s house, and in an attempt to resist Potiphar’s wife’s seduction, he absolves himself of his garment, which represents his call to serve Potiphar (Genesis 39:12). Again, that was not God’s calling on his life. He eventually ended up in the position God ordained for him. And this was signified by Pharaoh dressing him up with robes of linen; the attire for the ruler of Egypt, second to Pharaoh (Genesis 41:42). In essence, God uses rejection to strip you off from who you aren’t, in order to strap you on with who you are.


[1]Mary McLeod Bethune.  http://www.notablebiographies.com/Be-Br/Bethune-Mary-Mcleod.html (accessed August 29, 2010).

[2]The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind. http://bryanmealer.com (accessed August 29, 2010).

Rejected for a Purpose Part 4

William Parham, a former Methodist minister is recognized by 20th century Pentecostals as the father of the “classical Pentecostal doctrine.” Unfortunately, his teachings did not gain wide acceptance, initially. In 1905, he moved his headquarters to Houston, Texas and founded “The Bible Training School.” That was where he met and taught William J. Seymour, a black evangelist from Louisiana.

Seymour embraced Parham’s Pentecostal teaching. In the winter of 1906, Seymour was recruited to be the pastor of a storefront church in Los Angeles, California. He accepted the offer and journeyed by train to assume his new pastorate. Seymour preached just a few sermons before he found himself locked out by his congregation. His members were not ready to accept his doctrine of Spirit baptism. He was rejected.

Homeless and jobless, Seymour was given a temporary shelter, and he dedicated himself to a time of intense prayer. Later on a family invited him to stay in their home. They also persuaded him to hold services in their abode. His messages were received so much so that he drew a large crowd to his services. They had to secure a new building to accommodate the onslaught of people who were coming to the services.

The building acquired was a former church building on 312 Azusa Street. The church was called the Apostolic Faith Mission, and they began their services in April, with Seymour as their pastor. In case the name of the street on which the church was located did not give you a hint, William J. Seymour was the catalyst behind the Azusa Street Revival. And rejection was the vehicle that navigated him to this accomplishment.

Seymour was rejected by a storefront church, and the rejection “re-ejected” him to be the pioneer of a 3 year revival characterized by the outpouring of the Holy Spirit, and a global Pentecostal movement whose impact is still resonating today. But how was Seymour able to get to this point? He was rejected.

People might hold you back from doing something, but God uses their hindrance to release you to fulfill His purpose for your life. The enemy will try to use rejection to set you back, but God uses it to set you free. Every time you hear people talk about the Azusa street revival, remember that the means through which that movement exploded, and the vehicle which ignited the man behind the explosion, is rejection (David W. Dorries, Spirit-Filled Christology (San Diego: Aventine Press, 2006), 260-263). 

There Is Someone Else Better For You

Recently, I had the privilege to watch clips of Pastor Joel Osteen’s Night of Hope event, which he held at the Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles, California. During the event he called one of the worship leaders of his church, Da’dra Crawford Greathouse, to share an experience she had, which showed how God helped her out of a trying situation. Ms. Greathouse mentioned that, a few years ago, she was diagnosed with a condition called goiter.This condition occurs as a result of the swelling of the thyroid gland. This was devastating news, as this condition led to two huge growths on either side of her neck, close to her larynx or voice box. The prognosis was that the condition could cause her not to be able to sing. And even if she could still sing, she wouldn’t be able to sing as high and as low, within her normal vocal range. Worse still, the condition could lead to death.

Distraught about this discouraging news she sought out the help of a doctor. She was hoping this doctor would be able to perform the surgery necessary to remove the growths, in such a way that she could still sing; and sing within her normal range. The doctor told her that there was nothing he could do for her, and walked away. Disheartened, she went after the doctor, and asked if there was anyone he knew that could perform the surgery for her. The doctor told her that there was no one…and he walked away.

Ms. Greathouse was devastated. Nevertheless, she strengthened her resolve. She kept her head up, looking on to God for help. She pressed on. She did more research, and eventually found another doctor. She related her plight to this new doctor, who assured her that not only could he perform the surgery, but he could do it in such a way that she would be able to sing as high and as low as she normally did. The success of the surgery was very evident by the way she sang in the Dodger Stadium.

It turns out that the new doctor was experienced and successful with the kind of surgery that Ms Greathouse needed to resolve her condition. If I’m not mistaken, the doctor was also the one who devised the surgical technique required for the kind of operation she needed. He had been carrying out this procedure in, developing countries, where he served as a medical missionary. Ms. Greathouse’s experience reinforces a truth about how God uses rejection to help us.

God allows the wrong people to walk away from our lives, in order to make room for the right people to walk into our lives. With this in mind, I want to encourage you by letting you know that God will allow someone to turn you down in order to allow someone else to turn you on. Someone may have walked out on you. You may have lost on an opportunity. Your employment, house, spouse, significant other, connection, friend or family member may have “walked” away; but keep your head up. Have faith in God and expect Him to walk the right person, project, promotion, or property into your life.

The Blessing is Thinking About You, And on its Way to You

How God Uses Rejection to Help You Find and Fulfill Your DestinyFor two and a half years, Margaux Sky overworked herself at her Art Café and Bakery restaurant. She did all the cooking, filled all the orders, and did all the cleaning. Yet, she could barely make ends meet. Despite her good cooking and hard work, it seemed like her work was in vain. It wasn’t surprising that she decided to call it quits by selling her café.

On the day she planned to work for the last time, her sister, Mary, ordered some takeout lunch. Mary ordered the lunch for her husband, Tim, who was providing lunch for his boss. Margaux made what she thought were her last batch of curried chicken sandwiches, and added some salad and homemade chocolate fudge cake to the mix. She handed the takeout lunch to her sister, to give to her husband for the lunch meeting he had with his boss.

Later that night, Tim called Margaux to let her know that his boss barely took the first bite of her curried chicken sandwich before she fell in love with it. Tim had told his boss that she should enjoy the sandwich while she could because Margaux, his sister-in-law, would be closing shop the next day. On her way home, Tim’s boss couldn’t get her mind off the palatable sandwich and Margaux.

On the next day, at about 8am in the morning, just one hour before Margaux handed over the reins of her restaurant to a new owner, Margaux got a phone call. It was from her brother-in-law, Tim. He said that his boss was sending her a big check to hire help and stay open for business. Tim had received an email from his boss the night before. His boss told him that, “Anybody this good shouldn’t go out of business.” Tim’s boss was Oprah Winfrey.

Likewise, you might be like Margaux, before her big break. You might be faithful with what you have, maintaining the integrity and excellence of who you are, and diligent at what you do. Yet, it seems like no one notices you. It appears that no one is vying for your affection, soliciting your business, acknowledging your work, or appreciating your efforts. Make no mistake about it; God sees you. God appreciates you. And God will blow your mind.

He is not unjust to see your work and labor of love that you have shown toward Him. Keep being your best. Keep maintaining your integrity. Keep the diligence in your work. No one as good as you are, in your character and your work ethic, should go out of business…so to speak. Not having people fall over themselves to seek you out for your affection or your expertise is just God’s way of preserving you for the right person or investor.

Proverbs 22:29 says that a person who excels and is diligent in their work will not stand before unknown people. Hence the reason why some haven’t valued who you are, what you have, and what you do. The proverb goes on to say that such an individual would stand before kings or people of influence. There is someone of great influence looking for you. Someone who will be captivated by your gift, expertise, virtue or integrity. Someone who would invest in your work or your heart.

If you are a virtuous woman, you might not get a check in the mail, but you will be checked out by a male…the right man for you. If you are a man of valor, your gift will make room for you, either in the establishment of someone of prominence, or in the heart of the right woman for you. Keep being your best. God sees your work. He will reward you publicly for what you’ve been doing privately.