Woman Evolve with Sarah Jakes Roberts - From Hustle To Harvest w/ Bishop T.D. Jakes
Episode Date: June 5, 2024They say just because you graduated, don’t burn down the school house—and today W.E. find out why! As one of the world’s most revered communicators, successful entrepreneurs, multi–New York Ti...mes best-selling authors and global leaders, Bishop T.D. Jakes details his journey as a CEO and Chairman. In this episode with SJR, Bishop Jakes elaborates on how he transitioned his day-to-day focus to other ventures while maintaining a stance at the intersection of mission, ministry and marketplace. It goes without saying that power moves from one idea to the next, so let's get into this message of expansion, succession, ownership, legacy and MORE! If you're on the entrepreneurial path, seeking a harvest then head over to the GoodSoilForum.com.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Both the promise and the pain that shaped you has a lot to do with the power that
emanates from you. You can't just have power and not have patience. Knowledge may drive the thought, but wisdom causes it not to destroy.
You can disrupt without becoming destructive.
First of all, let me say that I did get an update.
We had an episode called A Valuable Currency with Victoria Washington.
And in that podcast, we had a question that came over
that we finally got an update on.
So if you guys didn't get to hear,
this question was from a woman who was wondering
whether or not she should leave her job.
Sometimes she wants to quit
and find a different job opportunity
because of the weight that it
is causing on her mental and emotional health often has her conflicted.
But she also is wondering, am I supposed to be the light in this place and I'm supposed
to, you know, surrender to the discomfort so that I can let my light shine.
She wrote back and she says, Hey, sis, just listen to one of the podcast episodes and
heard your response to my question.
Thank you for hearing me.
It was so helpful.
I wanted to send an update.
I actually got let go from the job not long after was upset about it, but not really because
I wanted to leave anyway.
Lol.
Maybe that was God's way of making a way.
It was a good thing though, because it allowed me time to reset, learn and unlearn some things
and find myself again in God's hand, not a paycheck.
Anyway, thank you for all that you are and do
and praying for you continually.
Thank you so much.
One, for sending an update
because when I mind your business
and you don't tell me what happened,
I'd be out here with the ultimate cliffhanger.
And that's not right.
Don't do your friends like that.
Secondly, I'm glad to hear that God made it increasingly
clear what your next move needed to be.
And I am praying that you just continue to get more and more wisdom about how you move
into your next.
Okay, so now it's time for me to mind someone else's business.
I did not read this in advance.
So oh, this interesting because this is a question based off of the podcast that Victoria's
question was not Victoria's question that the young woman's question was, not Victoria's question,
that the young woman's question was on
with Victoria Washington.
Anyways, it says,
I recently heard the episode on relationship with money.
I've been responsible with money all my life,
but I've been surviving and not living for so long.
I'm a single mom of a 13 year old girl all her life.
My income really hasn't changed,
but God has sustained and always provided.
I went through a time where I was unemployed for almost a year and I was
faced with eviction and repossession. It's created a trauma for me and I'm
afraid of that happening. I'm anxious when I spend money because I want to
make sure I'm not without. I pay my tithes, offerings, and I believe that God
will bring financial freedom but I'm now 41 and I'm wondering when it will be my
time. I work to pay bills because that's'm now 41 and I'm wondering when it will be my time.
I work to pay bills because that's what it is
after I budget and make sure I take care of home first.
I'm a giver at heart and I've helped guys
in previous relationships in a huge way.
But that debt fell on me when they walked away
from the relationship.
How do I get over the hump?
I'm starting to feel stuck and stressed.
Okay, so this is a great question.
I will be honest, I'm not a money
whiz. So I know that there are resources out there that are better suited to help you get
the support that you need. Some of those people that we have introduced a delegation to or
presented to the delegation because the delegation was already familiar was the finance bar.
They have a social media page that helps you
to navigate financial choices and decisions.
The budgetista is someone who we enjoyed
in obviously Victoria, Washington.
I will say that the numbers are relatively,
I'm gonna say quote unquote simple.
If you cannot increase your income,
then if you can decrease your expenses,
even if that means downsizing,
even if that means getting creative
with the way that you guys are living,
that may be one of your only options.
Sometimes people move to different cities
because of the cost of living.
But I think that if you're in a situation
where you're tired of feeling like,
man, I am literally just working to pay bills, there's nothing left, and I'm still stressed, that may be considering if you're in a situation where you're tired of feeling like man, I am literally just working to pay bills
There's nothing left and I'm still stressed that may be considering if you've done all that you can on the money tightening upside
What can I do on the expense side to bring things down?
Is there a way that I can leverage an opportunity to add additional income?
But I do think that exploring your cost of living the cost of living in other cities, whether or not your job will transfer if the money will stretch in a different way are pretty much the only
options that you have.
Or like I said, trying to consider different ways of income, even if it's taking on a skill
or talent that is an investment at first, but then it's something that you can ultimately
use to create an additional stream of income in the long term.
That may be something to consider.
I understand completely the frustration of feeling like I just work to pay bills.
There has been many times in my life where I really didn't feel like I had much of a
cushion.
And I think what I did in those moments where I didn't have much of a cushion, I made some
choices that I think allowed me
to bring additional income.
There were some waitressing jobs that I did.
Oh my goodness, I did some childcare,
I did some house cleaning.
This was when I dropped out of college
and I was intent on making away from me and my son.
And my parents and I were just going through
a strange stage in our relationship.
I took on a lot of different odd jobs.
Maybe there's something that you can do in that lane.
If not, I would attack those expenses.
Those resources that I mentioned are much more equipped to help you figure out the best
path forward than I am. But I do know that sometimes what we lose in maybe not living in the way we
want, but gain in the joy. So I say that to say, so there's a woman I saw on TikTok and she's got a
family, I think it's like three or four children. And she has a one bedroom apartment and she turned
the living room into her bedroom, the main bedroom, two of the kids share and then the dining nook she has for one of her older children. I may have the layout wrong
but she's maximized the space of this one bedroom to make sure that she has space for the children
and she's doing what she has to do for now but what I'm saying is like okay so maybe she doesn't
have the two or three bedroom apartment maybe she can't afford it or maybe she could afford it but
she would be stretched and afford and get what she did and getting creative in her living space has presented
an opportunity where she may not be jumping into the two
or three bedroom, but as her money increases, she's able
to store or maybe even splurge in a way that she wouldn't
be able to if she was stretching to make ends meet.
I'm not necessarily saying that this is your path.
It's just an example of how people have used different
options to maximize their ability to make sure that ends are being
met, that children are being housed and fed and that those coins are going for
as long as they can. So I hope that you get plugged into those resources that
are much more knowledgeable than I am. But there's nothing like feeling stuck
and stressed. If you can decrease your expenses, even if it means changing the way you live in an exchange
for that, you have a little bit more cushion, you and your daughter maybe to do things that
you may have not been able to do because you were trying to maintain a housing situation
that wasn't ideal for her.
It could pay in the long run.
So take some time, do some exploring.
Hopefully that helps.
This is part of the reason why having a conversation about surrendering to believing in transition
is so necessary.
While my conversation with my father doesn't speak to this specifically, I do want to take
a moment and just talk about the reality of having to believe in seasons of life transition.
When I went on tour, we did a tour called
the Hope Revival Tour, and in that tour,
I used Hagar as an example.
Hagar was forced into a situation
where she had to transition.
Things were relatively okay for her,
but then God literally tells Abraham
to send her and the boy out,
and he sends her out with water,
and it's not enough to sustain her and the boy out and he sends her out with water and it's not enough to sustain her and
the boy and it's frustrating and she's getting ready to quit and she's ready to give up and
the boy cries out on her behalf and as a result of the boy crying out for her behalf God answers
her prayer to have provision in a space where she would have had lack. There are so many times where we can get so frustrated
by the lack that we don't even know how
to cry out for provision.
And I love this text so much because it doesn't say
that God built a well, it doesn't say that the woman
started digging or the boy started digging.
Something happens in her exchange with the Lord
where she opens her eyes and there's a well in front of her.
Maybe the well was already there, but she was so blinded by the lack that she didn't see the potential for provision.
I do believe that it is God's desire for us to live a life of peace, of rest, of...
I want to say surrender, but surrender, I do think in many ways it's a lifestyle of surrender
where we're willing to lay down our idea
of what our life should look like
in exchange for the reality of how his presence
can meet us where we are.
I also believe that God wants to partner with us
in us really maximizing whatever moment we're standing in.
And in those moments of transition, if we partner with our frustration, if we partner,
sometimes it's unknowingly partner with a lack mentality, we can miss out on the opportunity
to partner with God for us to experience provision.
And so my prayer for those of you all who are in a season of transition right now is
that God would help you.
I'm crying out even right now on your behalf, that God would help you. I'm crying out even
right now on your behalf that God would help you to see the ways that your perspective
may be limited to only look for what's wrong, limited because you've experienced so many
disappointments that you're not even positioned to think about innovation or creativity because you're just so tired. God, I pray that those
who this applied to would experience rest, rest in the area where they've been weary,
rest in the area where they've been stretching and feeling so pulled and yet not seeing a
harvest for the things that they have sown. God, I pray that you would allow
them to experience your comfort. Even the comfort that comes with you laying them on
my heart at a time where they can't pray for themselves. Lord, I'm crying out for their
behalf. I'm crying out that they would see you, that they would know you, that they would
believe you in this moment of transition, that they would not miss the unexpected provision that exists for them in this moment.
God, I pray that if they have resources available to them, but they're afraid to ask God of
pride, that they would open their mouth so that they do not miss the miracle that was
connected with them opening their mouth.
God, if they have no one to call on, no provision that they can see.
God, I pray that you would create it for them,
that they would open their eyes
and in an area where they once saw drought,
they would experience living water.
God, bless them as only you can do.
Bless them first for the inside
that they would have rest and peace and comfort,
and then practical resources available to them.
In Jesus' name I pray.
Amen.
I'm excited about this conversation with my dad.
He's seen a lot of transition in his life and I believe that his wisdom on the current
state of affairs, his wisdom on what's happening in the world is going to be helpful and beneficial
to you.
So let's get into it.
So last time you were on the podcast, you had just drug me around Atlanta, passing the
baton with very little remorse.
I have, you know, very little remorse.
And that was in 2022.
And it's been over a year and I feel like there's been like maybe that was
the beginning of transition, but I feel like we're a little bit further into transition.
So I'm just wondering like, how are you feeling since everything happened?
Everyone's always asking me like, how did I feel like how have you been feeling since
that moment? I feel great. You know, I don't do anything
without a lot of prayer and a lot of deliberation. So I generally don't make uncertain moves,
especially of that magnitude. I might be an impulsive shopper. But that big of a transition
was something that I prayed about and watched
and thought about several years before we did it. So when we did it, I felt really,
really good about it and felt really, really great about it. And I'm still involved in
a supportive role in the background. And that's kind of refreshing. I like it.
I feel like what happened at Why Man Th THOU ART LOOSE happening at the same time that Taree
and I moved to Dallas was just speaking to growth and expansion as well.
I'm wondering, as I've seen you begin to move more into your role as a chairman with the
foundation, more into real estate with the ventures.
What are you sensing is happening generationally
with the passing of the baton?
And how has it felt for you introducing new ideas
and concepts into something that has already proven
to be very effective?
Well, a lot of my generation is retiring.
Unfortunately, some are expiring.
I am moving more into semi-retirement as it relates to pastoral duties as you and Torrey
take over more and more aspects of the leadership of the church.
It has freed me to work in the foundation
and with TD Jakes Real Estate Ventures
and TD Jakes Airprises.
And that's really exciting for me
because when I was focused primarily on every Wednesday night,
every Sunday morning, doing everything over there,
I didn't give it the attention that I'm able to give it now
and it needs that attention.
And as you all move into that role,
I wanted to do it gradually because the weight
of responsibility that comes with
welding the sword from that platform
is bigger than leading a church. We have a global church,
we have a church around the world. And I wanted you to have a chance to adjust to that and
not just drop the weight of it all on you and just walk away into the sunset. I think
that's irresponsible. And I like to think of it like a skin graft.
You know, they'll take skin from one part of your body
and graft it to another part of your body.
And even though it was always in the body,
it still has to graft both by the peripheral skin,
as well as the new skin.
It still needs time to graft in order to work.
And I think that's good.
And how I feel about it is, it's interesting
because on one hand, you don't build something
of that magnitude from the ground up
and not have intense passion and feeling about it.
And on the other hand, I do feel excited.
For me, what I'm doing with real
estate and what I'm doing with entrepreneurship and what I'm doing with the foundation is
just the word made flesh. It's still ministry, you know, creating opportunities for underserved
communities. It's still ministry. It's Jesus feeding the multitude.
It's providing for basic needs.
If your brother have need of a coat,
don't give him a sermon.
And so now I'm able to work in another aspect
of meeting people at the point of their needs,
but it's still ministry.
And so we haven't completely transitioned, you know, and but we have began
the process of that skin graft taking place. And it's a grafting you can't control. That
makes me a little bit uncomfortable because I might occasionally have control issues, but it's a great thing you can't
control because it's not totally at the mercy of the new skin or the old skin.
They both have to accept each other and that has to be a natural organic process of deliberation.
And as long as I live, I will always be around and I will always
be supportive and I will always be in some aspect of speaking, preaching, leading, developing,
that sort of thing. But to give my day-to-day attention over to other things and to see people have a place to stay, workforce housing,
to see people have an opportunity to build their business,
especially with technology coming in
and changing the future for so many jobs
that we have come to rely upon as American citizens.
I think it's very, very important that we
have a stabilized economy as a country.
Yeah.
So, so I think it's the work of the Lord.
It's all the work of the Lord.
But to God be the glory.
You so deep.
You so saved, Bishop.
Well, it is.
No, it's true.
It's true.
It's true.
It's true.
It's true.
It's true.
Last season, millions tuned into the Betrayal podcast to hear a shocking story of deception.
I'm Andrea Gunning, and now we're sharing an all new story of betrayal.
Stacey thought she had the perfect husband.
Doctor, father, family man.
It was the perfect cover for Justin Rutherford to hide behind.
They led me into the house and I mean, it was like a movie.
He was sitting at our kitchen table.
The cops were guarding him.
Stacey learned how far her husband would go to save himself.
I slept with a loaded gun next to my bed.
You not just say I wish he was dead,
you actually gave details and explained different scenarios
on how to kill him.
He, to me, is scarier than Jeffrey Dahmer.
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Hey everyone, I'm Mark. I'm Greg.
I'm Brendan.
And this is a trailer for a new podcast called
Get It to Dutch, A Screenwriter's Journey.
It's about screenwriting.
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The three of us play aspiring screenwriters
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Well, I would say one of us is aspiring
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Which one of us is aspiring?
Well, they're gonna have to listen to the podcast.
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I do want to talk a little bit though, because like, you know, I just had this book, Power
Moves came out.
And literally part of the latter part of the chapters talks about how power moves from
one idea to a next, and how something that once worked in one system in one generation may not
be what works in the next. I want to talk a little bit about succession and not
just familial succession but as we see emerging leadership from Millennials
into workplaces where maybe boomers or exers have had a particular way of
doing things, we see technology changing the way
things have done, we see quite
literally power moving from one
concept to another.
What is one thing that you think
an incoming generation must do
in order to successfully expand
what has already been done, while
also honoring the people who are maybe still in decision
making positions.
First of all, I think that when we think about it generationally, we don't really give power
moves the full credit when we do it by age.
It varies by region.
What works in California won't work in New York. What works in Chicago won't work in West Virginia.
There's all of those different dynamics other than age.
But we generally talk about it generationally and not
regionally.
But there are different approaches.
And that's some of the struggle when you go to a conference
and you come back with all these ideas,
you also have to siphon them through,
will this work in Tuscaloosa?
Will this work in Birmingham?
And then when you add the generational component in it,
our message remains the same, but our methods change.
Our message remains the same, but our methods change. The core that creates ministry is the gospel, and that's going to be what it's going to be. That's not going to change.
The way in which we express the gospel, receive the gospel, the way in which we are able to communicate the
gospel. For example, the fact that we can stream. Paul never got to stream. He never
got to tweet. He never got to post. But we can still communicate the gospel through technology
in a way that we didn't have an opportunity to do before. And in the local church setting,
church music is faddish, like all music,
it goes through stages.
And when you lived a long time, you've seen a lot of stages.
I've seen a lot, when I came along,
the caravans were before the Clark sisters, okay?
And then the Clark sisters came along,
they were contemporary.
Now they're considered traditional.
And the beat goes on and then there's,
what's Christian music, mainstream,
worship music, all the hymns, anthems.
It's gonna take on many iterations
based on creativity and time.
But again, the core remains the same.
You know, you can put bananas in cornbread,
banana cornbread, but you can't leave out the cornmeal.
There are some basic things that still are applicable
as you try new things and do creative things
that are unique, not only to the generation
but to the individual. I think you have to be true to who you are, not just true to who
your generation is, but true to who you are a generation, you have to move as an individual
who happens to be a part of a generation. But every person in that generation doesn't
have the same giftings, the same talent, the same education, the same mentality, the same
wisdom, the same charisma. It is so individualized.
It's the difference between the book of Hebrews
and the book of Romans.
Yes, they're both in the Bible,
but you can see the style of the writing deviate
by the individual who recourse it.
And I think to that own self be true,
is what I would say to the coming generation,
being true to your core and your essence
and what shaped you, both the promise and the pain
that shaped you has a lot to do with the power
that emanates from you and that power moves as you age.
Different stages of parenthood, of marital life, of stage of life you're in,
all of that plays a part in what you bring to the stage.
When you walk across the stage to that mic, every experience that you had leading up to
walking across the stage walks with you. And those experiences continue to change
and your worldview changes.
So your depth of revelation is in part based on the eyes
that behold the text.
I can't tell you how different a text looks to me now
than it did 20 years ago.
Because my life's experiences, the text is still the same,
but my life's experiences, the text is still the same, but my life's experiences
make me extract from the text different elements of truth and wisdom that add to the style
in which Jeremiah writes versus the style in which Isaiah writes, from Isaiah to Ezekiel, who were primarily in the same era. But their
style of expressing their revelation, their focus of what was important. Isaiah is talking
a lot about the future. Ezekiel is talking a lot about the conditions as it's going on
in Israel at that time. Neither one of them are wrong.
And I think when we start to get down to right and wrong
rather than different, we make a mistake.
You know, this is wrong, this is out of style.
Clothes go out of style, hair may go out of style,
but truth and authenticity never goes out of style.
And I think the way you may remain relevant at my age
is to be true to who you are.
And the way you remain relevant at your age
is to be true to who you are,
whether you're in the corporate world.
Like people say, you know, you're a minister,
you're involved in entrepreneurship,
we're getting ready for our Good Soil Conference,
we're training people in entrepreneurship.
Well, I'm a minister, but I'm a person too.
And I tell them, if I could sing like Marvin Winans,
I would, but that's not what God gave me,
though he and I are pretty close to the same age.
You know, I'm not gonna be Rob Parsley,
though we're the same age.
I'm not gonna be Creflo Dollar, though we're the same age. There are certain things that we have in common, but you can only give to
people what has been given to you. As Jesus said, as the Father have loved me, so love
I you. And so what has been poured into me is all that can pour out of me. And that changes at every day of your
life, every meeting you go to, every country you visit. Your vision expands of the world
as you travel more, as opposed to somebody who's never left buck-tussle. They've got
the same Bible, but their view of the world when they read the text is imaginary.
But if you've been to the promised land, if you've been to Jerusalem, if you've been to
Israel, your view expands as you expound the scripture.
Do you think that for someone who is trying to be true to themselves in systems that only honor maybe one expression
of gifting, one expression of talent.
Do you think that their job is to honor the difference?
But like how do they not lose themselves?
I'll make this a little bit more grounded.
I get a lot of communication from people who are like, hey, maybe I feel called to a business
or I feel called to a church, but I have such great ideas on how things could be done differently
on how we can reach more people on how we can change the way things have been done.
But I feel like I'm constantly being shut down.
Do you think they go to a space where they can flourish or do they stay in
this tension of being called to a place that doesn't necessarily feel like it has flexibility
and wait for it to become more flexible?
How do they navigate them being in those rooms?
You know, when you were very, very, very little girl, I had 55 gallon fish tanks, aquariums.
And we would go to the fish store and pick up fish in a plastic bag and bring them home.
We didn't just dump the fish over into the tank.
You'll shark the fish and kill it.
You put the bag in the water in an isolated environment and let it adjust to the environment
and then ease the fish into it.
Sometimes we can have great ideas,
but we introduce them in ways that are offensive.
So charisma and wisdom and timing has a lot to do
with whether those ideas are accepted or not. And sometimes respecting the old ideas while you introduce new ideas is a gradual process.
The world changes gradually. Culture in an organization changes gradually, not suddenly. If you're gonna change the culture of an organization,
you have to do it gradually.
If you're gonna change the culture in a church,
you have to do it gradually.
So patience is required with power.
You can't just have power and not have patience.
And part of being a great shepherd is patience
because sheep don't run, not fast.
So you've got to have patience
if you're gonna be a great leader
and introduce your creativity incrementally
without insulting that which was because the people who are there are part
of that which was. And so when you insult it, you insult them. And so I think you have
to do it in such a way that you don't, you're not, I tell people the plane is going like
at 500 miles an hour, but you can't feel it in the cabin. You want the ride to be smooth.
I don't want to be sitting there with my jaws blowing back, and I'm holding onto my seat
like this. And I think sometimes when we're excited about our ideas and we want to come
in and make it right now, you make people's jaws blow back when in fact it is possible to go 500 miles an hour and
still have a smooth ride inside the cabin.
And that's what you want to do as a leader, whether you're in corporate America, whether
you're in a business.
There's subtle changes.
There are graphic changes, changing the color, changing the logo, little steps, changing the mood, the music,
the tone, the texture, exposing the audience or the company
to new ideas and different thoughts
where it's not all coming from you.
Let it be birthed in them like it was birthed in you.
And in West Virginia, we used to have a saying,
just because you graduated, don't burn down the school.
You know, now you've got a great idea and you've graduated,
but don't burn down the school because you were a good person
before you had the great idea.
So give me a chance to take the class too
and let's grow together.
And I think that's part of wisdom.
Knowledge may drive the thought, but
wisdom causes it not to destroy. You can disrupt without becoming destructive.
Okay. So I love what you said about culture changing gradually, Because I do think that part of being
in an internet generation,
in a microwave generation,
as you all call,
which I have to tell you,
you know, people you say,
you know, this is such a microwave generation,
you press a button, it comes out so quickly,
that there was a part of me that felt like
a little offended by this.
But now that I see how quickly we expect
for change to occur,
and I look at the stories of people we admire, who, you know, 12 years here, 20 years working
there before they became these legendary icons that we understand.
It helps me to understand that we do have an expectation that my idea should be manifested,
realized, transforming things within a year or I'm giving up.
And it makes me think about how you're also changing the culture gradually about entrepreneurship
within our communities.
I think for a long time, we felt like success
was owning a business, success was being a business owner.
But what I hear you saying is that it is time for us
to change the mentality around entrepreneurship
from not just being starting the business, but
how do I scale it?
How do I make sure that I'm not the only one who is doing all of the parts?
Can we talk a little bit about entrepreneurship, why it's important in this day and age where
technology seems to be taking over things that would have once been businesses?
And how do we begin to see ourselves as more than just starters, but people who are established
for generations?
Wow.
Big question.
Big question.
Let's roll all the way back to we as a people came here as a product. And when you are introduced to a country as a for sale
item, it affects you even in freedom to think in terms of working for somebody rather than
owning. So the first hurdle to get over is to get to climb the hurdle of
being attracted to ownership when you have once been owned. Wow.
Okay, so let's let's start there. And then once you do that and we are 90 about 92% of all
black businesses have less than two employees.
So that means that a lot of times we have people running a business because they have a talent,
but not because they know how to run a business.
And so just because you can, to simplify it, just because you can fry chicken doesn't mean that you should open up a chicken shack.
Because quite honestly, you can get somebody to fry the chicken, but you might not be
able to get somebody to do the books and to think whether you should scale the business.
Bringing more people and the right people when you bring more people can cause your
business to accelerate much more rapidly.
And we're trying to teach them how to get soil,
how to get access to capital,
what to do with that capital when you get it.
Not to take the capital and spend it on luxury items,
not necessarily even for you,
but to bling out the restaurant
when you need an accountant.
To bling out the restaurant
and you've got fancy plates and cups,
but you haven't paid your quarterly taxes,
you don't have your W-2 set up,
you don't have estate planning set up,
you don't know whether you're doing a DBA
when you need to be doing LLP or LLC or whatever.
Investigating and develop, we do all of that at Good Soil.
We teach you, we expose you to the people who have the capital, even when you don't
have full credit.
We talk you through the process of still working a job because you need to eat while you're
doing it and growing your business to the point that you're working yourself out of a job into ownership.
And the reason it is so vitally important is because stats say that 70 million jobs
will be deleted because of artificial intelligence.
Now they're going to be replaced with 80 million jobs.
But the question is, are you qualified for those jobs?
And if you're not trained and qualified to not just to buy technology, but to create
technology or make technology or repair technology, then ownership becomes a way in which you
can own a business that causes you to be able to flourish because
you might not be able to go back to school and go through a full STEM program and go
after technological engineering degrees at 40 because you've got three kids or five kids
or the other.
But you could start a business or you could do something on that
regard and you could hire people to do it.
If you get profitable, you can hire people to do it and run a tech company.
Some of the biggest tech companies in the country, I mean billion dollar tech companies
are not owned by people who have tech backgrounds.
So ownership means that you can go out and hire what you don't know and own a business
because business principles are transferable.
Whether you run in a car lot or whether you're running a truck driving service or whether
you're running a restaurant, the or whether you're running a restaurant,
the basic principles of business remain the same.
I'm reading a book now called Business Made Simple,
and listening at the basic principles
are transferable into real estate development,
it's transferable even into leadership of the church, you have to have a certain business acumen if you're
going to be successful or you don't get the loan at the bank, or you don't have the financials
prepared to do business with the world.
We're not in the world, but we're still of the world, and we have to be able to understand
the world in order to function within the world.
Last season, millions tuned into the Betrayal podcast
to hear a shocking story of deception.
I'm Andrea Gunning, and now we're sharing
an all new story of betrayal.
Stacey thought she had the perfect husband.
Doctor, father, family man.
It was the perfect cover for Justin Rutherford
to hide behind.
It led me into the house and I mean it was like a movie.
He was sitting at our kitchen table. The cops were guarding him.
Stacey learned how far her husband would go to save himself.
I slept with a loaded gun next to my bed.
You not just say I wish he was dead, he actually gave details and explained different scenarios
on how to kill him.
He to me is scarier than Jeffrey Dahmer.
Listen to Betrayal on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Gangsta Rap. Hosted by MC Yade and Big Steels every Thursday, each episode provides an in-depth
exploration into the formative artists, monumental albums, and socio-political factors that have
shaped Gangsta Rap from its emergence in the 80s to its enduring impact today. Gangsta Chronicles
unpacks the evolution of this uniquely American art form. We dive into the socio-cultural aspects
that Gangsta Rap boldly addressed, from police brutality to systemic racism, offering listeners Hey everyone, I'm Marc. I'm Greg. I'm Mark.
I'm Greg.
I'm Brendan.
And this is a trailer for a new podcast called Get It to Dutch, a Screenwriter's Journey.
It's about screenwriting.
And a journey.
The three of us play aspiring screenwriters on a quest to get a hit Hollywood script to
famous producer Dutch Huxley.
Well, I would say one of us is aspiring and the other two are sort of struggling.
Which one of us is aspiring? Well they're gonna have to
listen to the podcast. Hmm but I don't know and I made the podcast. I made the
podcast and I think you guys were along for the ride. Each week we bring in a
script, we read it and then we give each other notes. And you'll also hear about
our adventures navigating the Hollywood system. The show features amazing
guests like Tim Robinson,
Lily Sullivan, Weird Al Yankovic, and Rob Hubel.
And like any great blockbuster,
it's filled with heartbreak, adventure, suspense,
and just a little tasteful nudity.
And some distasteful nudity.
Sorry about that, guys.
Listen to Get It to Dutch,
a screenwriter's journey on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
That is so good and so necessary because not many places are having these conversations
in ways that we can access the people who need to be caught up the most.
I feel like good soil is an incredible opportunity to do that.
Between good soil, what I see you doing with the foundation, what I see you doing with the real estate ventures, it feels like you are more intentionally, I think
you've always thought about legacy, but I think you have more intentionally been thinking
about the remaining marks that you want to leave as a part of your legacy in the world.
They asked you this at the Milken Institute, but I wanna ask you,
as you consider the essence of who you are,
what you've been able to offer to the world,
what is it about what you know about the world,
what you know about God,
what you know about ministry
that you want to stay in the earth?
You know, I'm gonna give you a very deep answer.
The Bible said Aaron's rod, which was a dead stick, budded, blossomed and brought forth
fruit.
Okay?
Whether it's in the budding stage, the blossoming stage, or the bringing forth fruit stage, you're always evolving,
but you are still coming from the same place.
And so for me, as I think about legacy,
and the innovation and the things I've been able to do,
when I go back and check my DNA,
I just 10X to what my parents did in front of me.
You know, and it looks innovative and it looks creative
and it is legacy and it is important
that you leave your mark in the world
and something that outlives you and outlives you.
But the root is not that different from the fruit.
And my mother owned property, she dabbled in real estate, she
collected rent until she passed away. My father owned a business. That was the environment
from which I was extrapolated. And I did not know that it was in me like that. But over time, you bud, you blossom, you bring forth fruit.
And this is a stage where I'm bringing forth another kind of fruit and leaving legacy in
the earth.
But that does not negate that the greatest legacy that I leave in the earth are the people
who were touched by my ministry, who were changed by my messages. The greatest legacy I leave on
earth is my children and what they are able to grow up and do and be. That's legacy too.
Not all legacy is tangible and face forward to the public. Some legacy is incalculable
Some legacy is incalculable in terms of the changing of a human heart. So I'm adding to that legacy in very practical, pragmatic ways to help to deter the projection
that by 2050, the average median income of African Americans is projected to be zero. If I can subvert that and bring it up
just 20%, 10%, I will have made my mark on it and somebody else will have to do the rest.
And when we talk about African American median income, you're talking about the country's median income
because we represent a significant portion
of the population.
So when we do better, everybody does better.
Since we are at the bottom of the chain
when it comes to income disparity,
if we go up, everything else goes up too.
So if it's good for us, it's good for the country.
It's good for the other business owners.
It's good for the mortgage company.
It's good for the banking business.
It's good for the carpenters and the electricians when you own your own home.
Your success creates jobs for all kinds of other people.
You do a movie from hairstylists to makeup artists
to food prep people that are never seen in the credits
when you roll the credits.
All of those people had a job because you did a film.
And so it's like the quantum theory of the butterfly.
The butterfly flaps its wings in Brazil and a storm breaks out in Alaska.
It's a residual perpetual effect of better.
When you do better, I do better.
And I might not do better directly, but indirectly your better affects my better also.
Okay.
So before we go, I have to ask you, as you are kind of semi-retired, not really, you
just left your semi and then you picked up another semi, so you still full eye.
Don't tell my bitches like that. another semi so you still full eye. What place?
Don't tell my bitches like that.
I'm snitching.
I'm snitching.
You know, rest.
What does it look like to give yourself permission to rest while also recognizing that there
are other things that you want to accomplish?
Rest for me becomes difficult because my mind is moving faster than my body.
And I have to be intentional about getting rest.
I have to supplement my body with magnesium and things like that to shut my brain down
so that I can't get rest.
And I slept all day Monday.
You know, I slept late into the day.
And then I went back to bed again.
And then I went back to bed earlier again to get rest.
But rest isn't just about sleep.
Yeah.
Rest is about fun time, relaxing time,
sitting in the backyard under a tree,
taking vacations sometimes. For me,
a lot of times, I don't always get to go travel and spend tense consecutive days of rest,
but little moments of rest. You know, Jesus stole away from the crowd and went up into
the mountains. And what led to him walking on the water
is that he was coming from that respite
of getting away from everybody pulling at him
and in prayer and contemplation.
He was on the boat, sleep on the boat.
Sometimes you have to get it where you can,
especially when you've got a lot of responsibility.
You might not be able to
get it in traditional ways, a pedicure, a manicure, that sort of thing enables you
to keep going till you get to a place where you can shut everything down.
Rest for me is having a good team around me that I can count on so that I'm not
sitting on the beach answering texts and responding to phone me that I can count on so that I'm not sitting on the beach answering
texts and responding to phone calls. And I can't rest. It doesn't matter where I fly
to. If I'm going to be worried while I'm there, I might as well sustain where I am. So rest
for me is knowing that everything is handled, everything is safe, everything is well, because I was raised to be responsible.
And that's a pro and a con.
It's good because I am very responsible.
It's bad because I'm so responsible
that I have to fight off guilt when I take a break.
You know, that guilt lessens with knowing
that the essentials are covered in my absence and the greater
the people you hire, which goes back to good soil, if you're only you working and your
mama or you working and your cousin and you working and your sister, how would you get
rest? Because if you can't back away from it a few weeks
without it caving in, it's not a business.
It's a gig, it's a hustle.
And what we're trying to do is to get people
from hustle to harvest so that they can get moments
of rest and reflection, which incidentally
makes you more creative when you come back, because
you had a moment to stand back and stare at it, and you're better when you come back than
you were before you left.
Okay.
I just needed that soundbite so I could play it for you.
Thank you for that.
That is evil and wicked and I'm praying for you.
Everything's fine, Bishop.
Well, it's not my, it's one of my weaker strengths, as your mother would say.
I know, I heard her when you said that. Yeah, yeah. It's one of my weakest strengths to let go.
But I did find the key to my weaker strength becoming strong and that's hiring competent
people.
Yeah.
And that makes it easier for me to walk away and really be present in the moment at the beach and not be sneaking looking at
my phone trying to respond to something.
So you're doing better.
You are you doing better.
I'm working progress.
I love you daddy.
I watch movies and everything.
I know and you'd be binge watching.
I'm proud of you.
You're doing better.
I'm doing better.
Love you.
Thank you for the opportunity.
Love you too.
Thank you for the opportunity.
Love you too.
Thank you, daddy.
Thank you.
I hope that you enjoyed this episode as much as I did.
I love having an opportunity to sit down with my father
and just to pick his brain.
If you want more information on Good Soil,
make sure that you log on to his social media page.
We still have a few spots left and I believe that it's going to be just a rewarding
opportunity for you to be in the room with people who are in the same lane as you
as entrepreneurship or moving in a lane that you feel called to.
So you can check out the Good Soil forum by a simple Google search
or heading over to Bishop's page where they've got all the details about the conference.
All right. Listen., oh my gosh, next week,
I am releasing an episode with Priscilla Shire.
Let me tell you.
Blessed, okay?
It was so, so good, a mentorship moment.
If ever there was one.
You do not wanna miss all of the incredible conversations
we're having about transition this month.
So make sure that you are subscribing,
downloading, rating the podcast
because we've got more goodies headed your way.
Evolve.
Last season, millions tuned into the Betrayal podcast
to hear a shocking story of deception.
I'm Andrea Gunning,
and now we're sharing an all new story of betrayal.
Justin Rutherford, doctor, father, family man.
It was the perfect cover to hide behind.
Detective Weaver said,
I'm sure you know why we're here.
I was like, what in the world is going on?
Listen to betrayal on the iHeart radio app,
Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Melissa Fumero and I'm Stephanie Beatriz. You may know us from television.
And now we're here with our very own podcast, More Better with Stephanie and Melissa.
Join us as we take on topics like listening to yourself, the challenge of self-care, and making friends as an adult.
We're gonna share our struggles,
we're gonna speak to experts,
and we're gonna share everything we learned with you.
Listen to more Better with Stephanie and Melissa
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Dev into the visceral world of hip-hop
with the Gangsta Chronicles, hosteded by MC Yade and Big Steel,
Zerry Thursday, a podcast that aims to unravel the intricate tapestry of one of music's most influential and misunderstood subgenres, gangster rap.
Gangsta Chronicles unpacks the evolution of this uniquely American art form,
offering listeners a comprehensive understanding of the significance this genre holds.
Listen to the Gangsta Chronicles on the Black Effect Podcast Network, iHeartRadio app, or wherever you get your podcasts.