Always aspire to be great.
Sam Eneje
Samuel Eneje is a digital media consultant.
One payment, endless Possibilities.
What He says, He will do.
Most people see food. I see structure.
A plate is never just a plate to me, it’s a system waiting to be built, refined, and scaled.
Because ideas are easy. Ex*****on is common. But translating ideas into something that actually works? That’s a different discipline.
I don’t just create products. I study behaviour. I test assumptions. I build models that make sense on paper, in practice, and in profit.
From the outside, it looks like food. But underneath, it’s strategy. It’s intention. It’s design.
That’s where I operate.
Not in the noise. Not in trends. But in building things that hold.
If you have an idea sitting in your head, or a business that feels like it’s not reaching its full capacity, you don’t need more hype.
You need clarity. You need structure. You need direction.
And that’s what I do.
John 14:15
15 “If you love me, keep my commands".
Moments.
All that we are is to give God glory.
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The story moves.
David has been anointed.
The Spirit of God has come upon him. And then, as if God wants to demonstrate immediately what He just deposited in this young man, a giant shows up.
Goliath.
Nine feet tall.
Armoured from head to foot.
A professional soldier who has been training for war since before David was born.
He stands in the valley every morning and every evening, taunting the army of Israel, and the entire army, including David's older brothers, is paralysed with fear.
David arrives at the battlefield to deliver food to his brothers. He hears Goliath. And he asks a question that reveals everything about who he is:
"Who is this uncircumcised Philistine, that he should defy the armies of the living God?"
Notice: David does not ask how big he is. He does not ask how long he has been threatening the army. He asks about the giant's relationship with God.
Because in David's mind, the most important fact about Goliath is not his size. It is his spiritual position.
David volunteers to fight him. And the response from the people around him is immediate and familiar:
You are disqualified.
His brother Eliab, the one who looked like a king, the one Samuel almost anointed, turns on David and says: Why did you come down here? I know your pride and the evil of your heart. You came just to watch the battle.
King Saul says: You cannot fight this man. You are just a youth, and he has been a warrior from his youth.
Everyone around David has a reason why he is the wrong person for this moment. Too young. Too inexperienced. Wrong background. Wrong size. Wrong pedigree.
Does that sound familiar?
How many voices in your life have given you a carefully reasoned explanation for why you are the wrong person for what God placed in your heart?
But David does not argue with the voices. He does not try to prove himself to the doubters. He simply goes back to his testimony.
He tells Saul: I killed a lion. I killed a bear. God delivered me from both. This Philistine will be no different, because he has defied the army of the living God.
David's confidence was not in his own ability. It was in the track record of a God who had already shown up for him.
We have established that David was overlooked.
That he was ruddy, ordinary in appearance, and not even invited to the gathering where his life would change.
But let us ask an important question today: why David?
If God does not look at the outward appearance, what did He see when He looked at David? What was it about this young, sun-darkened shepherd boy that made the Creator of the universe say: that one?
The answer is in the field.
Before David ever stood in front of Samuel, before the oil touched his head, before a single person celebrated him, David had already been doing something extraordinary in a place where nobody was watching.
He was worshipping.
In the fields, alone with his sheep, David was writing songs to God. Psalms that would become some of the most read words in human history were first sung to an audience of sheep and stars and open sky.
He was fighting.
When a lion came for the flock, David did not run. He killed it.
When a bear came, he killed that too. No audience. No recognition.
No one to post about it or celebrate it.
He was faithful.
He showed up every day to a job that no one considered important, and he did it with the full weight of his character.
David did not become extraordinary when Samuel arrived. Samuel's arrival simply revealed what David had already been building in secret.
This is one of the most important principles in the Kingdom of God:
Your private life is the audition for your public calling. What you do when no one is watching is exactly what God sees when He is deciding who to trust with more.
The worship that happens in your quiet morning before the day begins.
The integrity you maintain when no one would know if you compromised.
The faithfulness you bring to the small assignment that no one applauds.
The fight you put up for your own soul in the moments when it would have been easy to give in.
None of it is wasted.
All of it is seen. Every single moment of it is building something in you that the public season will require.
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