Hear, O LORD, when I cry with my voice: have mercy also upon me, and answer me. When thou saidst, Seek ye my face; my heart said unto thee, Thy face, LORD, will I seek. Hide not thy face far from me; put not thy servant away in anger: thou hast been my help; leave me not, neither forsake me, O God of my salvation. When my father and my mother forsake me, then the LORD will take me up. Teach me thy way, O LORD, and lead me in a plain path, because of mine enemies.
Psalm 27:7-11
Though he was later known around the world as a powerful preacher and evangelist, G. Campbell Morgan started his ministry with a crushing rejection. He was one of 150 men who applied for ordination in 1888 but only 45 were approved, and he was not one of them. Jill Morgan, his daughter-in-law, wrote in her biography of him, A Man of the Word, “He wired to his father the one word, 'Rejected,' and sat down to write in his diary: 'Very dark everything seems. Still, He knoweth best.' Quickly came the reply: 'Rejected on earth. Accepted in Heaven. Dad.'” Morgan could have given up but instead kept going. In later years, Morgan said, “God said to me, in the weeks of loneliness and darkness that followed, 'I want you to cease making plans for yourself, and let Me plan your life.'”
All of us know the experience of failing to accomplish something we set out to do. All of us know the experience of having someone we counted on let us down in some way or even turn against us. All of us know the sting of rejection. Yet in every such moment, the promise of God's presence is still there. Even if we cannot count on those closest to us, we can always count on God. “Let your conversation be without covetousness; and be content with such things as ye have: for he hath said, I will never leave thee, nor forsake thee” (Hebrews 13:5).