IF you want to get a handle on the subject of destiny,coupledwith definite, direct and practical keys to fulfil destiny, then the book, ‘Dynamics of a Divine Destiny’ written by Bimbo Akinjokun, is the material to read.
The seventh book written by Akinjokun is small book that can be read at a sitting because the contents are straight to the point and written in a language that is easy to understand.
Its 17 chapters containpoignant key points on the subject of how to bring one’s destiny to fulfilment – understanding the pitfalls and the stepping stones on the road to destiny.
He givesprecise clarification on the nature of destiny when in the book, he declares, “You do not design your destiny, you discover it.”
In the first chapter titled ‘Beware of the serpent’ Akinjokun explains an uncommon reasoning to help one understand the undercurrents of satan’s tempting of Eve in the Garden of Eden, explaining that every temptation is an attempt by satanto either misrepresent God’s kindness as laxity or God’s commitment to standards as being difficult to please. He explains that satan’s power to lure is in cunningness and subtilty.
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‘Delivering a Divine Destiny’, the second chapter, is an expose on how to birth and deliver one’s destiny through the instrumentality of the Holy Spirit and the purpose of timing.
Why do people fast and pray and still end up in a mess? Akinjokun explains this in the third chapter called ‘Escaping satanic deception.’
Chapter 4 is titled, ‘Is there a way out?’ This is definitely a question one will ask when life’s storms arise. The author’s answer is yes, and he tells how in this chapter.
Can one walk life’s journey solely depending on God? Is it wrong to engage the help of men? “…All helps come from God but most helps come through men. Those who honour God and despise their fellow men always end up blocking the channels through which their helps would come…,” declares the founder of Hill-City Inspiration House, as he explains the balance that is involved in Chapter 5 of the book.
On your marks,’ ‘The altar of change’, ‘The mystery of iniquity’, ‘The pathway to divine prominence’, ‘The purpose and the blessing’, ‘The purpose of favour’, ‘The two wings of a great eagle’, ‘Who can hinder His will’, ‘Why God is sometimes silent’, ‘You can turn it around’, and ‘You’ve got what it takes!’ are the titles of the remaining chapters of the book; with each of them packed with attitude-sharpening nuggets that enable one chart a clear pathway to fulfil their destiny in definite terms.
The author shares his personal testimony on destiny in the final chapter of the book. In so doing, Akinjokun demonstrates that the book is not an academic exercise, but a treatise on what he himself has lived out.He erases any doubt in the mind of the reader that he knows what he is talking about in the book.
Akinjokun is an itinerant minister but makes his home in Ibadan with his wife,Tolulope and two children.