Paula White
She has a brand new website.
You may want to check it out but first, her story as told during her interview with the 700 club. She calls it From Trash to Treasure&
Paula Whites life started in what seemed to be an ideal situation -- the adored child of wealthy parents
My father took care of me every day, she recalls. He would take me to breakfast every morning and then to the country club. My mom ran the businesses. They were entrepreneurs. We owned toy stores, craft stores, restaurants, and seafood chains. So I just knew that loving arm that would hold me and draw smiley faces on my pancakes.
I was always told I was Daddys little girl. In fact, we owned toy stores, and I would run in and want to get the latest toy off the shelf. My mom would say no way, and my dad would say, Get whatever you want, baby.
Paula was five when her family moved from Tupelo, Missisippi, to Memphis, Tennessee.
Out of the blue& her life changed forever.
My dad comes in one night. Hes been drinking excessively, and he grabs one hand of me. My mother grabs the other, and they begin to pull at me like a Raggedy Ann doll -- just tugging at me. He says, Give her to me, or Ill kill myself. She said, No, I wont. She held on to me with her life, and my father extended his hand out and began to bash her head in. I had never seen a violent side to my father. So they call for the police, take him away, put him in jail overnight, he gets out, and takes his life as he had said he would, Paula says.
Paula faced a much different future without her beloved father to watch over her. Her perfect life became increasingly unstable.
From the ages of six to thirteen, Paula endured years of sexual and physical abuse.
Some were caretakers, some were neighbors, different people, she says. It wasnt a consistent abuse, but it was enough to do damage that psychiatrists said that I would be dysfunctional all my life.
Paulas downward spiral continued as she searched for the love she so desperately needed.
One thing just began to build in my life after another. Then there were the eating disorders: bulimia, anorexia& Sleeping with different people, thinking this is how you find love, she says. There was such a fear in me that [men] would never come back so do whatever you have to. Hit me, beat me, call me a dog, do whatever, just dont leave.
The odds that Paula White would find Jesus seemed slim since shed never even been to church.
I never heard the Gospel until I was 18 years old, she says. Jesus Christ& the name was synonymous to me as the Tooth Fairy or Santa Claus. Id heard the name but I did not know that He was the Son of God, that He walked the earth that He lived, He died, was crucified on an old rugged cross& that there was a God that loved me unconditionally.
At 18 Paula was visiting the home of a friend.
Im sitting in the living room, his uncle comes in, and says, I can see all your pain. Im thinking, How can you see any pain? I am a master at this time at masking any hurt [and] anything that would show the dysfunction.
He begins to pierce me with words that penetrated my being. He starts saying, I know what youre going through. He doesnt know anything about who I am, my background. He gets out a Bible, and I dont even know what a Bible is. I have no idea what hes doing. He says, I have the answer for everything thats hurting you, for every problem that you face. He just begins to, what I call, read me my mail. He takes me through the Word of God -- shows me the plan of salvation. Not only does he lead me to the Lord but he releases all the things in my past, shows me from the Word of God that I dont have to be a victim to the things that happened to me. I have this supernatural encounter. I mean, I got saved! I got rescued. I was radically changed.
I cannot tell you what exploded on the inside of my being. I can just say I, for the first time in my life, knew love.
Paula set out on a journey to find out what God was all about.
So I held the Word of God up and said, I want to know You. I want answers for life. I want to understand who You are. I dont want to trainwreck my life. I dont want to go back to anything that had been a part of that dysfunction.'
Soon Paulas passion for evangelism was born.
I found myself in the inner cities of America, all over the world for years, she says. Just hugging little boys and girls, telling them about the love of God, and picking up little broken Paulas. I was holding myself, restoring myself, and giving them the Word that so transformed me.
Paula married her husband Randy, and they lead Without Walls in Tampa, Florida.
Theres so many things that God has given me, she says. I have a wonderful husband, wonderful children, wonderful friends, a great church. My life is so satisfied and fulfilled in so many other areas that I focus on what God has given me and what I do have instead of what I dont have.
Most of all Paula White is determined to pass on what she does have to the people who need it most.
My greatest thrill was not preaching in public, she says. It was going into a restaurant, looking into a waitresss eyes, seeing behind the package [to] the depth of her soul, and giving her that same love that God gave me when I was 18 years old.
Life labeled me, people gave up on me, and thought that there was no hope, but God takes the people who have been cast aside and look like trash. Gods in the recycling business. He recycles that trash and brings forth treasure.
What nothing in this world can put back together, God can. If someone says its too much, what theyre saying is that the blood of Jesus Christ, the covenant that God made, is not enough. I stand as an [example] to say it is more than enough.



Your write touched my life and very encouraged by it.It has lifted my soul and spirit and have stored your website on my system.I stumbled on your web when i was going through one other inspirational website and that Olorunjo caught my attaention and when i closely checked your album,i realised that i know Egbon very well - i mean your Husband,he is a senior brother to my friend in University of Ilorin-Dele Olorunjo.
Keep on inspiring people.
We love it
Deji Adeola