Mark Jackson: What God’s Heroes Are Made Of

Mark Jackson’s journey to Warriors shaped by faith

Associated Press

Source: online.wsj.com

OAKLAND, Calif. — Mark Jackson had just arrived at the scene of a fiery crash near his Southern California home.

A Chrysler LeBaron was ablaze, a familiar one. The Golden State Warriors coach had purchased it months earlier so a family that needed a car could attend his ministry. The sight was bad enough — and then Jackson saw a pair of feet. Nine-year-old Jayla Taylor had died, and her toes peeked out through the wreckage.

The image from the crash last October sticks with Jackson every day.

If he had not donated the car, Jayla and her mother Gilana — who succumbed 20 days later to severe burns and smoke inhalation — might still be alive. The father, Rodney Taylor, and 4-year-old Amayah might not be living with Jackson’s family now, and Jackson might not feel so torn leaving them all back home for his dream job on the NBA sidelines.

Yet as with most things in life, Jackson does not question his decision nor does he question fate. He is a man who lives by faith, even though it has been tested so many times in his life — especially in the last year — he has lost count.

“I believe that trials and tribulations are transfers to where you’re going to,” said Jackson, who doubles as an ordained minister in Van Nuys, Calif., leading a non-denominational congregation of about 300 with his wife. “So there’s a reason why the process must play out and you must be patient with the process.”

Faith and fortitude might be considered critical qualifications for both of Jackson’s jobs.

The former New York Knicks and Indiana Pacers point guard and ESPN/ABC broadcaster is a first-time coach at any level. With Golden State, he leads a team with one playoff appearance in the last 18 years and without an All-Star in 15 years — a challenge tough enough to test anybody’s patience and belief.

He’s being tugged in two directions, serving those several hundred congregants he dearly loves back home and making an impact with the young Warriors. He connects almost daily with his parish via Twitter, sharing prayer requests while also hearing comments from frustrated fans.

In many ways, Jackson’s journey has prepared him for this role.

The son of a New York transit worker who rose from the city’s playgrounds to St. John’s to a starting role with the Knicks at Madison Square Garden, Jackson credits everything about his life to his faith.

He even pinpoints the moment.

Desiree Coleman, a Broadway performer and R&B singer, caught Jackson’s eye on TV one night. Jackson turned to Dave Snowden, his best friend and roommate at the time, and told him he had found his wife.

The two met shortly after at the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade. She turned him down there and again backstage at a United Negro College Fund function, including an offer for a first-class flight to Houston, a luxury hotel and courtside seats at the 1989 NBA All-Star Game.

Finally, Jackson convinced her to see a movie. At the end of the date, he sat behind the wheel of his Jeep Cherokee about to drop her off, when she changed his life forever.

“I’m thinking what normal guys do, sitting on top of the world. I’m thinking, ‘OK, maybe a kiss. Maybe she can go lock the doors and we can go back to my place, whatever,’” Jackson said, candidly. “She says to me, ‘Are you saved?’ I said, ‘What do you mean?’ She says, ‘Do you believe in Jesus Christ, your personal savior?’”

Parked in the middle of the street, the two joined hands as she broke down her definition of salvation. There, the young woman raised in a Pentecostal church gave the brash Knicks point guard with a Roman Catholic upbringing a new understanding of faith, one that spoke to him on a whole new level.

Two weeks later, Jackson kneeled down and proposed to her at his New Jersey home — diamond ring and all.

“I was stunned,” she said. “I had actually not even got into dating yet.”

Jackson has relied on his faith ever since.

Faith held back all the hate when Snowden was paralyzed from the waist down after getting shot a half-dozen times in the back in a random drive-by outside the Jackson family home in Queens the night of July 9, 1991. Jackson paid for all the medical bills, and now Snowden is the vice president of disabled services at the Garden, Radio City Music Hall and The Beacon Theatre.

Faith pushed him to give a stirring eulogy about his father in April 1999 in Brooklyn, some six months after Harry Jackson had been diagnosed with lung cancer. The younger Jackson, who finished second in career assists (10,334) behind only John Stockton (15,806) when he retired, found his future calling that day.

Faith kept him from flinching in the face of his followers during a sermon last Feb. 20, when another pastor whispered in his ear that Jackson’s 35-year-old brother Troy — a famous streetballer nicknamed “Escalade” — had died of heart failure. Jackson hurried over to Troy’s hotel room to identify the body and inform his mother.

Faith guided him again in August when that same pastor, Zachery Tims, was found dead at the W Hotel in Times Square of an apparent drug overdose. Tims, a pastor of a central Florida megachurch, would send Jackson words of encouragement in text messages every Sunday morning to inspire his sermon.

And most recently, faith forced Jackson to welcome the two surviving members of the Taylor family into his home in Calabasas, Calif., after the accident Oct. 1. Not even a year earlier, Rodney Taylor called him threatening to commit suicide while Jackson prepared to broadcast a game in Phoenix.

Jackson talked Taylor down over the next 90 minutes.

“Since I walked into the church three years ago, he’s done nothing but help me put my life together,” said Taylor, known by the congregation as “Brother 6-foot-8″ for his size and stature. “I told him one day, ‘If it wasn’t for you and your family, I probably would have tried to take my life again after the accident.’”

Taylor first met Jackson at the Calabasas Community Center. Other former NBA players such
as Mitch Richmond, Cuttino Mobley and Reggie Miller often dropped by for pick-up games.

The families grew closer beyond the normal pastors-parishioners relationship.

Jackson would surprise Taylor’s daughter, Jayla, with gift cards to Barnes & Noble “and you’d thought I gave her an iPad,” Jackson said. “She just wanted to read all day.”

The Taylors attended the Jacksons’ services at True Love Worship Center International by finding rides from others or taking public transportation. In three years, his wife Gilani missed only one Sunday service to take her stepson to the dentist for a toothache and Rodney missed one because he was out of town.

One night, Jackson called the family over to his mother-in-law’s house and handed Rodney the keys to a Chrysler sedan he bought at an auction. Jackson had to convince the Taylors to take the gift.

The family would often drive the car right behind the Jacksons’ on the way home from church, making sure they got home safely. About six months later, along Highway 101, an SUV swerved near the sedan driven by Taylor’s wife, with Jayla inside. It’s believed to be the cause of the single-vehicle wreck.

The crash happened on the opposite side of Jackson’s highway exit. Both look back on the good deed and tragedy that followed as nothing more than an unfortunate coincidence. Taylor, repairing his life again at Jackson’s home, is now in good spirits despite the heartbreak.

“When I look at Rodney Taylor today,” Jackson said, “that’s winning.”

Jackson realizes that his religious devotion might bother some fans impatient for victories — especially when the Warriors are stuck again in the back of the Western Conference.

But he believes that building character goes along with his task of building a winner.

For instance, Jackson has not cursed in at least 21 years, by his count. When he tried to get called for a technical foul late in a loss at the Lakers on Jan. 6 — so his players could see he was supporting them — he actually had to ask an official three times to call a technical on him before the surprised referee finally obliged.

“We’re going to win ballgames,” Jackson said. “But like I said to somebody, ‘It’d be shallow for me to win ballgames and not develop men, husbands, fathers. That’s a win to me and I’m not going to ignore that.’”

AP Sports Writer Janie McCauley contributed to this story.

31 Comments

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31 Responses to Mark Jackson: What God’s Heroes Are Made Of

  1. Maria

    I am blessed and honored to have Mr. Jackson representing our bay area team, as I live in Oakland, California! Thank you for the article! : )

  2. Michelle

    laid the foundation, and another buildeth thereon. But let every man take heed how he buildeth

    11For other foundation can no man lay than that is laid, which is Jesus Christ.

    12Now if any man build upon this foundation gold, silver, precious stones, wood, hay, stubble;

    13Every man’s work shall be made manifest: for the day shall declare it, because it shall be revealed by fire; and the fire shall try every man’s work of what sort it is.

    All of our works will be tried whether it be of God, or of self we have to trust and believe that God knows everything about us (our ending to beginning) and He will complete His work, He has begun!!! Amen for such an encouraging article and I pray for more mighty men of God to come forth and be about God’s busy, without compromising the truth!!!!!!!!

  3. Brittney (@BeautifulCrown8)

    I am so glad I read this article fully today. It is such a blessing to me! He is a hero in God’s eyes and keeping his Faith & Trust in Jesus Christ is key! May the Lord continue to bless him, his wife, marriage, b-ball team & ministry!

  4. jay

    GREAT STORY!!! I REALLY NEEDED TO READ THIS. MY LIFE HASN’T BEEN LIKE MARKS BUT IT HAS BEEN FRUSTRATING AT TIMES 2 THE POINT IM LIKE GOD WHERE ARE YOU & GOD U SAID! THIS STORY BRINGS ME TO REALITY 1) FAITH WORKS 2) FAITH STILL WORKS 3) KEEP TRUSTING GOD 4)THERE ARE OTHERS GOING THRU WORST THINGS. 5)ALL THINGS WILL WORK OUT 4 THE GOOD OF THEM THAT LOVE THE LORD….AGAIN GREAT STORY…

  5. Bonita

    I remember watching him play… Thank YOU Jesus for this testimony….. losing so much today dont feel as bad.

  6. Bee Jay

    I’m so blown away at this article and so full of joy for the Man of God! Praise God for his submission to God’s plan & will for his life. I pray that he continues to stand for God & that his faith is increased daily. I pray that he is blessed indeed in JESUS name!

  7. Eric Githae

    The Bible says that the proud will be humbled and the humble will be exalted….. I’ve just been humbled off my high horse! I salute you Brother Jackson!

  8. Servant of God

    We need more God fearing man like Mark Jackson.

  9. Ms Z

    Thank you EX Ministries! It’s very nice to read a positive story about a Black Athlete/Coach. When I used to follow basketball, it was all about the NY Knicks. Glad to see that he and his wife Desiree are holding fast to their faith. I remember her from the Off-Broadway play, “Mama I Want to Sing”. I still play her gospel CD. God Bless Them!

  10. Tiffany D.

    Love it! Strong “men” of God are a wonderful sight. In evil days where men burn in lust for each other, love the world and the lust thereof, it’s so good to see a family serving the Lord. I follow he and his wife on twitter, they and Elder Craig are ones 3 of the 4 i follow.

  11. NIYA

    i recently saw the news about a man who took his life and the life of his young sons after years went by and they remembered how their father had also killed their mother. I had a baby 2 weeks ago and have been feeling overwhelmed with raising my new little one plus 3 other kids. All around me i have seen and felt discouragement, loneliness, and pain. Often times i read ex times and hear about someone else’s foolishness going on and so i think, lord why? Why all of this pain and misery? But then i read about this man’s life and family. How god has used very painful situations in his life and held him through the fire. I am encouraged. Like paul addressing a church to say, ‘hey, i have pain and trials too, be encouraged to know that u are not alone. and god will see u through.’ Thank u ex for posting this uplifting article. For he truly is the god of our comfort.

  12. pastor Johnny Green

    I salute pastor Jackson,he is a man after my own heart.I know that God is very delighted about this life and how this man has decided to give it back to Him in the way that he is doing. I look forward to the day when I am able to meet him face to face and let him know that I am glkad to be doing battlke for God with him. God Bless

  13. Kim Worthy

    Very encouraging.

  14. Bensy

    Amen! Praise God!

  15. Janet

    It is so sad that he lost loved ones, but I like the part where the article said he did not question what he done. That’s the point we have to walk by faith, not by what’s in front of us!

  16. New Beginning

    Amen Brother :-)

  17. Godlysoldier

    This truly touched my heart! What an encouragement to the body of Christ. A true shepherd after God’s own heart! May the Lord continue to strenghten Pastor Jackson and pour in to him as he’s poured his heart and life into others.

  18. Sis. Dee

    This is a great and very encouraging article! Almost brought a tear to my eye! I might even start pulling for the Warriors! :)

  19. Roberto

    God is raising His men up who have humbled themselves for so long, to show there is a way out, there is forgiveness and that Christ is real.

  20. Kelvin

    Well Done…

  21. spiritualwarfare

    Great article! A true man of God, with fortitude. That will reflect on the men that he’s coaching and the folks that he’s ministering to.

  22. AJM

    Yay! I am glad you featured this article. I already read it since he coaches my favorite team! I follow him and the Warriors closely and let me tell you, he is what he preaches. There is even an upcoming game where he is going to witness after the game and share prayer with people. I hope I can go. He always talks about how he cares about the player’s families and wants to make more of them then just basketball players. He is amazing!

  23. LaWanda Rascoe

    Beautiful news!!!!!

  24. God Chaser

    Awesome Story. It’s good to read about others testimony. This has definitely encouraged me.

  25. Theresa Louis

    Very encouraging post. Thank God for men who will stand and still be lead by a heart of compassion.

  26. Exactly what we’ve been talking about in men’s group. Fellas, time to step it up, and be the heroes in our homes.

  27. Tina

    Wow. So very happy to read this. Wasn’t he the one who caught a lot of flack not to long ago for taking a stand against homosexuality in the NBA and not backing down?

  28. Tanaya Booth

    Great post! Thank you.

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