George
Muller
The Secret of His Power in Prayer
by Andrew Murray
When God wishes anew
to teach His Church a truth that is not being understood or
practiced, He mostly does so by raising up some man to be in
word and deed a living witness to its blessedness. And so God
has raised up in this nineteenth century, among others, George
Muller to be His witness that He is indeed the Hearer of prayer.
I know of no way in which the principal truths of God’s Word
in regard to prayer can be more effectually illustrated and
established, than a short review of his life and of what he
tells of his prayer experiences.
He was born in Prussia
on 25th September 1805, and is thus now eighty years of age.
His early life, even after having entered the University of
Halle as a theological student, was wicked in the extreme. Led
by a friend one evening to a prayer meeting, when just twenty
years of age, he was deeply impressed, and soon after brought
to know the Savior. Not long after he began reading missionary
papers, and in course of time offered himself to the London
Society for promoting Christianity to the Jews. He was accepted
as a student, but soon found that he could not in all things
submit to the rules of the Society, as leaving too little liberty
for the leading of the Holy Spirit. The connection was dissolved
in 1830 by mutual consent, and he became the pastor of a small
congregation at Teignmouth. In 1832 he was led to Bristol, and
it was as pastor of Bethesda Chapel that he was led to the Orphan
Home and other work, in connection with which God has so remarkably
led him to trust His Word and to experience how God fulfils
that Word.
A
few extracts in regard to his spiritual life will prepare the
way for what we specially wish to quote of his experiences in
reference to prayer:
“In connection with
this I would mention, that the Lord very graciously gave me,
from the very commencement of my divine life, a measure of simplicity
and of childlike disposition in spiritual things, so that whilst
I was exceedingly ignorant of the Scriptures, and was still
from time to time overcome even by outward sins, yet I was enabled
to carry the most minute matters to the Lord in prayer. And
I have found ‘godliness profitable unto all things, having promise
of the life that now is, and of that which is to come.’ Though
very weak and ignorant, yet I had now, by the grace of God,
some desire to benefit others, and he who so faithfully had
once served Satan, sought now to win souls for Christ.”
It was at Teignmouth
that he was led to know how to use God’s Word, and to trust
the Holy Spirit as the Teacher given by God to make that Word
clear. He writes:
“God then began to
show me that the Word of God alone is our standard of judgment
in spiritual things; that it can be explained only by the Holy
Spirit; and that in our day, as well as in former times. He
is the Teacher of His people. The office of the Holy Spirit
I had not experimentally understood before that time.
“It was my beginning
to understand this latter point in particular, which had a great
effect on me; for the Lord enabled me to put it to the test
of experience, by laying aside commentaries, and almost every
other book, and simply reading the Word of God and studying
it.
“The result of this
was, that the first evening that I shut myself into my room,
to give myself to prayer and meditation over the Scriptures,
I learned more in a few hours than I had during a period of
several months previously.
“But the particular
difference was that I received real strength for my soul in
so doing. I now began to try by the test of the Scriptures
the things which I had learned and seen, and found that only
those principles which stood the test were of real value.”
Of obedience to the
Word of God, he writes as follows, in connection with his being
baptized:
“It had pleased God,
in His abundant mercy, to bring my mind into such a state, that
I was willing to carry out in my life whatever I should find
in the Scriptures. I could say, ‘I will do His will’, and it
was on that account, I believe, that I saw which ‘doctrine
is of God.’ And I would observe here, by the way, that
the passage to which I have just alluded (John 7:17) has been
a most remarkable comment to me on many doctrines and precepts
of our most holy faith. For instance: ‘Resist not evil; but
whosoever shall smite thee on thy right cheek, turn to him the
other also. And if any man will sue thee at the law, and take
away thy coat, let him have thy cloak also. And whosoever shall
compel thee to go a mile, go with him twain. Give to him that
asketh thee, and from him that would borrow of thee, turn not
thou away. Love your enemies, bless them that curse you, do
good to them that hate you, and pray for them which despitefully
use you, and persecute you’ (Matt. 5:39-44). ‘Sell that ye have,
and give alms’ (Luke 12:33). ‘Owe no man any thing, but to love
one another’ (Rom. 13:8). It may be said, ‘Surely these passages
cannot be taken literally, for how then would the people of
God be able to pass through the world?’ The state of mind enjoined
in John 7:17 will cause such objections to vanish. WHOSOEVER
IS WILLING TO ACT OUT these commandments of the Lord LITERALLY,
will, I believe, be led with me to see that to take them LITERALLY
is the will of God. Those who do so take them will doubtless
often be brought into difficulties, hard to the flesh to bear,
but these will have a tendency to make them constantly feel
that they are strangers and pilgrims here, that this world is
not their home, and thus to throw them more upon God, who will
assuredly help us through any difficulty into which we may be
brought by seeking to act in obedience to His Word.”
This implicit surrender
to God’s Word led him to certain views and conduct in regard
to money, which mightily influenced his future life. They had
their root in the conviction that money was a divine stewardship,
and that all money had therefore to be received and dispensed
in direct fellowship with God Himself. This led him to the adoption
of the following four great rules:
1. Not
to receive any fixed salary, both because in the
collecting of it there was often much that was at variance with
the freewill offering with which God’s service is to be maintained,
and in the receiving of it a danger of placing more dependence
on human sources of income than in the living God Himself.
2. Never
to ask any human being for help, however great
the need might be, but to make his wants known to the God who
has promised to care for His servants and to hear their prayer.
3. To take this command
(Luke 12:33) literally, “Sell that thou hast and
give alms,” and never to save up money, but to
spend all God entrusted to him on God’s poor, on the work of
His kingdom.
4. Also to take Rom.
13:8, “Owe no man anything,” literally,
and never to buy on credit, or be in debt for anything, but
to trust God to provide.
This mode of living
was not easy at first. But Muller testifies it was most blessed
in bringing the soul to rest in God, and drawing it into closer
union with Himself when inclined to backslide: ”For it will
not do, it is not possible, to live in sin, and at the same
time, by communion with God, to draw down from heaven everything
one needs for the life that now is.”
Not long after his
settlement at Bristol, “The Scriptural Knowledge Institution
For Home And Abroad” was established for aiding in day school,
Sunday school, mission and Bible work. Of this Institution the
Orphan Home work, by which Mr. Muller is best known, became
a branch. It was in 1834 that his heart was touched by the case
of an orphan brought to Christ in one of the schools, but who
had to go to a poorhouse where its spiritual wants would not
be cared for. Meeting shortly after with a life of Franke, he
writes (Nov. 20, 1835):
“Today I have had
it very much laid on my heart no longer merely to think
about the establishment of an Orphan Home, but actually to set
about it, and I have been very much in prayer respecting it,
in order to ascertain the Lord’s mind. May God make it plain.”
Nov. 25—”I
have been again much in prayer yesterday and today about the
Orphan Home, and am more and more convinced that it is of God.
May He in mercy guide me. The three chief reasons are:
1. That God may be
glorified, should He be pleased to furnish me with the means,
in its being seen that it is not a vain thing to trust Him;
and that thus the faith of His children may be strengthened.
2. The spiritual welfare
of fatherless and motherless children.
3. Their temporal
welfare.”
After some months
of prayer and waiting on God, a house was rented, with room
for thirty children, and in course of time three more, containing
in all 120 children. The work was carried on in this way for
ten years, the supplies for the needs of the orphans being asked
and received of God alone. It was often a time of sore need
and much prayer, but a trial of faith more precious than of
gold was found unto praise and honor and glory of God. The Lord
was preparing His servant for greater things. By His providence
and His Holy Spirit, Mr. Muller was led to desire, and to wait
upon God till he received from Him, the sure promise of £15,000
for a Home to contain 300 children. This first Home was opened
in 1849. In 1858, a second and third Home, for 950 more orphans,
was opened, costing £35,000. And in 1869 and 1870, a fourth
and a fifth Home, for 850 more, at an expense of £50,000,
making the total number of the orphans 2,100.
In addition to this
work, God had given him almost as much as for the building of
the Orphan Homes and the maintenance of the orphans, for other
work, such as the support of schools and missions, and Bible
and tract circulation. In all he had received from God, to be
spent in His work, during these fifty years, more than one million
pounds sterling. How little he knew, let us carefully notice,
that when he gave up his little salary of £35 a year in
obedience to the leading of God’s Word and the Holy Spirit,
what God was preparing to give him as the reward of obedience
and faith; and how wonderfully the Word was to be fulfilled
to him: “Thou hast been faithful over few things; I will set
thee over many things.”
And these things
have happened for an ensample to us. God calls us to be followers
of George Muller, even as he is of Christ. His God is our God;
the same promises are for us; the same service of love and faith
in which he labored is calling for us on every side. Let us
in connection with our lessons in the school of prayer study
the way in which God gave George Muller such power as a man
of prayer: we shall find in it the most remarkable illustration
of some of the lessons which we have been studying with the
blessed Master in the Word. We shall specially have impressed
upon us His first great lesson, that if we will come to Him
in the way He has pointed out, with definite petitions, made
known to us by the Spirit through the Word as being according
to the will of God, we may most confidently believe that whatsoever
we ask, it shall be done.
Prayer and
the Word of God
We have more than
once seen that God’s listening to our voice depends upon our
listening to His voice. We must not only have a special promise
to plead, when we make a special request, but our whole life
must be under the supremacy of the Word: the Word must be dwelling
in us. The testimony of George Muller on this point is most
instructive. He tells us how the discovery of the true place
of the Word of God, and the teaching of the Spirit with it,
was the commencement of a new era in his spiritual life. Of
it he writes:
“Now, the scriptural
way of reasoning would have been: God Himself has condescended
to become an author, and I am ignorant about that precious book
which His Holy Spirit has caused to be written through the instrumentality
of His servants, and it contains that which I ought to know,
and the knowledge of which will lead me to true happiness; therefore
I ought to read again and again this most precious book, this
book of books, most earnestly, most prayerfully, and with much
meditation; and in this practice I ought to continue all the
days of my life. For I was aware, though I read it but little,
that I knew scarcely anything of it. But instead of acting thus
and being led by my ignorance of the Word of God to study it
more, my difficulty in understanding it, and the little enjoyment
I had in it, made me careless of reading it (for much prayerful
reading of the Word gives not merely more knowledge, but increases
the delight we have in reading it); and thus, like many believers,
I practically preferred, for the first four years of my divine
life, the works of uninspired men to the oracles of the living
God. The consequence was that I remained a babe, both in knowledge
and grace. In knowledge, I say; for all true knowledge
must be derived, by the Spirit, from the Word. And as I neglected
the Word, I was for nearly four years so ignorant, that I did
not clearly know even the fundamental points
of our holy faith. And this lack of knowledge most sadly kept
me back from walking steadily in the ways of God. For when it
pleased the Lord in August 1829 to bring me really to the Scriptures,
my life and walk became very different. And though ever since
that I have very much fallen short of what I might and ought
to be, yet by the grace of God I have been enabled to live much
nearer to Him than before. If any believers read this who practically
prefer other books to the Holy Scriptures, and who enjoy the
writings of men much more than the Word of God, may they be
warned by my loss. I shall consider this book to have been the
means of doing much good, should it please the Lord, through
its instrumentality, to lead some of His people no longer to
neglect the Holy Scriptures, but to give them that preference
which they have hitherto bestowed on the writings of men.
“Before I leave this
subject, I would only add: If the reader understands very little
of the Word of God, he ought to read it very much; for the Spirit
explains the Word by the Word. And if he enjoys the reading
of the Word little, that is just the reason why he should read
it much; for the frequent reading of the Scriptures creates
a delight in them, so that the more we read them, the more we
desire to do so.
“Above all, he should
seek to have it settled in his own mind that God alone by His
Spirit can teach him, and that therefore, as God will be inquired
of for blessings, it becomes him to seek God’s blessing previous
to reading, and also whilst reading.
“He should have it,
moreover, settled in his mind that although the Holy Spirit
is the best and sufficient Teacher, yet that
this Teacher does not always teach immediately when
we desire it, and that therefore we may have to entreat Him
again and again for the explanation of certain passages; but
that He will surely teach us at last, if indeed we are seeking
for light prayerfully, patiently, and with a view to the glory
of God.”
We find in his journal
frequent mention made of his spending two and three hours in
prayer over the Word for the feeding of his spiritual life.
As the fruit of this, when he had need of strength and encouragement
in prayer, the individual promises were not to him so many arguments
from a book to be used with God, but living words which he had
heard the Father’s living voice speak to him, and which he could
now bring to the Father in living faith.
Prayer and
the Will of God
One of the greatest
difficulties with young believers is to know how they can find
out whether what they desire is according to God’s will. I count
it one of the most precious lessons God wants to teach through
the experience of George Muller, that He is willing to make
one know, of things of which His Word says nothing directly,
that they are His will for us, and that we may ask them. The
teaching of the Spirit, not without or against the Word, but
as something above and beyond it, in addition to it, without
which we cannot see God’s will, is the heritage of every believer.
It is through THE WORD, AND THE WORD ALONE, that the Spirit
teaches, applying the general principles or promises to our
special need. And it is THE SPIRIT, AND THE SPIRIT ALONE, who
can really make the Word a light on our path, whether the path
of duty in our daily walk, or the path of faith in our approach
to God. Let us try and notice in what childlike simplicity and
teachableness it was that the discovery of God’s will was so
surely and so clearly made known to His servant.
With regard to the
building of the first Home and the assurance he had of its being
God’s will, he writes in May 1850, just after it had been opened,
speaking of the great difficulties there were, and how little
likely it appeared to nature that they would be removed:
“But while the prospect
before me would have been overwhelming had I looked at it naturally,
I was never even for once permitted to question how it would
end. For as from the beginning I was sure it was the will
of God that I should go to the work of building for Him
this large Orphan Home, so also from the beginning I was as
certain that the whole would be finished as if the Home had
been already filled.”
The way in which
he found out what was God’s will, comes out with special clarity
in his account of the building of the second Home; and I ask
the reader to study with care the lesson the narrative conveys:
December 5, 1850—”Under
these circumstances I can only pray that the Lord in His tender
mercy would not allow Satan to gain an advantage over me. By
the grace of God my heart says: ‘Lord, if I could be sure that
it is Thy will that I should go forward in this matter, I would
do so cheerfully; and, on the other hand, if I could be sure
that these are vain, foolish, proud thoughts, that they are
not from Thee, I would, by Thy grace, hate them, and entirely
put them aside.’
“My hope is in God;
He will help and teach me. Judging, however, from His former
dealings with me, it would not be a strange thing to me, nor
surprising, if He called me to labor yet still more largely
in this way.
“The thoughts about
enlarging the Orphan work have not yet arisen on account of
an abundance of money having lately come in; for I have had
of late to wait for about seven weeks upon God, whilst little,
very little comparatively, came in, i.e. about four
times as much was going out as came in; and, had not the Lord
previously sent me large sums, we should have been distressed
indeed.
“Lord! how can Thy
servant know Thy will in this matter? Wilt Thou be pleased to
teach him!”
December 11—”During
the last six days, since writing the above, I have been, day
after day, waiting upon God concerning this matter. It has generally
been more or less all the day on my heart. When I have been
awake at night, it has not been far from my thoughts. Yet all
this without the least excitement. I am perfectly calm and quiet
respecting it. My soul would be rejoiced to go forward in this
service, could I be sure that the Lord would have me to do so;
for then, notwithstanding the numberless difficulties, all would
be well; and His Name would be magnified.
“On the other hand,
were I assured that the Lord would have me to be satisfied with
my present sphere of service, and that I should not pray about
enlarging the work, by His grace I could, without an effort,
cheerfully yield to it; for He has brought me into such a state
of heart, that I only desire to please Him in this matter. Moreover,
hitherto I have not spoken about this thing even to my beloved
wife, the sharer of my joys, sorrows, and labors for more than
twenty years; nor is it likely that I shall do so for some time
to come: for I prefer quietly to wait on the Lord, without conversing
on this subject, in order that thus I may be kept the more easily,
by His blessing, from being influenced by things from without.
The burden of my prayer concerning this matter is, that the
Lord would not allow me to make a mistake, and that He would
teach me to do His will.
December 26—”Fifteen
days have elapsed since I wrote the preceding paragraph. Every
day since then I have continued to pray about this matter, and
that with a goodly measure of earnestness, by the help of God.
There has passed scarcely an hour during these days, in which,
whilst awake, this matter has not been more or less before me.
But all without even a shadow of excitement. I converse with
no one about it. Hitherto have I not even done so with my dear
wife. From this I refrain still, and deal with God alone about
the matter, in order that no outward influence and no outward
excitement may keep me from attaining unto a clear discovery
of His will. I have the fullest and most peaceful assurance
that He will clearly show me His will. This evening I have
had again an especially solemn season of prayer, to seek to
know the will of God. But whilst I continue to entreat and beseech
the Lord, that He would not allow me to be deluded in this business,
I may say I have scarcely any doubt remaining on my mind as
to what will be the issue, even that I should go forward in
this matter. As this, however, is one of the most momentous
steps that I have ever taken, I judge that I cannot go about
this matter with too much caution, prayerfulness, and deliberation.
I am in no hurry about it. I could wait for years, by God’s
grace, were this His will, before even taking one single step
toward this thing, or even speaking to anyone about it; and,
on the other hand, I would set to work tomorrow, were the Lord
to bid me do so. This calmness of mind, this having no will
of my own in the matter, this only wishing to please my Heavenly
Father in it, this only seeking His and not my honor in it;
this state of heart, I say, is the fullest assurance to me that
my heart is not under a fleshly excitement, and that, if I am
helped thus to go on, I shall know the will of God to the
full. But, while I write this, I cannot but add at the
same time, that I do crave the honor and the glorious privilege
to be more and more used by the Lord.
“I desire to be allowed
to provide scriptural instruction for a thousand orphans, instead
of doing so for 300. I desire to expound the Holy Scriptures
regularly to a thousand orphans, instead of doing so to 300.
I desire that it may be yet more abundantly manifest that God
is still the Hearer and Answerer of prayer, and that He is the
living God now as He ever was and ever will be, when He shall
simply, in answer to prayer, have condescended to provide me
with a house for 700 orphans and with means to support them.
This last consideration is the most important point in my mind.
The Lord’s honor is the principal point with me in this whole
matter; and just because this is the case, if He would be more
glorified by not going forward in this business, I should by
His grace be perfectly content to give up all thoughts about
another Orphan House. Surely in such a state of mind, obtained
by the Holy Spirit, Thou, O my Heavenly Father, wilt not
suffer Thy child to be mistaken, much less deluded. By
the help of God I shall continue further day by day to wait
upon Him in prayer, concerning this thing, till He shall bid
me act.
January 2, 1851—”A
week ago I wrote the preceding paragraph. During this week I
have still been helped day by day, and more than once every
day, to seek the guidance of the Lord about another Orphan House.
The burden of my prayer has still been, that He in His great
mercy would keep me from making a mistake. During the last week
the book of Proverbs has come in the course of my Scripture
reading, and my heart has been refreshed in reference to this
subject by the following passages: ‘Trust in the Lord with all
thine heart; and lean not unto thine own understanding. In all
thy ways acknowledge Him, and He shall direct thy paths’ (Prov.
3:5, 6).By the grace of God I do acknowledge the Lord in all
my ways, and in this thing in particular; I have therefore the
comfortable assurance that He will direct my paths concerning
this part of my service, as to whether I shall be occupied in
it our not. Further: ‘The integrity of the upright shall preserve
them’ (Prov. 11:3). By the grace of God I am upright in this
business. My honest purpose is to get glory to God. Therefore
I expect to be guided aright. Further: ‘Commit thy works unto
the Lord, and thy thoughts shall be established’ (Prov. 16:3).
I do commit my works unto the Lord, and therefore expect that
my thoughts will be established. My heart is more and more coming
to a calm, quiet, and settled assurance, that the Lord will
condescend to use me still further in the orphan work. Here,
Lord, is Thy servant.”
When later he decided
to build two additional houses, No. 4 and 5, he writes thus
again:
“Twelve days have
passed away since I wrote the last paragraph. I have still day
by day been enabled to wait upon the Lord with reference to
enlarging the orphan work, and have been during the whole of
this period also in perfect peace, which is the result of seeking
in this thing only the Lord’s honor and the temporal and spiritual
benefit of my fellow men. Without an effort could I by His grace
put aside all thoughts about this whole affair, if only assured
that it is the will of God that I should do so; and, on the
other hand, would at once go forward, if He would have it be
so. I have still kept this matter entirely to myself. Though
it be now about seven weeks, since day by day, more or less,
my mind has been exercised about it, and since I have been daily
praying about it, yet not one human being knows of it. As yet
I have not even mentioned it to my dear wife in order that thus,
by quietly waiting upon God, I might not be influenced by what
might be said to me on the subject. This evening has been particularly
set apart for prayer, beseeching the Lord once more not to allow
me to be mistaken in this thing, and much less to be deluded
by the devil. I have also sought to let all the reasons against
building another Orphan House, and all the reasons for
doing so pass before my mind: and now for the clearness and
definiteness, write them down....
“Much, however, as
the nine previous reasons weigh with me, yet they would not
decide me were there not one more. It is this: after having
for months pondered the matter, and having looked at it in all
its bearings and with all its difficulties, and then having
been finally led, after much prayer, to decide on this enlargement,
my mind is at peace. The child who has again and again besought
His Heavenly Father not to allow him to be deluded, nor even
to make a mistake, is at peace, perfectly at peace concerning
this decision; and has thus the assurance that the decision
come to, after much prayer during weeks and months, is the leading
of the Holy Spirit; and therefore purposes to go forward, assuredly
believing that he will not be confounded, for he trusts in God.
Many and great may be his difficulties; thousands and ten thousands
of prayers may have ascended to God, before the full answer
may be obtained; much exercise of faith and patience may be
required; but in the end it will again be seen, that His servant,
who trusts in Him, has not been confounded.”
Prayer and
the Glory of God
We have sought more
than once to enforce the truth, that while we ordinarily seek
the reasons of our prayers not being heard in the thing we ask
not being according to the will of God, Scripture warns us to
find the cause in ourselves, in our not being in the right state
or not asking in the right spirit. The thing may be in full
accordance with His will, but the asking, the spirit of the
supplicant, not; then we are not heard. As the great root of
all sin is self and self-seeking, so there is nothing that even
in our more spiritual desires so effectually hinders God in
answering as this: we pray for our own pleasure or glory. Prayer
to have power and prevail must ask for the glory of God; and
he can only do this as he is living for God’s glory.
In George Muller
we have one of the most remarkable instances on record of God’s
Holy Spirit leading a man deliberately and systematically, at
the outset of a course of prayer, to make the glorifying of
God his first and only object. Let us ponder well what he says,
and learn the lesson God would teach us through him:
“I had constantly
cases brought before me, which proved that one of the especial
things which the children of God needed in our day, was to
have their faith strengthened.
“I longed, therefore,
to have something to point my brethren to, as a visible proof
that our God and Father is the same faithful God as ever He
was; as willing as ever to PROVE Himself to be the LIVING GOD
in our day as formerly, to all who put their trust in Him.
“My spirit longed
to be instrumental in strengthening their faith, by giving them
not only instances from the Word of God of His willingness and
ability to help all who rely upon Him, but to show
them by proofs that He is the same in our day. I knew
that the Word of God ought to be enough, and it was by grace
enough for me; but still I considered I ought to lend a helping
hand to my brethren.
“I therefore judged
myself bound to be the servant of the church of Christ, in the
particular point in which I had obtained mercy; namely, in being
able to take God at His Word and rely upon it. The first object
of the work was, and is still: that God might be magnified
by the fact that the orphans under my care are provided with
all they need, only by prayer and faith, without anyone
being asked; thereby it may be seen that God is FAITHFUL STILL,
AND HEARS PRAYER STILL.
“I have again these
last days prayed much about the Orphan House, and have frequently
examined my heart; that if it were at all my desire to establish
it for the sake of gratifying myself, I might find it out. For
as I desire only the Lord’s glory, I shall be glad to be instructed
by the instrumentality of my brother, if the matter be not of
Him.
“When I began the
Orphan work in 1835, my chief object was the glory of God,
by
giving a practical demonstration as to what could be accomplished
simply through the instrumentality of prayer and faith,
in order
thus to benefit the church at large, and to lead a careless
world to see the reality of the things of God, by showing
them
in this work, that the living God is still, as 4,000 years
ago, the living God. This my aim has been abundantly honored.
Multitudes
of sinners have been thus converted, multitudes of the children
of God in all parts of the world have been benefited by
this
work, even as I had anticipated. But the larger the work has
grown, the greater has been the blessing, bestowed in the
very
way in which I looked for blessing: for the attention of hundreds
of thousands has been drawn to the work; and many tens of
thousands
have come to see it. All this leads me to desire further and
further to labor on in this way, in order to bring yet greater
glory to the Name of the Lord. That He may be looked at,
magnified, admired, trusted in, relied on at all times, is
my
aim in this service; and so particularly in this intended
enlargement. That it may be seen how much one poor man, simply
by trusting in God, can bring about by prayer; and that thus
other children of God may be led to carry on the work of God
in dependence upon Him; and that children of God may be led
increasingly to trust in Him in their individual positions
and
circumstances; therefore I am led to this further enlargement.”
Prayer and
Trust in God
There are other points
on which I would be glad to point out what is to be found in
Mr. Muller’s narrative, but one more must suffice. It is the
lesson of firm and unwavering trust in God’s promise as the
secret of persevering prayer. If once we have, in submission
to the teaching of the Spirit in the Word, taken hold of God’s
promise, and believed that the Father has heard us, we must
not allow ourselves by any delay or unfavorable appearances
be shaken in our faith.
“The full answer
to my daily prayers was far from being realized; yet there was
abundant encouragement granted by the Lord, to continue in prayer.
But suppose, even if far less had come in than was received,
still, after having come to the conclusion, upon scriptural
grounds, after much prayer and self-examination, I ought to
have gone on without wavering, in the exercise of faith and
patience concerning this object; and thus all the children of
God, when once satisfied that anything which they bring before
God in prayer, is according to His will, ought to continue in
believing, expecting, persevering prayer until the blessing
is granted. Thus am I myself now waiting upon God for certain
blessings, for which I have daily besought Him for ten years
and six months without one day’s intermission. Still the full
answer is not yet given concerning the conversion of certain
individuals, though in the meantime I have received many thousands
of answers to prayer. I have also prayed daily without intermission
for the conversion of other individuals about ten years, for
others six or seven years, for others from three or two years;
and still the answer is not yet granted concerning those persons,
while in the meantime many thousands of my prayers have been
answered, and also souls converted, for whom I had been praying.
I lay particular stress on this for the benefit of those who
may suppose that I need only to ask of God, and receive at once;
or that I might pray concerning anything, and the answer would
surely come. One can only expect to obtain answers to prayers
which are according to the mind of God; and even then, patience
and faith may be exercised for many years, even as mine are
exercised, in the matter to which I have referred; and yet am
I daily continuing in prayer, and expecting the answer, and
so surely expecting the answer, that I have often thanked God
that He will surely give it, though now for nineteen years faith
and patience have thus been exercised. Be encouraged, dear Christians,
with fresh earnestness to give yourselves to prayer, if you
can only be sure that you ask things which are for the glory
of God.
“But the most remarkable
point is this, that £6, 6s. 6d. from Scotland supplied
me, as far as can be known now, with all the means necessary
for fitting up and promoting the new Orphan Houses. Six years
and eight months I have been day by day, and generally several
times daily, asking the Lord to give me the needed means for
this enlargement of the orphan work, which, according to calculations
made in the spring of 1861, appeared to be about fifty thousand
pounds: the total of this amount I had now received. I praise
and magnify the Lord for putting this enlargement of the work
into my heart, and for giving me courage and faith for it; and
above all, for sustaining my faith day by day without wavering.
When the last portion of the money was received, I was no more
assured concerning the whole, that I was at the time I had not
received one single donation towards this large sum. I was at
the beginning, after once having ascertained His mind, through
most patient and heart-searching waiting upon God, as fully
assured that He would bring it about, as if the two houses,
with their hundreds of orphans occupying them, had been already
before me. I make a few remarks here for the sake of young believers
in connection with this subject:
1. Be slow to take
new steps in the Lord’s service, or in your business, or in
your families: weigh everything well; weigh all in the light
of the Holy Scriptures and in the fear of God.
2. Seek to have no
will of your own, in order to ascertain the mind of God, regarding
any steps you propose taking, so that you can honestly say you
are willing to do the will of God, if He will only please to
instruct you.
3. But when you have
found out what the will of God is, seek for His help, and seek
it earnestly, perseveringly, patiently, believingly, expectantly;
and you will surely in His own time and way obtain it.
“To suppose that
we have difficulty about money only would be a mistake: there
occur hundreds of other wants and other difficulties. It is
a rare thing that a day occurs without some difficulty or some
want; but often there are many difficulties and many wants to
be met and overcome the same day. All these are met by prayer
and faith, our universal remedy; and we have never been confounded.
Patient, persevering, believing prayer, offered up to God, in
the Name of the Lord Jesus, has always, sooner or later, brought
the blessing. I do not despair, by God’s grace, of obtaining
any blessing, provided I can be sure it would be for any real
good, and for the glory of God.”
Click
the icon to download or print this article.
You will need word processing software that can read Microsoft Word documents
in order to view this file. If you do not have Microsoft Word or a compatible word processor, you can download
the free Microsoft
Word Viewer.
|