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George Mueller |
Chapter 15 |
Arthur Tappan Pierson |
GEORGE MUELLER OF BRISTOL
AND HIS WITNESS TO A PRAYER-HEARING GOD
1899
The originally "authorized memoir".
BY
ARTHUR T. PIERSON
This book is in the public domain.
OCR (Optical Character Recognition) and reformatting by Katie Stewart
WStS Note: All italics in this volume are by Dr. Pierson, himself.
We have chosen to spell Mr. Mueller's name without the umlaut.
Table of Contents
Available in a compressed
version ---New Window
Introduction by Mr. James Wright
A Prefatory Word
Chapter I. From His
Birth To His New Birth
Chapter II. The New
Birth And The New Life
Chapter III. Making
Ready The Chosen Vessel
Chapter IV. New Steps
And Stages Of Preparation
Chapter V. The Pulpit
And The Pastorate
Chapter VI. "The
Narrative Of The Lord's Dealings"
Chapter VII. Led Of
God Into A New Sphere
Chapter VIII. A Tree
Of God's Own Planting
Chapter IX. The Growth
Of God's Own Plant
Chapter X. The Word
Of God And Prayer
Chapter XI. Trials
Of Faith And Helpers To Faith
Chapter XII. New Lessons
In God's School Of Prayer
Chapter XIII. Following
The Pillar Of Cloud And Fire
Chapter XIV. God's
Building: The New Orphan Houses
Chapter XV. The Manifold Grace Of God (this page)
Chapter XVI. The
Shadow Of A Great Sorrow
Chapter XVII. The
Period Of World-Wide Witness
Chapter XVIII. Faith
And Patience In Serving
Chapter XIX. At Evening-Time--
Light
Chapter XX The Summary
Of The Life-Work
Chapter XXI. The Church
Life And Growth
Chapter XXII. A Glance
At The Gifts And The Givers
Chapter XXIII. God's
Witness To The Work
Chapter XXIV. Last
Looks, Backward And Forward
Appendix.
A. Scripture Texts That Moulded George Mueller
B. Apprehension Of Truth
C. Separation From The London Society, Etc.
D. The Scriptural Knowledge Institution For
Home And Abroad
E. Reasons Which Led Mr. Mueller To Establish
An Orphan House
F. Arguments In Prayer For The Orphan Work
G. The Purchase Of A Site, Etc.
H. God's Faithfulness In Providing
[WStS: I. or J. none listed]
K. Further Recollections Of Mr. Mueller
L. Soul Nourishment First
M. Church Conduct
N. The Wise Sayings Of George Mueller
.

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CHAPTER 15
The Manifold Grace Of God
SOME one has quaintly said, in commenting upon the Twenty-third Psalm, that "the coach in which the Lord's saints ride has not only a driver, but two footmen"--
"goodness and mercy shall follow me."
Surely these two footmen of the Lord, in their celestial livery of grace, followed
George Mueller all the days of his life. Wonderful as is the story of the building
of those five orphan houses on Ashley Down, many other events and experiences no
less showed the goodness and mercy of God, and must not be unrecorded in these pages,
if we are to trace, however imperfectly, His gracious dealings; and having, by one
comprehensive view, taken in the story of the orphan homes, we may retrace our steps
to the years when the first of these houses was planned, and, following another path,
look at Mr. Mueller's personal and domestic life.
He himself loved to trace the Lord's goodness and mercy, and he saw abundant proofs
that they had followed him. A few instances may be given, from different departments
of experience, as representative examples.
The Lord's tender care was manifest as to his beloved daughter Lydia. It became clear
in the year 1843, that, both for the relief of the mother and the profit of the daughter,
it would be better that Lydia should be taught elsewhere than at home; and in answer
to prayer, her father was divinely directed to a Christian sister, whose special
gifts in the way of instructing and training children were manifestly from the Spirit,
who divides unto all believers severally as He will. She seemed to be marked of God,
as the woman to whom was to be intrusted the responsible task of superintending the
education of Lydia. Mr. Mueller both expected and desired to pay for such training,
and asked for the account, which in the first instance he paid, but the exact sum
was returned to him anonymously; and, for the six remaining years of his daughter's
stay, he could get no further bills for her schooling. Thus God provided for the
board and education of this only child, not only without cost to her parents, but
to their intense satisfaction as being under the true "nurture and admonition
of the Lord;" for while at this school, in April, 1846, Lydia found peace in
believing, and began that beautiful life in the Lord Jesus Christ, that, for forty-four
years afterward, so singularly exhibited His image.
Many Christian parents have made the fatal mistake of intrusting their children's
education to those whose gifts were wholly intellectual and not spiritual, and who
have misled the young pupils entrusted to their care, into an irreligious or infidel
life, or, at best, a career of mere intellectualism and worldly ambition. In not
a few instances, all the influences of a pious home have been counteracted by the
atmosphere of a school which, if not godless, has been without that fragrance of
spiritual devoutness and consecration which is indispensable to the true training
off impressible children during the plastic years when character is forming for eternity!
Goodness and mercy followed Mr. and Mrs. Mueller conspicuously in their sojourn in
Germany in 1845, which covered about three months, from July 19th to October 11th.
God plainly led to Stuttgart, where brethren had fallen into grievous errors and
needed again a helping hand. When the strong impression laid hold of Mr. Mueller,
more than two months before his departure for the Continent, that he was to return
there for a season, he began definitely to pray for means to go with, on May 3rd,
and, within a quarter hour after, five hundred pounds were received, the donor
specifying that the money was given for all expenses needful, "preparatory to,
and attendant upon" this proposed journey. The same goodness and mercy followed
all his steps while abroad. Provision was made, in God's own strange way, for suitable
lodgings in Stuttgart, at a time when the city was exceptionally crowded, a wealthy
retired surgeon, who had never before rented apartments, being led to offer them.
All Mr. Mueller's labours were attended with blessing: during part of the time he
held as many as eight meetings a week; and he was enabled to publish eleven tracts
in German, and judiciously to scatter over two hundred and twenty thousand of them,
as well as nearly four thousand of his Narrative, and yet evade interference from
the police.
One experience of this sojourn abroad should have special mention for the lesson
it suggests, both in charity for others' views and loving adaptation to circumstances.
A providential opening occurred to address meetings of about one hundred and fifty
members of the state church. In his view the character of such assemblies was not
wholly conformed to the Scripture pattern, and hence did not altogether meet his
approval; but such opportunity was afforded to bear testimony for the truth's sake,
and to exhibit Christian unity upon essentials, for love's sake, that he judged it
of the Lord that he should enter this open door. Those who knew Mr. Mueller but little,
but knew his positive convictions and uncompromising loyalty to them, might suspect
that he would have little forbearance with even minor errors, and would not bend
himself from his stern attitude of inflexibility to accommodate himself to those
who were ensnared by them. But those who knew him better, saw that he held fast the
form of sound words with faith and love which are in Christ Jesus. Like Paul, ever
ready to be made all things to all men that by all means he might save some, in his
whole character and conduct nothing shone, more radiantly beautiful, than Love. He
felt that he who would lift up others must bow himself to lay hold on them; that
to help brethren we must bear with them, not insisting upon matters of minor importance
as though they were essential and fundamental. Hence his course, instead of being
needlessly repellant, was tenderly conciliatory; and it was a conspicuous sign of
grace that, while holding his own views of truth and duty so positively and tenaciously,
the intolerance of bigotry was so displaced by the forbearance of charity that, when
the Lord so led and circumstances so required, he could conform for a time to customs
whose propriety he doubted, without abating either the earnestness of his conviction
or the integrity of his testimony.
God's goodness and mercy were seen in the fact that, whenever more liberal things
were devised for Him, He responded in providing liberally means to carry out such
desires. This was abundantly illustrated not only in the orphan work, but in the
history of the Scriptural Knowledge Institution; when, for years together, the various
branches of this work grew so rapidly, until the point of full development was reached.
The time indeed came when, in some departments, it pleased God that contraction should
succeed expansion, but even here goodness ruled, for it was afterward seen that it
was because other brethren had been led to take up such branches of the Lord's
work, in all of which developments Mr. Mueller as truly rejoiced as though it had
been his work alone that was honoured of God.
The aiding of brethren in the mission fields grew more and more dear to his heart,
and the means to indulge his unselfish desires were so multiplied that, in 1846,
he found, on reviewing the history of the Lord's dealings, that he had been enabled
to expend about seven times as much of late years as previously. It may here
be added, again by way of anticipation, that when, nineteen years later, in 1865,
he sat down to apportion to such labourers in the Lord as he was wont to assist,
the sums he felt it desirable to send to each, he found before him the names of one
hundred and twenty-two such! Goodness and mercy indeed! Here was but one branch
of his work, and yet to what proportions and fruitfulness it had grown! He needed
four hundred and sixty-six pounds to send them to fill out his appropriations, and
he lacked ninety-two of this amount. He carried the lack to the Lord, and that
evening received five pounds, and the next morning a hundred more, and
a further "birthday memorial" of fifty, so that he had in all thirty-seven
more than he had asked.
What goodness and mercy followed him in the strength he ever had to bear the heavy
loads of care incident to his work! The Lord's coach bore him and his burdens together.
Day by day his gracious Master preserved his peace unbroken, though disease found
its way into this large family, though fit homes and work must be found for outgoing
orphans, and fit care and training for incoming orphans; though crises were constantly
arising and new needs constantly recurring, grave matters daily demanded prayer and
watching, and perpetual diligence and vigilance were needful; for the Lord was his
Helper, and carried all his loads.
During the winter of 1846-7 there was a peculiar season of dearth. Would God's goodness
and mercy fail? There were those who looked on, more than half incredulous, saying
to themselves if not to others,
"I wonder how it is now with Mr. Mueller and his orphans! If he is able to provide for them now as he has been, we will say nothing." But all through this time of widespread want his witness was,
"We lack nothing: God helps us."
Faith led when the way was too dark for sight; in fact the darker the road the
more was the Hand felt that leads the blind by a way they know not. They went
through that winter as easily as through any other from the beginning of the work!
Was it no sign that God's "footmen" followed George Mueller that the work
never ceased to be both a work of faith and of prayer? that no difficulties or discouragements,
no successes or triumphs, ever caused for an hour a departure from the sublime essential
principles on which the work was based, or a diversion from the purpose for which
it had been built up?
We have heard it said of a brother, much honoured
of God in beginning a work of faith, that, when it had grown to greater proportions,
he seemed to change its base to that of a business scheme. How it glorifies God that
the holy enterprise, planted in Bristol in 1834, has known no such alteration in
its essential features during all these years. Though the work grew, and its needs
with it, until the expenses were twofold, threefold, fourfold, and, at last, seventyfold
what they were when that first Orphan House was opened in Wilson Street, there has
been no change of base, never any looking to man for patronage or support,
never any dependence upon a regular income or fixed endowment. God has been, all
through these years, as at first, the sole Patron and Dependence. The Scriptural
Knowledge Institution has not been wrecked on the rocks of financial failure, nor
has it even drifted away from its original moorings in the safe anchorage-ground
of the Promises of Jehovah.
Was it not goodness and mercy that kept George
Mueller ever grateful as well as faithful! He did not more constantly feel his need
of faith and prayer than his duty and privilege of abounding joy and praise. Some
might think that, after such experiences of answered prayer, one would be less and
less moved by them, as the novelty was lost in the uniformity of such interpositions.
But no. When, in June, 1853, at a time of sore need, the Lord sent, in one sum, three
hundred pounds, he could scarcely contain his triumphant joy in God. He walked up
and down his room for a long time, his heart overflowing and his eyes too, his mouth
filled with laughter and his voice with song, while he gave himself afresh to the
faithful Master he served. God's blessings were to him always new and fresh. Answered
prayers never lost the charm of novelty; like flowers plucked fresh every hour from
the gardens of God, they never got stale, losing none of their beauty or celestial
fragrance.
And what goodness and mercy was it that never suffered prayerfulness and patience
to relax their hold, either when answers seemed to come fast and thick like snowflakes,
or when the heavens seemed locked up and faith had to wait patiently and long! Every day brought new demands for continuance in prayer.
In fact, as Mr. Mueller testifies, the only difference between latter and former
days was that the difficulties were greater in proportion as the work was larger.
But he adds that this was to be expected, for the Lord gives faith for the very purpose
of trying it for the glory of His own name and the good of him who has the faith,
and it is by these very trials that trust learns the secret of its triumphs.
Goodness and mercy not only guided but also guarded this servant of God. God's
footmen bore a protecting shield which was always over him. Amid thousands of unseen
perils, occasionally some danger was known, though generally after it was passed.
While at Keswick labouring in 1847, for example, a man, taken deranged while lodging
in the same house, shot himself. It afterward transpired that he had an impression
that Mr. Mueller had designs on his life, and had he met Mr. Mueller during this
insane attack he would probably have shot him with the loaded pistol he carried about
on his person.
The pathway of this man of God sometimes led through deep waters of affliction, but
goodness and mercy still followed, and held him up. In the autumn of 1852, his beloved
brother-in-law, Mr. A. N. Groves, came back from the East lndies, very ill; and in
May of the next year, after a blessed witness for God, he fell asleep at Mr. Mueller's
house. To him Mr. Mueller owed much through grace at the outset of his labours in
1829. By his example his faith had been stimulated and helped when, with no visible
support or connection with any missionary society, Mr. Groves had gone to Bagdad
with wife and children, for the sake of mission work in this far-off field, resigning
a lucrative practice of about fifteen hundred pounds a year. The tie between these
men was very close and tender and the loss of this brother-in-law gave keen sorrow.
In July following, Mr. and Mrs. Mueller went through a yet severer trial. Lydia,
the beloved daughter and only child,-- born in 1832 and new-born in 1846, and at
this time twenty years old and a treasure without price,-- was taken ill in the latter
part of June, and the ailment developed into a malignant typhoid which, two weeks
later, brought her to the gates of death. These parents had to face the prospect
of being left childless. But faith triumphed and prayer prevailed. Their darling
Lydia was spared to be, for many years to come, a blessing beyond words, not only
to them and to her future husband, but to many others in a wider circle of influence.
Mr. Mueller found, in this trial, a special proof of God's goodness and mercy, which
he gratefully records, in the growth in grace, evidenced in his entire and joyful
acquiescence in the Father's will, when, with such a loss apparently before him,
his confidence was undisturbed that all things would work together for good. He could
not but contrast with this experience of serenity, that broken peace and complaining
spirit with which he had met a like trial in August, 1831, twenty-one years before.
How, like a magnet among steel filings, the thankful heart finds the mercies and
picks them out of the black dust of sorrow and suffering!
The second volume of Mr. Mueller's Narrative closes
with a paragraph in which he formally disclaims as impudent presumption and pretension
all high rank as a miracle-worker, and records his regret that any work, based on
scriptural promises and built on the simple lines of faith and prayer, should be
accounted either phenomenal or fanatical.
The common ways of accounting for its success would
be absurdly ridiculous and amusing were they not so sadly unbelieving. Those who
knew little or nothing, either of the exercise of faith or the experience of God's
faithfulness, resorted to the most God-dishonouring explanations of the work. Some
said:
"Mr. Mueller is a foreigner; his methods are so novel as to attract attention."
Others that the
"Annual Reports brought in the money,"
or suggested that he had
"a secret treasure."
His quiet reply was,
that his being a foreigner would be more likely to repel than to attract confidence;
that the novelty would scarcely avail him after more than a score of years;
that other institutions which issued reports did not always escape want and debt;
but, as to the secret treasure to which he was supposed to have access, he felt constrained to confess that there was more in that supposition than the objectors were aware of. He had indeed a Treasury, inexhaustible-- in the promises of a God unchangeably faithful-- from which he admits that he had already in 1856 drawn for twenty-two years, and in all over one hundred and thirteen thousand pounds.
As to the Reports, it may be worth while to notice that he never but once in his
life advertised the public of any need, and that was the need of more orphans--
more to care for in the name of the Lord-- a single and singular case of advertising,
by which he sought not to increase his income, but his expenditure-- not asking the
public to aid him in supporting the needy, but to increase the occasion of his outlay!
So far was he from depending upon any such sources of supply as the unbelieving world
might think, that it was in the drying up of all such channels that he found the
opportunity of his faith and of God's power. The visible treasure was often so small
that it was reduced to nothing, but the invisible Treasure was God's Riches in glory,
and could be drawn from without limit. This it was to which he looked alone, and
in which he felt that he had a river of supply that can never run dry.*
*Appendix H.
The orphan work had, to Mr. Mueller, many charms which grew on him as he entered
more fully into it. While his main hope was to be the means of spiritual health to
these children, he had the joy of seeing how God used these homes for the promotion
of their physical welfare also, and, in cases not a few, for the entire renovation
of their weak and diseased bodies. It must be remembered that most of them owed their
orphan condition to that great destroyer, Consumption. Children were often brought
to the orphan houses thoroughly permeated by the poison of bad blood, with diseased
tendencies, and sometimes emaciated and half-starved, having had neither proper food
nor medical care.
For example, in the spring of 1855, four children from five to nine years old, and
of one family, were admitted to the orphanage, all in a deplorable state from lack
of both nursing and nutrition. It was a serious question whether they should be admitted
at all, as such tended to turn the institution into a hospital and absorb undue care
and time. But to dismiss them seemed almost inhuman, certainly inhumane. So,
trusting in God, they were taken in and cared for with parental love. A few weeks
later these children were physically unrecognizable, so rapid had been the improvement
in health, and probably there were with God's blessing four graves less to be dug.
The trials incident to the moral and spiritual condition of the orphans were even
greater, however, than those caused by ill health and weakness. When children proved
incorrigibly bad, they were expelled, lest they should corrupt others, for the institution
was not a reformatory, as it was not a hospital. In 1849, a boy, of
less than eight years, had to be sent away as a confirmed liar and thief, having
twice run off with the belongings of other children and gloried in his juvenile crimes.
Yet the forbearance exercised even in his case was marvelously godlike, for, during
over five years, he had been the subject of private admonitions and prayers and all
other methods of reclamation; and, when expulsion became the last resort, he was
solemnly and with prayer, before all the others, sent away from the orphan house,
that if possible such course might prove a double blessing, a remedy to him and a
warning to others; and even then this young practised sinner was followed, in his
expulsion, by loving supplication.
Towards the end of November, 1857, it was
found that a serious leak in the boiler of the heating apparatus of house No. 1 would
make repairs at once necessary, and as the boilers were encased in bricks and a new
boiler might be required, such repairs must consume time. Meanwhile how could three
hundred children, some of them very young and tender, be kept warm? Even if gas-stoves
could be temporarily set up, chimneys would be needful to carry off the impure air;
and no way of heating was available during repairs, even if a hundred pounds were
expended to prevent risk of cold. Again Mr. Mueller turned to the Living God, and,
trusting in Him, decided to have the repairs begun. A day or so before the fires
had to be put out, a bleak north wind set in. The work could no longer be delayed;
yet weather, prematurely cold for the season, threatened these hundreds of children
with hurtful exposure. The Lord was boldly appealed to.
"Lord, these are Thy orphans: be pleased to change this north wind into a south wind, and give the workmen a mind to work that the job may be speedily done."
The evening before the repairs actually began, the cold blast was still blowing; but on that day a south wind blew, and the weather was so mild that no fire was needful! Not only so, but, as Mr. Mueller went into the cellar with the overseer of the work, to see whether the repairs could in no way be expedited, he heard him say, in the hearing of the men,
"They will work late this evening, and come very early again to-morrow."
"We would rather, sir," was the reply, "work all night."
And so, within about thirty hours, the fire was again burning to heat the water
in the boiler; and, until the apparatus was again in order, that merciful soft south
wind had continued to blow. Goodness and mercy were following the Lord's humble servant,
made the more conspicuous by the crises of special trial and trouble.
Every new exigency provoked new prayer and evoked new faith. Then, in 1862, several
boys were ready to be apprenticed, and there were no applications such as were desired,
prayer was the one resort, as advertising would tend to bring applications from masters
who sought apprentices for the sake of the premium. But every one of the eighteen
boys was properly bound over to a Christian master, whose business was suitable and
who would receive the lad into his own family.
About the same time one of the drains was obstructed which runs about eleven feet
underground. Then three holes had been dug and as many places in the drain tapped
in vain, prayer was offered that in the fourth case the workmen might be guided to
the very spot where the stoppage existed-- and the request was literally answered.
Three instances of marked deliverance, in answer to prayer, are specially recorded
for the year between May 26, 1864, and the same date in 1865, which should not be
passed by without at least a mention.
First, in the great drought of the summer of 1864, when the fifteen large cisterns in the three orphan houses were empty, and the nine deep wells, and even the good spring which had never before failed, were almost all dry. Two or three thousand gallons of water were daily required, and daily prayer was made to the God of the rain. See how God provided, while pleased to withhold the supply from above! A farmer, near by, supplied, from his larger wells, about half the water needful, the rest being furnished by the half-exhausted wells on Ashley Down; and, when he could no longer spare water, without a day's interval, another farmer offered a supply from a brook which ran through his fields, and thus there was abundance until the rains replenished cisterns and wells."*
*About twenty years later the Bristol Water Works Co. introduced pipes and thus a permanent and unfailing supply.
Second, when, for three years, scarlet and typhus fevers and smallpox, being prevalent in Bristol and the vicinity, threatened the orphans, prayer was again made to Him who is the God of health as well as of rain. There was no case of scarlet or typhus fever during the whole time, though smallpox was permitted to find an entrance into the smallest of the orphan houses. Prayer was still the one resort. The disease spread to the other houses, until at one time fifteen were ill with it. The cases, however, were mercifully light, and the Lord was besought to allow the epidemic to spread no further. Not another child was taken; and when, after nine months, the disease altogether disappeared, not one child had died of it, and only one teacher or adult had had an attack, and that was very mild. What ravages the disease might have made among the twelve hundred inmates of these orphan houses, had it then prevailed as later, in 1872!
Third, tremendous gales visited Bristol and neighbourhood in January, 1865. The roofs of the orphan houses were so injured as to be laid open in at least twenty places, and large panes of glass were broken. The day was Saturday, and no glazier and slater could be had before Monday. So the Lord of wind and weather was besought to protect the exposed property during the interval. The wind calmed down, and the rain was restrained until midday of Wednesday, when the repairs were about furnished, but heavy rainfalls drove the slaters from the roof. One exposed opening remained and much damage threatened; but, in answer to prayer, the rain was stayed, and the work resumed. No damage had been done while the last opening was unrepaired for it had exposed the building from the south, while the rain came from the north.
Mr. Mueller records these circumstances with his usual particularity, as part
of his witness to the Living God, and to the goodness and mercy that closely and
continually followed him.
During the next year, 1865-6, scarlet fever broke out in the orphanage. In all thirty-nine
children were ill, but Whooping-cough also made its appearance; but though, during
that season, it was not only very prevalent but very malignant in Bristol, in all
the three houses there were but seventeen cases, and the only fatal one was that
of a little girl with constitutionally weak lungs.
During this same year, however, the Spirit of God wrought mightily among the girls,
as in the previous year among the boys, so that over one hundred became deeply earnest
seekers after salvation; and so, even in tribulation, consolation abounded in Christ.
Mr. Mueller and his wife and helpers now implored God to deepen and broaden this
work of His Spirit. Toward the end of the year closing in May, 1866, Emma Bunn, an
orphan girl of seventeen, was struck with consumption. Though, for fourteen years,
she had been under Mr. Mueller's care, she was, in this dangerous illness, still
careless and indifferent; and, as she drew near to death, her case continued as hopeless
as ever. Prayer was unceasing for her; and it pleased God suddenly to reveal Christ
to her as her Saviour. Great self-loathing now at once took the place of former indifference;
confession of sins of previous callousness of conscience; and unspeakable joy in
the Lord, of former apathy and coldness. It was a spiritual miracle -- this girl's
sudden transformation into a witness for God, manifesting deepest conviction for
past sin and earnest concern for others. Her thoughtless and heedless state had been
so well known that her conversion and dying messages were now the Lord's means of
the most extensive and God-glorifying work ever wrought up to that time among
the orphans. In one house alone three hundred and fifty were led to seek peace
in believing.
What lessons lie hidden-- nay, lie on the very surface-- to be read of every willing
observer of these events! Prayer can break even a hard heart; a memory, stored with
biblical truth and pious teaching, will prove, when once God's grace softens the
heart and unlooses the tongue, a source of both personal growth in grace and of capacity
for wide service to others. We are all practically too careless of the training of
children, and too distrustful of young converts. Mr. Mueller was more and more impressed
by the triumphs of the grace of God as seen in children converted at the tender age
of nine or ten and holding the beginning of their confidence steadfast unto the end.
These facts and experiences, gleaned, like handfuls of grain, from a wide field,
show the character both of the seed sown and the harvest reaped, from the sowing.
Again, when, in 1866, cholera developed in England, in answer to special prayer not
one case of this disease was known in the orphan houses; and when, in the autumn,
whooping-cough and measles broke out, though eight children had the former and two
hundred and sixty-two, the latter, not one child died, or was afterward debilitated
by the attack. From May, 1866, to May, 1867, out of over thirteen hundred children
under care, only eleven died, considerably less than one per cent.
That severe and epidemic disease should find its way into the orphanages at all may
seem strange to those who judge God's faithfulness by appearances, but many were
the compensations for such trials. By them not only were the hearts of the children
often turned to God, but the hearts of helpers in the Institution were made more
sympathetic and tender, and the hearts of God's people at large were stirred up to
practical and systematic help. God uses such seeming calamities as "advertisements"
of His work; many who would not have heard of the Institution, or on whom what they
did hear would have made little impression, were led to take a deep interest in an
orphanage where thousands of little ones were exposed to the ravages of some malignant
and dangerous epidemic.
Looking back, in 1865, after thirty-one years, upon the work thus far done for the
Lord, Mr. Mueller gratefully records that, during the entire time, he had been enabled
to hold fast the original principles on which the work was based on March 5, 1834.
He had never once gone into debt; he had sought for the Institution no patron but
the Living God; and he had kept to the line of demarkation between believers and
unbelievers, in all his seeking for active helpers in the work.
His grand purpose, in all his labours, having been, from the beginning, the glory
of God, in showing what could be done through prayer and faith, without any leaning
upon man, his unequivocal testimony is:
"Hitherto hath the Lord helped us."
Though for about five years they had, almost daily, been in the constant trial
of faith, they were as constantly proving His faithfulness. The work had rapidly
grown, till it assumed gigantic proportions, but so did the help of God keep pace
with all the needs and demands of its growth.
In January, 1866, Mr. Henry Craik, who had for thirty-six years been Mr. Mueller's
valued friend, and, since 1832, his coworker in Bristol, fell asleep after an illness
of seven months. In Devonshire these two brethren had first known each other, and
the acquaintance had subsequently ripened, through years of common labour and trial,
into an affection seldom found among men. They were nearly of an age, both being
a little past sixty when Mr. Craik died. The loss was too heavy to have been patiently
and serenely borne, had not the survivor known and felt beneath him the Everlasting
Arms. And even this bereavement, which in one aspect was an irreparable loss, was
seen to be only another proof of God's love. The look ahead might be a dark one,
the way desolate and even dangerous, but goodness and mercy were still following
very close behind, and would in every new place of danger or difficulty be at hand
to help over hard places and give comfort and cheer in the night season.
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CHAPTER 16
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