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George Mueller |
Chapter 17 |
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
Chapter XVI. The
Shadow Of A Great Sorrow
Chapter XVII. The Period Of World-Wide Witness
(this page)
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 17
The Period Of World-Wide Witness
GOD'S real answers to prayer are often seeming denials. Beneath the outward request
He hears the voice of the inward desire, and He responds to the mind of the Spirit
rather than to the imperfect and perhaps mistaken words in which the yearning seeks
expression. Moreover, His infinite wisdom sees that a larger blessing may be ours
only by the withholding of the lesser good which we seek; and so all true prayer
trusts His to give His own answer, not in our way or time, or even to our own expressed
desire, but rather to His own unutterable groaning within us which He can interpret
better than we.
Monica, mother of Augustine, pleaded with God that her dissolute son might not go
to Rome, that sink of iniquity; but he was permitted to go, and thus came into contact
with Ambrose, bishop of Milan, through whom he was converted. God fulfilled the mother's
desire while denying her request.
When George Mueller, five times within the first eight years after conversion, had
offered himself as a missionary. God had blocked his way; now, at sixty-five, He
was about to permit him, in a sense he had never dreamed of, to be a missionary to
the world. From the beginning of his ministry he had been more or less an itinerant,
spending no little time in wanderings about in Britain and on the Continent; but
now he was to go to the regions beyond and spend the major part of seventeen years
in witnessing to the prayer-hearing God.
These extensive missionary tours occupied the evening of Mr. Mueller's useful life,
from 1875 to 1892. They reached, more or less, over Europe, America, Asia, Africa,
and Australia; and would of themselves have sufficed for the work of an ordinary
life.
They had a singular suggestion. While, in 1874, compelled by Mrs. Mueller's health
to seek a change of air, he was preaching in the Isle of Wight, and a beloved Christian
brother for whom he had spoken, himself a man of much experience in preaching, told
him how
"that day had been the happiest of his whole life";
and this remark, with others like it previously made, so impressed him that the
Lord was about to use him to help on believers outside of Bristol, that he determined
no longer to confine his labours in the Word and doctrine to any one place, but to
go wherever a door might open for his testimony.
In weighing this question he was impressed with seven reasons or motives,
which led to these tours:
1. To preach the gospel in its simplicity, and especially to show how salvation is based, not upon feelings or even upon faith, but upon the finished work of Christ; that justification is ours the moment we believe, and we are to accept and claim our place as accepted in the Beloved without regard to our inward states of feeling or emotion.
2. To lead believers to know their saved state, and to realize their standing in Christ, great numbers not only of disciples, but even preachers and pastors, being themselves destitute of any real peace and joy in the Lord, and hence unable to lead others into joy and peace.
3. To bring believers back to the Scriptures, to search the Word and find its hidden treasures; to test everything by this divine touchstone and hold fast only what will stand this test; to make it the daily subject of meditative and prayerful examination in order to translate it into daily obedience.
4. To promote among all true believers, brotherly love; to lead them to make less of those non-essentials in which disciples differ, and to make more of those great essential and foundation truths in which all true believers are united; to help all who love and trust one Lord to rise above narrow sectarian prejudices, and barriers to fellowship.
5. To strengthen the faith of believers, encouraging a simpler trust, and a more real and unwavering confidence in God, and particularly in the sure answers to believing prayer, based upon His definite promises.
6. To promote separation from the world and deadness to it, and so to increase heavenly-mindedness in children of God; at the time warning against fanatical extremes and extravagances.
7. And finally to fix the hope of disciples on the blessed coming of our Lord Jesus; and, in connection therewith, to instruct them as to the true character and object of the present dispensation, and the relation of the church to the world in this period of the outgathering of the Bride of Christ.
These seven objects may be briefly epitomized thus: Mr. Mueller's aim was to lead
sinners to believe on the name of the Son of God, and so to have eternal life;
to help those who have thus believed, to know that they have this life; to
teach them so to build up themselves on their most holy faith, by diligent
searching into the word of God, and praying in the Holy Ghost, as that this life
shall be more and more a real possession and a conscious possession; to promote among
all disciples the unity of the Spirit and the charity which is the
bond of perfectness, and to help them to exhibit that life before the world; to incite
them to cultivate an unworldly and spiritual type of character such as conforms
to the life of God in them; to lead them to the prayer of faith which is both
the expression and the expansion of the life of faith; and to direct their hope to
the final appearing of the Lord, so that they should purify themselves even
as He is pure, and occupy till He comes. Mr. Mueller was thus giving himself to the
double work of evangelization and edification, on a scale commensurate with his love
for a dying world, as opportunity afforded doing good unto all men, and especially
to them who are of the household of faith.
Of these long and busy missionary journeys, it is needful to give only the outline,
or general survey. March 26, 1875, is an important date, for it marks the starting-point
He himself calls this "the beginning of his missionary tour."
From Bristol he went to Brighton, Lewes, and Sunderland-- on the way to Sunderland
preaching to a great audience in the Metropolitan Tabernacle, at Mr. Spurgeon's request--
then to Newcastle-on-Tyne, and back to London, where he spoke at the Mildmay Park
Conference, Talbot Road Tabernacle, and "Edinburgh Castle." This tour closed,
June 5th, after seventy addresses in public, during about ten weeks.
Less than six weeks passed, when, on August 14th, the second tour began, in which
case the special impulse that moved him was a desire to follow up the revival work
of Mr. Moody and Mr. Sankey. Their short stay in each place made them unable to lead
on new converts to higher attainments in knowledge and grace, and there seemed to
be a call for some instruction fitted to confirm these new believers in the life
of obedience. Mr. Mueller accordingly followed these evangelists in England, Ireland,
and Scotland, staying in each place from one week to six, and seeking to educate
and edify those who had been led to Christ. Among the places visited on this errand
in 1875, were London; then Kilmarnock, Saltwater, Dundee, Perth, Glasgow, Kirkentilloch
in Scotland, and Dublin in Ireland; then, returning to England, he went to Leamington,
Warwick, Kenilworth, Coventry, Rugby, etc. In some cases, notably at Mildmay Park,
Dundee and Glasgow, Liverpool and Dublin, the audiences numbered from two thousand
to six thousand, but everywhere rich blessing came from above. This second tour extended
into the new year, 1876, and took in Liverpool, York, Kendal, Carlisle, Annan, Edinburgh,
Arbroath, Montrose, Aberdeen, and other places; and when it closed in July, having
lasted nearly eleven months, Mr. Mueller had preached at least three hundred and
six times, an average of about one sermon a day, exclusive of days spent in travel.
So acceptable and profitable were these labours that there were over one hundred
invitations urged upon him which he was unable to accept.
The third tour was on the Continent. It occupied most of the year closing May 26,
1877, and embraced Paris, various places in Switzerland, Prussia and Holland, Alsace,
Wurtemberg, Baden, Hesse Darmstadt, etc. Altogether over three hundred addresses
were given in about seventy cities and villages to all of which he had been invited
by letter. When this tour closed more than sixty written invitations remained unaccepted,
and Mr. Mueller found that, through his work and his writings, he was as well known
in the continental countries visited, as in England.
Turning now toward America, the fourth tour extended from August, 1877, to June of
the next year. For many years invitations had been coming with growing frequency,
from the United States and Canada; and of late their urgency led him to recognize
in them the call of God, especially as he thought of the many thousands of Germans
across the Atlantic, who as they heard him speak in their own native tongue would
keep the more silence. (Acts xxii.2.)
Mr. and Mrs. Mueller, landing at Quebec, thence went to the United States, where,
during ten months, his labours stretched over a vast area, including the States of
New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Maryland, District of Columbia,
Virginia, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Louisiana, and Missouri. Thus
having swept round the Atlantic sea-border, he crossed to the Pacific coast, and
returning visited Salt Lake City in Utah-- the very centre and stronghold of Mormonism--
Illinois, Ohio, etc. He spoke frequently to large congregations of Germans, and,
in the Southern States, to the coloured population; but he regarded no opportunity
for service afforded him on this tour as so inspiring as the repeated meetings with
and for ministers, evangelists, pastors, and Christian workers; and, next to them
in importance, his interviews with large bodies of students and professors in the
universities, colleges, theological seminaries, and other higher schools of education.
To cast the salt of the gospel into the very springs of social influence, the sources
whence power flows, was to him a most sacred privilege. His singular catholicity,
charity, and humility drew to him even those who differed with him, and all denominations
of Christians united in giving him access to the people. During this tour he spoke
three hundred times, and travelled nearly ten thousand miles; over one hundred invitations
being declined, for simple lack of time and strength.
After a stay in Bristol of about two months, on September 5, 1878, he and his wife
began the fifth of these missionary tours. In this case, it was on the Continent,
where he ministered in English, German, and French; and in Spain and Italy, when
these tongues were not available, his addresses were through an interpreter. Many
open doors the Lord set before him, not only to the poorer and humbler classes, but
to those in the middle and higher ranks. In the Riviera, he had access to many of
the nobility and aristocracy, who from different countries sought health and rest
in the equable climate of the Mediterranean, and at Mentone he and Mr. Spurgeon held
sweet converse. In Spain Mr. Mueller was greatly gladdened by seeing for himself
the schools, entirely supported by the funds of the Scriptural Knowledge Institution,
and by finding that, in hundreds of cases, even popish parents so greatly
valued these schools that they continued to send their children, despite both the
threats and persuasions of the Romish priests. He found, moreover, that the pupils
frequently at their homes read to their parents the word of God and sang to them
the gospel hymns learned at these schools, so that the influence exerted was not
bounded by its apparent horizon, as diffused or refracted sunlight reaches with its
illumining rays far beyond the visible track of the orb of day.
The work had to contend with governmental opposition. When a place was first opened
at Madrid for gospel services, a sign placed outside, announcing the fact. Official
orders were issued that the sign should be painted over, so as to obliterate the
inscription. The painter of the sign, unwilling both to undo his own work and to
hinder the work of God, painted the sign over with watercolours, which would leave
the original announcement half visible, and would soon be washed off by the rains;
whereupon the government sent its own workman to daub the sign over with thick oil-colour.
Mr. Mueller, ready to preach the gospel to those at Rome also, felt his spirit saddened
and stirred within him, as he saw that city wholly given to idolatry-- not pagan
but papal idolatry-- the Rome not of the Caesars, but of the popes. While at Naples
he ascended Vesuvius. Those masses of lava, which seemed greater in bulk than the
mountain itself, more impressed him with the power of God than anything else he had
ever seen. As he looked upon that smoking cone, and thought of the liquid death it
had vomited forth, he said within himself,
"What cannot God do!"
He had before felt somewhat of His Almightiness in love and grace, but he now
saw its manifestation in judgment and wrath. His visit to the Vaudois valleys, where
so many martyrs had suffered banishment and imprisonment, loss of goods and loss
of life for Jesus' sake, moved him to the depths of his being and stimulated in him
the martyr spirit.
When he arrived again in Bristol, June 18, 1879, he had been absent nine months and
twelve days, and preached two hundred and eighty-six times and in forty-six towns
and cities. After another ten weeks in Bristol, he and his wife sailed again for
America, the last week of August, 1879, landing at New York the first week in September.
This visit took in the States lying between the Atlantic Ocean and the valley of
the Mississippi-- New York and New Jersey, Ohio, Indiana, Michigan and Illinois,
Wisconsin, Iowa, Minnesota-- and, from London and Hamilton to Quebec, Canada also
shared the blessing. This visit covered only two hundred and seventy-two days, but
he preached three hundred times, and in over forty cities. Over one hundred and fifty
written invitations still remained without response, and the number increased the
longer his stay. Mr. Mueller therefore assuredly gathered that the Lord called him
to return to America after another brief stay at Bristol, where he felt it needful
to spend a season annually, to keep in close touch with the work at home and relieve
Mr. and Mrs. Wright of their heavy responsibilities, for a time.
Accordingly on September 15, 1880, again turning from Bristol, these travellers embarked
the next day on their seventh mission tour, landing, ten days later, at Quebec. Mr.
Mueller had a natural antipathy to the sea, in his earlier crossing to the Continent
having suffered much from sea-sickness; but he had undertaken these long voyages,
not for his own pleasure or profit, but wholly on God's errand; and he felt it to
be a peculiar mark of the lovingkindness of the Lord that, while he was ready to
endure any discomfort, or risk his life for His sake, he had not in his six crossings
of the Atlantic suffered in the least, and on this particular voyage was wholly free
from any indisposition.
From Quebec he went to Massachusetts, Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania.
Among other places of special interest were Boston, Plymouth-- the landing-place
of the Pilgrims,-- Wellesley and South Hadley colleges-- the great schools for woman's
higher education,-- and the centres farther westward, where he had such wide access
to Germans. This tour extended over a smaller area than before, and lasted but eight
months; but the impression on the people was deep and permanent. He had spoken about
two hundred and fifty times in all; and Mrs. Mueller had availed herself of many
opportunities of personal dealing with inquirers, and of distributing books and tracts
among both believers and unbelievers. She had also written for her husband more than
seven hundred letters,-- this of itself being no light task, inasmuch as it reaches
an average of about three a day. On May 30, 1881, they were again on British shores.
The eighth long preaching tour, from August 23, 1881, to May 30, 1882, was given
to the Continent of Europe, here again Mr. Mueller felt led by the low state of religious
life in Switzerland and Germany.
This visit was extended to the Holy Land in a way strikingly providential. After
speaking at Alexandria, Cairo, and Port Said, he went to Jaffa, and thence to Jerusalem,
on November 28. With reverent feet he touched the soil once trodden by the feet of
the Son of God, visiting, with pathetic interest, Gethsemane and Golgotha, and crossing
the Mount of Olives to Bethany, thence to Bethlehem and back to Jaffa, and so to
Haipha, Mt. Carmel, and Beyrût, Smyrna, Ephesus, Constantinople, Athens, Brindisi,
Rome, and Florence. Again were months crowded with services of all sorts whose fruit
will appear only in the Day of the Lord Jesus, addresses being made in English, German,
and French, or by translation into Arabic, Armenian, Turkish, and modern Greek. Sightseeing
was always but incidental to the higher service of the Master. During this eighth
tour, covering some eight months, Mr. Mueller spoke hundreds of times, with all the
former tokens of God's blessing on his seed-sowing.
The ninth tour, from August 8, 1882, to June 1, 1883, was occupied with labours
in Germany, Austria, and Russia, including Bavaria, Hungary, Bohemia, Saxony, and
Poland. His special joy it was to bear witness in Kroppenstädt, his birthplace,
after an absence of about sixty-four years. At St. Petersburg, while the guest of
Princess Lieven, at her mansion he met and ministered to many of high rank; he also
began to hold meetings in the house of Colonel Paschkoff, who had suffered not only
persecution but exile for the Lord's sake. While the Scriptures were being read one
day in Russ, with seven poor Russians, a policeman summarily broke up the meeting
and dispersed the little company. At Lodz in Poland, a letter was received, in behalf
of "almost the whole population," begging him to remain longer; and so
signs seemed to multiply, as he went forward, that he was in the path of duty and
that God was with him.
On September 26, 1883, the tenth tour began, this time his face being turned
toward the Orient. Nearly sixty years before he had desired to go to the East Indies
as a missionary; now the Lord permitted him to carry out the desire in a new and
strange way, and India was the twenty-third country visited in his tours.
He travelled over 1,000 miles, and spoke over two hundred times, to missionaries
and Christian workers, European residents, Eurasians, Hindus, Moslems, educated natives,
native boys and girls in the orphanage at Colar, etc. Thus, in his seventy-ninth
year, this servant of God was still in labours abundant, and in all his work conspicuously
blessed of God.
After some months of preaching in England, Scotland, and Wales, on November 19, 1885,
he and his wife set out on their fourth visit to the United States, and their eleventh
longer mission tour. Crossing to the Pacific, they went to Sydney, New South
Wales, and, after seven months in Australia, sailed for Java, and thence to China,
arriving at Hong Kong, September 12th; Japan and the Straits of Malacca were also
included in this visit to the Orient. The return to England was by way of Nice; and,
after travelling nearly 38,000 miles, in good health Mr. and Mrs. Mueller reached
home on June 14, 1887, having been absent more than one year and seven months, during
which Mr. Mueller had preached whenever and wherever opportunity was afforded.
Less than two months later, on August 12, 1887, he sailed for South Australia, Tasmania,
New Zealand, Ceylon, and India. This twelfth long tour closed in March, 1890, having
covered thousands of miles. The intense heat at one time compelled Mr. Mueller to
leave Calcutta, and on the railway journey to Darjeeling his wife feared he would
die. But he was mercifully spared.
It was on this tour and in the month of January, 1890, while at Jubbulpore, preaching
with great help from the Lord, that a letter was put into Mr. Mueller's hands from
a missionary at Agra, to whom Mr. Wright had sent a telegram, informing his father-in-law
of his dear Lydia's death. For nearly thirty years she had laboured gratuitously
at the orphan houses and it would be difficult to fill that vacancy; but for fourteen
years she had been her husband's almost ideal companion, and for nearly fifty-eight
years her father's unspeakable treasure-- and here were two other voids which could
never be filled. But Mr. Mueller's heart, as also Mr. Wright's, was kept at rest
by the strong confidence that, however mysterious God's ways, all His dealings belong
to one harmonious spiritual mechanism in which every part is perfect and all things
work together for good. (Romans viii.28.)
This sudden bereavement led Mr. Mueller to bring his mission tour in the East to
a close and depart for Bristol, that he might both comfort Mr. Wright and relieve
him of undue pressure of work.
After a lapse of two months, once more Mr. and Mrs. Mueller left home for other extensive
missionary journeys. They went to the Continent and were absent from July, 1890,
to May, 1892. A twelvemonth was spent in Germany and Holland, Austria and Italy.
This absence in fact included two tours, with no interval between them, and concluded
the series of extensive journeys reaching through seventeen years.
This man-- from his seventieth to his eighty-seventh
year-- when most men are withdrawing from all activities, had travelled in forty-two
countries and over two hundred thousand miles, a distance equivalent to nearly eight
journeys round the globe. He estimated that during these seventeen years he had addressed
over three million people; and from all that can be gathered from the records of
these tours, we estimate that he must have spoken, outside of Bristol, between five
thousand and six thousand times. What sort of teaching and testimony occupied these
tours, those who have known the preacher and teacher need not be told. While at Berlin
in 1891, he gave an address that serves as an example of the vital truths which he
was wont to press on the attention of fellow disciples. We give a brief outline:
He first urged that believers should never, even under the greatest difficulties, be discouraged, and gave for his position sound scriptural reasons.
Then he pointed out to them that the chief business of every day is first of all to seek to be truly at rest and happy in God.
Then he showed how, from the word of God, all saved believers may know their true standing in Christ, and how in circumstances of particular perplexity they might ascertain the will of God.
He then urged disciples to seek with intense earnestness to become acquainted with God Himself as revealed in the Holy Scriptures, and carefully to form and maintain godly habits of systematic Bible study and prayer, holy living and consecrated giving.
He taught that God alone is the one all-satisfying portion of the soul, and that we must determine to possess and enjoy Him as such.
He closed by emphasizing it as the one, single, all-absorbing, daily aim to glorify God in a complete surrender to His will and service.
In all these mission tours, again, the faithfulness of God was conspicuously seen,
in the bounteous supply of every need. Steamer fares and long railway journeys; hotel
accommodations, ordinarily preferred to private hospitality, which seriously interfered
with private habits of devotion, public work, and proper rest-- such expenses demanded
a heavy outlay; the new mode of life, now adopted for the Lord's sake, was at least
three times as costly as the former frugal housekeeping; and yet, in answer to prayer
and without any appeal to human help, the Lord furnished all that was required.
Accustomed to look, step by step, for such tokens of divine approval, as emboldened
him to go forward, Mr. Mueller records how, when one hundred pounds was sent to him
for personal uses, this was recognized as a foretoken from his great Provider, "by
which," he writes,
"God meant to say to my own heart, 'I am pleased with thy work and service in going about on these long missionary tours. I will pay the expenses thereof, and I give thee here a specimen of what I am yet willing to do for thee.' "
Two other facts Mr. Mueller specially records in connection with these tours:
first, God's gracious guiding and guarding of the work at Bristol so that it suffered nothing from his absence; and
secondly, the fact that these journeys had no connection with collecting of money for the work or even informing the public of it. No reference was made to the Institution at Bristol, except when urgently requested, and not always even then; nor were collections ever made for it. Statements found their way into the press that in America large sums were gathered, but their falsity is sufficiently shown by the fact that in his first tour in America, for example, the sum total of all such gifts was less than sixty pounds, not more than two thirds of the outlay of every day at the orphan houses.
These missionary tours were not always approved even by the friends and advisers of Mr. Mueller. In 1882, while experiencing no little difficulty and trial, especially as to funds, there were not a few who felt a deep interest in the Institution on Ashley Down, who would have had God's servant discontinue his long absences, as to them it appeared that these were the main reason for the falling off in funds. He was always open to counsel, but he always reserved to himself an independent decision; and, on weighing the matter well, these were some of the reasons that led him to think that the work of God at home did not demand his personal presence:
1. He had observed year after year that, under the godly and efficient supervision of Mr. Wright and his large staff of helpers, every branch of the Scriptural Knowledge Institution had been found as healthy and fruitful during these absences as when Mr. Mueller was in Bristol.
2. The Lord's approval of this work of wider witness had been in manner conclusive and in measure abundant, as in the ample supply of funds for these tours, in the wide doors of access opened, and in the large fruit already evident in blessing to thousands of souls.
3. The strong impression upon his mind that this was the work which was to occupy the "evening of his life," grew in depth, and was confirmed by so many signs of God's leading that he could not doubt that he was led both of God's providence and Spirit.
4. Even while absent, he was never out of communication with the helpers at home. Generally he heard at least weekly from Mr. Wright, and any matters needing his counsel were thus submitted to him by letter; prayer to God was as effectual at a distance from Bristol as on the spot; and his periodical returns to that city for some weeks or months between these tours kept him in close touch with every department of the work.
5. The supreme consideration, however, was this: To suppose it necessary for Mr. Mueller himself to be at home in order that sufficient means should be supplied, was a direct contradiction of the very principles upon which, and to maintain which, the whole work had been begun. Real trust in God is above circumstances and appearances. And this had been proven; for, during the third year after these tours began, the income for the various departments of the Scriptural Knowledge Institution was larger than ever during the preceding forty-four years of its existence; and therefore, notwithstanding the loving counsel of a few donors and friends who advised that Mr. Mueller should stay at home, he kept to his purpose and his principles, partly to demonstrate that no man's presence is indispensable to the work of the Lord. "Them that honour Me I will honour." (1 Samuel ii.39.) He regarded it the greatest honour of his life to bear this wide witness to God, and God correspondingly honoured His servant in bearing this testimony,
It was during the first and second of these American tours that the writer had
the privilege of coming into personal contact with Mr. Mueller. While I was at San
Francisco, in 1878, he was to speak on Sabbath afternoon, May 12th, at Oakland, just
across the bay, but conscientious objections to needless Sunday travel caused me
voluntarily to lose what then seemed the only chance of seeing and hearing a man
whose career had been watched by me for over twenty years, as he was to leave for
the East a few days earlier than myself and was likely to be always a little in advance.
On reaching Ogden, however, where the branch road from Salt Lake City joins the main
line, Mr. and Mrs. Mueller boarded my train and we travelled to Chicago together.
I introduced myself, and held with him daily converse about divine things, and, while
tarrying at Chicago, had numerous opportunities for hearing him speak there.
The results of this close and frequent contact singularly blessed to me, and at my
invitation he came to Detroit, Michigan, on his next tour, and spoke in the Fort
Street Presbyterian Church, of which I was pastor, on Sundays, January 18 and 25,
1880, and on Monday and Friday evenings, in the interval.
In addition to these numerous and favourable
opportunities thus providentially afforded for hearing and conversing with Mr. Mueller,
he kindly met me for several days in my study, for an hour at a time, for conference
upon those deeper truths of the word of God and deeper experiences of the Christian
life, upon which I was then very desirous of more light. For example, I desired to
understand more clearly the Bible teaching about the Lord's coming. I had opposed
with much persistency what is known as the premillennial view, and brought out my
objections, to all of which he made one reply:
"My beloved brother, I have heard all your arguments and objections against this view, but they have one fatal defect: not one of them is based upon the word of God. You will never get at the truth upon any matter of divine revelation unless you lay aside your prejudices and like a little child ask simply what is the testimony of Scripture."
With patience and wisdom he unravelled the tangled skein of my perplexity and difficulty, and helped me to settle upon biblical principles all matters of so-called expediency. As he left me, about to visit other cities, his words fixed themselves in my memory. I had expressed to him my growing conviction that the worship in the churches had lost its primitive simplicity; that the pew rent system was pernicious; that fixed salaries for ministers of the gospel were unscriptural; that the church of God should be administered only by men full of the Holy Ghost, and that the duty of Christians to the non-churchgoing masses was grossly neglected, etc. He solemnly said to me:
"My beloved brother, the Lord has given you much light upon these matters, and will hold you correspondingly responsible for its use. If you obey Him and walk in the light, you will have more; if not, the light will be withdrawn."
It is a singular lesson on the importance of an anointed tongue, that forty simple words, spoken over twenty years ago, have had a daily influence on the life of him to whom they were spoken. Amid subtle temptations to compromise the claims of duty and hush the voice of conscience, or of the Spirit of God, and to follow the traditions of men rather than the word of God, those words of that venerated servant of God have recurred to mind with ever fresh force. We risk the forfeiture of privileges which are not employed for God, and of obscuring convictions which are not carried into action. God's word to us is "use or lose."
"To him that hath shall be given: from him that hath not shall be taken away even that which he seemeth to have."
It is the hope and the prayer of him who writes this memoir that the reading of
these pages may prove to be an interview with the man whose memorial they are, and
that the witness borne by George Mueller may be to many readers a source of untold
and life-long blessing.
It need not be said that to carry out conviction into action is a costly sacrifice.
It may make necessary renunciations and separations which leave one to feel a strange
sense both of deprivation and loneliness. But he who will fly as an eagle does into
the higher levels where cloudless day abides, and live in the sunshine of God, must
consent to live a comparatively lonely life. No bird is so solitary as the eagle.
Eagles never fly in flocks: one, or at most two, and the two, mates, being ever seen
at once. But the life that is lived unto God, however it forfeits human companionship,
knows divine fellowship, and the child of God who like his Master undertakes to
"do always the things that please Him,"
can like his Master say,
"The Father hath not left me alone."
"I am alone; yet not alone, for the Father is with me."
Whosoever will promptly follow whatever light God gives, without regard to human opinion, custom, tradition, or approbation, will learn the deep meaning of these words:
"Then shall we know, if we follow on to know the Lord."
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CHAPTER 18
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