NEW STEPS AND STAGES OF PREPARATION
PASSION for souls is a divine fire,
and in the heart of George Muller that fire now began
to burn more brightly, and demanded vent.
In August, 1827, his mind was more
definitely than before turned toward mission work.
Hearing that the Continental Society of Britain sought
a minister for Bucharest, he offered himself through
Dr. Tholuck, who, in behalf of the Society, was on
the lookout for a suitable candidate. To his
great surprise his father gave consent, though Bucharest
was more than a thousand miles distant and as truly
missionary ground as any other field. After a
short visit home he came back to Halle, his face steadfastly
set toward his far-off field, and his heart seeking
prayerful preparation for expected self-sacrifice and
hardship. But God had other plans for His servant,
and he never went to Bucharest.
In October following, Hermann Ball,
passing through Halle, and being at the little weekly
meeting in Muller’s room, told him how failing
health forbade his continuing his work among Polish
Jews; and at once there sprang up in George Muller’s
mind a strong desire to take his place. Such
work doubly attracted him, because it would bring him
into close contact with God’s chosen but erring
people, Israel; and because it would afford opportunity
to utilize those Hebrew studies which so engrossed
him.
At this very time, calling upon Dr.
Tholuck, he was asked, to his surprise, whether he
had ever felt a desire to labour among the Jews Dr.
Tholuck then acting as agent for the London Missionary
Society for promoting missions among them. This
question naturally fanned the flame of his already
kindled desire; but, shortly after, Bucharest being
the seat of the war then raging between the Russians
and Turks, the project of sending a minister there
was for the time abandoned. But a door seemed
to open before him just as another shut behind him.
The committee in London, learning
that he was available as a missionary to the Jews,
proposed his coming to that city for six months as
a missionary student to prepare for the work.
To enter thus on a sort of probation was trying to
the flesh, but, as it seemed right that there should
be opportunity for mutual acquaintance between committee
and candidate, to insure harmonious cooperation, his
mind was disposed to accede to the proposal.
There was, however, a formidable obstacle.
Prussian male subjects must commonly serve three years
in the army, and classical students who have passed
the university examinations, at least one year.
George Muller, who had not served out even this shorter
term, could not, without royal exemption, even get
a passport out of the country. Application was
made for such exemption, but it failed. Meanwhile
he was taken ill, and after ten weeks suffered a relapse.
While at Leipzig with an American professor with whom
he went to the opera, he unwisely partook of some
refreshments between the acts, which again brought
on illness. He had broken a blood-vessel in the
stomach, and he returned to Halle, never again to
enter a theatre. Subsequently being asked to go
to Berlin for a few weeks to teach German, he went,
hoping at the Prussian capital to find access to the
court through persons of rank and secure the desired
exemption. But here again he failed. There
now seemed no way of escaping a soldier’s term,
and he submitted himself for examination, but was
pronounced physically unfit for military duty.
In God’s providence he fell into kind hands,
and, being a second time examined and found unfit,
he was thenceforth completely exempted for life
from all service in the army.
God’s lines of purpose mysteriously
converged. The time had come; the Master spake
and it was done: all things moved in one direction to
set His servant free from the service of his country,
that, under the Captain of his salvation, he might
endure hardness as a good soldier of Christ, without
entanglement in the affairs of this life. Aside
from this, his stay at the capital had not been unprofitable,
for he had preached five times a week in the poorhouse
and conversed on the Lord’s days with the convicts
in the prison.
In February, 1829, he left for London,
on the way visiting his father at Heimersleben, where
he had returned after retirement from office; and he
reached the English metropolis March 19th. His
liberty was much curtailed as a student in this new
seminary, but, as no rule conflicted with his conscience,
he submitted. He studied about twelve hours daily,
giving attention mainly to Hebrew and cognate branches
closely connected with his expected field. Sensible
of the risk of that deadness of soul which often results
from undue absorption in mental studies, he committed
to memory much of the Hebrew Old Testament and pursued
his tasks in a prayerful spirit, seeking God’s
help in matters, however minute, connected with daily
duty.
Tempted to the continual use of his
native tongue by living with his German countrymen,
he made little progress in English, which he afterward
regretted; and he was wont, therefore, to counsel those
who propose to work among a foreign people, not only
to live among them in order to learn their language,
but to keep aloof as far as may be from their own
countrymen, so as to be compelled to use the tongue
which is to give them access to those among whom they
labour.
In connection with this removal to
Britain a seemingly trivial occurrence left upon him
a lasting impress another proof that there
are no little things in life. Upon a very small
hinge a huge door may swing and turn. It is,
in fact, often the apparently trifling events that
mould our history, work, and destiny.
A student incidentally mentioned a
dentist in Exeter a Mr. Groves who
for the Lord’s sake had resigned his calling
with fifteen hundred pounds a year, and with wife
and children offered himself as a missionary to Persia,
simply trusting the Lord for all temporal supplies.
This act of self-denying trust had a strange charm
for Mr. Muller, and he could not dismiss it from his
mind; indeed, he distinctly entered it in his journal
and wrote about it to friends at home. It was
another lesson in faith, and in the very line
of that trust of which for more than sixty years he
was to be so conspicuous an example and illustration.
In the middle of May, 1829, he was
taken ill and felt himself to be past recovery.
Sickness is often attended with strange self-disclosure.
His conviction of sin and guilt at his conversion
was too superficial and shallow to leave any after-remembrance.
But, as is often true in the history of God’s
saints, the sense of guilt, which at first seemed to
have no roots in conscience and scarce an existence,
struck deeper into his being and grew stronger as
he knew more of God and grew more like Him. This
common experience of saved souls is susceptible of
easy explanation. Our conceptions of things depend
mainly upon two conditions: first, the clearness
of our vision of truth and duty; and secondly, the
standard of measurement and comparison. The more
we live in God and unto God, the more do our eyes
become enlightened to see the enormity and deformity
of sin, so that we recognize the hatefulness of evil
more distinctly: and the more clearly do we recognize
the perfection of God’s holiness and make it
the pattern and model of our own holy living.
The amateur musician or artist has
a false complacency in his own very imperfect work
only so far as his ear or eye or taste is not yet trained
to accurate discrimination; but, as he becomes more
accomplished in a fine art, and more appreciative
of it, he recognizes every defect or blemish of his
previous work, until the musical performance seems
a wretched failure and the painting a mere daub.
The change, however, is wholly in the workman
and not in the work: both the music and the
painting are in themselves just what they were, but
the man is capable of something so much better, that
his standard of comparison is raised to a higher level,
and his capacity for a true judgment is correspondingly
enlarged.
Even so a child of God who, like Elijah,
stands before Him as a waiting, willing, obedient
servant, and has both likeness to God and power with
God, may get under the juniper-tree of despondency,
cast down with the sense of unworthiness and ill desert.
As godliness increases the sense of ungodliness becomes
more acute, and so feelings never accurately gauge
real assimilation to God. We shall seem worst
in our own eyes when in His we are best, and conversely.
A Mohammedan servant ventured publicly
to challenge a preacher who, in an Indian bazaar,
was asserting the universal depravity of the race,
by affirming that he knew at least one woman who was
immaculate, absolutely without fault, and that woman,
his own Christian mistress. The preacher bethought
himself to ask in reply whether he had any means of
knowing whether that was her opinion of herself, which
caused the Mohammedan to confess that there lay the
mystery: she had been often overheard in prayer
confessing herself the most unworthy of sinners.
To return from this digression, Mr.
Muller, not only during this illness, but down to
life’s sudden close, had a growing sense of sin
and guilt which would at times have been overwhelming,
had he not known upon the testimony of the Word that
“whoso covereth his sins shall not prosper,
but he that confesseth and forsaketh them shall find
mercy.” From his own guilt he turned his
eyes to the cross where it was atoned for, and to
the mercy-seat where forgiveness meets the penitent
sinner; and so sorrow for sin was turned into the
joy of the justified.
This confidence of acceptance in the
Beloved so stripped death of its terrors that during
this illness he longed rather to depart and to be
with Christ; but after a fortnight he was pronounced
better, and, though still longing for the heavenly
rest, he submitted to the will of God for a longer
sojourn in the land of his pilgrimage, little foreseeing
what joy he was to find in living for God, or how
much he was to know of the days of heaven upon earth.
During this illness, also, he showed
the growing tendency to bring before the Lord in prayer
even the minutest matters which his later life so
signally exhibited. He constantly besought God
to guide his physician, and every new dose of medicine
was accompanied by a new petition that God would use
it for his good and enable him with patience to await
His will. As he advanced toward recovery he sought
rest at Teignmouth, where, shortly after his arrival,
“Ebenezer” chapel was reopened. It
was here also that Mr. Muller became acquainted with
Mr. Henry Craik, who was for so many years not only
his friend, but fellow labourer.
It was also about this time that,
as he records, certain great truths began to be made
clear to him and to stand out in much prominence.
This period of personal preparation is so important
in its bearing on his whole after-career that the
reader should have access to his own witness.
See Appendix B.
On returning to London, prospered
in soul-health as also in bodily vigor, he proposed
to fellow students a daily morning meeting, from 6
to 8, for prayer and Bible study, when each should
give to the others such views of any passage read
as the Lord might give him. These spiritual exercises
proved so helpful and so nourished the appetite for
divine things that, after continuing in prayer late
into the evening hours, he sometimes at midnight sought
the fellowship of some like-minded brother, and thus
prolonged the prayer season until one or two o’clock
in the morning; and even then sleep was often further
postponed by his overflowing joy in God. Thus,
under his great Teacher, did this pupil, early in
his spiritual history, learn that supreme lesson that
to every child of God the word of God is the bread
of life, and the prayer of faith the breath of life.
Mr. Muller had been back in London
scarcely ten days before health again declined, and
the conviction took strong hold upon him that he should
not spend his little strength in confining study, but
at once get about his work; and this conviction was
confirmed by the remembrance of the added light which
God had given him and the deeper passion he now felt
to serve Him more freely and fully. Under the
pressure of this persuasion that both his physical
and spiritual welfare would be promoted by actual
labours for souls, he sought of the Society a prompt
appointment to his field of service; and that they
might with the more confidence commission him, he
asked that some experienced man might be sent out
with him as a fellow counsellor and labourer.
After waiting in vain for six weeks
for an answer to this application, he felt another
strong conviction: that to wait on his fellow
men to be sent out to his field and work was unscriptural
and therefore wrong. Barnabas and Saul were called
by name and sent forth by the Holy Spirit, before
the church at Antioch had taken any action; and he
felt himself so called of the Spirit to his work that
he was prompted to begin at once, without waiting
for human authority, and why not among the
Jews in London? Accustomed to act promptly upon
conviction, he undertook to distribute among them
tracts bearing his name and address, so that any who
wished personal guidance could find him. He sought
them at their gathering-places, read the Scriptures
at stated times with some fifty Jewish lads, and taught
in a Sunday-school. Thus, instead of lying like
a vessel in dry-dock for repairs, he was launched into
Christian work, though, like other labourers among
the despised Jews, he found himself exposed to petty
trials and persécutions, called to suffer reproach
for the name of Christ.
Before the autumn of 1829 had passed,
a further misgiving laid hold of him as to whether
he could in good conscience remain longer connected
in the usual way with this London Society, and on
December 12th he concluded to dissolve all such ties
except upon certain conditions. To do full justice
both to Mr. Muller and the Society, his own words will
again be found in the Appendix.
See Appendix C.
Early in the following year it was
made clear that he could labour in connection with
such a society only as they would consent to his serving
without salary and labouring when and where the Lord
might seem to direct. He so wrote, eliciting a
firm but kind response to the effect that they felt
it “inexpedient to employ those who were unwilling
to submit to their guidance with respect to missionary
operations,” etc.
Thus this link with the Society was
broken. He felt that he was acting up to the
light God gave, and, while imputing to the Society
no blame, he never afterward repented this step nor
reversed this judgment. To those who review this
long life, so full of the fruits of unusual service
to God and man, it will be quite apparent that the
Lord was gently but persistently thrusting George
Muller out of the common path into one where he was
to walk very closely with Himself; and the decisions
which, even in lesser matters furthered God’s
purpose were wiser and weightier than could at the
time be seen.
One is constantly reminded in reading
Mr. Muller’s journal that he was a man of like
frailties as others. On Christmas morning of this
year, after a season of peculiar joy, he awoke to
find himself in the Slough of Despond, without any
sense of enjoyment, prayer seeming as fruitless as
the vain struggles of a man in the mire. At the
usual morning meeting he was urged by a brother to
continue in prayer, notwithstanding, until he was
again melted before the Lord a wise counsel
for all disciples when the Lord’s presence seems
strangely withdrawn. Steadfast continuance in
prayer must never be hindered by the want of sensible
enjoyment; in fact, it is a safe maxim that the less
joy, the more need. Cessation of communion with
God, for whatever cause, only makes the more difficult
its resumption and the recovery of the prayer habit
and prayer spirit; whereas the persistent outpouring
of supplication, together with continued activity
in the service of God, soon brings back the lost joy.
Whenever, therefore, one yields to spiritual depression
so as to abandon, or even to suspend, closet communion
or Christian work, the devil triumphs.
So rapid was Mr. Muller’s recovery
out of this Satanic snare, through continuance in
prayer, that, on the evening of that same Christmas
day whose dawn had been so overcast, he expounded
the Word at family worship in the house where he dined
by invitation, and with such help from God that two
servants who were present were deeply convicted of
sin and sought his counsel.
Here we reach another mile-stone in
this life-journey. George Muller had now come
to the end of the year 1829, and he had been led of
the Lord in a truly remarkable path. It was but
about four years since he first found the narrow way
and began to walk in it, and he was as yet a young
man, in his twenty-fifth year. Yet already he
had been taught some of the grand secrets of a holy,
happy, and useful life, which became the basis of
the whole structure of his after-service.
Indeed, as we look back over these
four years, they seem crowded with significant and
eventful experiences, all of which forecast his future
work, though he as yet saw not in them the Lord’s
sign. His conversion in a primitive assembly
of believers where worship and the word of God were
the only attractions, was the starting-point in a career
every step of which seems a stride forward. Think
of a young convert, with such an ensnaring past to
reproach and retard him, within these few years learning
such advanced lessons in renunciation: burning
his manuscript novel, giving up the girl he loved,
turning his back on the seductive prospect of ease
and wealth, to accept self-denial for God, cutting
loose from dependence on his father and then refusing
all stated salary lest his liberty of witness be curtailed,
and choosing a simple expository mode of preaching,
instead of catering to popular taste! Then mark
how he fed on the word of God; how he cultivated the
habits of searching the Scriptures and praying in
secret; how he threw himself on God, not only for
temporal supplies, but for support in bearing all
burdens, however great or small; and how thus early
he offered himself for the mission field and was impatiently
eager to enter it. Then look at the sovereign
love of God, imparting to him in so eminent a degree
the childlike spirit, teaching him to trust not his
own variable moods of feeling, but the changeless
word of His promise; teaching him to wait patiently
on Him for orders, and not to look to human authority
or direction; and so singularly releasing him from
military service for life, and mysteriously withholding
him from the far-off mission field, that He might
train him for his unique mission to the race and the
ages to come!
These are a few of the salient points
of this narrative, thus far, which must, to any candid
mind, demonstrate that a higher Hand was moulding
this chosen vessel on His potter’s wheel, and
shaping it unmistakably for the singular service to
which it was destined!