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George Mueller
1805 - 1898
"At last I saw Christ as my Saviour. I believed in Him and gave
myself to Him. The burden rolled from off me, and a great love for Christ
filled my soul. That was more than fifty years ago. I loved Jesus Christ
then, but I loved Him more the year after, and more the year after that,
and more every year since."
Born in Prussia
in 1805, George Mueller began running from God early in life. By age ten
he had devised a scheme to embezzle government money entrusted to his
father. He spent his schooldays in drunken immorality. He even served
time in jail at age sixteen for failing to pay his bills.
The
university he attended had some 900 divinity students, but Mueller said
there were not nine of them who truly feared God. He continued his sinful
habits during his college days until finally at age 20 the burden of his
sins overcame him and he trusted Christ as Saviour.
Soon
he committed himself to a full-time gospel ministry. When Mueller was twenty-five,
he went to Teignmouth,
England,
with his new wife, Mary, to pastor a small church. He gave up the small
salary offered when he discovered it was paid through the rental of
church pews. From that time on he resolved to live by faith.
Mueller
moved in 1832 to Bristol,
England,
to be the pastor of another church. There his famous work with the
orphans began when two young children were thrown upon the church's care.
Mueller had only two shillings to his name when he began the orphanage
work, but over the next sixty years God sent more than $7,500,000 to
supply their needs. New buildings were built or purchased, staff was
hired, and the hundreds of children never missed a meal. Many times
prayers were said over empty plates only to have food arrive at the last
moment.
Mueller
resolved never to tell anyone what his needs were. He told them to God
and confidently expected them to be met.
During
his life, Mueller started 117 schools which educated over 120,000 young
people and orphans. He became pastor of Bethesda Chapel in Bristol. The church
had some 2,000 members at his death.
Spurgeon
said, "Of flowers of speech he has none, and we hardly think he
cares for them; but of the bread of Heaven he has abundance."
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